We
are in Third World War - an economic war. And the weapon is debt’
The
Occupy Wall Street movement staged a day of protests in the US on May
Day. Meanwhile RT spoke to an Occupy London activist who said the
group is only gaining momentum as more people understand they are
being robbed by their governments.
RT,
2
May, 2012
The
Occupy Wall Street movement staged a day of protests in the US on May
Day. Meanwhile RT spoke to an Occupy London activist who said the
group is only gaining momentum as more people understand they are
being robbed by their governments.
Thousands
took to the streets of American cities from coast to coast to mark
May Day and call for a nationwide strike.
Between
50 and 100 people joined them in London by moving into Paternoster
Square with tents and supplies on Tuesday night. However they were
forced to leave by City of London officers just hours later.
The
renewed activism comes more than six months after members of Occupy
London were prevented from occupying the square in heart of the City
of London. Many thought the movement appears to be on its last legs.
Jamie Kelsey-Fry from the Occupy London convinces RT otherwise.
RT:
You said yourself that this place [St. Paul’s Cathedral in London]
is almost haunted – the tents used to be right here just where you
are standing. Is the Occupy movement dead?
Jamie
Kelsey-Fry: Absolutely not, obviously. One of the things of camp
movement is that we are allowed to put more energy into the movement
itself. It was actually becoming very difficult to sustain the camp
because it became very large. If you bear in mind that five months
ago none of us thought the camp would last this long, we are still
developing our ideas and have them move forward, have to use outrage
to escalate the movement, to generate solidarity and otherwise really
of reaching the public consciousness to get across our very simple
ideas of social, environmental and economic justice. So, we have
really just begun in that sense really.
RT:
It is no coincidence that we are here in one of the financial hearts
of London – London Stock Exchange is not very far from here at all.
Bankers are still being paid their bonuses, as we are hearing from
newspapers every day. The 1 per cent appears very much to be still in
charge. Have you had any impact at all?
JKF:
Absolutely. I think there have been some measures by the government
because they have such an influence on the public view on the
financial system, that there has been a leading banker who has had to
turn down his bonus. Sir Fred was made to turn back his knighthood.
But I think these are just punitive measures. I think they show that
the government realizes that there is a lot of public support for the
issues we are raising awareness about. So they are taking some
measures to make it look as if they are doing something.
You
are absolutely right. In terms of 1 per cent remains the 1 per cent –
that is completely untouched. Also, if you bear in mind the fact that
last year of the hundred top Footsie (FTSE) the average pay raise is
49 per cent. Everything business is usual, but what is different is
that people are now aware about this. People are now entering this
dialog, and they are beginning to challenge the assumptions that have
not been challenged for a very long period of time, which is that can
we continue with such an unsustainable, undemocratic, unjust economic
system.
RT:
So far Occupy looks kind of a sort of open-air party for people who
have something to lose. What are people in the movement willing to
sacrifice in order to achieve those goals?
JKF:
People are sacrificing their jobs, their relationships – not by
intention. Many people have lost their homes. I have never been in a
movement where people are that dedicated. The general portrayal of us
is being people who are, you know, jobless, on the dole, losers is
absolutely the opposite to the reality. The reality is that a whole
span of people from across the general public have been motivated to
dedicate themselves, a hundred per cent to this movement. This means
that a very small proportion of us are actually experienced activists
and by far the highest amount of us are people who are just from
ordinary walks of life, who have gone “I wanna make a stance. We
have to do something about this unsustainable system.” And this is
a movement for us to do that in.
RT:
It has been five months since you came to this area. Let’s talk
about your goals. Lots of people seem to have very limited
understanding of what you are actually trying to achieve. Just take
me through it.
JKF:
When we took this space on October 15th, over a period of 48 hours
some about 3,500 people took part in generating what was called our
initial statements. So really within 40 hours we made it very clear
why we were here. We are questioning what we see as an unsustainable
economic system, an undemocratic economic system, a political system
that seems to be working with profits before people; it is
intertwined with the corporations. We are also questioning the idea
of regulated bodies being managed by the people they are meant to be
regulating. We also question the idea that perpetual war for
resources is something that is going to destroy the planet. So we
made it very clear. We nailed our ideals to the wall within 48 hours.
An economic system based on infinite growth, but which relies on
found out resources, is flatly absolutely embarrassing.
RT:
Let’s broaden it out a bit and talk a little bit about the global
economic situation, if you like through the prism of your movement.
The European project is constantly in the papers and it looks like
it's on its last legs, how do you see it playing out?
