You’re right, there are great big swaths of the Occupy movement that are too prone to becoming sides to take, or teams to cheer for, and would take far too much time and attention to unravel for the utility they’d provide. But I don’t think the problem’s entirely prohibitive, at least not all of its parts. Broad discussions on whether the protests’ methods are moral, or whether their cause is just, those probably are too messy. But I think that problems that the protests bring up that we’d not see in normal day-to-day society, like the increasing militarization of police forces in the US of late, they could be useful discussions to have.
You’re right, there are great big swaths of the Occupy movement that are too prone to becoming sides to take, or teams to cheer for, and would take far too much time and attention to unravel for the utility they’d provide. But I don’t think the problem’s entirely prohibitive, at least not all of its parts. Broad discussions on whether the protests’ methods are moral, or whether their cause is just, those probably are too messy. But I think that problems that the protests bring up that we’d not see in normal day-to-day society, like the increasing militarization of police forces in the US of late, they could be useful discussions to have.