Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Protesters vow to keep building movement for change despite brutal police crackdowns

Occupy Wall Street: ‘You cannot evict an idea!’occupy_wallstreet11-29-2011.jpgBloodied but unbowed, the Occupy Wall St. movement has vowed to resist brutal assaults by police on peaceful protests calling for economic fairness and a government that serves ordinary people—not just the super-rich.

On a cold New York City afternoon, two days after an historic “Day of Action,” a few hundred protesters gathered in Zuccotti Park in lower Manhattan. A few feet from where the World Trade Center towers once stood, they talked about the way forward and heard speakers discuss topics such as the financial crisis in Italy and how it would impact ordinary Americans.
What they didn’t do was run and hide after a major crackdown on demonstrations and forced evictions of Occupy encampments around the country, where demonstrators have lived in parks, on downtown streets and near the offices of powerful institutions to show their distrust of the ruling class and their dissatisfaction with current conditions.
“We are moving forward,” Mark Bray, a media coordinator told The Final Call. “Many of our people are in jail, some have been injured, we know eventually some may die. But we are in the early stages of a social movement that will change this country,” Mr. Bray said.
With the two month anniversary of the Occupy Movement Nov. 17, a movement started with a few thousand young people responding to a call sparked by resentment over corporate bailouts and economic inequality has gone global.

protesters_police11-29-2011.jpg
Los Angeles police offi cers struggle to arrest an unidentifi ed man in Los Angeles, Nov. 17. Occupy Wall Street demonstrators held modestly sized, but energetic rallies around the country Nov. 17 to celebrate two months since the movement’s birth and signal that they aren’t ready to quit yet, despite police raids that have destroyed some of their encampments. Photo: AP Wide World Photos/Damian Dovarganes
Young people, mostly from middle-class White American families, coined the phrase “We are the 99 percent.” That cry has echoed across the country and the world capturing the plight of the masses of people left behind economically while a small ruling elite benefits handsomely on the financial and political sides.

Angela Davis, a college professor and onetime Black Panther Party revolutionary, writing Nov. 16 in the Guardian UK newspaper said, “This new Occupy Movement imagined itself from the beginning as the broadest possible community of resistance—the 99 percent against the 1 percent—who are the most affluent sectors of society; big banks, financial institutions and corporate executives.”
America’s political establishment answered the peaceful Occupy movement Nov. 17 with brutal assaults by police in riot gear, some likened the heavy-handedness to old school fascism. So violent was the response that some returning veterans condemned the police for using weapons and tactics not permitted by occupying U.S. troops in war torn nations.
In Los Angeles, hundreds marched through downtown and 27 people were arrested. In Portland, police blocked protesters from crossing a bridge to the financial district, arresting 25 on disorderly conduct charges. In Berkeley, Calif., police cleared out a protest camp, arresting two.
In Atlanta, 18 protesters were arrested for blocking traffic, while in Dallas, 100 police officers in riot gear cleared the Occupy camp outside of city hall, citing unsanitary conditions and safety concerns. Eighteen people were arrested. The same happened in Philadelphia where 300 tents had been placed next to city hall to house protesters.
Protests targeted for crackdown include camps and demonstrators in Las Vegas, St. Louis, Seattle, Wash., and Boston and the Huffington Post, on Nov. 18, showed photographs of police on the campus of the University of Calif. at Davis brandishing pepper spray canisters, some allegedly dousing students sitting on the ground in peaceful protest.
But, it was New York City that became the poster child for excessive police crowd control tactics and the chilling use of force to squelch free speech, according to activists. Two hundred fifty protesters were arrested, some bloodied by police using metal batons.
Some policing experts said the crowd control was aggressive, but not excessive. First Amendment experts said televised interactions between police and demonstrators can hurt the goal of protests and discourage others from joining.
“Everyone has the right to exercise First Amendment rights—if actions cross the line and threaten health and safety of others, we will respond accordingly,” said New York’s billionaire mayor Michael Bloomberg.

protester_cuffed11-29-2011.jpg
Police arrest a demonstrator at an encampment for the Occupy Wall Street movement in Oakland, Calif., Nov. 14. Police in Oakland began clearing out a weeksold encampment of Occupy demonstrators. Photo: AP Wide World Photos/Paul Sakuma
“Mayor Bloomberg, who benefited from Wall St. greed, has no compunction against ruthlessly repressing those who dare exercise their constitutional rights to peaceably assemble and to petition the government for a redress of grievances that he helped to create,” activists responded.

