A roundtable discussion with students and activists either directly involved with Occupy Wall St. or who are closely following the #Occupy movement.
The recent #Occupy protests are driven by discontent with the present state of affairs: glaring economic inequality, dead-end Democratic Party politics, and, for some, the suspicion that capitalism could never produce an equitable society. These concerns are coupled with aspirations for social transformation at an international level. For many, the protests at Wall St. and elsewhere provide an avenue to raise questions the Left has long fallen silent on:
What would it mean to challenge capitalism on a global scale?
How could we begin to overcome social conditions that adversely affect every part of life?
And, how could a new international radical movement address these concerns in practice?
Although participants at Occupy Wall St. have managed thus far to organize resources for their own daily needs, legal services, health services, sleeping arrangements, food supplies, defense against police brutality, and a consistent media presence, these pragmatic concerns have taken precedent over long-term goals of the movement. Where can participants of this protest engage in formulating, debating, and questioning the ends of this movement? How can it affect the greater society beyond the occupied spaces?
We in the Platypus Affiliated Society ask participants and interested observers of the #Occupy movement to consider the possibility that political disagreement could lead to clarification, further development and direction. Only when we are able create an active culture of thinking and debating on the Left without it proving prematurely divisive can we begin to imagine a Leftist politics adequate to the historical possibilities of our moment. We may not know what these possibilities for transformation are. This is why we think it is imperative to create avenues of engagement that will support these efforts.
Towards this goal, Platypus will be hosting a series of roundtable discussions with organizers and participants of the #Occupy movement. These will start at campuses in New York and Chicago but will be moving to other North American cities, and to London, Germany, and Greece in the months to come. We welcome any and all who would like to be a part of this project of self-education and potential rebuilding of the Left to join us in advancing this critical moment.
The Platypus Affiliated Society
October 2011
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Roundtable Participants
Phil Arnone is a grad student in NYU's Draper Interdisciplinary Program. He has been active in the anti-war and alter-globalization movements since high school; was an organizer with Students for a Democratic Society and a member of United Students Against Sweatshops while completing his undergraduate studies at the University of Mary Washington, where he was a student organizer for the campus living wage campaign which successfully won a living wage for all University workers in 2006. After college he worked as a boycott organizer for UNITE HERE, the hotel and food service workers union. He has been active in the Occupy Wall St. movement, and is working on linking up existing workers' and immigrants' rights organizations to OWS and connecting the OWS protests to the ongoing struggles throughout the city.
Jackrabbit began his political awakening as an anarchist in Philadelphia in the late 80s where he was a squatter and volunteered at the Wooden Shoe infoshop for many years. After hitchhiking across the US and Europe he finally ended up in San Francisco where after many years he would eventually obtain a Bachelor's in International Relations at San Francisco State University. Currently he works at a marketing agency in midtown Manhattan. Jackrabbit is a member of the Politics and Electoral Reform working group at OWS and is also involved with the inter-occupation communication initiative being developed at OWS.
Chris Maisano is a public librarian in Brooklyn, rank-and-file activist in DC37 Local 1482, and chair of the NYC local of Democratic Socialists of America and in solidarity with Teamsters art handlers' union at Sotheby's. He is a contributing writer for Jacobin. Maisano is part of the OWS Demands Working Group.
Lisa Montanarelli has been active in antiwar protests, community health activism, LGBT rights, and a variety of other causes since the late 1980s. She worked for California Prevention Education Project (Cal-PEP), providing HIV street outreach to people of color, sex workers and homeless youth. After earning her Ph.D. in comparative literature at U.C. Berkeley and teaching college level, she became more deeply involved in community health educationâteaching for San Francisco Sex Information, andâas a hepatitis C patient for over 20 yearsâfacilitating workshops for patients and healthcare providers. She co-authored The First Year Hepatitis C: An Essential Guide for the Newly Diagnosed and three other non-fiction books. Lisa is a member of the OWS Education and Empowerment and Think Tank Working Groups and helps the Coaching Working Group by interviewing occupiers and blogging at visionaries.co. She is also active in the Stop Stop-and-Frisk movement, and through the Interdependence Project. Montanarelli facilitates meditation sessions for OWS at Liberty Plaza.
Jordan Morrel has been at Occupy Wall Street for four weeks. At OWS he has served as a facilitator for the General Assembly, and has focused on Sanitation, Mediation, and having conversations with people about such typically taboo subjects as the connections between capitalism and democracy in the United States today, and the radical idea of building society based on respect, not fear, of each
other. Jordan grew up in San Francisco, where he was a mental health and substance use counselor, worked at a non-profit volunteer-run collective "Bike Kitchen," and participated in Food Not Bombs, Reclaim the Streets parties, Critical Mass, and other silly activities. He plans to stay in NYC indefinitely.
Laura Schleifer created the word 'artivist' to describe her life's purpose as an artist-activist. A NYC based writer, theater artist, and NYU Tisch grad, her work has spanned the Middle East, where she performed for Palestinian and Iraqi children on a theater/circus tour, to an NGO in Nicaragua, where she taught English through the use of theater, to off-Broadway, where she's performed her socially conscious songs and monologues at theaters throughout New York with the Theaters Against War network, and worked with homeless and at-risk youth as an Artist Mentor. She also served as Outreach/Panelist coordinator at this year's Left Forum conference, and and organized and chaired a panel on whether the USA should owe amnesty to undocumented immigrants fleeing from U.S. imperialism. Her original feature screenplay, The Feral Child, was a Sundance Screenwriters Lab finalist, and her short play, Toyz in tha Hood, lead to a NYC arts grant for the First City Theater Co. She also writes for several publications, including Looking Glass Magazine and The Leftist Review. Laura is currently developing a homeless 'survival guide' website at wheninneed.org. Schleifer is part of the OWS Alternative Economies Working Group.
