EFTA01112800.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 256.3 KB • Feb 3, 2026 • 5 pages
The Yippies and the Occupiers
As a co-founder of the Yippies (Youth International Party)—known for demonstrating
against the Vietnam War at the 1968 Democratic convention in Chicago--I find myself
comparing and contrasting the Yippies and the Occupy Wall Street protesters.
We had to perform stunts to get media coverage of our cause, so a group of us
went to the New York Stock Exchange, upstairs to the balcony, and threw $200 worth
of singles onto the floor below, watching the gang of manic brokers suddenly morph
from yelling "Pork Bellies" into playing "Diving for Dollars." Then we held a press
conference outside, explaining the connection between the capitalist system and the
war.
Now, a particular placard, "Wall Street Is War Street," gives me a sense of
continuity. Other anonymous Occupier spokespersons carried posters proclaiming:
"God Forbid We Have Sex & Smoke Pot. They Want Us to Grab Guns & Go to War!" "I
am an immigrant. I came here to take your job. But you don't have one." "$96,000 for a
BA in Hispanic transgender gay & lesbian studies and I can't find work!" And a woman
in a wheelchair: "Stand Up For Your Rights!"
By the sheer power of numbers without the necessity of stunts, the Occupiers
have broadened public awareness about the economic injustice perpetuated by
corporations without compassion conspiring with government corruption that has
resulted in immeasurable suffering. The Yippies were a myth that became a reality.
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The Occupiers are a reality that became a myth. The spirit of nonviolent revolution is
what connects them.
The Yippies were a myth that became a reality. The Occupiers are a reality that
became a myth. The spirit of nonviolent revolution is what connects them.
NPR waited until eleven days of Occupy Wall Street had passed before
reporting its existence. The executive news editor explained that the Occupiers "did
not involve large numbers of people" (actually, there were already several hundred),
no "prominent people" showed up (thus ignoring Michael Moore and Susan
Sarandon), the lack of "a great disruption" (the police pepper-spraying protesters
trapped in a cage of orange netting finally met that need), "or an especially clear
objective" (oh, right, like all those flip-floppy pandering politicians whose clear
objective is to get elected).
The Occupiers appear to be a leaderless community—most likely, you can't
name a single one; not yet, anyway—whereas Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin and I served
as spokespeople for the Yippies. We had media contacts and knew how to speak in
sound bytes. If we gave good quote, they gave free publicity for upcoming
demonstrations. It was mutual manipulation.
Sample: A reporter asked me about the 1968 counter-contention we were
planning, "Will you be staying in tents?" I replied, "Some of us will be intense. Others
will be frivolous."
During an interview with Abbie and me for the CBS Evening News, taped at his
apartment, Abbie paraphrased Che Guevara and said, "I'm prepared to win or die."
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However, that never got on the air. When the reporter asked me, "What do the Yippies
actually plan to do in Chicago?" I smiled at her and said, "You think I'm gonna tell your
That portion of my answer was used to end Walter Cronkite's segment on the Yippies,
but my follow-up sentence--"The first thing we're gonna do is put truth serum in the
reporters' drinks"--was omitted. They had beaten me at my own game.
The Yippies were inspired by the Buddhist monk in Vietnam who set himself on
fire in order to call attention to the war. The photo of that incident traveled around the
globe, and I wore a lapel button which featured that flaming image. Similarly, in 2010,
a street vendor in Tunisia refused to pay a police bribe, then immolated himself, which
inspired a revolution there, and next in Egypt, spreading into Arab Spring, which
ultimately inspired American Autumn in 2011.
Inspired by the Yippies attempt to levitate the Pentagon, Aron Kay wanted to
get fellow Occupiers to levitate Wall Street, to no avail. Likewise, inspired by the
Yippies nomination of an actual pig named Pigasus for president, Michael Dare tried
unsuccessfully to persuade fellow protesters at Occupy Seattle to carry out his notion
that, "If corporations are people, let's run one for president." I offered myself as
Secretary of Greed.
The evolution of technology has changed the way protests are organized and
carried out. The Yippies had to use messy mimeograph machines to print out flyers
that had to be stuffed into envelopes, addressed, stamped and mailed. The Internet
generally—and social media such as Facebook and Twitter—have enabled Occupiers
to inexpensively reach countless people immediately.
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When the Yippies were being tear-gassed, and beaten sadistically and
indiscriminately, we chanted, "The whole world is watching!" But now, when a
bloodbath was expected to happen if the New York police forced the Occupiers out of
the park—and then that didn't happen—Michael Moore asked a cop, "Why don't you
think the eviction happened?" The reply: "Because the mayor's afraid of YouTube."
(One month later, Mayor Bloomberg apparently lost that fear; by his order, the
eviction happened at 1 a.m. The next afternoon, a protester, before being allowed
back in, was overheard remarking, "The cops have occupied Zuccotti Park. We're just
trying to figure out what their demands are.")
Not only what occurred in Chicago in 1968 was officially labeled "a police riot"
by a government-sponsored investigation, but also an undercover police
provocateur—who was disguised as a local biker and acted as Jerry Rubin's
bodyguard—would ultimately state that he participated in pulling down the American
flag in Grant Park, destroying it, then running up the black flag of the Viet Cong in its
place.
"I joined in the chants and taunts against the police," he said, "and provoked
them to hitting me with their clubs. They didn't know who I was, but they did know
that I had called them names and struck them with one or more weapons."
Now, as the Occupy model has spread around the country, police brutality has
increased, and it's not surprising that there have been accusations of provocateurs
sabotaging the nonviolent principle, not to mention an assistant editor at a
conservative magazine who infiltrated a group of protesters in Washington, D.C., later
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claiming that his purpose was "to mock and undermine them in the pages of the
American Spectator," and that he helped incite a riot at the National Air and Space
Museum, getting pepper-sprayed in the process.
The Yippies were essentially countercultural, an amalgam of radicalized stoned
hippies and straight political activists. And, although the Occupiers are essentially
mainstream, their demonization by right-wing media pundits has been providing a
replay performance of the Dinosaur Follies.
Bill O'Reilly called the Occupiers "drug-trafficking crackheads" and "violent
America-hating anarchists." Sean Hannity said they "sound like skinhead Nazi
psychos." Ann Coulter referred to them as mobs of "teenage runaways" and "tattooed,
body-pierced, sunken-chested 19-year-olds getting in fights with the police for fun."
Glenn Beck warned that they "will come for you and drag you into the streets and kill
you." Andrew Breitbart declared that Occupy Wall Street is "a group of public
masturbating violent freaks."
Rush Limbaugh labeled them "dumbed down" and "propagandized" and asked
a rhetorical question reeking with layers of irony: 'Whatever happened to the '60s--
Question Authority?" At this point, Limbaugh is like a castrated canine that is still busy
humping the living-room sofa by force of habit.
I'll conclude here with a little gift for the infamous 1% in the form of what could
eventually become a riddle for reactionaries. "What do corporations and fetuses have
in common?" And the answer is: "They're both persons."
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