Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff
jessemckinley Jesse McKinley
Crwd now close to 3000....call and response from speakers to crwd; "whole world is watching Oakland" - passing cars honking. #occupyoakland
23 minutes ago
CalFireNews Cal Fire News
#OWS #Alert multiple channels reporting possible raid on #OccupySF tonight around midnight, apparently #DHS wants all cities to clear camps
5 hours ago
OccupyAirForce Air Force anonymous
#OccupyDenver is being bullied by police and needs cold weather gear. #occupysf is supposedly getting raided tonight.
3 minutes ago
More police lining up at Zuccotti #ows #occupywallstreet
blogdiva Liza Sabater
where? Union Sq? RT @OccupyWallSt: please be aware, COBRA a tactical NYPD unit is mounting, expect gas! #ows
1 minute ago
exiledsurfer exiledsurfer
RT @mtracey: Now there are two groups of riot cops on Liberty St., facing Zucotti. Emotions running high. #OWS
50 seconds ago
The cops in Oakland, CA must be insane or have very dense people calling the shots. Their response to Occupy Oakland was so over the top it’s staggering. Tear gas, riot gear, flashbombs. Hundreds of armored police descended on the peaceful encampment.
If you want to create martyrs to a cause you oppose, this is how it’s done people:
"They came in force, bringing hundreds and hundreds of para-military police officers to subdue a group of campers who offered no resistance. JP Dobrin has some amazing pictures of the police assault, if you want to see that. I find myself thinking much more about what isn’t there anymore, the social infrastructure that these people treated as a violent threat to, something. We shouldn’t romanticize what was happening in that camp; parts were incredibly beautiful and inspiring, and then parts were, like anywhere else you have people, problematic. But it was working and growing and struggling, until, of course, it wasn’t allowed to anymore.
I support peaceful protest and democratic dissent. What we should never countenance is state violence against people who are not using violence themselves, whatever the cause. I don’t care if it’s Occupy Wall Street or the Tea Party. Though those Tea Partiers had lots of guns."
A little friendly advice for the police: if you want a protest or a rally to dissipate, ignore it. Until it turns into a violent riot, ignore it. Even if it goes on for weeks and months, eventually people go home.
If you want to make the protests more poignant, more profound, if you want to swell the ranks of the protesters and give them even more legitimacy, attack them with tear gas and flashbombs. Arrest them en masse.
Marine, Navy, Army and Airforce Veterans and Police Vow to Protect Innocent Protesters
In response to the police brutality against peaceful American protesters – here, here, here, here, here and here – military and police groups are forming to protect American citizens.
In fact, many in the military support the protests (and see this).
As of today, OccupyMarines, Occupy Police, Occupy Navy, Occupy Airforce, and Occupy Army have formed to protect the people against police brutality.
After Veterans for Peace member Scott Olsen – a Marine Corps veteran twice deployed to Iraq – was critically wounded in the Occupy Oakland protest, Occupy Marines tweeted:
WHEN YOU SHOOT ONE MARINE, YOU SHOOT AT ALL OF US. OORAH. Do It Peacefully Occupy We Stand In Solidarity
http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2011/10/ ... ment-15103
ThatSarahSnyder Sarah Snyder
This gives me chills/tears RT Egyptian revolutionaries announced they will march in #Tahrir on Oct 28th in solidarity with #occupyoakland
34 minutes ago
St Paul's Cathedral canon resigns
Giles Fraser quits over plans to forcibly remove Occupy London Stock Exchange protesters from outside cathedral
Riazat Butt, Shiv Malik, Lizzy Davies
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 27 October 2011
The canon chancellor of St Paul's Cathedral, the Rev Dr Giles Fraser, has resigned in protest at plans to forcibly remove protesters from its steps, saying he could not support the possibility of "violence in the name of the church".
Speculation grew in the last 24 hours that Fraser, a leading leftwing voice in the Church of England, would resign because he could not sanction the use of police or bailiffs against the hundreds of activists who have set up camp in the grounds of the cathedral in the past fortnight.
Just after 9am on Thursday, Fraser tweeted: "It is with great regret and sadness that I have handed in my notice at St Paul's Cathedral."
In a statement to the Guardian, Fraser, who was appointed canon in May 2009, confirmed his resignation, saying: "I resigned because I believe that the chapter has set on a course of action that could mean there will be violence in the name of the church."
...
Fraser quickly became a hero figure among the Occupy the London Stock Exchange (LSX) movement, clearing police officers off the steps of St Paul's and supporting the group's right to peaceful protest after a court injunction stopped it from setting up camp in nearby Paternoster Square. He also delivered a Sunday sermon decrying corporate greed, which was seen as another sign of his endorsement of the protest.
Occupy London said it was "deeply moved" to hear of his resignation.
"He is man of great personal integrity and our thoughts are with him. He respected our right to protest and defended it. For that we are very grateful, as he ensured that St Paul's could be a sanctuary for us and that no violence could take place against peaceful protesters with a legitimate cause – challenging and tackling social and economic injustice in London, the UK and beyond."
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