The Bleeding Edge

By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — June 5, 2026

When I was studying telecommunications at DeVry Institute of Technology in the late 1980s, the head of the program, Al Payette, used to tell us something we all understood perfectly well.

“The cutting edge is also the bleeding edge.”

Nobody misunderstood him. Nobody was confused about what he meant. We knew that working in a rapidly changing technical field meant risk. Technology moves fast. Industries shift. Companies rise and fall.

What we did not understand — what none of us understood — was how quickly most of us would feel that first cut.

The bleeding started almost immediately.

For many of us, it started the day we walked across the stage and received our diplomas.

Building the Networks

My degree was in telecommunications — voice and data systems — but my professional work was in data communications.

In the mid-1990s, that meant something very specific. Businesses were beginning to connect computers together in ways that are completely taken for granted today.

Local area networks. Wide area networks. Ethernet cabling. Early routers and gateways. Offices that once ran isolated machines were being transformed into connected systems.

From roughly 1994 until about 1998, that was my work. I helped bring the first LAN and WAN networks into businesses. We wired buildings. We connected offices. We turned disconnected computers into networks.

Today those systems form the basic infrastructure of modern commerce. At the time, they were still new enough that someone had to physically install them, configure them, and make them work.

For a few years, it felt like standing inside the future.

Then the work began to disappear.

By 1998 the number of contracts was shrinking. By the time the telecom contraction and the collapse of the dot-com bubble hit around 2000, many of those positions had simply vanished.

The expansion of data communications had stopped.

And the people who had built it were suddenly expendable.

The Contradiction

What made that moment even stranger was what was happening in the public conversation about technology jobs.

Experienced engineers and networking specialists were being laid off. Telecommunications companies were collapsing or consolidating. Entire segments of the industry were shrinking.

At the same time, corporate leaders were appearing before Congress arguing that the United States faced a shortage of trained engineers.

Bill Gates testified that American companies needed more high-skill visas because they supposedly could not find enough qualified technical workers.

But thousands of qualified workers already existed.

Many of them were unemployed.

Alan Greenspan acknowledged that the data communications expansion had contracted, yet the policy conversation quickly shifted toward importing additional technical labor rather than stabilizing the careers that had already been built.

Whether those decisions were wise or not is something economists will debate for decades.

But if you were living through that moment, the contradiction was impossible to miss.

You were told your skills were desperately needed at the exact moment you were discovering they were not.

The Slow Start

I graduated in October of 1990, entering the workforce during the recession that followed the end of the Cold War and the so-called peace dividend period.

Economists have documented that graduating during an economic downturn can affect a person’s earnings and opportunities for years, sometimes for decades. A slow start can echo through an entire career.

That reality shaped my life more than I understood at the time.

In 1998 I was earning $28.50 an hour in the technical field.

By the 2000s, after the industry contraction, the most I ever made in technical work again was about $17 an hour — for positions that had once paid far more.

Eventually, like many people whose technical careers collapsed during that period, I spent much of my working life in other fields simply because those were the jobs that remained available.

The official story of the technology revolution rarely includes that part.

But it happened.

Occupy

By 2011 the economic consequences of those structural changes had become impossible to ignore.

That was the year Occupy Wall Street began.

I became involved in July of 2011, before the first tents went up in Zuccotti Park. Like many others, I believed the country needed to confront the economic system that had produced the financial crisis and the bailouts that followed.

When the movement spread to Chicago, I participated there as well.

But movements, like institutions, are not immune to hierarchy or internal politics. Solidarity is often more complicated than people imagine.

Instead of finding common ground, I found myself publicly ridiculed and pushed aside by activists who decided I was not one of the people they wanted representing their cause.

After the economy had already knocked me down, even the people claiming to challenge that system found ways to exclude me.

That experience taught me something important.

Power dynamics exist everywhere.

Leaving the United States

On September 5, 2023, I arrived in the Philippines to live with my wife.

Her name was Luz.

We hoped to build a life together here.

She died of cancer on September 3, 2025, at 5:15 in the morning. We buried her on September 11. She is entombed above her parents in a small family structure here in Leyte.

We never reached our second wedding anniversary.

After she died, I stayed.

The Archive

Today I live in Baybay City continuing the work that has defined the last several years of my life.

I write.

Thousands of essays now exist in what has become the WPS News archive — or perhaps more accurately, the WPS News knowledge base.

It is a record of events, policies, and power structures as I have witnessed and analyzed them.

The audience is not large. The work is not profitable.

But documentation matters.

History is not written only by institutions. It is also written by individuals who decide that the truth of their experience deserves to be recorded.

Extraction

Looking back across the decades, a pattern becomes difficult to ignore.

Modern systems extract value from people.

Technical workers build the networks that power the digital economy. Activists lend their time and energy to movements. Writers produce analysis that circulates widely.

But the people performing that labor often receive little in return.

Structural extraction without compensation is theft.

That sentence may sound blunt, but if you spend enough years watching the same pattern repeat, it becomes difficult to describe it any other way.

The Bleeding Edge

Al Payette warned us that the cutting edge was also the bleeding edge.

He was right.

Most of us understood there would be risks in working at the edge of a rapidly changing industry. What we did not understand was how quickly the system would turn on us.

Decades later, I understand.

And I am still here.

So I write.

Because whether anyone wants to hear it or not, the story of what happened to us deserves to be told — without extraction.

For more social commentary, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

References

Greenspan, A. (2004). The Economic Outlook. Federal Reserve Board remarks.

Gates, B. (2008). Testimony before the U.S. House Committee on Science and Technology regarding high-skill immigration.

#Economy #extraction #Labor #OccupyMovement #socialCommentary #structuralInequality #technologyHistory #telecomCollapse

Welcome to the Stacks

By Cliff Potts, Curator

Your Local Device — May 31, 2026

Well now.

You’re back in the stacks again. Or maybe this is your first wander through the aisles. Either way — welcome. We appreciate the visit.

Archives don’t trend. They don’t go viral. They just sit here, steady and patient, waiting for someone curious enough to open a drawer. So when you show up, especially from outside the usual neighborhood, it doesn’t go unnoticed.

We see the traffic. We see the late-night scrolls. We see the deep dives into 2011.

And yes — thank you for that.

Why We’re Here

Let’s be clear about something. We’re not here to lecture. We’re not the teachers of the universe. We’re not handing out moral report cards.

We’re record keepers.

We hold onto information. We document what was said, what was done, what was promised, and what actually happened. Not perfectly. Not without bias. Not without the fingerprints of the moment.

But we kept it.

And that matters.

Especially in an era where every six months feels like a hard reboot of memory.

About That Popularity Narrative

There’s this idea floating around — you’ve heard it — that the current administration in Washington, D.C. is wildly popular. That everything is humming along nicely. That any dissent is just noise from the sub-basement of political acceptance.

Interesting framing.

If you’ve been wandering through these archives, you’ve probably noticed something else: cycles. Patterns. Counter-movements. The pushback to Occupy. The backlash elections. The “we’ve corrected course” declarations.

So here’s the gentle, slightly sharky question from behind the curator’s desk:

How’s that working out for you?

You put the counter-Occupy forces in the White House in 2016. You doubled down again in 2024. You were told this would stabilize everything. Restore order. Calm the waters.

Is that what you’re seeing?

No judgment. Just a question. The files are here if you’d like to compare notes.

The Flavor of the Early Years

Let’s not pretend this archive sprang from some neutral vacuum.

The early writings? They had an Occupy flavor. Liberal. Frustrated. Sometimes sharp around the edges. That wasn’t an accident. That was the atmosphere at the time. We recorded what we saw as best we could with the tools we had.

Some of it holds up beautifully. Some of it shows its age. Some of it is raw.

That’s what an honest archive looks like.

You’ll find Dan’s fingerprints in here. Kelly’s voice in certain passages. Matt’s tone in the structure of a few pieces. Ramey? There’s a lot of Ramey. You can feel it. The cadence. The urgency.

And if you can’t find everything here, some of it lives over on YouTube — especially from the 2011 time frame. You have to go looking for it. It won’t find you. But it’s there.

Recorded. Preserved. Not erased.

Remembering vs. Learning

If you’re spending time in the stacks, you’re not here to be taught. You’re here to remember. Or to establish a baseline. To compare what was said then with what’s being said now.

That’s a healthy instinct.

We’re not promising perfection. We’re not promising objectivity polished to a mirror shine. We’re promising continuity.

When the story shifts, you can come back and check what it used to be.

That’s the service.

Need Something?

If you’re digging for something specific — a date, a statement, a thread from 2011 that seems oddly relevant again — pass along a request. I’ll see what I can do.

That’s part of the job, too.

We built the shelves. You’re the one pulling the folders.

And whether you agree with what’s in them or not, the fact that you’re here means you care enough to look beyond the surface.

For that — genuinely — thank you.

#archives #civicRecord #historicalDocumentation #IndependentJournalism #mediaLiteracy #Occupy25 #OccupyMovement #politicalMemory #publicRecord #WPSNews
In Solidarity with the Students

Following the organising of encampments calling for an end to universities’ complicity in Israel’s ongoing genocide, it is clear that students are taking charge of their own political education. In solidarity with these groups, we have the following ebooks free to download—including From The River to the Sea, published

Verso

> .. the movement became synonymous with a place— Standing Rock— it could be said that its political energy was generated in large part by the landscape itself. In the words of a group of activists, “Standing Rock emerged as a ‘prayer camp’ because the grounds in question are sacred, a site of ceremony and ancestral knowledge.”

#AmitavGhosh #NutmegsCurse
#StandingRock #OccupyMovement #OccupyPlaces
#一所懸命 #PowerOfPlace #BloodAndSoil #StoryAndSoil #StoryAndPlace

ROCK FOR PALESTINE
Yusuf Cat Stevens
Roger Waters (Pink Floyd)
Low Key

Life on YouTube
Friday 21 June 2024
@6.30PM - 18.30 GMT
https://www.patreon.com/posts/106501579

@doubledownnews
#concert #music #Palestine #genocide #resillience #resistance #bandaid #inspirational #solidarity #lowkey #pinkfloyd #cat #catstevens #occupymovement #israel #telaviv #occupation #colonialism #freeconcert #bds

Stunning police brutality will ignite a student anti-war movement in America | Joan Donovan https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/apr/29/police-brutality-university-protest #USuniversities #Occupymovement #USpolicing #Protest #USnews
Stunning police brutality will ignite a student anti-war movement in America

There is some truth to the popular protest slogan: ‘They tried to bury us, but they didn’t know we were seeds’

The Guardian

Cornell Law Prof. William Jacobson likens anti-Israel protests at Ivy League schools to Occupy Wall Street.

Yale students join Columbia in setting up "liberation zones," with Yale's featuring a "Liberated Zone" banner. Pro-Hamas slogans at Columbia led to over 100 arrests.

#IvyLeagueProtests #AntiIsrael #Yale #Columbia #OccupyMovement

@[email protected] @AmishSuperModel exactly. It’s too bad the #OccupyMovement didnt come together as I hoped it would.
It was the right time to fill the streets. Now the streets of every city are filled with homeless people, many doing hard drugs right out in the open.