#OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby 82_28 » Fri Nov 18, 2011 2:51 am

First things first, I agree with, have marginally taken part in and am all for OWS.

Second things more importantly: To get anywhere in Seattle north to south you have the choice of two high occupancy bridges (Ship Canal and Aurora) and four other surface bridges (Montlake, University, Fremont and Ballard). That is it. No other way to get to where you wanna go north or south of the canal or lakes if that is what you need to do.

Today's shutting down of the University Bridge incenses me. Utter idiocy and just writing this makes me seethe even more.

My girlfriend's sister was just diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (5 months ago or so). She's very young (23), she's beautiful, strong and athletic. She lives in Eastlake, just south of the University bridge and a little under the Ship Canal (I-5 bridge). We live around the other side of the lake (North of Queen Anne), thus must utilize the fucking bridge, one of the FIVE ESSENTIAL bridges this fucking city depends on to get north and south. But nooooooo.

Well, sis has been getting multiple injections to fight this MS and they just fucking upped her dose yesterday. Well. . . . . . She had a fucking reaction today and was running a fucking fever and couldn't fucking move. Guess what else couldn't move? Oh I dunno, people that needed to get to her because traffic is blocked by these fucking asshats who A) don't have a clue as to what pieces of infrastructure are essential and B) How not to piss off sympathizers.

These fools shut down the entire city for a time today. There are FIVE (5) routes to get north and south. They chose to close one down at RUSH HOUR on a Thursday. They put my, for all intents and purposes, sister in law's life at risk, because we could not reach her. So OS, FUCK YOU and learn a little bit about positive outcomes to your antics and who the fuck they might affect.

I'm still with you, but fuck you, you put people's lives in danger today and if not that made some of us worry even more than necessary. Her doctor and the hospital is north of that bridge you blocked. Let's get the asshats who come up with these stunts outta there, OK?

If you knew one goddamned thing about this city and gave a single fuck for it, you would not block one of it's necessary bridges.
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Fri Nov 18, 2011 3:10 am

82_28 wrote:asshats who A) don't have a clue as to what pieces of infrastructure are essential and B) How not to piss off sympathizers.


Yes. The ideas and beliefs and conversations at GA make me despair a lot.

I keep going, though.

The greatest value #OWS will provide is the networks of quiet competence that get connected by it...and remain standing.
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Allegro » Fri Nov 18, 2011 3:33 am

.
Excerpt from Blips #117
by Gilles d’Aymery | Swans dot com | Nov 7, 2011
— fifth paragraph only

    PERHAPS BOOMERS would be well advised to ponder and keep in mind what the late French biologist Jean Rostand wrote in Inquietudes d’un biologiste, « A entendre certains fracas, on souhaiterait, pour ce qu’on estime, la dignité du silence. » (“To hear some deafening news, one would wish, for what is esteemed, the dignity of silence.”) These young people are very well informed. They know that almost 20 million of them (age 18-29) are unemployed. They know that the Boomers are leaving them with over $15 trillion in public debt, which will grow to $20 trillion by 2015. They know there is no way they can repay this debt in their lifetime. There are many young veterans among them who fought and died for wars chosen by their elders and who are fully aware of the $1 trillion a year spent on military adventurism. They sure know about Wall Street and the banksters, and their armies of lobbyists—and how both Democratic and Republican parties have been captured by corpocracy. They are much more knowledgeable in many ways than the Boomers. What they do not know is how to change, or at least fix, the insane system they are inheriting, and since the creators of this insane system don’t know either, they should simply shut up and let the new generation figure it out. They will.

    [RESUME.]

Swans’s editor, Gilles d’Aymery wrote:Gilles d’Aymery was born in 1950 in France. Educated at the Universities of Economics & Law of Toulouse and Paris, and at the Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Paris, he’s traveled extensively and speaks several languages. Aymery has worked in the international oil & gas industry, moved to the U.S. in 1982, eventually changed course to become a computer consultant to small US businesses, and created Swans in 1996. He has been dedicating his time to the project since January 2001.