***Unless otherwise stated by the participants, their comments today do not necessarily reflect the overall opinion of their respective Working Groups.
"Margarethe von Trottas einfĂŒhlsames PortrĂ€t der radikalen FriedenskĂ€mpferin ist nicht nur ein StĂŒck deutscher Zeitgeschichte, sondern widmet sich auch den GefĂŒhlen und Motiven seiner Titelheldin. Barbara Sukowa bekam fĂŒr ihre eindrucksvolle Leistung das Filmband in Gold und die Goldene Palme als Beste Darstellerin." (artfilm.net)
Mittwoch, 26. Oktober 2011, 20:00
IVI - Kettenhofweg 130 (3. Stock)
In diesem Semester möchte Platypus euch zu einem filmischen Durchlauf durch die Geschichte der Linken im 20. Jahrhundert einladen. An vier Abenden werden wir uns in gemĂŒtlicher AtmosphĂ€re verschiedenen geschichtlichen Momenten der Linken nĂ€hern und die Gelegenheit zu einer anschlieĂenden Diskussion haben.
Weitere Termine:
30.11.11 Kuhle Wampe (1932), SlĂĄtan Dudow (Drehbuch unter Mitarbeit von Bertolt Brecht)
21.12.11 Deutschland im Herbst (1978), u.A. Rainer Werner Fassbinder
25.01.12 Battle in Seattle (2007), Stuart Townsend
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<a href="http://germany.platypus1917.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/1923-Jan-Zrzavy-Czech-artist-1890-1977-Kavarna-1923.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-172" title="1923 Jan Zrzavy (Czech artist, 1890-1977) Kavarna 1923" src="http://germany.platypus1917.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/1923-Jan-Zrzavy-Czech-artist-1890-1977-Kavarna-1923-238x300.jpg" alt="" width="238" height="300" /></a>Platypus Coffee Breaks bieten eine hervorragende Gelegenheit Freunde, UnterstĂŒtzer und Mitglieder von Platypus zu treffen. In einer offenen und geselligen AtmosphĂ€re wollen wir uns ĂŒber neuere Artikel der Platypus Review (PR) austauschen, der Geschichte und momentanen Lage der internationalen Linken auf den Grund gehen, die Arbeit der Gruppe in den USA, Canada und GroĂbritannien thematisieren oder einfach nur nett miteinander plaudern.
Dieses Semester: Jeden <strong>Mittwoch, 16 Uhr</strong> im <a href="http://www.asta.uni-frankfurt.de/service/studierendenhaus.html"><strong>Cafe KOZ</strong></a>.
Erdgeschoss des Studierendenhauses - Campus Bockenheim.
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A film screening series in two parts:
Part 1:Â Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (2010)
âWant to know what the mother of all bubbles was? Came out of nowhere, by chance. They called it the Cambrian Explosion. It happened around 530 million years ago. And, over the next 70-80 million years, the rate of evolution accelerated so fast that we came along, the human race. They still canât explain how that happened, except that it happened. Some people say it was by chance. Others, design. But who really knows?â
Dalhousie Grad House:Â TU 11.1.2011 | 6PM |1252 Lemarchant Street (across from SUB, map)
Please read the article âFinance capital: Why financial capitalism is no more âfictitiousâ than any other kindâ by the Platypus Historians Group (Platypus Review issue #7, October 2008)
Part 2:Â Battle in Seattle (2007)
âI donât blame you. I mean, I do, but â sh**, youâre not the problem. Youâre just doing your job, I guess. The people Iâm really trying to fight are the ones who destroy so much, and they hurt so many lives. Not just one. Literally, millions. And no one ever points a gun at them. You know, they just seem so â unaccountable. Untouchable. Just seems kind of f***ed that youâre â you and me are the ones that have to fight each other.â
Dalhousie Grad House:Â TU 11.8.2011 | 6PM
Please read the article "Whither Marxism? Why the occupation movement recalls Seattle 1999" (October 15, 2011)
The recent #occupy protests protests depart significantly from the anti-war politics that has defined activism on the Left for the past decade. Slogans decrying corporate greed now dominate the picket signs that until recently were used to condemn U.S. imperialism. However, does this spreading protest movement signal a new era of activism in the U.S.? Or, are these recent demonstrations expressing old and familiar discontents? Perhaps, as the role of Adbusters suggests, something of the 1990s has come back into vogue, bringing back to the fore the age-old hatred of the bankers and impersonal financial institutions, and opposition to neoliberal globalization, now in crisis. The spirit of the 1999 Seattle protest against the World Trade Organization seems to have returned, with a vengeance.
Please join Platypus in considering the historical sources of the ongoing anti-Wall Street protests through the lens of two recent films that highlight the popular imagination of contemporary Capitalism and its discontents.
Contact: dalhousie@platypus1917.org
UPDATE: Noam Chomsky's talk has been moved to Saturday Oct. 22 due to the rain. Platypus will still be in attendance. The time hasn't been determined.  Time: 6:00 PM. Dewey Square, Boston, MA.
Please make sure to coordinate with us at boston@platypus1917.org or use the contact tab.
This week, on 19th Oct 2011, the MassArt Coffee Break will meet at Dewey Square to attend a talk by Noam Chomsky.
Saturday, Oct 22|Â 6:00 PM
Noam Chomsky at OccupyBoston
FSU Soapbox, Dewey Square occupation.