Thursday, November 17, 2011

Former IVC Student Reports: "Occupy Cal: The Movement of All"


Damilare "Dare" Oladapo is a former IVC student currently in his first semester at Cal. This is his report of the week's activities:
On June 12, 1993, I watched from the safe haven of my house as protesters took to the streets of Lagos defied the military order and demonstrated against the nullification of a free and fair election that should have declared the late MKO Abiola, President of Nigeria. As a child I lacked both a voice and a discerning intellect and all I could do was to share my parents’ catharsis for the protest.


On November 9, 2011, I stripped away the feeling of pity and fear and embraced pride and camaraderie as I protested alongside fellow students, faculty of UC Berkeley and the Berkeley community against the 81% tuition hike and the growing income inequality that plagues this society. We chanted, we raised our voices and fists to the sky and marched our cause to the city and the historic steps of Sproul plaza.

And now as I reflect, I realize that like the protest of June 12, 1993 in Lagos where the poor, the middle-class, tradesmen and women, university students, political factions, and countless others protested against the military government, the Occupy Cal movement included the different facets of the UC Berkeley and Berkeley community (Men, Women, Trans-gender, Whites, Blacks, Latinos, Heterosexuals, Homosexuals, Homed, Homeless). We all assembled with one voice to protest for one cause; we forgot our self-interests; we put ourselves in harm’s way of the weather and the brutality of the police. This indeed is a movement of the people, by the people, and for the people.
(Robert Hass, UC Berkeley professor, former Poet Laureate of the United States
and Pulitzer Prize winner, is batoned by UC Berkeley police November 10, 2011)
However, though Occupy Cal may generate emotions and rally individuals together into a community, its goal of change is far from being reached. And as the opponents of the Occupy Movement gaffe at the incredulity and austerity of our General Assemblies, we must realize that a consolidation of our oppositional fronts, which Dean Spade calls “differential consciousness,” is our hope for success.

“Differential Consciousness” is the application of all four forms of oppositional consciousness — Equal rights form, Revolutionary form, Supremacist form, Separatist form — that Chela Sandoval laid out in Methodology of the Oppressed. Presently, each Occupy Movement’s General Assembly has embraced one or two of these forms as the arbiter of its movement’s strategy. However, this is an ineffective approach because an application of either one of these forms would only alienate us from ourselves (the public). And just as the Trans-gender Movement championed by Dean Spade and notable others have utilized the differential consciousness, so also should the Occupy Movement. We need to adapt to the strategies of the enemy we confront; merely, calling out an ethos argument would only demonstrate us as the bitter and irrational sect of society. A simple example of the application of the differential consciousness took place — and am proud to say — at the Berkeley protest where protesters sought an end to the police brutality by identifying the police brutes as members of the “99%” and not separating them as tools or members of the infamous 1% (Equal rights form); whilst others chanted “Shame!” at the police for beating protesters (separatist and supremacist form). Together, we marshaled the police off the steps and occupied the Sproul Plaza till dawn; these are the possible effects of mobilizing our different fronts together.

(Lauren Winder - Sproul Plaza)
In conclusion: to truly effect change in the US and around the world, there must be a movement of all; if not, we will derail, like the protest of June 12, 1993, into a mere historical movement that effected no significant change.
Rebel Girl is proud to report that Dare, too, like Lauren, is an English major. At Cal, they study with Professor Robert Hass.




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15 comments:

Anonymous said...

I like the point Jackie Goldberg makes in that documentary about the FSM students taking seriously the concepts they learned in their education and acting on them. Do continue to post these updates from the students - it's nice to see what they're doing and thinking.

Anonymous said...

Golly gee, perhaps they ought to occupy the privileged, elite ruling class? Guess not though, because they need those Warshington mobsters to strongarm the rest of us into paying for all their bad choices in life...

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204323904577040373463191222.html

Anonymous said...

I like the reports too. Very inspiring. How many of our students get into Berkeley anyway?

Anonymous said...

Not very many! And the ones who do seem to be taking advantage of it. Go bears!

Anonymous said...

I loved these posts this week. Thanks. I kept coming back to look at them.

Anonymous said...

Cool. Go Bears!

(Dare also took classes at Saddleback.)

Anonymous said...

It's certainly ironic these self proclaimed "free speech" advocates align themselves with the party (Democrat) that holds an indisputable record of limiting free speech the most. The fairness doctrine comes to mind; by liberals to shut down any debate from conservative points of view. And take a good look at what our Chavezesque admin does, all designed to limit free speech. Jus say'n...

These all self important youngsters aren't accomplishing anything, and there's no parallel to Africa or the mid East as this article and the state run media suggest. Just another losing ploy by the white house, meant to promote class warfare.

Roy Bauer said...

3:56, assertion is not substitute for argument.

Anonymous said...

3:56, that didn't even make logical sense.

Anonymous said...

Makes sense to us at Saddleback: keep at them Roy. Assertions they are sans evidence.

Anonymous said...

It’s the Occu-poo “movement.” LOL

Anonymous said...

I have to weigh in here. Nobody's taking away anyone's free speech in these demonstrations. These are supposed to be educated kids. They should already know if they break the law they will probably be arrested. As I understand it’s like those Muslim students at UCI. Any person’s or group’s alleged “free speech” that takes away other’s rights to free speech is NOT free speech. Impeding commerce, traffic, forcing unsanitary conditions in public places, property damage costing cities & taxpayers, violence, etc... is NOT free speech either. Come on BvT, I thought you were an expert with this stuff.

Anonymous said...

The original FSM movement was a broad coalition across the political spctrum - I think the Occupy movement has a bit of that range as well. It's a good thing.

Thanks for these posts and links.

Anonymous said...

I have to disagree, it's not a good thing at all.

Here’s the rap sheet on your occupiers. 302 violent incidents! Sure you’ll say because it’s from Breitbart it’s not credible. As you will see it’s not from Brietbart, he’s just the messenger connecting the dots where the state run media has failed, no doubt at the direction of the white house.

http://biggovernment.com/jjmnolte/2011/10/28/occupywallstreet-the-rap-sheet-so-far/

BvT, please explain to us how the Tea Party, as alleged by the state run media and the white house, was violent, racist, and often the speculation of a new form of domestic terrorism?

Anonymous said...

Well, 1:32, do you recall the signs threatening armed violence at the baggers' gatherings?

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...