Thursday, October 27, 2011

Is It Time to Just Show Up?

Woody Allen may have said it best.  Eighty per cent of success is showing up. 

The time may not be right for Occupy Wall Street to forge a common message.  But a unified slogan could be just the thing for the moment when critics are trying to debunk the movement for its formlessness.

"Just Show Up" could serve the purpose.

Six million Americans have been out of work for more than six months.  If that doesn't qualify people to protest against the greed and opportunism that has exploited them, what would?  The thing about the six million -- and all their dependents -- is that most of the time they're invisible.  So it's hard to imagine how much misery and shame that represents.

As long as people who are suffering from the system's excesses remain huddled by the hearth -- as long as the unemployed protest their fate from corner bar stools across America -- they can be dismissed as an inevitable consequence of capitalism.

Right-thinking people know they are not.  Increasingly, they represent the silent majority.  Instead of being shuffled out of sight, isn't it time for the real majority to JUST SHOW UP?

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Ex-PM in Synch With Protesters

Anyone who thinks the Occupy Wall Street movement has no relevance for Canadians may be surprised to see former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney offering his sympathetic take on the protests.  Mulroney understands how Canada's economy is driven by what happens in the U.S.

As prime minister, Mulroney saw first-hand how Canadian fiscal policy is defined by the international money markets,  leading him to champion free trade as a means to achieve global competitiveness.
Small wonder that Mulroney has joined Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney in raising a supportive voice on behalf of the protests. 

Marginal living standards are becoming the great leveller in North America as the middle class is hollowed out after putting all its faith in free markets.  Ironically, while its equal opportunity they want, Americans -- and Canadians to a lesser degree so far -- are finding equality at the bottom of the income spread.

Some commentators dismiss the occupations as copycat displays, preferring to credit the prudence of Canada's chartered banks for sparing us from the fate that has befallen our U.S. neighbours. 

But they only need to look at the soaring debt load in this country to understand how Canadian consumers are poised to share the same fate.             

Friday, October 21, 2011

Mapping the Occupation

The previous post was entitled Occupy the Western World as a reflection of what is happening as much as an exhortation.   This embedded link shows how The Guardian has mapped how the Occupy Wall Street ethos has gone viral throughout Europe and the Americas.  

The Guardian has geo-tagged all the locations where "Occupy" demonstrations have occurred in recent days and accompanied the satellite map with a spread sheet recording numbers, links to sources and available photographic records of each event.

It's a fascinating record of how an irresistible idea -- equality of opportunity -- cannot be supressed despite decades of social engineering inspired by a culture that exhalts individual achievement.  It's an archive of collective will.     

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Occupy the Western World

Occupy Wall Street is still a burgeoning, largely moderate collection of interests

So far the violence-prone anti-global hoardes haven’t taken over.  The odds are that either they will or at least that there will be a clash between the moderates in the movement, who are openly declaring themselves, and the extremists who like to wear black masks.

Nobody with any sense is arguing that capitalism should be dismantled, only that its excesses must be reduced.  Equality of opportunity is the goal, not chaos.

But the longer the movement continues as a formless mass, the greater the likelihood that it will be hijacked by extreme positions, violent or otherwise. 

Its shambolic state has certain advantages:  as long as it is undefined, it can be inclusive.  Until it adopts a manifesto – and by doing so defines the basis for negotiating a new social contract in America – the worst that can be said about its philosophy is that it is meaningless.  But this lack of precision is the very nourishment that allows the movement to grow.  For now, it appears to have sustainable momentum and the spontaneity that can attract new adherents. 

At this point, calls for the mass demonstrations to coalesce around a common theme would only fragment it.  However there is a limit to how long this street theater can remain formless, due to its vulnerability.     

Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney lent momentum to the movement when he gave his endorsement in an interview with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Carney told Peter Mansbridge that the Occupy Wall Street protests and their ilk, that hit Canadian cities on the weekend, are a “democratic expression of views’’ and “entirely constructive.’’ 

“It makes it more tangible, the challenges that that economy is facing, and it makes it more important to demonstrate success on issues such as financial reform,’’ he said.  Carney’s utterances couldn’t have been more apt.  Nor could they have been more potent since he is about to become the head of the Financial Stability Board, tasked with reforming the international banking system using Canada’s model.    

As moral authority goes, Carney’s utterance was as powerful as Warren Buffet’s assertion this summer that people like him aren’t paying their fair share for public services.  And it is more timely, since the replacement of the FSB’s current chairman takes place next month. 

It’s vital for the momentum of Occupy Wall Street to be sustained right now.  That’s because, like Sisyphus, Carney is having to push a very large bolder up a hill.  Europe’s money managers are slow to respond to demands for a trillion-dollar infusion to shore up the continent’s banking system.  Canadian spokesmen have told the Europeans that action is already overdue and further delay will only make it harder to stabilize the system. 

Carney could use the evidence that there is a growing impatience with the status quo throughout the western world.  This virtual constituency, uncontrollably linked by social media, is becoming a new political reality much larger than national boundaries. 

Due to its common cause – angered and frustrated by being disinherited and futureless -- it is becoming the basis for a new global political reality.  To falter now would remove a powerful force for change just when it is most needed.              


