#OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff

Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Laodicean » Mon Dec 12, 2011 7:01 pm

User avatar
Laodicean
 
Posts: 3506
Joined: Wed Jan 27, 2010 9:39 pm
Blog: View Blog (16)

Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby 2012 Countdown » Mon Dec 12, 2011 8:43 pm

Occupy Seattle
BREAKING NEWS
Terminal 18 at the Port of Seattle, owned by Goldman Sachs, is occupied. No more profit today



Boots Riley
Ports update: Oakland shutdown. Vancouver shut down. Portland shut down. Longview shut down. LA/LB partially shut. SD: arrests.

===

Image
Occupy Goldman Sachs: The Protesters March On 'The Vampire Squid'
Linette Lopez and Robert Johnson | Dec. 12, 2011, 3:07 PM

"The first thing you need to know about Goldman Sachs is that it's everywhere. The world's most powerful investment bank is a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity..." -Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone
If you missed that quote when it first graced the pages of Rolling Stone last year, you probably heard it repeated again and again everywhere since. There was little to stop it. The image of Goldman sucking the life out of its victims was just too priceless for the media to pass up.
Occupy Wall Street couldn't help itself either.
Today, in solidarity with western protesters who aim to shut down the West Coast deep water ports, a little over 100 Occupy Wall Street protesters marched to Goldman Sachs on 200 West Street around 8:00 a.m. to show everyone inside the bank what the movement thought of it.
The demonstrators chanted: "F*** You Goldman Sachs, Occupy Strikes Back." At our last count, 17 people were arrested.
Loud costumes and a brass band aside though, this was a serious message. As Rutgers history Professor James Livingston put it as he addressed the crowd:
"We have two problems, surplus capital and superfluous profits...and we know where they come from. For the last 30 years income has been transferred away from labor and consumption to capital. Private investment is not necessary to drive growth...profits aren't necessary. They can do two things — they can sit in banks, or be channeled into speculative markets as they have been since 1983....Now we're subject to boom and bust cycles... We need to send money back to wages and socialize investment. We need to turn these people (bankers) into public servants."
Think that's radical? You should check out the pictures.

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/occupy-w ... z1gN1sntiW

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image


more at link

===

VIDEO: Police Make Arrests at Port of LA Occupy Protest
VIDEO: Police Make Arrests at Port of LA Occupy Protest - Eric Spillman reports
Hundreds of Occupy protesters gathered at Harry Bridges Park in San Pedro in an attempt to shut down the Port of LA.

http://www.ktla.com/videogallery/66717798/News/VIDEO

Image

===


By Mike Pearson, CNN
updated 3:02 PM EST, Mon December 12, 2011


(CNN) -- Protesters chanting, "Whose port? Our port!" protested at West Coast ports on Monday, temporarily shutting down some of the facilities in a protest against what they called corporate greed.

The protesters, affiliated with the nationwide "Occupy" movement, set out in the pre-dawn hours in Oakland, California; Los Angeles and Portland, Oregon, to shut down ports in an effort to "disrupt the economic machine that benefits the wealthiest individuals and corporations," according to organizers.
----
Story and video (1:03):
http://www.cnn.com/2011/12/12/us/occupy ... ?hpt=hp_t1
George Carlin ~ "Its called 'The American Dream', because you have to be asleep to believe it."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=acLW1vFO-2Q
User avatar
2012 Countdown
 
Posts: 2293
Joined: Wed Jan 30, 2008 1:27 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Project Willow » Mon Dec 12, 2011 10:50 pm

Two terminals in the Port of Seattle shut down today, #18 and #5.

Image

A line of semis is backed up around the Gate 1, terminal 18 entrance.

Image

If the police set these barricades, then they assisted with the blockade.

Image

Image
The protest was divided into color coded areas so people could decide on what level of risk they wished to take with the police. This was the "red" area, the blockade at the entrance to the port.

Image
I was just briefly behind the red area barricade as I did not want to get arrested.

