The right wing republicans have always been good at organizing, they have to be, they are a minority political party. And once right wing republicans can get enough conservative democrats to go along, they can set the political agenda and tilt the playing field towards concentrated wealth in only the few.
Conversely the left and the union movement have come and now have gone due to complacency and lack of continued commitment. But still, lesson taken, first there must be a real crisis for the left to really start to organize, but when it does, and has a some national unity, its usually unstoppable.
And having said that, I can start to discuss the Vietnam era protests at a time when American was peak prosperity. And woe be to the politician running for office without organized labor backing. As the USA emerged from WW2 far ahead, economically and militarily. With a self confident domestic and foreign policy consensus designed to keep America in first place. Or so we thought.
The first cracks to that solid glass foundation emerged during the 1950's, first a giant nuclear arms race with the Soviet Union, then a Korean war that the failed to win and instead got a stalemate, followed by the shock in sputnik, as the USA woke up one morning and found the USSR was way ahead in the space race. As the USA did the thing it knew best, throw money at the problem and do it inefficiently. Meanwhile, as education became a commodity, a nascent civil rights movement gained critical mass. As America once again saw its itself violently just starting to clash in the streets.
As America's first wave baby boom generation came of draft age just in time for the Vietnam war. The US involvement in Vietnam may have started out small, but after the mid-60's, American boys were coming home in body bags at a rate of 300 a week for months at a time at the times of peak activity. . No one cared that we were killing innocent Vietnamese at 30x the rate, but the civil rights movement and the antiwar movement somewhat combined.
Sadly, in my opinion, it ended up breaking the solidarity of the majority American left.
As the Union movement had achieved prosperity for its members, as they swiftly forgot the fact that the prior two or three generations of their families had to take to the streets and ballot boxes to win their rights. And they initially were not happy or inclined to join a youth based movement opposing the Vietnam war or civil rights for blacks. As for the draft, they had fought in died in WW2 in our nation's hour of need. And felt little sympathy with that did not do the same. As for their own son's, they made sure they were in college or had a military job deferment.
After that, the death of the democratic left was a matter of time and appeasement. First Nixon ended the draft and all the stream went out of the movement, enough of the formerly solid democratic labor votes tilted to the GOP, the civil rights movement won its small victories in law, as this nation found new and different ways to discriminate. And finally basically ended as the nation would not accept busing to achieve racial integration.
So the question is how should we historically view the OWS movement and I feel its hard to predict. One one hand its new birth for left leaning American movement, at exactly a time when government needs do so much in terms of leveling the playing field
so badly tilted against most of the American's people self interests. As the American economy shrinks, formerly well paying middle class jobs derived from value added manufacturing vanish, and outsourced off overseas. As America is racing towards a Haitian style economy. Plenty of goods in the store at low prices, but too few American consumers can buy them. On the other hand are the American people angry enough and united enough to toss the rascals out yet?
My guess may be not quite yet, so OWS may be a fizzle, but rest assured, the American people will have to take matters into their own hands soon. But soon in the eyes of history may be 20 years, the pendulum of change always largely lags the need.
And the last thing to say may be, a stable government can last for a thousand years as long as it keep pace and changes with changing internal and external realities, but as soon as a government becomes fossilized and incapable of changing, it will violently be overthrown from within.