Wednesday, November 16, 2011

The 1 percent celebrate. For now They overran Zuccotti Park, but stopping a movement gone viral won't be so easy By Arun Gupta / Salon

Wednesday, Nov 16, 2011 5:00 AM 22:33:42 PST

The 1 percent celebrate. For now

They overran Zuccotti Park, but stopping a movement gone viral won't be so easy

A pedestrian takes a picture of an empty and closed Zuccotti Park in New York, Nov. 15, 2011. (Credit: AP/Seth Wenig)
Right now in executive suites, political chambers and police command centers the 1 percent are cheering. They are slapping backs, grinning from ear to ear and bursting with delight. Messages of “congratulations” and “job well done” from the wealthy are surely flooding the offices of their political pets and police enforcers.
Why shouldn’t they celebrate? For 30 years they have ruled as masters of the universe, while we toil as their serfs. As long as politicians comforted the owning class with bailouts and tax cuts, and the corporate media cheered rising stock prices and record corporate profits, the 1 percent knew their house was in order.
But that order was upended two months ago. Since September they have been deviled by a genuine mass movement that has stripped the facade off their democracy. The 1 percent could no longer deny that it was the reverse-Robin Hood system they had created that diverted wealth upward while denying tens of millions full-time employment and healthcare, leaving people mired in poverty, and homeless or in foreclosure.
Within a few weeks of the beginning of Occupy Wall Street the 1 percent had already lost the debate. The movement of the 99 percent has put a public face on extreme suffering in a land of extreme wealth.
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Arun Gupta, a New York writer and co-founder of Occupy the Wall Street Journal, is reporting for Salon from occupation sites all over the United States. More Arun Gupta

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