Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Occupy Everywhere - Sept 17th - Day of Rage Against Wall Street and what it stands for!
Not everyone at the top of the economic system thinks it's a fair one. Why Jesse Estrinand many othersdecided to stand with the rest of us.

by Jesse Estrin
posted Nov 09, 2011


I first realized that I came from wealth when I discovered that not everybody's family had more than one house.It was a further revelation when, growing up, it dawned on me that not everybody else went to the same kind of school I did. I began to understand that my experience of elementary and high school going to nicely furnished schools with state-of-the-art facilities in a safe neighborhood of West L.A., and with very little diversity and an obsession with getting students into Ivy League collegeswas not the experience of the majority of other children my age. When you are surrounded by peers in the same financial bracket as yourself, it can take some time to recognize the bubble that separates you from the rest of society. This bubble is what I eventually came to understand as privilege.

[Image: image_preview] Jesse Estrin: "I love my family but feel great sadness at the system which hasallowed my family to accumulate such wealth at the expense of so manyothers. This is a time of collective grief. It has reached a new level.In my opinion it is the beginning of the Great Turning, and I wouldlike to stand up as one of the people who see it coming, and contributeto a renewed vision of a healthy, just, and beautiful world."


It was a long and bumpy journey to come to terms with what this privilege of wealth meant, especially in light of the glaring differences of experience that I began to see all around me. By the time I made it to college, and began to get involved with social and environmental activism, I would find myself in the confusing position of listening to angry insults and generalized stereotypes about "rich people." My new friendspeople I respected and admiredwere adamant about social justice but had a great amount of anger and resentment toward people with wealth. It was extremely awkward for me, and I found myself keeping my background hiddeneven to close friendsand never outing myself as someone who came from wealth. I felt a tremendous amount of embarrassment and shame around it. Interestingly, I discovered that many of my friends who also came from wealth felt the same way. It was actually very isolating. It wasn't cool to be a rich kid. It wasn't until I discovered Resource Generation, an organization that works with young people to leverage wealth and privilege for social change, that I found a network of other young people with similar backgrounds who wanted to talk about these taboo issues in order to make a difference in the world. Attending a conference they put on and meeting other young folks who came from the upper class and who shared a passion for social and economic justice was incredibly meaningful. I realized that for most people today, money remains a taboo subject that no one ever wants to talk about openly. When the Occupy Wall Streetprotests began, I decided it was time for me to step up, publicly outmyself as a part of the 1%, and share my outrage at the injustices thatare occurring globally.
This is often especially true for those who have money, and many of the people I met at Resource Generation had families that were strict about never talking about wealth or where it came from. To break out of the silence and actually talk about money was itself a liberating experience.Furthermore, talking about the ways it was most often accrued (through an unjust economic system with complex and subtle relationships to racism, classism, and oppression) was incredibly challenging, but at the same time empowering. It was through my own inner work around these issuesthrough workshops, conferences, and conversations with othersthat I came to realize my shame and embarrassment about coming from wealth didn't need to paralyze me and keep me silent. Only after I did this did I feel empowered to try and understand how I could best use my resources to change the social issues I felt most strongly about.While millions are struggling for survival, taxes for the wealthiest 1%have gone down! This is simply unacceptable. And the thing isit is unacceptable to every other person of wealth that I know.
When the Occupy Wall Street protests began, I decided it was time for me to step up, publicly out myself as a part of the 1%, and share my outrage at the injustices that are occurring globally. I have to admit that this was scary for me, because I didn't know what kind of reaction I would get. After all, this was a movement of and for the 99%, many of whom seemed to have anger towards the 1%. With the streets of San Francisco crowded with protesters shouting "We are the 99%!" and "Whose streets? Our streets!" I was less than excited to walk out into the open with a giant sign confessing my status as the 1%.


GREAT VIDEO BELOW - DON'T MISS IT FOR ANYTHING!!!
[URL="http://www.yesmagazine.org/new-economy/wall-street-occupiers-the-future-is-in-your-hands"][Image: image_thumb]
Wall Street Occupiers,
the Future Depends on You
[/URL]
Why David Korten hopes the #Occupy movement will finally change the Wall Street game.