A contrarian, Aymery is a long-time advocate of policies that promote cooperation (in opposition to competition), equal allocation and sharing of created wealth entailing redistribution of revenues, collective decision-making on the control of resources (both input and output), and “underconsumptionism” to mitigate growing human-made ecological mayhem. As a contrarian by nature and a secular humanist by affinity, he has never been a member of, or affiliated to a political party, and as a nonreligious person never embraced any ideological chapel… [RESUME.]
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby American Dream » Fri Nov 18, 2011 10:59 am

NOVEMBER 17, 2011

http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/11/17/ ... -movement/

Repression Breeds Resistance

The Coming War on the Occupy Movement

by GEORGE CICCARIELLO-MAHER


As I begin to write this, Occupy Oakland circulates in a by-now familiar pattern: forced from the camp at the break of day, the occupiers reconvened as they have done before on the steps of the Public Library. Later, they will attempt to close a repeating circuit that stretches a short six blocks along 14th Street between City Hall and the Library.

This circuit, moreover, is one which draws its familiarity not only from recent weeks, but also from the early moments of what is a single cycle of struggle spanning years: it was down 14th Street that Oakland Police pursued us during the first rebellion, on January 7th of 2009, that greeted the murder of Oscar Grant. And it was in front of the same Public Library that I crouched behind a bush as an armored personnel carrier sped past, only to sprint off as heavily-clad militarized police-troops dismounted to chase myself and others on foot.

It has become all too apparent that the Occupy Movement is under attack, and that even my title is wholly insufficient: this war is not “coming,” this war has already begun.

Breaching the Limits of Tolerance

Writing from the perspective of a previous cycle of struggle, the radical Frankfurt School theorist Herbert Marcuse described the phenomenon of “repressive tolerance,” in which an ostensibly liberating concept and practice becomes distorted to suit the powerful and legitimate the status quo. According to the political theorist Wendy Brown, the discourse of tolerance serves to mark the powerful as normal while discrediting the “unruly” as somehow “deviant,” and thereby “legitimates the most illiberal actions of the state.” In other words, the repression that comes is not a distinct and corrupted form of tolerance, as for Marcuse, but instead embedded within the idea itself.

This lesson is of paramount importance to the Occupy Movement, but so is its opposite: even the most repressive of tolerance has its limits in the push-and-pull of forces vying for control, and Marcuse’s arguable pessimism on this point must be countered with the optimism of transgressing those limits.

This war began as most do, in the realm of hegemonic struggle where small shifts signal coming offensives. But walking the fine line of counterintelligence and counterinsurgency, the forces conspiring against the Occupy Movement have been anything but subtle. In a crude and thinly-veiled information war, lies are tossed about like the seeds they are, and the media duly parrots line put forth by police and city alike. This “chatter” (to turn the language of the counterinsurgents against them) begins to spread surreptitiously: that Occupy is unsanitary, now dangerously so, now downright violent.

By the time San Francisco Chronicle was citing “anonymous police sources” about the conditions of the camp (bearing in mind that the police were not even allowed into the camp), it was clear to many that a raid was imminent. For the second raid this morning, the warning was even clearer: another anonymous leak to the Chronicle, and a leaked email to parents at a local school about an “overwhelming use of force.”

The script is strikingly similar across the map, from Oakland to Portland, Atlanta to Philly: a Democratic mayor plays nice, claiming to represent “the 99%” and to support the Occupation’s crusade against big business. But at some point, as the chatter increases, the occupation goes badly wrong, becoming unacceptable and violent, unrecognizable to the Middle America for which it claims to speak. A murder, a suicide, a rape, and an overdose suddenly brim with political opportunity. With the stage set, all that remains is for the guardians of good order to step in to defend the common good.

The Students Step into the Fray

The Bay Area Occupy Movement received an unexpected shot in the arm last Wednesday when students protesting the creeping increase in fees in the UC system pitched a small number of tents on the grassy area in front of Sproul Hall. If Oakland Mayor Jean Quan drastically miscalculated when she unleashed the police in late October, the response by UCPD to this seemingly minor disturbance strays into the realm of the Epic Fail. Deploying overwhelming force, UCPD could be seen on video beating and spearing students with their batons, punching some in the face, and even dragging English Professor Celeste Langan down by her hair. Langan would later write about her experience, and another English Professor, Geoffrey O’Brien, was also injured by police on the day.

Such repressive tactics and blatant disconnect between the second-rate cops of the UCPD and the student body are nothing new. Amid the student upsurge of 2009, the UCPD came under heavy scrutiny for its handling of a wave of building occupations, and at least one lawsuit from a friend of mine whose fingers had been purposely broken by a sadistic officer outside the Wheeler Hall occupation. At the height of the repressive wave, I myself was one of many featured on the UCPD website in an openly McCarthyite attempt to foster a snitch culture on campus (website visitors were encouraged to send tips that would aid in identifying the dangerous student organizers). The website was eventually removed through legal action.

But repression breeds resistance, as we well know. As I write this, the November 15th system-wide student strike is but a few hours away, and the mass participation of students in the Occupy struggle promises, if they can successfully link with their counterparts to the south, to offer a much needed injection of energy and numbers.

The Indestructible Oakland Commune

The days following the Oakland General Strike and port shutdown were dominated by a debate that never should have been. Rather than crowing about an unprecedented and unexpected chain of victories, in which Occupiers forced the city to back down and re-took Oscar Grant Plaza only to then embark on a massive if not truly General Strike, which saw up to 25,000 people swarm and shut down the Port of Oakland, some within the metaphorical Occupy camp naively took the bait offered by the city and the police, and amplified by the media. The press talking points went something like this: an otherwise powerful day was sullied by the actions of a small few who broke windows at a bank and assailed the Whole Foods in my old neighborhood.

While this iteration of the “nonviolence” debate was won on many fronts by those promoting nuance and diversity of tactics, this was nevertheless a powerful foothold for those seeking to oust the Occupation once again. Within a matter of days the chatter had increased once again, City Council was almost unanimously urging its removal, and the formerly remorseful Jean Quan, fresh from a visit to Scott Olson’s bedside, was once again urging the Occupiers to vacate. Councilwoman Desley Brooks, whose opportunism apparently knows no bounds, went from sleeping at the occupation (or at least publicly emerging from a tent) to condemning the occupiers in a matter of mere weeks. (Such stage-managed populism is something of a forte: Brooks had previously unleashing her goons on myself and others for apparently undermining her carefully crafted image of sympathy with the people.)

As City Council turned against the Occupiers, and as the City Administrator threatened to go around the Mayor to approve a raid, Quan was apparently disconnected and feigned impotence: as a leaked email from her husband put it, “she does not set policy for the city… council does.” The very same Mayor who had approved the devastatingly brutal raid a week prior finally signed on to allow the same police, under the same police chief, with the same participating agencies, to move in and clear the camp.

This was too much for some within the Quan administration to handle. At 2am, Quan’s chief legal advisor Dan Siegel resigned via a twitter message. Siegel, who I am proud to count as a friend and a comrade, and whose civil rights law firm has tirelessly defended protestors in the past, has been for years fighting the struggle within the Quan administration against all odds. He has chosen to take a principled stand at exactly the right moment.

As Occupiers massed at the Public Library, only to march once again up 14th Street to again seize Oscar Grant Plaza with no resistance from police, the same Plaza the Mayor had just spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to clear, it is clear that she has been defeated once again, and decisively so. One wonders what could possibly be next for Quan.

