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Occupy Wall Street has, from its earliest days, been something of a bazaar of causes and hobbyhorses. That, in fact, is what defines it, as I argued in a post a few weeks ago: not a single program or doctrine, but a kind of open process that, among its more articulate spokespersons, could be described as anarchism or direct democracy. That process has baffled most of the media, accustomed to the orthodox left, right or Republican, Democratic split. This explains the initial reaction to OWS that it was simply a Tea Party for the left and the insistence by pundits that it stood for this or that. But it soon became clear that something else was going on. One day as I wended my way past Zuccotti Park, I was struck by waving signs demanding to "End the Fed." This shruggingly seemed, at the time, to represent an example of the general incoherence of OWS. But a few days later, on the prime media strip along Broadway by the park, there were suddenly four sign wavers in a row urging not only to "End the Fed" but to sign up with Ron Paul, last seen on the GOP presidential debate stage trying to help Rick Perry with his list of agencies to kill.
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