Voices
from the Occupation
A
Revolution in our Sense of Self
“A self
does not amount to much, but no self is an island; each exists in a fabric of
relations that is now more complex and mobile than ever before.”
Jean-Francois Lyotard
Jean-Francois Lyotard
Over
the last four months, as the Occupy movement has set up camp in one square in
one city in one country and one continent after another – there has been debate and
discussion around ‘if’ this is a revolution; ‘if’ it is a revolution, what is
it a revolution for or about? First and foremost, I assert that the Occupy
Movement is a revolution in our sense of self as Citizens of the World and today’s article explains why.
Who Are
You?
This
question is surprisingly inflammatory. It
is often responded to either as an irrelevance, an intrusion or a challenge.
Yet we so often throw around assertions about self-interest, selfishness, self
aggrandisement and self defence without following up the inquiry with – what ‘self’
is being defended or promoted? So let us interrogate the idea of self.
The
primary view of self could be a physical view: Your Self, as a framework of
bones and connective tissues wandering the world in a biological mission of survival and propogation. Self defence would look like defending
yourself from physical attack, and your self interest would accord with your
physical needs being met. A limited but
surely rational view of self.
The
secondary view of self is ontological: Your Self as the Being in the body. The thoughts, opinions, beliefs, perspectives,
loves, hates and considerations of the mind you associate with your body. What would self defence and self interest look
like under those conditions? The defence
of one’s views and opinions, including the promotion of one’s ideas and
perspectives?
Both
these views of self can ultimately extend the primary view of self beyond the
physical boundaries of ‘you’. Whether
biological imperative or love, ‘you’ may see ‘self’ interest in taking an
action which saves something ‘you’ identify as more important than ‘you’. Rather than over riding or superseding the
self, this is simply an extension thereof. ‘You’ die and survive at the same
time. For example, a mother may throw
herself in front of a bullet for her child – dying herself but her child living
– her greater self interest was the survival of her child. A civil rights campaigner risks assassination
in promoting their ideals for a fair world – and is killed. They have died, but their self interest has
continued. The self in this case is
extended beyond the single body considered ‘you.
In
essence, it is possible and always has been, for the self to be extended to
encompass other people, species, and ideas.
There is
no Such Thing as Society
Whatever one’s view of self, it is not only a
symptom of a social order but the cause of its persistence. Throughout ages of human civilisation from Aztecs to Incas, Romans to Neanderthals,
Babylonians to the Mongols – the sense of self framed the society. A self as servant of omnipotent ‘God’, a self
as pure vessel and instrument of omnipotent ‘God’, a slave or property of
someone else, an owner of someone else, a happy prole, a worker, an entrepreneur.
Moving up to contemporaray history - there
was good reason why former British Prime Minister and free trade zealot
Margaret Thatcher told Britain ‘there is no such thing as society’. To create
the legislative and structural framework for the Britain she believed in,
Britain needed a revolution in its sense of self. Britain in 1979, and even 1987 when she made
the remark to Women’s Own magazine – was a very different place. There was an ‘entrenched’ view of society,
community and duty. The self was not
only one’s family, but one’s street and one’s town. Self interest was the success not only of one’s
self as an individual, but the prosperity of family, street and town.
In
order for free market capitalism to work, individual self interest is the
driving force. The profit of one over
another can only be validated in this way. So people not only had to shift
their view of self interest to narrowly focus upon themselves, but they went a
step further by believing that this, in fact, is the ONLY and NATURAL self
interest. Stalin did the same, so did Hitler, so did Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr.
It
seems we have been locked since before the Enlightenment in a see-saw debate
between ideologies which have the individual self interest as the bedrock (libertarianism,
capitalism) or the destroyer (20th century communism) of people.
The
Occupied Self as 21st Century Citizen of the World
One
of the extraordinary defining characteristics of the Occupy Movement is its
refusal to define itself within the left-right/capitalist-communist
narrative. Even people who identify
themselves as broadly of those beliefs, do not ascribe them to the Movement
itself. I assert that this is because
the people moved by the Occupy Movement, moved to take action - are in a revolution of the sense of self which fits
neither paradigm and makes elements of each perfectly palatable and equally
unconscionable.
In
the early 1990’s, politics and international relations theorists started to
speak of a new emerging phenomenon – the global civil society. Globalisation in the sense of communication
of ideas, pictures and experience transmitted person to person across the globe
in seconds, together with globalisation in terms of physical movement and
global institutions making the far away relevant and pertinent – was forming a
supra state relationship between people, or a globalised civil society.