Image

Image
he fellow on the painted horse was talking about hot chocolate. It's very cold here today, there was ice on the sidewalk.

Image
It was all rather calm and festive, not too many people. I did not stay long. I had not worn warm enough socks.

Image
I walked the entire way and shot this as the sun went down on my way home.
User avatar
Project Willow
 
Posts: 4798
Joined: Sat May 07, 2005 9:37 pm
Location: Seattle
Blog: View Blog (1)

Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Nordic » Mon Dec 12, 2011 11:18 pm

Thanks Willow. You represented me and god-only-knows how many others today!
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
Nordic
 
Posts: 14230
Joined: Fri Nov 10, 2006 3:36 am
Location: California USA
Blog: View Blog (6)

Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Hammer of Los » Tue Dec 13, 2011 8:21 am

...

Yeah, many thanks to 2012 countdown and Project Willow for the inspirational pictures and stories.

This is what hope for a new future looks like.

...
Hammer of Los
 
Posts: 3309
Joined: Sat Dec 23, 2006 4:48 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby JackRiddler » Tue Dec 13, 2011 10:49 am

Wow! Thanks Willow and 2012!
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

TopSecret WallSt. Iraq & more
User avatar
JackRiddler
 
Posts: 16007
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 2:59 pm
Location: New York City
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Bruce Dazzling » Tue Dec 13, 2011 2:06 pm

Lots of links in the original.

A Largely Peaceful Police State
Sunday, December 11, 2011
NPR Check


On November 30th the LAPD cleared out the LA Occupy encampment with a massive police action that was hailed in most mainstream media outlets as being peaceful and well-conducted. Being a defiantly mainstream media organization - NPR jumped on the bandwagon of LAPD-love with two features on its November 30 Morning Edition.

One involved Renee Montagne interviewing Frank Stoltze a reporter at NPR affiliate KPCC. Stoltze described "a massive police operation" that was "a largely peaceful operation" and commented that the protestors were "quite well-disciplined." Stoltze also claimed that the police action was due to "concerns about public safety' and because "there was some drug use going on." At that point Montagne interrupted him to say "And drug dealing, I mean there were some stories of you know, you know homeless encampments that had encroached on the encampment." [Of course "some stories" is all the evidence Montagne produces to substantiate such a provocative claim].

The second story featured Inskeep interviewing Frank Stotlze who explained that "in the end there was very little force used...in part because this is a new LAPD." The interview covered much of the same material as the Renee Montagne piece.

BUT there were a few little problems with this Police State Theater propaganda from LA:

First, the coverage of the raid was restricted to 12 members of a media septic tank pool. Like the restrictive media pools of the US military these "pools" are meant to tightly control access to what is actually happening and to favorably tilt coverage toward those who set up the pool and grant/deny access to this "pool" - in this case the LAPD. You would think, just the very concept of the police media pool would raise journalistic concerns - unless your news organization is tiltled toward spinning press coverage in favor of police actions against dissidents.

Second, and most important, a lot of rough and very ugly police behavior occurred outside the coverage perimeter that the media pool had access to, and to those who were arrested once they were out of the range of media pool coverage. Ruth Folwer of Occupy LA reported on police "kettling," rough tactics, and arbitrary arrests that occurred on side streets around the main occupy crackdown. Lisa Derrick documented police use of "non lethal" weapons on non-violent, non-resistant LA protesters. The LA Weekly blog noted the brutal police attack on photojournalist, Tyson Heder. Patrick Meighan, one of the writers for the popular FOX cartoon, Family Guy, has posted a very detailed description of his first hand experience of the rough treatment meted out to those arrested at Occupy LA. A very similar picture emerged from Exiled editor, Yasha Levine's description of his treatment by the LAPD. The Brad Blog gathered evidence of both the deplorable conditions endured by arrestees and the use of police violence against protesters during that "largely peaceful operation" by the "new LAPD" that NPR's Frank Stoltze was so impressed with.

