Adbusters Founders Cheer As Occupy Wall Street Protests Arrive In Canada

Occupy Wall Street

First Posted: 10/14/11 05:15 AM ET Updated: 10/14/11 02:16 PM ET

TORONTO - With roots that reach as far as Cairo's fertile Tahrir Square, the protests roiling Wall Street will finally come full circle this weekend as they blossom in Canada, the country where they were conceived.

Just a few short months ago, staff members at Vancouver-based magazine Adbusters — one of the seminal agents of the modern-day culture-jamming movement — watched, rapt, as scores of ordinary Egyptians took to the streets to depose a dictator and end decades of brutal repression at the hands of their government.

"We had sort of a communal, 'Aha!' moment," Adbusters co-founder Kalle Lasn recalled in an interview.

"We started wondering whether the same kind of tools that were used in Egypt, and the sort of regime-change philosophy, couldn't be applied to America."

The ensuing conversation eventually led to the "Occupy Wall Street" movement, an international uprising against economic inequality and corporate influence on the U.S. federal government.

The campaign — which began on Sept. 17 as an occupation of Manhattan's Zuccotti Park — has generated waves that have engulfed dozens of American cities and spread to countries around the world. On Saturday, it arrives in several Canadian cities, including Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver.

Watching the phenomenon come full circle has been both surreal and exciting, Lasn said.

"I kept on wanting to go to New York, and now instead of me coming to the occupation, the occupation is coming to me," he said.

"This idea of occupying the iconic centre of global capitalism ... there was something magical about that right from the start, so I knew something very special would happen there on Wall Street, but I had no idea that it would spread to hundreds of cities all around the place and become this possibility of a global mind shift."

Even to a publication for which subversive trends are its stock in trade, the momentum has been surprising.

Adbusters has been a staple of the counter-cultural scene since Lasn and co-founder Bill Schmalz put out its first issue in 1989. The inaugural issue challenged ads of the day that promoted the British Columbia logging industry, using spoof advertisements and articles to raise awareness of environmental issues at a time when the environment was hardly the mainstream topic it is today.

The magazine has gone on to embrace other social causes, adopting the slogan, "Cultural revolution is our business." Its following is largely based in the U.S. — American readers account for 60 per cent of the bimonthly magazine's circulation of 100,000.

Adbusters tries to challenge mainstream thinking through culture jamming, a process of replacing common messages with alternative narratives. Kate Tilleczek, Canada Research Chair of Child and Youth Cultures, said Adbusters quickly emerged as a leader in the culture jamming movement that found its niche in a specific demographic.

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Where To Find -- Or Avoid -- The Biggest Occupy Canada Protests:

Occupy Toronto
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When: Sat. Oct. 15, 10 a.m.
Where: Corner of King St. and York St.
More Info: www.occupyto.org, @OccupyTO

"It was a voice. They created a space. Young people were really, really moved by it, especially the strong visuality of it," Tilleczek said. "It probably plays its part in so far as it set a culture among the left and the young of feeling fine about jamming the culture."

The desire to overthrow the lobbyists and corporations that exert the most influence on the U.S. government galvanized Adbusters staff to reach out to the magazine's network of activists around the world, Lasn said. Those contacts helped stir up interest over the summer.

The message was originally targeted at Americans grown weary of economic imbalance between the rich and poor, as well as an economy that has foundered for the past three years.

Activists soon found that the issues ran deeper, Lasn said. The ongoing financial crises, coupled with escalating environmental disasters such as last summer's oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, have left people feeling the need to take control of their collective destiny.

"Young people are looking at this sort of black-hole future, and they're saying, 'Unless we stand up and fight for a different kind of future, then we're not going to have a future.'"

Adbusters spread word of the fledgling idea in its July issue by publishing a poster depicting a ballerina poised atop the charging bull statue that has become a Wall Street landmark. Social media helped to leverage the message, as did the support of subversive forces like the computer-hacker community in the U.S.

The support of self-proclaimed "hacktivist" group Anonymous, known for its defiant and decisive attacks against mainstream corporate brands like MasterCard and Visa, gave the movement the "street cred" it needed to truly flourish, Lasn said.

Over the past month, dozens of rallies emulating the New York protest have sprung up in major cities across the U.S., as well as major centres in Europe and Asia. At least 10 Canadian cities will be holding protests on Saturday, including Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary, Montreal and Halifax.