Some
held that this was somehow bound up in liberal capitalist democracy. Francis Fukuyama’s ‘The End of History and the Last Man’ in 1993 spoke of the end of history being with liberal capitalist
democracy as the last great idea. In
fairness to Fukuyama, it was indeed left to the stage unchallenged for over
twenty years following the fall of the Berlin Wall and the Iron Curtain.
But
what people like Fukuyama, Kissinger, and others missed, was the impact on the
sense of self that would occur when global civil society started talking to
each other. A sense of self has
developed which can be described as the self as ‘Citizen of the World’. This is not to say that before Occupy, no one
cared what was happening in other parts of the world, this would be demonstrably
false. I mean instead that Occupy
exists, because the pool of people who would identify themselves as citizens of
the world, equate the interests of people anywhere in the world with their own,
and in fact have the two in their mind as synonymous – has not only grown, but
been able to seek, identify and communicate with each other all over the
world.
The
Citizen of the World view of self holds both individual self interest and the
rights of the other as one and sees no inherent conflict.
Being Unmessable With...
The capitalist, liberal, free trade thinkers made the
GDP and
global strategic position of the country – synonymous with self interest
and used pseudo darwinian survivalist arguments to support it. In the same way, 20th century
communism did so in negative – it made the prosperity of the nation
supreme, over and above individual interests.
When individuals identify their country’s GDP and global strategic position or a notion of supreme statehood as synonymous with their self interest, they become a puppet of the powerful of their country. People find themselves justifying all sorts, things entirely inconsistent with their personal morality, in the name of that 'self interest'. For example, suicide bombers bad, drone attacks good; greed wrong, profit good; theft wrong, tax ‘avoidance’ good; benefit cheat bad, bank bailout good; Boston Tea Party good, Occupy movement bad.
When individuals identify their country’s GDP and global strategic position or a notion of supreme statehood as synonymous with their self interest, they become a puppet of the powerful of their country. People find themselves justifying all sorts, things entirely inconsistent with their personal morality, in the name of that 'self interest'. For example, suicide bombers bad, drone attacks good; greed wrong, profit good; theft wrong, tax ‘avoidance’ good; benefit cheat bad, bank bailout good; Boston Tea Party good, Occupy movement bad.
When
people are Citizens of the World, they cease to be so easily swayed by narrow
nationalist, short term, separationist prerogatives. They don’t see just the new school being
built in their road, but the schools being blown to bits in Iraq and
Afghanistan for the oil revenues to pay for it.
They don’t see just the fragile continuance of the British Banking
industry due to government bailout, but the resulting indenture of future
generations, they see not only the growing middle class through the 20th
century in their own country, but the 3 billion people starving in the
world. They assess progress at a
different scale - they take in the world, not simply their country or region of
the world. They consider the wider
view. Progress for an island at the cost
of regression all around, it not true progress to the citizen of the
world. Their impatience for change comes
from their ownership of the world as their responsibility; their patience to
stay in it for the long haul from the same place.
In
economic terms, if I have five pounds and I share it with someone else, I have
less money. If I give someone my love,
compassion or consideration my Self expands to include that person. I am losing nothing. I get to experience that
love, compassion and consideration by giving it. Ungiven, it doesn’t exist. You can’t save, hoarde or steal love. It is only shared and experienced through
transmission. The crucial aspect to the
Citizen of the World view of self is that it has love as its core, not
economics.
It’s Time
to Get Excited
A
society that is global in conscience, built on love, co operation and equality
is not an aspiration. It exists, now, in
900 cities across the world. The Free
University campaign headed up by the Bank of Ideas in Occupy London is working
to educate, inform and engage debate on issues of economics, education, work,
technology, science, food production, politics and governance and all other
matters for a society to function – when composed by Citizens of the
World. In short, Occupy is a
conversation to create a world built by Citizens of the World. This
revolution in sense of self has been a long time coming, but it is here
now. An alternative society is being
built inside the existing one. History will look upon this as humankind's chrysalis moment – where the Citizens of the World turned a
recession into a revolution, and a world based on competition and fear of the
other, into one based on cooperation and love of each other as ourselves.






This is fascinating - well done. I shall need to read this more than once and more carefully to fully get what you are presenting but as a way of looking at where we have been and where we are going starting with ideas about the sense of self is brilliant. Love you.
ReplyDelete(Pls proofread-a couple little errors)
ReplyDeleteBeautifully put. I, and I hope many others, will send on your message with hope that good hearts will heed and endorse it.
WLx