Mayor Bloomberg, the world’s 30th wealthiest individual, grabbed national headlines after his police force’s midnight raid Nov. 15 on the encampment at Zuccotti Park, claiming the compound was a health hazard with serious safety concerns. Protestors were allowed back in the park but not tents or sleeping bags and a court sided with the city denying protestors the right to camp out.
Anthony Batalla, 20, from the predominately White middle-class community of Astoria Queens, N.Y. told The Final Call he was rousted from his tent by police and beaten. He showed off scars as proof, including a large bruise to his rib section. When asked why he had returned, Mr. Batalla said, “I will not let them scare me into not standing in solidarity with others who are fighting against economic inequality.”
Mr. Batalla said his father has worked for the Post Office for 38 years, but his parents may lose their home. He had been in Zuccotti Park since Oct. 4.
Rani Shamie, 30, said he has been at the Occupy encampment for five or six weeks and was an eyewitness the morning police in riot gear beat women who were in tents. “I want the constitution to be first; not the capitalist agenda. For the past 280 years, we have been moving the constitution forward; and we will resist the repression against our ideals,” he said.
In recent weeks, the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan has warned the president and the country that her warmongering abroad and lack of investment at home was another sign of a doomed America. “All that love war over peace, that love wrong over right, and love injustice over justice, this is the day of your doom. The end of your world has arrived! What you’re looking at happening in Tunisia, in Egypt, in Yemen, in Jordan, in Libya and Bahrain will soon, very soon, happen in all the nations of the world,” he said Saviours Day 2011.
“While it’s happening there, you better prepare, because it will be coming to your back door America,” he warned.
It appears police and politicians did in fact prepare—over one week at least a dozen cities moved to evict Occupy protesters from public spaces, with police actions sharing similar characteristics.
In newspaper accounts, some unnamed Dept. of Justice officials admitted that there had been coordinated action with the help of the Dept. of Homeland Security, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and other federal police agencies.
But analysts note Occupy demonstrations are not criminal activities and argue police should not be treating them as such, and the coordination shows the crackdown is political.
Oakland’s Mayor Jean Quan mentioned during an interview with the British Broadcasting Network that she was on a conference call with 17 other cities, discussing the crackdowns before they happened. Mayor Quan’s police department sparked a brutal confrontation which resulted in critically injuring Iraq war veteran Scott Olsen, followed by general labor strike in the port city.
A White House press secretary insisted Nov. 16 that the federal government was not coordinating the attacks, adding, “Every municipality has to make its own decision about how to handle their issues.”
But the federal government may also have the capacity to oversee such crackdowns through information fusion centers working at local levels. Before the National Fusion Center Conference in Kansas City, Mo., which came after the 9-11 attacks, Dept. of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, on March 11, 2009, said, “Fusion centers are going to be key in how we increase our ability to protect the homeland. We have created kind of a seamless network of information-sharing not just vertically state to federal, local to state to federal, but also horizontally across the country at different levels. Fusion centers will not be run by the federal government—fusion centers are primarily a phenomenon of your locality, your local and your state, and they grow from that basis and from that recognition,” Secy. Napolitano added.
There are reportedly 72 fusion centers across the country.

police_crackdown11-29-2011.jpg
An Occupy Wall Street protestor is subdued by a police offi cer near Zuccotti Park, Nov. 15, in New York. Police ordered demonstrators to leave their encampment in Zuccotti Park. Photo: AP Wide WorldPhotos/John Minchillo
The Homeland Security secretary told the National Fusion Center Coordination group that her department had given $327 million in direct funding and another $812 million for “broader information sharing” to back the fusion centers.

