The instigator: Adbusters founder on sowing the seeds of the 'Occupy' revolution

Adbusters founder and editor, Kalle Lasn, reflects on his Vancouver magazine's role as Occupy Wall Street instigator and agitator, and explores the possibility of a global uprising.

Adbusters posters that helped incite Sept. 17 action in New York.

Adbusters

Adbusters posters that helped incite Sept. 17 action in New York.

Adbusters founder and editor, Kalle Lasn.

The Tyee

Adbusters founder and editor, Kalle Lasn.

Editor's Note: This piece originally appeared in www.The Tyee.ca.

Since Sept. 17 the streets of south Manhattan have been chockablock with people protesting — what, exactly? At times not even they seem sure, perhaps because their cause for being there is so vast and miasmic that they can grab hold of any part of it and make a credible claim for anger. Banks too big to fail. Soaring college costs (and debt) in a time of jobless youth. Cronyism, lobbyism, corporatism, deregulation. It all falls under a hashtag that began far from the pepper spray and mass arrests, in the offices of Vancouver's Adbusters magazine, as #OccupyWallStreet.

The movement has been at turns derided by Republican presidential candidates ("I think it's dangerous, this class warfare," Mitt Romney said.) and by major media (quoth a New York Daily News editorial: "This bunch ought to get down on their knees in thanks that America's capitalist Founding Fathers saw fit to protect the privileges of the dumb and obnoxious along with everyone else"). Nonetheless it has mushroomed from a few die-hards in the early going to a pulsing micro-city of thousands and has spawned smaller protests around America. Unions and student groups have joined in solidarity, and on Oct. 15, Toronto and Vancouver will see their own "Occupy" demonstrations.

Although it was inspired by the methods and successes of the Arab Spring, the original expectations were more muted. When Vancouver-based Adbusters presented the idea to the world, it did so in the form of a poster that featured a dancer posed on the shoulders of the Wall Street bull statue, a foggy clamour of demonstrators behind her. The poster asked the question, "What is our one demand?" Activist groups seized on it, as did the hacktivist group Anonymous, and a collective began to form. The arrests of 700 demonstrators on the Brooklyn Bridge on Oct. 1 pushed the event to the fore of media coverage.

To hear tell from Adbusters founder and editor Kalle Lasn now, the question of that one demand still needs to be answered concisely and directly. But as the movement overspills Wall Street, he describes it as the most successful in the 22 years he and his magazine have been advocating "culture jamming," which originally sought to subvert consumerism. Lasn sat down in the office of Adbusters — south of False Creek, with a fine view of downtown Vancouver — to address that singular demand, his renewed faith in the left and the soft power of ballerinas.

On the ballerina atop bull imagery of Adbusters' original #OccupyWallStreet poster:

"To me it was a sublime symbol of total clarity. Here's a body poised in this beautiful position and it spoke of this crystal-clear sublime idea behind this messy business. On top of the head it said, 'What is our one demand?' To me it was almost like an invitation, like if we get our act together then we can launch a revolution. It had this magical revolutionary feel to it, which you couldn't have with the usual lefty poster which is nasty and visceral and in your face. The magic came from the fact this ballerina is so sublimely tender.

"There's some idea there, and the power of it comes from the fact that most of the time you'll never be able to answer what it is. It's just there. It's just a magic moment that you can feel in your gut that it's there, and you're willing to go there and sleep there and go through the hardship and fight for it. Once you start answering it too clearly then the magic is gone."

On the revolt's many parents:

"We have a network of 90,000 culture jammers who are tuned in to us at various levels. The biggest brainstorms happened between myself and Adbusters' senior editor Micah White, who lives in Berkeley. We were the two key people who got excited, and more and more excited, morning after morning, and eventually decided on that hashtag, #OccupyWallStreet. When we launched that hashtag, the twittering came on so hard and fast that it drove us. We suddenly said, 'Hey, this could actually happen.'

"Anonymous gave us that — I don't know what you call it, that sort of anarchy cred. All of a sudden this organization that has this strange mystique to it, they're saying, 'Yeah, occupy Wall Street!' That first video of theirs was quite a delightful little piece of videomaking, and at that moment I could feel that we got a mighty boost forward.

"We always thought of ourselves as the catalyzers, the people who set that meme, as we like to call it, in motion. And right from the start we decided that we're not going to play a part on the street, that if our meme flies, if people love it, then we're happy to come up with posters, and we did send them all kinds of handbills and we sent them corporate America flags. So we left it pretty well up to them.

"But we do try to influence it on the deeper level. Our poster said, 'What is our one demand?' They didn't like that. And we thought it was very important, for them to have peoples' assemblies and for them to demonstrate how radical democracy really works. We thought it was a mistake for them not to discuss what some of the demands could be, and we pushed them very hard to get some of their demands together, so when a New York Times reporter phones you up and says, 'What do you want?' that you can at least answer that question. That debate is still continuing now, about whether we should have that one demand.

