It's unfortunate but, this is an important event. Democracy is messy at times. That there are these events doesn't take away from the importance of OWS.
But "important event" and "importance of OWS" is just rhetoric. It doesn't justify or excuse these events.
And these events--or anecdotes, as you've also called them--aren't being presented without context. They're being presented within the context of OWS. Wherever we find OWS gatherings, we find these events. We find failures of sanitation. we find allegations of theft and battery and rape and statutory rape. We find safety hazards. We find violent clashes with the police. We find a disregard for permits and other elements of the due process our society has already agreed upon.
We don't find these things everywhere the we find the OWS movement. But we do find them a lot. These anecdotes establish a recurring theme for the movement. And this recurring theme speaks directly to the values and validity of the movment, and of the people involved. These values, expressed repeatedly in these anecdotes, must be considered when we consider the "importance of OWS".
Maybe a movement with the recurring themes of "angry at Wall Street" and "casual disregard for human civilization" is important in some way, but I don't think it's necessarily important in a good way.
And note that this recurring, negative theme is not shared by other recent movements. The Tea Party gatherings seemed to have no problems with rape or theft or human waste. Over the past ten years, there have been many gatherings and demonstrations and movements, that have not had these recurring themes.
There's a floating union protest here in San Diego, that's been going on for at least the past ten years. Protestors move their signs and pamphlets around the city, picketing the evildoing corporation of the week. You can always find them scattered here and there throughout the commercial districts of the city. They have no police problems, no poop problems, and no problem clearly articulating their message.
Throughout the Bush years, protestors were a frequent sight in the city center and other public places. Protestors, and counter protestors. Never did we see the recurring themes we see in the OWS movement.
You say that these anecdotes--these recurring themes--don't take away from the "importance" of the movment. What you fail to realize is that to a lot of people, these themes are emerging as what is
really important about the movement. At the very least any reasonable evaluation of the movement will have to square the "important" themes with these other themes.
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Consider this a sidebar. I'm having trouble articulating this thought. It goes something like this:
Most modern, "civilized" humans place value on certain practices regarding the management and disposal of human waste. This is not a value we set aside lightly. Call it an inhibition.
What kind of environment would we have to create, to encourage people to set aside their inhibitions, to reject the value of human waste managment principles? What kind of environment seemingly attracts people who are so close to giving up such a well-established and thoroughly socialized element of modern civilization? Doesn't this disregard for bodily sanitation suggest a disturbing disregard for mental sanitation? It's bad civics, and bad civics as a recurring theme does not bode well for the OWS movement.
I know, I know: "It's not a single monolithic movment. Not everybody is pooping in the streets." But that doesn't wash. The Tea Party comprises a wide range of values and views. But one thing it doesn't have is people pooping in the streets. In fact, what sets OWS apart from other protest movements over the past... 100 years? is the recurring theme of people pooping in the streets. And that's the theme you insist doesn't signify. I think it actually signifies more than you'd like, about the movement and its importance.