JKF:
What we see it as – and when I say we, I am speaking “I” as a
member of Occupy – it’s very clear for the movement from the
beginning that the global economic system is on its last legs. About
nine months ago we had a leading trader on BBC news live who said
very clearly that governments don’t rule the world, Goldman Sachs
does. So it’s very clear to us that what’s happening in Europe,
what’s happening in Greece, is just a symptom of this disease. And
this disease is going to continue to get worse unless we as people,
as a grassroots movement actually take control ourselves of this
economic system which is being run by very few people, that has just
run completely out of control.
What’s
very frightening about this gentleman who was saying that Goldman
Sachs rules the world is that he was reveling in it – he
apologized, but he was reveling in it, because he said “If you
understand this situation you will know how to make a huge amount of
money out of the global collapse.” Now for any human being to be in
a situation where they can benefit hugely, buy massive yachts from
the suffering of millions and millions in the world – we should be
embarrassed of being part of that same human race. And we should be
embarrassed to stand by and do nothing about it.
RT:
It seems as though a movement like Occupy would be in support of
bailout of countries like Greece – for the sake of solidarity of
workers, that kind of thing.
JKF:
A very interesting question. I’m not the Occupy movement, I’m one
person in it, but I am not sure that the movement would support
bailing out. Exactly where we are standing at the moment was the
famous tent city university and we had an evening of solidarity with
Greece. And there was about 50 Greek people here and there was a
fascinating noise. And they kept going back to a very interesting
point – we are in Third World War and it’s an economic war and
the weapon is debt. And it was a fascinating thing to say, a very
revolutionary phrase.
I
think the movement is moving more towards a revolutionary solution to
the situation we are in rather than a reformist [one]. If you look at
the revolutionary, it has much more to do with the idea of dispensing
with the organizations like the IMF, dispensing with all
organizations that have ruled and regulated the way that financing
world is run because we believe them to be completely corrupt,
completely in the pockets of people that are meant to be regulating
and moving over. And the same with governments, they are completely
intertwined with all these financial decisions. They have an ear for
corporations, they have an ear for global financial institutions –
much-much more than they have an ear for the people of the country
they are meant to be looking after and supporting. So in the
situation what is happening in Greece and then coming out with the
statements “the Third World War is here, it’s an economic war and
the weapon is debt,” that really rang a bell with a lot of people.
If
you look at Iceland – now they are something that is quite
inspiring in a sense that they absolutely ignored what they have been
told to do. They didn’t go for being bailed out in any way. In fact
at the moment they are crowdsourcing their constitution themselves.
They dispense with all the leaders they believe to be corrupt and
they were banging their saucepans just like in Argentina until they
have a leader they believed in. And they are going much further. They
are now actually chasing and wanting to bring to court those bankers
that brought the country to debt in the first place. So they are
taking control themselves and they are doing right.
RT:
Can the crowdsourcing really work on the national and international
scale though?
JKF:
Yes. In terms of a national scale with Iceland they are simple
crowdsourcing their constitution themselves and it is managing well.
This new technology has absolutely revolutionized the speeches and it
revolutionizes the way that we move towards radical change in
activism. And it has only just started. The fact is – yes, I can
see in the future, within a lifetime, a situation when there’s a
form of global referendum. If we have that, I think very quickly the
leaders and the people around financial institutions and corporations
will be put to shame because when they would literally hear the
voices of the 99.9 per cent of the planet – then they will be put
to shame, they will be put into the shade, and ideally they’ll go.
RT:
Governments in different countries are obviously opposed to you
occupying places and you were evicted from here on a court order. The
US has reportedly rolled out what it’s calling “a microwave
weapon” to disperse crowds. Are you making plans for dealing with
those kinds of technology?
JKF:
This country last year bought large water cannons to dispense with
demonstrators or activists. And I think that’s kind of a scare
story – I know that it’s true that the military in the States may
have bought this weapon that can use soundwaves to kind of disempower
people that may be in the streets but I think that’s a symptom of
something far worse that is coming. Occupy is the canary in the mine
as we can see. But eventually the rest of this world will realize
that they have been robbed and they have been put into subjugation by
completely unjust undemocratic unsustainable financial systems. And
they will all as one become furious eventually.
So
I think those kind of weapons may well be something to take much more
seriously in say six months’ time or eight months’ time. In this
country the austerity measures haven’t really hit as hard as they
are going to. It’s easy for people to just stay within their own
“little pub” if you don’t mind the world. But when the
austerity measures cut into their actual lives, come right on to
their doorstep and enter their front door, and cut them away from a
lot of what they are used to, there will be enormous growth in people
who are trying to find this kind of economic justice that Occupy
represent
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