Tag: Wall Street

  • (Dis)order and Witness

    (Dis)order and Witness

    Since the Occupy protests began, I’ve been struggling with what is so objectionable to so many people about protest.  Perhaps I am as pinko as my former rector, Matt+ says I am, but I’ve never found protest in itself to be ugly.  Between my own limited experience and the research I’ve done, criticisms of protests of…

  • Telling Secrets: “…Another World Is Possible.”

    Elizabeth Kaeton preached the quintessential Advent 4 sermon–about Occupy Wall Street.  Amazing! This has me moved to see a simple idea.  Head on over, read it, and then reflect over that picture of Bishop Packard for a moment.  When you are done, come back and ask yourself the following question: What if, in the midst…

  • The Gilded Age of Media

    The Gilded Age of Media

    When faced with something they find confusing, most journalists give up.  They don’t do the real legwork of engaging the story.  They write the “process story” instead.  You’ve read the kind in which the author doesn’t actually write the story about the intended subject’s work, but how confusing that work is.  They trot out tired…

  • On Ecclesiology: Leadership, Emergence, and #Occupy

    On Ecclesiology: Leadership, Emergence, and #Occupy

    In the Premodern world, humanity was led by “the divine right of kings,” in other words, authority was bestowed upon a singular human authority from a divine source. In the Modern world, humanity was led by singular representation.  Authority was bestowed on an individual to represent the people, either through fiat or election. The Enlightenment…

  • Occupy Wall Street’s collective statement

    Occupy Wall Street’s collective statement

    For those following #OccupyWallStreet, click on their first collective statement. One of the criticisms of the movement has been their lack of central authority and a clear, concise statement of demands.  What is unique to this movement, and more typical of organizations today, rather than 50 years ago, is the belief that the first step toward…

  • Puritans: why Wall Street wasn’t occupied sooner

    Puritans: why Wall Street wasn’t occupied sooner

    or #OccupyWallStreet and our fear of protests A favorite line over the last two weeks has been: I’m surprised this didn’t happen sooner. Of course it did, but the media doesn’t really like protests.  It is surprising since the news is all about sensationalism and big displays of strangeness and upsetting the status quo.  It’s…