Lasn said he anticipates a more muted response to the movement in Canada, which has been somewhat spared the economic battering that has wreaked havoc south of the border .But the same impulses of anxiety and pessimism remain strong in Canada, he added.

"I think our movement can energize the political left," Lasn said.

"In Canada we have Harper so strong, the Conservatives so strong because there is no energized opposition. Over the next few months, and possibly one year, it's possible for fascinating, exciting new ideas that the political left has had for a long time, for those ideas to push up from the grass roots and start having an impact again on Canadian politics."

Tilleczek said youth organizers in Canada have been trying to galvanize the movement, criticized by some for lacking a clear expression of its demands, by invoking the image of former New Democrat leader Jack Layton, whose death in August from cancer touched off a remarkable display of national grief and affection.

It may not be enough, however, said Andrew Potter, co-author of the anti-culture-jamming book "The Rebel Sell," who warned that the unstructured nature of the protest could be its demise.

Potter pointed to the Tea Party, which evolved from dissatisfaction with the government's fiscal management and quickly coalesced into a powerful right-wing movement that has been absorbed into the political mainstream.

Protests based on culture jamming must also adapt themselves to the very systems they hope to overthrow if they want to affect any meaningful change, he said.

The message of higher taxation for the rich and financial reform is valid and worthy of praise, Potter said, but risks falling on deaf ears unless it's communicated more effectively.

"The left has consistently stayed outside the system, to see the system as part of the problem, not part of the solution," he said.

"What you've seen is a lot of people who would much rather take to the streets and leave it in the streets.... If they don't successfully institutionalize themselves within the American political power structure, it's not clear what's going to happen."

However the movement evolves, Lasn said Adbusters will not be leading the charge. The magazine has done its part, but will continue to support the movement and play an active behind-the-scenes role.

Its flexibility and lack of structure is its greatest strength, he added.

"What they've done is miraculous," Lasn said.

"Without leaders, without demands, they've been able to launch a national conversation the likes of which America hasn't seen for a couple of generations. It doesn't get any better than that."

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TORONTO - With roots that reach as far as Cairo's fertile Tahrir Square, the protests roiling Wall Street will finally come full circle this weekend as they blossom in Canada, the country where they w...
TORONTO - With roots that reach as far as Cairo's fertile Tahrir Square, the protests roiling Wall Street will finally come full circle this weekend as they blossom in Canada, the country where they w...
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02:23 PM on 10/15/2011
You've gotta luv Hedge's shout out for Karl Marx.
04:46 AM on 10/15/2011
Globalization is a failure

Retail Investors have no protection

The moral contract between corporations and employees has been broken.

Governments are using taxpayers to bail out con artists.

Ok it isn't so bad, stay home.
04:36 PM on 10/14/2011
Canada copying the States again. Leftie monkey see, leftie monkey do!
06:44 PM on 10/14/2011
No it's more like a collaboration. Seriously, not everything is a competition.
Adbusters, the agency responsible for planting the seed is based in Vancouver.

http://thetyee.ca/News/2011/10/07/Kalle-Lasn-Occupy-Wall-Street/
08:36 PM on 10/14/2011
Did you read the article?
09:11 PM on 10/14/2011
Yes, compared to the United States,Canada is doing well. These yahoos only see the negative not the positive.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
doophis
Idiota Maximus
03:00 PM on 10/14/2011
I'm pleased as all get out to see Canada participate but you can't tell me Occupy Wall Street was conceived in Canada. Where's Wall Street? Oh, it's in Toronto? I stand corrected.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
beingthebest
try as I might, I'm only human
07:23 PM on 10/15/2011
So you think that nothing we could possibly do could affect our neighbors. AdBusters, in case you are so ill informed, is read by a huge amount of people in the U.S. and is highly regarded.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GuyCybershy
02:08 PM on 10/14/2011
Chris Hedges shuts down Kevin O'Leary re: Occupy Wall Street