I remember my heart beating as I made my sign, and seeing my friendsmany of whom I had never told about my economic statusreading it for the first time. It took them a moment to process it. I was surprised and relieved to feel supported by all of them, who encouraged me and commented that it was a powerful form of solidarity.And this is the same reaction I found at the protest itself: Most of my fears quickly subsided as I found myself welcomed and embraced by the whole range of diverse people marching that day. I was embraced as an important part of the equation whose voice also needed to be heard, and whose solidarity is needed in the collective call for equality and justice. And although I know that cross-class alliances may not always be easy or smoothconsidering the tensions that can often existI realized it is important for me to speak out about my story, even in the face of struggles or challenges that can come with it.As people who have first-hand knowledge of how the economic system is tilted in our favor we have an obligation to speak out about it rather than remain silent and continue to receive its benefits.
As it became clearer how, by being born into the upper class, I was given many unfair advantages in jump-starting a successful career, I became appalled at the accusation that many people aren't "successful" because they don't "work hard enough." While I and many others have more than we need, I am surrounded by friends who are struggling to make ends meet, get health care, and pay back massive student loans. While millions are struggling for survival, taxes for the wealthiest 1% have gone down! This is simply unacceptable. And the thing isit is unacceptable to every other person of wealth that I know. That is why Iand many others in the 1%are standing with the 99% in demanding a more just and equitable distribution of wealth. This will require effort from all sides100%.Social activist and Buddhist Joanna Macy writes about what she calls the "Great Turning," our current moment in time as an epochal and historic transition toward a life-sustaining civilization. As I have tried to make sense of the suffering and injustice I see all around me, I am realizing that if we are to survive, we will have to see a rapid and major shift that includes not only economic change, but ecological and spiritual transformation as well.One of the sayings that my grandmother used to tell us, over and over, was "to one whom much is given, much is expected." I come from a family deeply committed to philanthropy and social justice, and have recently joined the board of my family's nonprofit foundation dedicated to progressive and grassroots philanthropy. I have come to believe that those of us who have benefited the most from the system need to step upespecially at this point in timeand give back. As people who have first-hand knowledge of how the economic system is tilted in our favor, we have an obligation to speak out about it rather than remain silent and continue to receive its benefits.Advocating for more equal taxation is one of the few concrete ways that those with wealth can stand up united to give back to the whole. This is critical if we are going to build a large and cohesive movement around redistribution of wealth and long-term change to our economic system.At the end of the march in San Francisco we ended up on the front steps of City Hall. I found myself drawn to a group of people playing drums, singing, and dancing. Somebody came over and handed me a drum, and before I knew what was happening I was pulled through the pulsing rhythm and into my heart in the way only music can do. With our signs laid on the ground, suddenly we became a group of people using our bodies and voices to express our dissent, our desire for change, our anger, and our pain; but also our hopes, our dreams, and the pure, untouched human impulse to celebrate and make music in the face of it all.Here for me was the defining image, the common heart of the movement, where all class difference falls away, where race and gender and sexual preference merge and entwine, and it is simply hearts coming together to forge a new way forward. This was enough to fill me with inspiration and with hope for the future.Long after I picked up my sign and headed home, it was this image, this feeling of the pounding drums and stomping feet, that stayed with me and made me feel connected to and included in the very heart of this movement. And for this I feel grateful.
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
Reply


Messages In This Thread
Occupy Everywhere - Sept 17th - Day of Rage Against Wall Street and what it stands for! - by Peter Lemkin - 20-11-2011, 06:56 PM

Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  The Scholars Who Shill for Wall Street Magda Hassan 0 4,082 25-10-2013, 02:56 AM
Last Post: Magda Hassan
  International Resistance - OCCUPY MONACO Magda Hassan 2 3,826 12-01-2011, 11:08 AM
Last Post: David Guyatt
  Britains upcoming Summer of Rage could end in a Nazi death camp. 0 905 Less than 1 minute ago
Last Post:

Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 9 Guest(s)