Thursday, October 20, 2011

First Meeting

Thank you everybody who participated and made our first meeting the collaborative, creative, chaotic, constructive meeting that it was.

Part 2: Strategy (starting here so readers aren't immediately overwhelmed by the Part 1 list)
Thinking on multiple dimensions seemed to be the most prevalent concept. We should consider the conflicts and cohesion implicit in dualities such as having a top down message (a collective national vision or goal) and a bottom up (local, organizational) purpose; knowing how to work within the present framework and also expanding our possibilities to create a new paradigm; focusing inward on educating ourselves as well as focusing outward in forming a collective body of knowledge for the community; deciding whether to start small and work up, or go big right out of the gate; focusing on specifics and broadening appeal, while not deterring other would be occupiers; balancing timing to allow the movement time to grow, and acting before we lose momentum, all while keeping in mind this may be urgent for those who suffer. Though these options may pull us in opposite directions, we must also find balance between being all encompassing in our consideration, and acting decisively when the time comes (there's a certain beauty to the yin and yang of this whole process, no?).

There are also certain guiding values that serve as the foundation from which we draw all actions. Bettering society will start from fairness, compassion, and understanding that we are all interconnected (will likely be better defined by the Goals Committee). We believe the cornerstone of this process should continue to be the leaderless movement, centered around general assemblies, because that is the democratic format which best enables these ideals to prevail at all levels. With this in mind, education will not only focus on objectives, but also the means for, and the spirit behind those objectives.

From an organizational perspective, what was originally two separate committees -- the Education Committee and the Goals Committee -- have been combined in personnel, but maintain distinct objectives. This stems from the fact that we cannot have goals without first being educated, then we must educate the community on those goals. However, the merging is more logistical than ideological. As such, at future meetings, time will be dedicated exclusively to each group. The format for how we will do that has not been finalized, but rather will be determined experimentally. In the coming week we plan to spend one hour on the Education Committee's first objective, educating ourselves. The second hour will be dedicated to the Goals Committee's first objective, creating sound bites to give the community a better idea of what we're about. No "decisions" are made here, but rather, we will solidify the ether of ideas into objectives and actions that are presentable for greater consideration. We will then present to the local general assembly, and eventually other general assemblies across the nation.

We will meet every Thursday at 6:30, this week again at the Peace Center, and individuals are encouraged to arrange other meetings, possibly more social gatherings like potlucks, house parties, or outings where we can meet less formally but still use as a time to present information. Another interesting suggestion was to celebrate after rallies at local businesses, this way they would have something to look forward to on our rally days. (One other thing I forgot to bring up is the matter of clean up after rallies. One of my conservative co-workers claims there was a problem with the mess left after our Brunswick rally. This could be a rumor, but it may be prudent to arrange a small clean up party after the rally and before the post-rally celebration.)

Other Topics brought up: To begin the education process we could spread fliers and host teach-ins. Our actions will be more effective if we appeal to emotions, and we will be more effective as a group if we break large objectives down into more manageable steps.


Part 1: Objectives
Here's a list of objectives we came up with (the ether of ideas I referred to earlier), loosely grouped by subject:
  • Corporations - eliminate corporate personhood, revoke unlimited campaign contributions, limiting other corporate powers, re-examine the EPA and FDA, and educate the community on how corporations have affected our democracy and our education system
  • Change the decision making process - focus on the general assembly model, the leaderless movement, branching out locally then nationally, organizing all levels across artificial lines such as party affiliations, equal representation for all, either replace or work in parallel to representative democracy
  • Economics - fix unemployment problem, start public works programs, correct the imbalance of wealth, understand the present macroeconomic situation (the Federal Reserve, taxation, monetary/fiscal policy), consider replacement, understand opposing theories, understand alternative economic models that are less based on consumption as a goal, maybe start some bartering programs
  • Society - focus on people over profits, move away from ownership as a goal, focus on community, LOVE!, spread info on the constitution, focus on necessities for all, get past our differences
  • Environment - be less damaging, plant trees
  • OWS - Simplify and communicate, develop our language, don't shy from big issues, branch out to all, start a book club
Acting on the last item there, we are starting a recommended reading list immediately. Email me (yasu4303@gmail.com) the titles, or update the spreadsheet directly with any books you recommend. If you email me, I would prefer it be in the format: Title, Author, Subject, and maybe a one or two sentence endorsement of the book (see example on the spreadsheet).

I think that is all for now. If I missed something, please put it up in the comments, and a big thank you again to all who participated.

1 comment:

  1. Please set up an About page for this blog to tell visitors who you are, how to contact you, and so on. For example,

    Occupy Wall Street NC (Nevada County, CA)
    http://www.facebook.com/owsnc?ref=ts

    See also

    Bloomington and Columbus, Indiana Education Working Group blog
    http://educationwg.wordpress.com/

    ReplyDelete