A Happy/Sad Anniversary: Occupy Wall Street Began 14 years ago on Sept. 17, 2011

[This post shamelessly shared from history.com]

The edge of Zuccotti Park, NYC, a few days before the cops cleared it. Photos by me.

On September 17, 2011, hundreds of activists gather around Zuccotti Park in lower Manhattan for the first day of the Occupy Wall Street Movement—a weeks-long sit-in in New York City’s Financial District protesting income inequality and corporate corruption. While the movement failed to see any of its goals or policy proposals come to fruition, years later, Occupy Wall Street is still considered a blueprint for decentralized activism.

Zuccotti again; the arts never stopped.

The protest was organized by members of Adbusters, a Canadian anti-consumerist publication, including founder Kalle Lasn and editor Micah White. Adbusters staff coordinated the time, place and marketing of the event. White sent out the first #OccupyWallStreet tweet which would be seen by thousands of people following the movement online. The occupy hashtag is largely responsible for the movement’s exposure and helped make it among the largest activist efforts to go viral on social media and spread around the world.

Your humble blogger at Zuccotti, taking a turn pedaling an elevated bicycle: its turning wheels operated a charger where Occupiers could recharge hones & devices. This was a few days before the park was forcibly cleared, November 2011.

Organizers first planned to meet at Wall Street’s Charging Bull Statue and One Chase Plaza, but police erected barricades at both city-owned parks before the event on September 17. The nearby Zuccotti Park was left untouched; over the course of the next two months, thousands would come to occupy it. On November 15, 2011, members of the NYPD forcibly removed the protestors and arrested some 200 people. Later efforts to re-occupy the park were met with police resistance.

Occupier Andrew Bryant in Fayetteville, NC speaking up for justice, for the 99% and for the glory of God.

The terms 99 and 1 percenter, first coined by the Hells Angels motorcycle club, were popularized by the Occupy movement; the first refers to the majority of people living in the United States, and the second represents Wall Street and the wealthiest portion of the population. These terms—and Occupy Wall Street’s social media strategy—would be modeled by movements including #MeToo and #BlackLivesMatter.

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PS. I visited Zuccotti Park briefly. It was wonderful, amid the anarchic swirl. But I figured it couldn’t last; we weren’t really ready. (We didn’t think to add “No KIngs!” to the slogan roster.) Occupy was the right idea, ahead of its time; maybe too late because too soon. But the memory lives, and its decentralist tactics have survived and adapted. La Lucha continua!

 

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