Occupy Philly’s “Wrong Turn”

On the opposite coast, the same script plays out. After initially expressing support for Occupy Philly, and evidently fooling many Occupiers in the process, Mayor Nutter was re-elected by a wide margin last Tuesday, freeing his hand for a radical change in course. The previous week, the Radical Caucus of Occupy Philly had brought forth a proposal to the General Assembly which simply stated that the Occupy camp would not voluntarily leave in preparation for a scheduled construction project in Dilworth Plaza, and would resist eviction. The proposal seemed to shock many who had been lulled into the false sense of security that liberal tolerance provides, but after extending discussion of a modified proposal for an entire week, a four-hour General Assembly decided almost unanimously (150 to 3) to remain in Dilworth Plaza and make preparations for nonviolent civil disobedience in the event of a raid.

Nutter’s first move came in a Sunday press conference, in which he announced his intentions to the world in so many words. “Occupy Philly has changed,” he insisted, and so to must the city’s relation with it change. Conditions had deteriorated, fire codes had been violated, and communication, according to the Mayor, had been unilaterally severed. The shadowy force behind this subtle and unwelcome change, according to Nutter, was the Radical Caucus, a frightening group that had taken over and is “bent on civil disobedience” (I only wonder why he didn’t follow suit with other cities in referring to “violence”). If the central pretext for eviction in other cities has been murder, suicide, and overdoses, in Philly it is rape: Nutter highlighted a sexual assault at the camp as an indication of just how far the movement had fallen.

If the repetition of this same strategy, discredit then evict, across the country were not enough to doubt the Mayor’s words, Occupy Philly itself was quick to respond. At a counter-press conference yesterday, speaker after speaker dismantled Nutter’s claim, piece by piece. The most shocking revelation came from the Women’s Caucus, which was quick to highlight the opportunism and hypocrisy of focusing in on the sexual assault as a pretext to attack the Occupation. As a representative of the Women’s Caucus told the press, “We asked police for help with the eviction of a sexual predator. The police said, ‘It’s not our problem. Get your men to handle it.’”

If anything, the Mayor’s slander has strengthened the resolve of those who will defend the camp from eviction, and here’s to hoping it will open the eyes of some who have claimed that the Mayor was on the side of the Occupation from day one. (The so-called “Reasonable Solutions Committee,” which had spearheaded efforts to hand the Plaza back to the city, appears to be beyond all limits of reason. Its members are now both circulating a petition to repeal the GA’s decision to remain, deemed a “Petition for the Logical” with characteristic condescension, while simultaneously betraying the Occupation as a whole by unilaterally applying for alternative permits from the city).

The Politics of War

From the messy dialectic of the spreading Occupy Movement emerge some expected developments. Solidarity develops among the occupiers, who draw strength from the successes and rage from the repression of their comrades, learning crucial and radicalizing lessons from both. Police and city administrators similarly close ranks (sometimes together, sometimes against one another) gripped with the fear that their power is splintering, that the movements have become ungovernable, that they are slipping the yoke and refusing the straitjacket. A climate of mutual polarization, radicalization, and warfare sets in.

But other unexpected dynamics surface as well, some of which play into the hands of the Occupiers. As Occupations spread from Oakland to Berkeley, the sheer number of available police becomes a question, as individual forces rely on mutual aid programs for costly, large-scale eviction efforts. Word emerges that Oakland’s efforts to remove the camp were sped-up due to the constraints imposed by the impending student strike tomorrow. Here the fallout from the brutality of the first Oakland eviction blows back on the police forces themselves: citing the excessive force in Oakland, Berkeley City Council voted unanimously to block mutual aid assistance between the Berkeley PD and UCPD.

And even those more than willing to participate in brutality have begun to demand more booty and protection: in the run-up to the second Oakland eviction this morning, the Alameda County Sheriff’s Department demanded not only $1,000 per officer per day, and the City of Alameda also demanded increased legal protection in the case of a repeat of the brutality that left Iraq veteran Scott Olson critically injured at the hands of an ACSD officer. This increasing legal scrutiny, financial strain, and sheer numerical limitations bode well for the future of Bay Area occupations and those across the nation.

