What many believed to be a one-off protest action has quickly taken on a different form; Occupy Wall Street is now a movement that has already been compared to the Arab Spring. However, while these revolutions had a clearly defined target, in the case of Egypt the overthrowing of Mubarak and in Libya Colonel Gaddafi, Occupy Wall Street lacks clearly defined goals. Ironically, this could not be better pointed out than by taking a look at the original poster gathering support for the protests.
The movement is threatening a bank run in which depositors would collaboratively rush to withdraw deposits from a bank. Should such a move really succeed to the highest degree as imagined by protestors, which is highly unlikely, a bank would be brought down. What would happen though when all the big banks are destroyed? Who will loan to businesses? It is unlikely that the “99%” of Americans the movement keeps mentioning it represents feel represented by the protests.
What would aid the movement is having just one very clear demand, aim and message. One suggestion is: Reducing the role of money in politics. The connections between government and the financial services industry has become far too entangled to discern. People often point to the big names such as Goldman Sachs (Hank Paulson, Secretary Treasurer during the crisis in 2008 was formerly CEO at the firm), but it is hundreds of financial firms that are lobbying Washington and have a vested interest. The influence of money has become enormous. Leading up to the 2008 elections, Obama received more donations from investment banks and hedge funds than from any other sector. The biggest supporters were Lehman Brothers, Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan Chase. According to the New York Times, the 2008 presidential campaign tore through all records in terms of expenses, costing a staggering $5.3 Billion Dollars.
This central demand of less money in politics should be supported by tangible ways of achieving this that could be used in negotiations with the government should protestors get to this stage. This should be in the form of regulation for party funding which could involve strict limits on corporate and private donations, controls placed on political spending and a legislative framework for providing transparency for both contributions and expenditures.
What would aid the movement is having just one very clear demand, aim and message. One suggestion is: Reducing the role of money in politics. The connections between government and the financial services industry has become far too entangled to discern. People often point to the big names such as Goldman Sachs (Hank Paulson, Secretary Treasurer during the crisis in 2008 was formerly CEO at the firm), but it is hundreds of financial firms that are lobbying Washington and have a vested interest. The influence of money has become enormous. Leading up to the 2008 elections, Obama received more donations from investment banks and hedge funds than from any other sector. The biggest supporters were Lehman Brothers, Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan Chase. According to the New York Times, the 2008 presidential campaign tore through all records in terms of expenses, costing a staggering $5.3 Billion Dollars.
This central demand of less money in politics should be supported by tangible ways of achieving this that could be used in negotiations with the government should protestors get to this stage. This should be in the form of regulation for party funding which could involve strict limits on corporate and private donations, controls placed on political spending and a legislative framework for providing transparency for both contributions and expenditures.
It is hard to imagine that 1% and 99% are currently being regarded equally by Washington. A government with the best interests of its people at heart would not give Wall Street the breaks they receive while simultaneously attempting to appeal to the average voter on social issues that will never be addressed in office. The movement has several noble intentions. However, the way protestors are going about achieving anything is naïve, too broad, and un-coordinated. Maybe the coming months will change this. This would allow the 99% to raise a louder voice towards Washington.





