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Health & Fitness

Occupying... Space

Lack of focus in the Occupy movement will be its downfall.

“Afflict the comfortable; comfort the afflicted."

Writer Finley Peter Dunne was talking about newspapers when he wrote a version of this many years ago, but I was reminded of it. the other day when I saw the ongoing media coverage of "Occupy (fill in the blank)."

I definitely think the comfortable -- those who live in their own insular worlds of privilege -- need to be prodded, poked and afflicted.

So I asked someone I know who works closely with "the comfortable" (financial institutions and wealthy investors) if they ever discussed the Occupy movement. The answer? No. Not even on their radar screen.

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I agree that big financial institutions did us all a disservice. I feel awful that so many have lost their jobs.

At the same time, something bothers me about this movement. Makes it different from the peace movement of the 1960s. I hate to even talk about it, because it makes me seem conservative, when I'm anything but.

What I am is realistic.

I'm sure that protesters don't intend to harm the small local businesses whose livelihoods have been impacted by the protests. And some businesses are actually getting more business from the traffic. But still, many small businesses in the protest areas have been hurt. And that does bother me.

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As usual, in Oakland any protest is an opportunity for do-badders to do bad. Such was the case the other week with throwing of paintballs and hazardous substances at police. And then, there sure are a lot of police trying to keep order. At a time municipalities can't afford police, diverting them from actual crimes seems counter-productive to society. But they're needed to keep order. The situation makes me uncomfortable.

What's more troublesome is that the movement seems doomed to fail because it is unfocused. When you ask for everything AND the kitchen sink -- a diverse list of "demands", from wanting 15 percent of NYPD and FDNY to be bisexual, a $20 minimum wage and free tuition to ending the Fed, chances are you'll get nothing.

Nada. Zip.

The peace movement wanted the Vietnam War to end. They didn't add "and let's legalize marijuana, give out free condoms in high schools and ratify the ERA" even if they wanted all those things.

And so, what actually can be achieved by this protest? With the peace movement, politicians were influenced, and I suppose that's the hope of the Occupy protesters as well.

But, times are different now. The Republicans have a vested interest in keeping this movement alive, in fostering discontent, because they hope it'll unseat Obama. 

Few politicians are going to be influenced to make things better right now. Not so close to an election year in a polarized environment that's all about power and not one bit about making things better for the people.

And then, take jobs. More jobs is a worthy goal. People do want to work and can't find jobs. But: I've worked in business my whole life. If there's no work, and reduced revenue, who's going to create the jobs? Do we expect business to make jobs out of whole cloth? Put people on the payroll when there's nothing for them to do? And no money to pay them? Shall we simply mint more money and hand it out?

And then, how will the movement define success? What's a win going to look like?

And what's their exit strategy?

With the Arab Spring, hey, I get it. I do. Corruption. Torture. Despots and dictators.

But when I look at protestors armed with the latest iPhones, iPads and Burbery scarves, well, I just can't see it as the same thing. In some ways it's an embarrassment to protest movements made up of people with real problems. If America's worst problem is that there are insufficient bisexuals in the NYPD (and I am SURE they're there, they're just not out), then do we really have a problem that warrants this kind of protest?

And then, who really are the afflicted? This past year I've seen shockingly long lines out the door at Apple stores in San Francisco, Los Gatos and Valley Fair: people waiting to the latest expensive Apple toy the day it comes out. Regular people, too. Not comfortably wealthy. I'm sure some are unemployed. I would put money on it.

The contrast is jarring.

People who need help should be helped. But I can't see how the Occupy movement is going to achieve that.

The whole thing just troubles me and in the end it seems like all this movement is doing is occupying space.

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