I use the language of war consciously, not out of some desire for violent conclusion but out of a recognition that violence is already there. As our Egyptian comrades made clear in a statement in solidarity with Oakland, “It is not our desire to participate in violence, but it is even less our desire to lose.” Despite the asymmetrical nature of the war that confronts us, the implements are the same: few can deny the shocking militarization of police departments in recent years, or that this heavy weaponry has been all but openly deployed against the Occupiers. If Clausewitz famously argued that war is politics by other means, a formulation which Foucault slyly reversed, the practical reality of the Occupy Movement is that the two are much more difficult to disentangle from one another. Every word from the mouth of these Democratic Mayors, every leak whispered from a cop to a reporter is a rubber bullet in potentia.

I use the language of war because we will not back down, and because as a result, the war will be brought to us.

But more importantly, I speak of war because this is not a one-sided affair, and we should not allow our opponents to strip us of our status as equals simply because we do not respond in kind. Our power is nothing to scoff at, although it circulates in a manner largely distinct from that which we oppose. Just two nights ago, Occupy Portland swelled into the thousands to defend Chapman and Lownsdale squares, facing down riot police, forcing their retreat, and winning the night in the most absolute of terms. Last night, the plaza was cleared and campers removed, but traces of such a stunning initial victory remain in the confidence and compromise of the occupiers as they regroup and go once more into the breach.

And as I finish, I receive late word from Oakland that the occupiers have re-taken Oscar Grant Plaza without more than a symbolic police presence, and even later word of a massive crackdown of Zucotti Park in Lower Manhattan. Another skirmish lost, another battle won, but the long war stretches out before us like an interminable horizon.




George Ciccariello-Maher is an exiled Oaklander who lives in Philadelphia and teaches political theory at Drexel University. He can be reached at gjcm(at)drexel.edu.
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Jeff » Fri Nov 18, 2011 11:41 am

Video of the complete projection here. What a beautiful action.



Interview with creator of Occupy Wall Street "bat-signal" projections during Brooklyn Bridge #N17 march

XJ: How did you go about finding someone nearby who would allow you stage this from inside their home?

MR: Opposite the Verizon building, there is a bunch of city housing. Subsidized, rent-controlled. There's a lack of services, lights are out in the hallways, the housing feels like jails, like prisons. I walked around, and put up signs in there offering money to rent out an apartment for a few hours. I didn't say much more. I received surprisingly few calls, and most of them seemed not quite fully there. But then I got one call from a sane person Her name was Denise Vega. She lived on the 16th floor. Single, working mom, mother of three.

I spoke with her on the phone, and a few days later went over and met her.

I told her what I wanted to do, and she was enthused. The more I described, the more excited she got.

Her parting words were, "let's do this."

She wouldn't take my money. That was the day of the eviction of Zuccotti, the same day. And she'd been listening to the news all day, she saw everything that had happened.

"I can't charge you money, this is for the people," she said.

She was born in the projects. She opened up her home to us.
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby thurnundtaxis » Fri Nov 18, 2011 11:45 am

^^ Wow! What a great story. Much love to Ms. Vega!
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby MacCruiskeen » Fri Nov 18, 2011 11:57 am

An inspiring speech by Todd Chretien to the November 9th Occupy Education rally at the University of California Santa Cruz:

"Ich kann gar nicht so viel fressen, wie ich kotzen möchte." - Max Liebermann,, Berlin, 1933

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby barracuda » Fri Nov 18, 2011 12:40 pm

82_28 wrote:I'm still with you, but fuck you, you put people's lives in danger today and if not that made some of us worry even more than necessary. Her doctor and the hospital is north of that bridge you blocked. Let's get the asshats who come up with these stunts outta there, OK?


I hope your sister-un-law came through that okay, man. I know if it were someone close to me in such a situation I'd be angry as well.