On Nov. 16, the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund and the National Lawyers Guild Defense Committee filed a Freedom of Information Act brief with the Dept. of Justice, Dept. of Homeland Security, FBI, Central Intelligence Agency and the National Park Service, requesting any information related to any involvement of federal agencies in planning the crackdown against the Occupy Movement.
“The severe crackdown on the Occupation Movement appears to be part of a national strategy to crush the movement,” said a spokesperson for the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund.
“The banks and the super-rich are becoming very concerned about ‘Occupy Wall St.’, and so, the level of repression will escalate,” predicted Oakland civil rights attorney/activist Dan Siegel, who is also a member of the National Lawyers Guild. “The one percent won’t give up without a fight,” Mr. Siegel told The Final Call.
Mr. Siegel resigned as an advisor to Mayor Quan after her crackdown against the Occupy Oakland encampment. “When I see all of the 20-year-olds and teenagers engaged in the movement, it gives me a great sense of optimism,” he said.
While Mr. Siegel says there are reasons to be optimistic, those who monitor the press and how the government deals with the press in America do not share his optimism. Josh Stearns, associate program director for Free Press, a media watchdog organization, told The Final Call that there appears to be a growing disrespect for the freedom of the press in America among government actors.
“The issue is a lot larger than covering protests. We see a growing trend in the U.S. of repression against the press; and we need to have a national debate about how to move forward,” Mr. Stearns said.
Mr. Stearns’ organization documented the arrest of 13 journalists in NYC during the Day of Action—including five with press credentials issued by the NYPD. There are also reports that police pushed reporters back some five blocks before their raid on the encampment at Zuccotti Park; and news helicopters were not allowed to fly directly over the encampment.
An 84-year-old grandmother pepper sprayed while watching an encounter between police and members of Occupy Seattle compared the media lockdown in the U.S. to what was going on in Nazi Germany as she was growing up.
“I see the same thing happening here. We really have no more free media that will bring you the issues instead of just the soft- fluff entertainment news,” Dorli Rainey told Keith Olbermann, while appearing on his nationally syndicated show.
In the meantime, the Wall St. Journal used data from the NY State Dept. of Labor Nov 17 to report the NYC job market shed 2,000 jobs for the third consecutive month. The Journal said NYC unemployment stands at 8.8 percent, with 350,000 out of work up from the October number of 346,400 people.
In Washington, D.C., the Patriotic Millionaires for Fiscal Strength continued a campaign against the congressional “super committee” for not showing fiscal responsibility. The committee made up of six Democrats and six Republicans representatives was to come up with a plan to trim $1.2 trillion from the federal budget by Nov. 23. The Patriotic Millionaires were discouraged over the committee’s position that it could not agree on a formula for reducing spending. The committee failed to find a way to trim the federal budget equally before automatic spending cuts kick in.
A Patriotic Millionaire spokesperson told ABC News on Nov. 16 “It’s a Las Vegas economy where regular Americans put their money on the table and the richest one percent owns the house. And if the one percent loses money, the 99 percent bails them out, covers their losses.”
Inaction by the super committee could mean more job losses and people on the streets, said analysts. There was also a clarion voice of warning:
“If the government of the United States forgets about the poor—the Black poor, the White poor, the Brown poor—and concentrates only on benefits for the rich, and is trying to make it better for the middle class who are fast becoming the new poor, then the heart of the American Congress is as cold as the granite that bears the image of a man whose heart was warm for the principles of Freedom, Justice, Equality and Peace,” said Min. Farrakhan during his Oct. 9 address at the 16th Anniversary of the Million Man March and Holy Day of Atonement in Philadelphia. The man Min. Farrakhan was speaking about was Dr. Martain Luther King Jr. prior to the dedication of the MLK monument in Washington, D.C.
But, the bad economic news keeps coming, this time from the U.S. Census Bureau in a November report that found the poverty level in the U.S. is higher than reported in September, which means that 100 million Americans are either in poverty or in the “fretful zone.”
The Census Bureau is using a new supplemental poverty measure, meant to better count disposable income. The new data says the “near poor” has increased.
“When we can’t feed our families, what do you tell us? Thou shalt not steal! When survival is the first law of nature, what are you going to do when Black people and poor people erupt in the streets of America? It’s coming! Will you use the federal troops, Mr. President against the poor?” asked Min. Farrakhan during his Feb. 2010 Saviours’ Day keynote address.

No comments: