http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/06/the-triumph-of-occupy-wall-street/395408/
OWS was not a failure. It changed our political focus and helped focus our attention on some real problems that need addressing.
If not for OWS things like income/wealth inequality, burdensome student debt and the move to a higher minimum wage would not have the strength they have today.
But while OWS may have successfully moved items like those into the national policitical discussion I think it's too early to call OWS a real success until actual legislation (or even private movement like we're seeing with companies like Wal-Mart upping their starting wages) is passed to help address concerns.
Talk is cheap.
Nearly four years after the precipitous rise of Occupy Wall Street, the movement so many thought had disappeared has instead splintered and regrown into a variety of focused causes. Income inequality is the crisis du jour—a problem that all 2016 presidential candidates must grapple with because they can no longer afford not to. And, in fact, it’s just one of a long list of legislative and political successes for which the Occupy movement can take credit.
Until recently, Occupy’s chief accomplishment was changing the national conversation by giving Americans a new language—the 99 percent and the 1 percent—to frame the dual crises of income inequality and the corrupting influence of money in politics. What began in September 2011 as a small group of protesters camping out in Manhattan’s Zuccotti Park ignited a national and global movement calling out the ruling class of elites by connecting the dots between corporate and political power. Despite the public’s overwhelming support for its message—that the economic system is rigged for the very few while the majority continue to fall further behind—many faulted Occupy for its failure to produce concrete results.
Yet with the 2016 elections looming and a spirit of economic populism spreading throughout the nation, that view of Occupy’s impact is changing.
OWS was not a failure. It changed our political focus and helped focus our attention on some real problems that need addressing.
If not for OWS things like income/wealth inequality, burdensome student debt and the move to a higher minimum wage would not have the strength they have today.
But while OWS may have successfully moved items like those into the national policitical discussion I think it's too early to call OWS a real success until actual legislation (or even private movement like we're seeing with companies like Wal-Mart upping their starting wages) is passed to help address concerns.
Talk is cheap.