However, I don't think there's any way around the fact that any honest attempt to change the fucked up and bullshit situation we're all in now might result in the inconveniencing of large swaths of the population at times. And without parsing out individual instances of inconvenience, it's hard to imagine that, generally speaking, it is easy or handy to be evicted from your home, or be out of work, or be drone-bombed from above, or to not be able to affford adequate medical assistance at all, as a result of the actions of the fascists running the show - all of which make up slices of the reasons for the bridge shut-down.

Again though, best wishes for your girl friend's sister, and for anyone in like circumstance. Try and keep in the back of your mind that your government is the motivator behind these kinds of incidents, and that people are trying to make things better.
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby JackRiddler » Fri Nov 18, 2011 12:43 pm

.

Yesterday in Manhattan: chaotic and infuriating on the one hand, but in the end fantastic, invigorating, inspiring. This is a movement!

Hope to report later.

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Jeff » Fri Nov 18, 2011 12:54 pm

Meanwhile, in London (which is being live-blogged at link):

Occupy London takes over empty UBS bank

Protesters escalate demonstration with 'public repossession' a day after ignoring Corporation of London's demand for them to leave St Paul's

3.08pm:

The new occupation has been assisted by members of squatters' rights groups, who hope to also use it to highlight an imminent new law which will make the practice a criminal offence, Peter says. Currently, so long as a building was empty and there was no criminal damage in gaining entry, squatters must be evicted via the civil courts.

At a press conference inside the building, Occupy activists said they hoped to avoid confrontation with police by negotiating with UBS to use the empty complex by agreement. Attempts to contact the bank had thus far been unanswered, they said.

The Guardian was given a tour of much of the main building, comprising dozens of empty office suites in generally good repair, although there was some damp and damaged plaster.

Aside from the building's size and location, near many other financial institutions, the activists say it was chosen as it is owned by a major bank, and one which was bailed out by taxpayers, albeit those in Switzerland. Ronan McNern, a regular camp spokesman, said: "UBS is representative of the sort of bank which is not acting in the public interest. This is a public repossession of their empty building."


A few days ago I was saying in my head, Don't stagnate: escalate! But my head holds nothing this movement needs to hear.
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby 2012 Countdown » Fri Nov 18, 2011 1:14 pm

Beautiful indeed, thank you Jeff.

I also look forward to reading Jack's and Bruce's and other RIers report/personal experiences on site.

---

LRAD Defends ‘Sound Cannon’ Use At Occupy Wall Street

Image

Image

Carl Franzen- November 17, 2011, 6:43 PM 5837110Occupy Wall Street supporters have blasted the New York Police Department’s use of Long Range Acoustic Devices to respond to the civil disobedience actions that sprang up throughout Manhattan on Thursday.

“So it’s official: NYPD is using LRAD sound cannons. Usually used during combat, they send harmful, pain inducing tones over long distances,” tweeted the Occupied Wall Street Journal account.

“LRAD works according to the same principle as that old Memorex commercial. Your skull is the wine glass and the cops are Ella Fitzgerald,” tweeted Anon
Photos of an LRAD being carried around by an NYPD officer were snapped by Joshua Paul, an Android developer on the ground during Friday’s clashes.

But the LRAD Corporation, the San Diego-based company that manufacturers the devices (and there are at least six distinct products, ranging from the “handheld” LRAD 100X to various vehicle-mounted and stationary devices), asserts that its products aren’t weapons at all, not even less than-lethal ones, but rather that they are primarily “communication devices,” and superior ones at that to alternatives such as the trusty old megaphone, or bullhorn.

“The police are likely using it to communicate,” with the protesters, said Scott Stuckey, Vice President for Business Development at the LRAD Corporation, in a telephone interview with TPM. “Megaphones aren’t loud enough to reach people over a large, crowded space, with lots of background noise.”

