Hvad er Occupy Copenhagen?
Occupy Denmark og Occupy Copenhagen er en del af en international bevægelse der er bekymret over samfundsudviklingen. Vi er inspireret af bl.a. det arabiske forår, Democracia real Ya (ægte demokrati nu) i Spanien og Occupy Wall Street i New York. Occupy bevægelsen har lokale grupper i mere end 2000 byer verden over.
Vi er bekymrede over:
-
At demokratiet ikke fungerer når penge har magt over politikerne
-
At massemedierne ikke lever op til deres funktion som demokratiets livsnerve fordi de leverer det som markedskræfterne og de økonomiske magthavere kræver og ikke det der er nyttigt at vide
-
At vi har et økonomisk system som er fundamentalt ustabilt, som skaber kriser de færreste kan forudse, som får mega-koncerner til at vokse sig endnu større, og som skaber sult ved at spille hasard med fødevarepriser
-
At vi har et økonomisk system som kræver vækst og evigt stigende forbrug for at fungere
-
At jordens rigdomme og økonomiske magt bliver koncentreret på færre og færre hænder
-
At vi driver rovdrift på jordens ressourcer så der ikke er noget tilbage til kommende generationer
Occupy bevægelsen er uafhængig af partipolitik. Mange af bevægelsens aktivister og sympatisører er også engagerede i andre organisationer og bevægelser af vidt forskellig art der beskæftiger sig med samme problemområde, men Occupy bevægelsen er ikke bundet til nogen bestemt politisk ideologi.
Occupy bevægelsen er et forum hvor vi diskuterer problemer og løsninger uden at bevægelsen som helhed kan tages til indtægt for nogen bestemt politisk ideologi. I modsætning til mange andre organisationer og bevægelser påstår vi ikke at have en patentløsning der kan løse alle problemerne. Vi har hver især vores egne ideer om hvad der skal til for at skabe en bedre verden, og vi forventer ikke at blive enige om en bestemt politisk løsning. Vi mener at flest mulige mennesker skal inddrages i processen med at finde løsninger på de mange alvorlige problemer vores planet står overfor.
Derfor går vi ind for:
-
At politikere, medier, samfundsdebattører, forskere og almindelige mennesker tager problemerne alvorligt og diskuterer mulige løsninger
-
At magten skal ligge hos borgerne og ikke hos finansfyrsterne
-
At den nuværende kasino-økonomi skal erstattes af et system der skaber stabilitet, retfærdighed, tryghed og bæredygtighed
-
At rovdriften på jordens ressourcer stoppes
Occupy bevægelsen opfordrer alle mennesker til at tage et medansvar for samfundsudviklingen og klodens fremtid og til at bidrage til at løse de enorme problemer verden står overfor. Derfor opfordrer vi alle til at være med – også dig!
- Log in or register to post comments
- Email this page
Comments
David Stodolsky
January 8, 2012 - 14:43
Permalink
There is no shortage of resources
The idea that the World is running low on "resources" is a myth promoted primarily by the owners of these resources. This allows them to maintain high prices and therefore collect higher profits. There are resources, such as fish, whales, etc., which have been mismanaged. Shortages have, therefore, been a result.
However, there is no evidence whatsoever that oil, gas, coal, and nuclear fuels will become scarce within the next thousand years. In fact, the improvements in the technologies of extraction of these resources means that their real cost has been dropping for as long as records have been kept and continue to do so. Proven reserves of oil have never been higher.
The term "resource" by itself is not meaningful, since what is considered a resource changes from time to time. A hundred years age, oil was considered a pollutant of a valuable resource - clean water.
Arnold
January 16, 2012 - 09:41
Permalink
There IS a shortage of resources
We are consuming non-renewable resources and polluting our planet at an alarming rate. See for example this video, or search for "rare earth shortage". The free market system has no mechanism for ensuring sustainable production. On the contrary, it is more profitable to make products with planned obsolescence.
David Stodolsky
January 17, 2012 - 15:04
Permalink
There IS NOT a shortage of resources
YouTube is not a reliable source of info. For highly politicized topics like this, only articles in scientific journals, or materials directly derived from them, are valid sources.
David Stodolsky
January 31, 2012 - 12:15
Permalink
Celebrating Consumption
Could spending be virtuous and thrift bad? Left-wing economic and cultural historian James Livingston thinks so. He suggests -- taking on the 19th century Populists, the Frankfurt School, and current economic orthodoxy along the way -- that consumption is good for social justice and the environment. Livingston argues that, in place of austerity and frugality, investment should be socialized, wages increased, and the workweek shortened.
David Stodolsky
February 24, 2012 - 22:07
Permalink
RIP: Peak Oil - we won't be running out any time soon
Human ingenuity wins the day
Analysis The idea that seized the imaginations of the bien pensant chattering classes in the Noughties – "Peak Oil" – is no longer relevant. So says the commodities team at Citigroup, and policy-makers would be wise to examine the trends they've identified.
"Peak Oil" is the point at which the production of conventional crude oil begins an irreversible decline. The effect of this, some say, is that scarcity-induced prices rises would require huge changes in modern industrial societies. For some, Peak Oil was the call of Mother Earth herself, requiring a return to pre-industrial lifestyles. One example of this response is the "Transition Towns" network, a middle-class phenomenon in commuter belt towns in the UK.