Any organization that claims to be doing journalism would recognize that it has a duty and responsibility to revisit a story/s which future events and facts have shown was so distorted, truncated, and false. It's bad enough that NPR considers it acceptable to adopt the servile role of reporting from a police-picked/ police approved "pool" - but even more disturbing is its utter lack of follow-up in correcting the misinformation conveyed in that report. Given that we are talking about NPR (which has a fondness for jack-booted police tactics and for the expanded powers of the surveillance state) it really is no surprise at all that NPR has purposely ignored the evidence that their two main feature stories on the police action against Occupy LA were nothing but pro-police propaganda filled with inaccuracies and spin.

If you want to get a sense of the "objective" and "unbiased" attitudes of the so-called journalists who work for NPR and its affiliates listen first to the Steve Inskeep interview story I mentioned above and hear the derision in Inskeep voice as he sneers "OK, so the tree fort is on its way out." [this link has great images and descriptions of that "peaceful" action.] Even more disturbing is KPCC's John Rabe's editorializing as he interviews pool reporter and colleague Frank Stolze and says [at about the halfway point of the interview]:

"There were a lot of protesters who were saying [Rabe imitates them with snarky intonation] 'This is what a police state looks like.' And it's not what a police state looks like. They may not like the lines of cops, but nobody was shot down like in say Syria, Egypt, Libya - these are police states; I don't think that helps the Occupy LA's cause by having people shouting dumb stuff like that."


"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
User avatar
Bruce Dazzling
 
Posts: 2306
Joined: Wed Dec 26, 2007 2:25 pm
Location: Yes
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Twyla LaSarc » Tue Dec 13, 2011 2:41 pm

Thanks Willow! I wanted to be there but I had to work my last day yesterday to get my vacay time for the next couple of weeks of holiday shutdown. Sort of sucky, but thems union rules.

I was wondering how it went, having a hard time finding news now since my formerly fave news aggregator formalized its alliance with the dark side (and the headache inducing animated ads aren't helping make the joint any less cheezy dontchaknow...) So- thank you for the pics, I'm glad you were able to witness this for us.

A bit more from another local protester:
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2011/12/1 ... siderecent
“The Radium Water Worked Fine until His Jaw Came Off”
User avatar
Twyla LaSarc
 
Posts: 1040
Joined: Mon Jun 07, 2010 2:50 pm
Location: On the 8th hole
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Project Willow » Tue Dec 13, 2011 2:55 pm

^ Some media reports said police used concussion grenades, but that was after I left. I saw three very orderly arrests. The media was all over the place.

Occupy Seattle kept up its port action today. In solidarity with ILWU, terminal #5 blocked at 7 am this morning until about an hour ago.

Longshoremen are refusing to cross our picket line to enter the terminal.


In contrast to media coverage yesterday:
All of the truck drivers encountered were incredibly supportive, despite the delays. They understood we were fighting for their right to a fair wage. Currently they are paid at a level slightly above fast food workers, despite serving as the lifeblood of America's physical economy.


Seattle PI:
...

The makeshift barricade, at Klickitat Avenue Southwest and Southwest Spokane Street in the shadow of the West Seattle Bridge, was the sight of the only major confrontation between police and protesters. Police officers on bicycles and on horseback moved in and pushed the crowd out of the street. Officers tossed two or three loud smoke bombs into the crowd, which caused people to scatter and wafted a throat-stinging irritant into the air.

Police said protesters threw flares, paint and rebar. One officer was hurt after being struck with paint. A seattlepi.com reporter witnessed one burning flare lobbed at police during the confrontation, as officers ordered the protesters to move and began wading into the crowd.

Hundreds of people had marched from downtown to the Port of Seattle and targeted Terminal 18, which is operated by SSA Marine, a company largely owned by international bank Goldman Sachs, organizers said. Protesters swarmed around one entrance at 3:15 p.m. and blocked it, clogging the road to the port and lower Spokane Street bridge with tractor-trailers and cars.

...

