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Category Archives: Politics
Notes From Jamison Square
There were 27 arrests at Jamison Square in Portland’s Pearl District last night. Yours truly wasn’t one of them, but I did spend some time at the park before the police moved in. Here’s my understanding of what happened. A … Continue reading
Posted in Media, Occupy Movement, Politics, Sociology
Tagged media, occupy, police, politics, portland
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The Debate Over Symbols At Occupy Portland
Two debates at the general assembly on October 9th stood out to me as possibly being thematically linked: the issue of whether or not to adopt the US flag as an official symbol of Occupy Portland and the issue of occupying or ceding Main Street, the bit of road between our twin encampments.
I saw Lindsay make a quick presentation about her flag proposal maybe half an hour before the general assembly got underway, and I had a chance to have a few words with her afterward, though I wasn’t the only one trying to clarify what she meant. Here is my understanding of the issue: Someone gave a speech during the march early that Sunday wherein it was suggested the Occupy movement “reclaim” the US flag as a symbol of the 99%. My understanding of Lindsay’s perspective (and I stress that it is my understanding, as I have no desire to put words in her mouth) is that she believes the flag has been soiled as a symbol—that the violence and oppression she alleges has been done under that banner make it ill-suited as a symbol for the movement. Continue reading
Posted in Occupy Movement, Philosophy, Politics, Sociology
Tagged occupy, politics, portland
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In Search of the Meaning of the Occupation Movement
One of the human species’ defining traits may be our need to find meaning. We are born into a world that seems devoid of objective purpose, yet we strive all the same to create and express subjective values, understanding, one hopes, that these senses of meaning are personal and not necessarily universal. All the same, as social animals, we seem driven to find common ground, to generate ideas around which we can build our societies and not only survive, but thrive.
Toward that goal, we fashion what become the dominant memes of our societies—we labor to express our individual and collective answers to the question “What’s it all about?” through philosophy and religion, through science and art, comedy and drama. Government, in the modern Western sense, seems to be (at least in theory) an attempt to codify what we hope are the best of these memes, to fairly secure our individual and collective liberty and happiness. Yet government, like any group or concept, remains a non-entity, incapable of generating meaning; so too, the Occupation movement cannot in and of itself create or define the purpose of its own existence—that task is left to us, the individuals who represent the 99%. The weary march of history has set us with the task of answering the question, “What’s this all about?” And until we can give solid answers to that question, as individuals and as a community, we lack the agency to create and control our nation’s future. Continue reading
Posted in Occupy Movement, Philosophy, Politics, Sociology
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Spotted at a MAX stop in downtown Portland
I’ll see you all there.



