Mainstream media criticised the protestors for not being more specific about their demands. But asking for a reduction of influence by vested interests in the framing of regulations is a specific enough demand.
However, disputes about the sharpness of protestors' demands are not the crux of the matter. Future events might depend on addressing a more fundamental contradiction that the protests have brought to the surface.
What if neither governments nor specific groups of private interests have enough control to steer globally mobile markets and related economic trends?
In this context there is merit in listening to some of the voices rarely found in the mainstream media. One such voice is John Bunzl, founder of the International Simultaneous Policy Organization, a group that seeks coordinated solutions to global problems.
While admiring the energy and the intentions of the protestors, Bunzl has questioned the basic assumption that there is someone with the power and ability to meet any demands.
"In our globalised world, destructive competition between governments means that there is no one in the cockpit of our global economic plane," Bunzl recently said in a group email discussion. "De-regulation has taken on a momentum all its own," he wrote, adding, "a momentum no individual nor small group of governments can now stop."
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