© Seth Wenig/APA sign in Zuccotti Park during an Occupy Wall Street protest in New York, 10 November 2011.
Introduction by Tom Engelhardt:When it set up its campsite at Zuccotti Park, Occupy Wall Street was facing in only one direction: toward the financial heart of the planet two blocks away. The police, who promptly surrounded the encampment and
organized their
own occupation of the neighborhood, were in a sense facing in the other direction: toward Ground Zero, where new glass-sheathed towers were rising to replace those destroyed on September 11, 2001. The police, up-armored in full riot gear, with the sort of surveillance paraphernalia, helicopters, and high-tech cameras that were a far more minimal aspect of domestic policing before 9/11, were clearly thinking counter-terrorism.
They were the representatives not just of New York's billionaire mayor and the bankers and brokers who had previously made the area their own, but of the ever more militarized national security state that had blossomed like some errant set of weeds in the ruins of the World Trade Center towers. They were domestic grunts for a new order in Washington as well as New York that has, by now, lost the ability to imagine solving problems in a civil and civilian fashion.
They represent those who have ruled this country since 9/11
in the name of our safety and security, while they made themselves, and no one else,
safe and secure. It is an order that has based itself on
kidnapping,
torture,
secret prisons,
illegal surveillance,
assassination, permanent war, militarized solutions to every problem under the sun, its own set of failed occupations in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the closest of relations with a series of crony capitalist corporations intent on making money off anyone's suffering as long as the going is good.
Comment: For a deeper understanding of what's really going on here, please see the following links:
Political Ponerology: A Science of Evil Applied for Political Purposes
Ponerology: The Study of Evil - Interview with Marian Wasilewski