Edit 10/23/11 @ 6:09 AM: The very first feedback I received on this post
was from an intelligent and thoughtful reader who notes that "I don't
see you talking at all" in response to my "what the eff are we talking about here?" at the end. The
mailer writes that it is all about conversing, asking questions and
challenging the status quo and asks a question of his own about what I was
hoping to find, the promised land? He saw me pointing a finger and poking
fun.
So here is my answer: I wanted to find some of history. I wanted to find
something different. I wanted to find someone talking about money printing
and inflationary disenfranchisement. That is what the whole Fed shtick was
about in the video (I admit the helicopters that flew over the Fed had me
thinking about making tin foil hat jokes and got me unfocused). I did not
want to find Kumbaya and bongos. I suppose I wanted
to find something more focused on a message of the '99%' being so many of us
stuck in the middle of a triad of the Democrat machinery, the Republican
machinery and the Corporate machinery. With a side of Federal Reserve thrown
in for good measure.
As for pointing a finger and making fun, I wish there was something to
point a finger at. I kept muted my views on Socialism and Unionization. I let
the signs pictured below, especially the first two, do the talking about
things I care about. In fact, the entire story is in the pictures and I am
not saying much, I agree. This is not about me talking and if it were, I
would not have much to say because I have seen and heard everything I saw and
heard yesterday before.
So, my point with this post is exactly what I thought I had already put
across. OB is not ready for prime time and in need of a focused message if it
hopes to be taken seriously. Now, my 2 hours may have missed something
profound that will happen or has happened. Maybe the whole thing is profound
and not to be judged on a 2 hour snippet in time. Maybe the kids organizing
in the picture below were about to make history. I don't know. I just
reported back - with some silliness I grant you - my impression. Believe me, if my consciousness were altered in any way, I'd have
reported it, instead of making funny captions below the photos.
Sad
to say, Occupy Boston is not ready for prime time. This is not to say there
were not some good causes represented at OB aside from the pro-socialism,
pro-union stuff. But my view upon walking through the little tent city,
hearing some sloganeering and the prerequisite bongos playing non-stop, is
that this is a real disappointment; a jumbled hodgepodge of stuff heard a
million times in the 60's, with some of it even being relevant to the
corporate culture that increasingly intertwines itself with our daily lives.
Boston
is either a giant step behind New York (as usual), or Chris Hedges hallucinated his thought provoking piece A
Movement Too Big To Fail as he wrote about OWS.
An
interlude: A few weeks ago my friend Jonathan, whose brokerage shop is right
in the middle of Manhattan, noted to me the cheery colors that New York's
cutting edge fashionistas are wearing nowadays.
This in contrast to the drabbed out "Tom Joad look a likes" he noted back on 2006/07 well before
the crash. Flash to Boston's epic Head of the Charles Regatta
and I have to tell you I have never seen so many people dressed in black out
there by the banks of the River Charles. Good old Boston, still stuck in a
bear market mentality while NYC's fashionable elite are already projecting
bullish times ahead.
Back
on message, as I approached the OB I was videoing myself (it is on the
cutting room floor as this ain't about me) in front
of Bank of America. A security guard came running and waving out of a little
guard shack telling me "No no, no camera
here!" "Why?" I asked, "I am only videoing myself
talking." "No no, they do not want anyone
to take pictures... they probably have YOU on video!" "Oh
okay, well thanks for the info" says I, walking away feeling like I am
in the middle of some alternate world with Michael Moore as its only other
occupant.
Next
I came upon a group of Boston's finest - really big dudes with really shiny
motorcycles all in a perfect line. "Hi officers, do you mind if I get a
photo?" Yes, barked the most important looking one. Okay then, moving
on... I am starting to think this OB must be really big because these guys
are deployed on a side street outside of the occupation area, just in case.
So
much for first impressions.
Here
is a little video in front of the Boston Federal Reserve. For some reason I
felt more in my element hanging around at the Fed then I did at OB. When I
was a little kid, my dad was driving my sister and me down Storrow Drive and we came upon a herd of hippies crossing
the road to the Hatch Shell for a concert. I had my head out the window going
'moo, the cows are leaving' (like in the commercial from back then) and a
hippie gave me the finger. I never liked hippies. So yeh,
I felt more at home at the Fed than I did among the Socialist, Unionist, Marxist contingent of OB.
Doin' his own thing in his own time man, it's
beautiful. To paraphrase Easy Rider.
I actually think I could win an award for this photo
You mean greed is not good?
Not sure who he is, but he is obviously pretty important... and purple.
Same here bro.
Gandhi and Doctor King were great men.
Tents, tents and more tents.
I
do not want to minimize the circumstance that drove some of these people
here. Corporate greed is after all, the reason I started doing this website
and blog thing back in '04. Corporate greed, screwed
up government and yup, the Federal Reserve banking system.
I
just feel that the Occupy Boston segment of the revolution is not nearly
where it needs to be. I am actually surprised there was not a 'Save the
Whales' contingent. And I do not make light of that because cruelty toward,
and exploitation of such beautiful creatures actually breaks my heart. But
what the f__k are we talking about here? Come on
people... FOCUS!
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