Since early October, I've been closely following Occupy Wall Street, and the other protests it spawned. At first I was interested in it as a sort of social experiment, I've never heard of long-term camping as a means of protest, and I was curious to see how it would work out. As it's grown though, I've been thinking that there might be a couple of things happening in the movements that might be of interest to rationalist communities. I've not seen much discussion of Occupy and its tactics on LessWrong, and I think that if nothing else, they're at least interesting, so I thought I'd open it up here.
Each Occupy movement is a hotbed of community experimentation. Things like General Assemblies (horizontally democratic voting discussions to make policy decisions) and ad-hoc sanitation, fire, and security committees of all shapes and sizes are popping up all over. What's more, as the events grow in size, and as police pressure on the events rises, these constructs are going to be tested more and more. We have a wildly varied gene pool, strong environmental constraints, and a fast mutation rate. It's a big evolutionary experiment in community formation. And I think if we look closely, we can find a whole lot of useful hacks to make stronger communities.
The whole thing's a great big ethical, emotional, and legal mess. There are issues with how private/public property laws intersect with freedom of speech, there are matters of what level of force is justifiable for police to keep peace in certain situations, there're issues of whether health and safety trump rights of protest, on and on and on. If nothing else, there's an interesting discussion there, about what a truly rational set of laws would look like, and whether or not the protesters or the police are justified in their actions.
And at the risk of sounding like a James Bond villain, there are some serious options for us to take over the world here. In the sense at least that the Occupy movements' goal is lasting societal change, and they have a good deal of momentum already. If members of the rationalist community moved to help them, they might have a fair deal more. And if we introduce them to rational ways of thinking, if we inject those memes into the discussion, there's some serious opportunity here to help stop the world being so insane.
At least that's my take on the whole thing. And I'm not exactly strong in the ways of rationality yet, still reading and re-reading the Sequences (I keep getting lost somewhere halfway into the QM sequence, I think I need to practice mathematics more to understand it on a more instinctive level) and I'd certainly appreciate the view of those Stronger than me.
A fundamental value of the political left is multiculturalism and egalitarianism -- the notion that "everyone ought to be 'equal'": equal in personal value, equal in economic outcome, equal in productivity and talent, equal in rank. These simply aren't values of the right. And from that root extends the notion that all beliefs are "equal".
In that sense, post-modernism is a 'core value' of the political left just as much as 'tradition' is a core value of the political right.
... The one thing protestors definitely have in common is the existence of strongly-held beliefs and/or opinions. They're not there to have their minds changed; they're there because they believe -- strongly -- that "the truth" is being ignored.
That's not exactly a hotbed arena for rational discourse.
This post is much better than its grandparent and I hope you can write such stuff not as responses to questions. I'd like to see more like this and less:
Not the best way to begin a post.
"there have been"!? Also, quantity of speeches or something like that would be important, not instances.
Not ideal to caricature like that, but not terri... (read more)