Thursday, October 13, 2011

Right Brain is Empty


CBC's hired mogul Kevin O'Leary is stumped by Pulitzer prize-winning journalist Chris Hedges' coherent description of the Occupy Wall Street movement. Hedges vows not to re-appear with Canada's answer to the Fox News mouthpiece.  O'Leary doesn't seem able to grasp plain speaking.

If there is to be a productive debate over solutions to the hollowing-out of western capitalist-style democracies, this clip shows it will take debaters who can put their case without resorting to cheap TV trash talk.  As a supporter of "Friends of Canadian Broadcasting" we understand the CBC's effort to balance the conversation by giving air time to both sides.  But surely the right can find somebody capable of representing their position without caricaturing their ideology. 

Name-calling and character-bashing. are the redoubt of the empty-headed.  Those are not the people who are going to dig America out of its slough of despair.

O'Leary reflects the most simplistic side of the argument and real life just isn't that simple for most people.  That's why the Wall Street protesters are calling themselves The 99 Per Cent.  Instead of  profiting from sure-fire formulas for capital gain, most people are struggling to feed, clothe and heat themselves.  O'Leary should try that for a while and see if his simple-mided solutions can dig him out.             

Monday, October 10, 2011

Conversation of a Decade

As we said when we launched Prophets of Boom, the crisis brought on by credit default swaps in 2008 and the subsequent collapse of the U.S. housing market would begin a conversation that will likely last a decade or more.  Young Americans who fear they are being disinherited by the excesses of the elites have brought the debate about their future out into the open with their move to occupy Wall Street

The movement is spreading to cities across the U.S. and there has been online chatter from the West Coast about expanding it to include main streets in Canada.   The power of the internet to mobilize like-minded people is being demonstrated to anyone who cares to check. 

In fact, the conditions that move New Yorkers to demonstrate at the altar of capitalism are being felt everywhere that the powerless are being dominated by others.  Increasingly in America thanks to skewed expectations, downloading of public expenditures to communities in crisis and outright greed, the conditions for dissent are being defined by one's distance from the centers of power.  That distance can be measured in miles, money and years of experience.  A very large constituency exists within those parameters - one that is finding its voice and exploring its influence.

The system of goverenance that was devised to harness regal and economic power for the collective good is seen to be failing.  Web-based means are mobilizing an opposition that is far more united and adroit than traditional politics or the ballot box.  How these dynamics play out in the coming decade could change policies or it could change the democratic system itself.   

One thing is clear:  contemporary leaders will need the widsom of the founding fathers to fashion a compromize that will satisfy the parties to this debate.  So far they have mostly been mute. 

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Debate Spills Into the Street

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezYoxIYJjSo



Occupy Wall Street has become the rallying cry for young Americans galvanized by news of an impending "double dip" recession.  Incensed at the erosion of their individual and collective sovereignty in the face of mounting debt loads, demonstrators are flooding onto Main Streets across the U.S. to register their dissent. 

As demonstrators turn their wrath against iconic targets like Wall Street, they don't appear to be in a mood for discussion.  Neither do the police and civil authorities, as hundreds of protesters were arrested over the weekend. 

This confrontation has been brewing for decades as the Prophets of Boom have overheated industrial economies until they are ready to burst.  Cooler heads have failed get decision-makers to heed the warning signs in the face of immediate gratification and unlimited growth.  Now the heat is on them, as common folk demand an historic settling of accounts. 

While expectations that took generations to set are being crushed by the economic news and by the authorities' reflex reactions,  it looks like the discussion has spilled out of the usual forums for democractic debate.  All the momentum is with the protesters, acting spontaneously and fuelled by  Web-induced fervour.  Little likelihood, then, that the demonstrations will cool down quickly.

The situation has all the elements of a sustained confrontation.  Not since the Vietnam War has there been such widespread protest in the U.S.  With no visible leadership and limitless energy, the people on the street must take their inspiration from non-violent figures like Ghandi, Mandela and King.  Political and public safety authorities will need to keep control over the police.  Without some self-control, the vision of America will soon be turned from a dream state into a horror show.             
  

       

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

The Future: A Dog's Life?

Since the Second World War, merchandisers have devised many new ways to exploit consumers’ ingrained fascination with the future.  From Chrysler’s “Forward Look” in the Fifties to the timeless exhortations of life insurance peddlers, the promise of the future has been a consistent advertising hook.
Now a major pet food producer has launched the first TV commercial designed for dogs.
The NestlĂ© corporation is using a high-frequency pitch in the commercial to grab the animals’ attention in a 23-second spot for its Beneful brand.  According to Reuters, the concept was being tested in Austria this week featuring a high-pitched sound similar to a dog whistle.  The commercial is said also to embody a squeak like pet toys emit.
Imagine how the focus testing must have gone:
Prompt:  Would those members of the pack who heard the squeak please respond?
Response: Woof
Prompt:  Describe the vision that it brings to mind
Response: (Scratch)    
Prompt:  What do you think of when you hear that sound?
Response:  (Yawn)
Prompt:  Could you in the second row find something else to lick while we do this test?
Response: Muffled bark …
Maybe the test result will convince NestlĂ©’s marketing team that dogs live in the moment -- not where consumers spend most of their time.