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MAhHPIuTQ5k&sns=fb
08:48 PM on 10/14/2011
Kevin O'Leary is an embarrassment. Is that clip O'Leary's audition for Faux News?
01:21 PM on 10/14/2011
Here is my personal issue with an Occupy Canada protest. Where was all this outrage and concern before the election? Low voter turnout helped return Harper Inc. and hand them a majority. None of their corporate agenda was a secret six months ago. Their disdain and contempt for democracy was no secret either. I just wonder if all the protestors voted.
01:59 PM on 10/14/2011
I agree. But at least they learned their lesson and are trying to do something now.
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Kristopher Leang
training to take down the elite
02:02 PM on 10/14/2011
even with low voter turnout, the split between NDP and Liberal was so immense that in many riding it wouldnt have made the difference. i totally agree and i voted and am not making excuses. these protesters in Canada are most likely those very left wing who went out and voted like me. hence why there wont be like 500,000 people it will be representative of conservative voters who dont show, left wings who commit and do. left wing who dont, and those who dont participate much in civil society and didnt vote.. kinda obvious..

you want me to explain anything else to u?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SMK1414
just another community organizer
11:53 AM on 10/14/2011
Fairness in the economy and corruption exists in both countries. To think Canada does not have similar problems is naive. Though the economy in Canada is not as pressing as in US, as in the 60' Canada has joined the US at times to fight for social and economic justice and peaceful
co-existance with other countries. 99% is 99% where ever you live. I am proud to have Canada
speak out and activate the liberal and socially concerned citizens.
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moby49
I will act as if what I do makes a difference.
11:40 AM on 10/14/2011
Listen to US. WE are the 99%.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Miller Time
11:36 AM on 10/14/2011
Once again the "professional" agitators come out in full force to destroy everything in their paths.

I am ashamed at the Canadian connection with the Wall Street protests.

Sham, shame and treble shame on you Adbusters.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
beingthebest
try as I might, I'm only human
07:25 PM on 10/15/2011
We rejoice in your shame. It must mean we are doing something right.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Miller Time
08:28 PM on 10/15/2011
I do not disagree with your aims. The salaries of CEOs are extreme. What spoils your image is the array of the usual professional complainers. Mostly young. Mostly male. Almost entirely white. Bearded. Hooded. Faces covered as though they are ashamed of their cause. And spouting the usual extreme left-wing propaganda.
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10:44 AM on 10/14/2011
Canadian masterminds of Occupy Wall St arrested in NYC!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1mfXGemJryo&feature=related
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Peacefrogg
09:20 AM on 10/14/2011
The other day i sat in front of the tube watching our honorble eastern european dictator von bottom plug harper doing another one of his unscrupulous business dealings with the highly oppresive regime or the honorable communist capitalist chinese dictator, fu-que-man.
It seems that this minority regime that managed to squeeze itself into number one position or the conservative party is he-ll bent on taking us down that same road that Bush and Company took the middle class of America down.

Even though i don't belong to a Union nor ever will, i do support the rights of workers and their right to bargain freely without government interference. Unfortuneately Canadas latest totalitarian regime doesn't feel the same. They support other regimes like china, libya and all those smaller third world corrupt, death squad, under-wear making central American countries.

Canadians have to wake up to the fact that these right-wing loons are not good for Canada or its 99%, they cater to the 1% who control most of the wealth, just like those lobbyist and thieves that have stolen Americas future by bankrupting them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Whistlejackett
Hey stop doing that
08:48 AM on 10/14/2011
Let's not worry about credits, lets worry about success.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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turkeylurky
Just keepin it real........
07:34 AM on 10/14/2011
We love to hate the Americans, but love to emulate them, eh?
Monkey see, monkey do..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SayBlade
This micro bio intentionally left blank.
10:08 AM on 10/14/2011
You've got it wackbards. It was a Canadian idea and like so many Canadian ideas it left the country for a while and now it is bringing home success.
10:39 AM on 10/14/2011
Excuse me? Which country was founded with a protest, while the other was simply granted statehood by the monarchy (that still appears on its money)?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kristopher Leang
training to take down the elite
10:41 AM on 10/14/2011
ya moderate tax an semi accountable politicians is the canadian way. the americans are now only mimicking and demanding something long afforded to every single developed country... except them.
11:16 AM on 10/14/2011
really....I haven't seen hordes of Canadians demanding American style health care or a change towards the use of an electoral college lately. We certainly didn't emulate...let the banks do whatever they want....cause if we had Canadians would have bailing banks out right along with America

America is NOT some big cultural monolith. The northeast is different from the south is different from the westcoast which is again different from Alaska. Just like different areas of Canada are different.

so don't assume emulation just cause somebody drives a car, shops at WalMart and watches American Idol.
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07:30 AM on 10/14/2011
They forgot the other Canadian connection. The company that owns Zuccotti park (Brookfield Management) is also Canadian.