"I've felt like this all my life and even though I'm kind of an old guy now, I must admit age doesn't seem to come into it. I feel like this is the first time in the 20-plus year history of Adbusters that we really have a chance to pull something off, and it's we. Let's face it, most of the people, probably 90 percent of the people camping out on Wall Street are young people, and even though I'm not sleeping there I still feel it's we. It takes old people like me and theoreticians like Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, who are writing for our next issue, and people like David Graeber, the anarchist, and Saul Newman, the guy who recently wrote a book about anarchism. It takes all kinds of people to launch a revolution, but the cutting edge is young people who put their asses on the line."

On watching the occupation from afar:

"I must admit I was very buoyed that people immediately started organizing in New York, and we knew that this thing was going to happen, even weeks in advance, that there were pre-meetings. But, you know, when that first Saturday came, Saturday, Sept. 17, then I did have this feeling that the whole damn thing could fizzle, and that we would be there for a day, and if we were lucky half a dozen people would stay there all night, and the whole thing could be just a puff of wind that came and went.


Like what you just read? Support high quality local journalism. Become a member of Crosscut today!

Comments:

Posted Fri, Oct 14, 7:58 a.m. Inappropriate

More here:

http://biggovernment.com/thomasryan/2011/10/14/the-email-archive-of-the-occupywallstreet-movement-anarchists-socialists-jihadists-unions-democrats/

BlueLight

Posted Fri, Oct 14, 8:27 a.m. Inappropriate

Thank you for this article. I don't think we should call it a "Robin Hood" tax which is based on a story of "stealing" from the rich. It's not stealing if the tax is intended to repair the damage caused by our financial and investment industry and to avoid future damage to our economy. It's a "Reparations Tax."

TSweeney

Posted Fri, Oct 14, 9:40 a.m. Inappropriate

It is easy to romanticize, dismiss or demonize the Occupy Wall Street phenomenon because it is so inchoate: like a Rorschach image you can read into it whatever you want. Does this reduce it to just another instance of meaningless cultural fluff? Not necessarily.

From the Tea Party on the right to Occupy Wall Street on the left there is a fundamental consensus that all is not well in America. The problem is that everyone has a different answer as to what the problems are, who to hold responsible and what needs to be done. So the Occupy Wall Street crowd is pointing the finger in a general way at the manipulations and obscene wealth of financial capitalism. It's not an indefensible initial target -- these slick folks do not create economic value, they just rearrange it. They are running a casino system and collecting the house percentage.

The social value of Occupy Wall Street is that it gets unhappy victims off their butts and into the streets. You have to start somewhere. The first existential act is to believe that you can have an effect, that you have some choice other than passively playing the victim. Once the basic commitment is made, the details will be generated by the process of engagement itself. No doubt it will be slow and messy, but it's an essential first step.

woofer

Posted Fri, Oct 14, 1:44 p.m. Inappropriate

It's a "transaction tax" same as a "sales tax" which you pay when you buy something. Wall street can handle this, it will just be priced into their models. It's not likely to slow much down though, same as a sales tax doesn't prevent you from buying something.

GaryP

Posted Fri, Oct 14, 7:47 p.m. Inappropriate

Did Adbusters also inspire the post game mayhem, violence, and destruction following the Vancouver Canucks loss in the 2011 N.H.L Stanley Cup? How many arrests have the 'occupiers' racked up worldwide so far? How much taxpayer loss has been accumulated? How many businesses have suffered loss due to the mobs? The glorification of the 'occupiers' and their string-pullers is truly pathetic.

animalal

Posted Sun, Oct 16, 11:11 a.m. Inappropriate

GaryP: Yes, a transaction tax is like a small sales, perhaps 0.25%. Keep in mind that much of the crazy hedge fund and wild programmed trading action is more in the sub 1% profit range than the 400% range you might assume. While that may not sound like much, if you do that with the huge sums these hedge fund managers control and you do often enough you can make a (billion dollar) living at it. Peter DeFazio in Oregon introduced the "Let Wall Street Pay for the Restoration of Main Street Bill" in 2009 to do just this. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Let_Wall_Street_Pay_for_the_Restoration_of_Main_Street_Bill
Passing this really would "put wall street to sleep." You would see a perhaps less than 1/1000 the number of trades of today and stock prices would stabilize. Things like a company's sales and profits would start to determine a stocks price. Radical stuff I know, but lets give it a whirl. Can't be worse than the roulette wheel woofer (above) describes.

GreenerEE

Posted Sun, Oct 23, 9:02 p.m. Inappropriate

Time for change. But not change by idiots who use idealism to try to figure out economic solutions.

Login or register to add your voice to the conversation.

Join Crosscut now!
Subscribe to our Newsletter

Follow Us »