Friday, December 2, 2011

Occupy Wall Street: Where Is It Headed?

As the Occupy Wall Street movement continues to sweep the nation, and the 99% continue to cry for accountability and justice within the financial system -- we should take heed in not only their movement, but also the glaring reality that the group is fighting a battle they simply cannot win. For despite the growing number of Occupy groups that have sprung up across the nation (both on and off college campuses) -- these protesters face a discouragingly long uphill battle. Starting with the negative media surrounding the group’s often fragmented goals, and ending with a financial situation that is often too complicated to explain to the average American -- OWS was doomed from the start. The blame the group seeks falls to no one individual, nor can the economies downturn be traced to one specific event. Beyond the desperate cries for Wall Street executives to be held accountable for what they have done -- what the movement has failed to realize is that they are not protesting the greed and corruption of the financial system, but those of American society. The full-bodied, drastic changes OWS wish to see implemented would only come only at the cost of broad-spectrum changes to American consumer culture and massive disruptions to the American economy.

Without even taking a stance on the movement, it is easy to see that the group’s vision completely outdistances the realities of our current situation. There is no doubt that the glaring disparities in wealth, education and living standards need to be addressed within our society -- but protesting the men and women who have the means and the ability to keep themselves in the 1% is not the best way to get there. To attack the principals of capitalism -- the foundation upon which this nation was built -- is but to alienate yourself to a position where you can no longer create the meaningful change you wish to create.
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Editorial Staff

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