Indeed, LRAD’s website advertises the products to law enforcement and military clients as being variants of a “high-intensity directional acoustic hailer designed for long-range communication and issuing powerful warning tones…”

The website continues:

http://idealab.talkingpointsmemo.com/20 ... street.php

===========

Report: NYPD cop pushes New York Supreme Court Judge into wall
By Rob Beschizza at 6:59 am Friday, Nov 18

Democracy Now quotes New York Supreme Court Judge Karen Smith:
I was there to take down the names of people who were arrested… As I’m standing there, some African-American woman goes up to a police officer and says, ‘I need to get in. My daughter’s there. I want to know if she’s OK.’ And he said, ‘Move on, lady.’ And they kept pushing with their sticks, pushing back. And she was crying. And all of a sudden, out of nowhere, he throws her to the ground and starts hitting her in the head,” says Smith. “I walk over, and I say, ‘Look, cuff her if she’s done something, but you don’t need to do that.’ And he said, ‘Lady, do you want to get arrested?’ And I said, ‘Do you see my hat? I’m here as a legal observer.’ He said, ‘You want to get arrested?’ And he pushed me up against the wall.

http://boingboing.net/2011/11/18/nypd-c ... supre.html
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Project Willow » Fri Nov 18, 2011 1:30 pm

Police riot in Portland.
Image

Protesting needs to stop being illegal.
http://blogtown.portlandmercury.com/BlogtownPDX/archives/2011/11/17/occupy-portland
..............

I was angry about the bridge action too, but only because I'd been deceived by the various notices and couldn't participate! Our police were much more reserved yesterday.

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Jeff » Fri Nov 18, 2011 1:34 pm

Interesting, almost Albert Speerish confessional here from the former police chief responsible for the brutality of the Battle of Seattle.

...

My support for a militaristic solution caused all hell to break loose. Rocks, bottles and newspaper racks went flying. Windows were smashed, stores were looted, fires lighted; and more gas filled the streets, with some cops clearly overreacting, escalating and prolonging the conflict. The “Battle in Seattle,” as the WTO protests and their aftermath came to be known, was a huge setback—for the protesters, my cops, the community.

More than a decade later, the police response to the Occupy movement, most disturbingly visible in Oakland—where scenes resembled a war zone and where a marine remains in serious condition from a police projectile—brings into sharp relief the acute and chronic problems of American law enforcement. Seattle might have served as a cautionary tale, but instead, US police forces have become increasingly militarized, and it’s showing in cities everywhere: the NYPD “white shirt” coating innocent people with pepper spray, the arrests of two student journalists at Occupy Atlanta, the declaration of public property as off-limits and the arrests of protesters for “trespassing.”

...

It is ironic that those police officers who are busting up the Occupy protesters are themselves victims of the same social ills the demonstrators are combating: corporate greed; the slackening of essential regulatory systems; and the abject failure of all three branches of government to safeguard civil liberties and to protect, if not provide, basic human needs like health, housing, education and more. With cities and states struggling to balance the budget while continuing to deliver public safety, many cops are finding themselves out of work. And, as many Occupy protesters have pointed out, even as police officers help to safeguard the power and profits of the 1 percent, police officers are part of the 99 percent.

There will always be situations—an armed and barricaded suspect, a man with a knife to his wife’s throat, a school-shooting rampage—that require disciplined, military-like operations. But most of what police are called upon to do, day in and day out, requires patience, diplomacy and interpersonal skills. I’m convinced it is possible to create a smart organizational alternative to the paramilitary bureaucracy that is American policing. But that will not happen unless, even as we cull “bad apples” from our police forces, we recognize that the barrel itself is rotten.
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby thurnundtaxis » Fri Nov 18, 2011 1:47 pm

Here's Keith Olberman's hilarious take down of Bloomberg and his pompous ineptitude, in case anyone hasn't seen it yet:


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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Bruce Dazzling » Fri Nov 18, 2011 2:05 pm

Thursday afternoon:

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Thursday night:

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Much more at the links in my sig.
"Arrogance is experiential and environmental in cause. Human experience can make and unmake arrogance. Ours is about to get unmade."

~ Joe Bageant R.I.P.

OWS Photo Essay

OWS Photo Essay - Part 2
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