(some great photos here)

Read more: http://www.seattlepi.com/local/transpor ... z1gRTydsRJ





On edit: holy hip dysplasia, that was a long walk yesterday! :rofl2
User avatar
Project Willow
 
Posts: 4798
Joined: Sat May 07, 2005 9:37 pm
Location: Seattle
Blog: View Blog (1)

Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Aurataur » Tue Dec 13, 2011 3:24 pm

I arrived at Harry Bridges Park near the Port of Long Beach shortly after 5 am. Approximately 600 others showed up as well. It was cold. It was raining. We marched from the park to an SSA terminal about a mile and half away. A squad of police officers formed a line and repeatedly told us that we had to move back to the "designated protest area." Eventually, they pushed us back and we retreated to an intersection closer to the park. The protest regrouped and we took over the street. More and more squads of officers showed up from every direction, effectively boxing us in. In many ways, they did our job for us. What would have been a relatively ineffective action at the SSA terminal ended up blocking traffic at a main thoroughfare for over an hour. The police were blocking the streets for us!

The rain started to come down very heavily and it was clear that the action would not last much longer. The riot police slowly pushed us out of the street and back to the parking lot. They had a van with large speakers blasting a warning that sounded like something straight out of a dystopian police state sci-fi novel. To paraphrase: "This has been deemed an unlawful assembly. Disperse immediately. If you do not disperse you will be arrested. You will be subject to significant physical injury. We may deploy electronic control devices, chemical agents, and police dogs. Disperse immediately." Creepy.

We dispersed. Needless to say, we didn't shut down the port. We were a minor disruption that backed traffic up for an hour or so. I still felt that it was a successful action.
User avatar
Aurataur
 
Posts: 51
Joined: Thu Apr 12, 2007 11:05 pm
Location: Lost Angeles
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby psynapz » Tue Dec 13, 2011 3:44 pm

As of about 1:00 a.m., the police had begun to push protesters out of the park and dismantle the set. "NYPD does not respect Law And Order," the crowd chanted cheekily. At one point, an occupier asked an officer, "Are these real barricades, or a set piece?"

Within about an hour police had cleared out the protesters, which was less time than it took clear the real Zuccotti, but probably more than they'd need on a TV show. "You guys just cleared a fake Zuccotti Park," the tweeter @NewYorkist told a police officer, who countered that they'd done no such thing: "We didn't clear a fake Zuccotti," he insisted. "They're taking the set down."

Wow...
Image

A few minutes later, the occupiers regrouped on a nearby set of steps for an impromptu general assembly. "This is beautiful, and this points out to us a more clever way to fight the struggle," someone said, echoed by the people's mic.

YES. Fucking brilliant. How many permits can The People be issued for an extended film shoot at Zucotti and/or Wall St. itself simultaneously? There are certainly enough cameras. If everybody's a film crew... Maybe all they need is an incorporated production company, ID badges, director's chairs, some lights, a box truck full of grip equipment, and a lot of power cables snaked around properly. Oh, and a jib arm, just to drive the point home. Put that fucker on the livestream.

Clearly it's time to occupy the Mayor's Office of Film, Theater and Broadcasting:
The Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting now accepts permit applications online at https://nyceventpermits.nyc.gov/film/. Productions will have the ability to apply for new project accounts and submit their location requests from any computer with internet access. Productions must submit their applications at least 48 business hours in advance to ensure that permits are processed and that all parking requests are granted.


Can some of that overflowing occupation coffer go towards hiring whatever quantity of NYPD detail is required in order to operate such a large, exterior, downtown location for an extended period of principal photography?

I wonder what a line of NYPD detail, working the full-scale movie set of the Occupation, would look like, lining the edge of Zucotti or encircling the Bull? What would the rest of the cops do?

NYC Mayor's Office of Film, Theater and Broadcasting wrote:Q. When do I need police assistance on a set?
A. You will need police assistance if your shoot involves any interruption of traffic, stunts, weapons or if your actors are wearing NYPD, NYFD, EMT or other costumes resembling uniformed services personnel in New York City.

Q. How do I get police assistance?
A. If you need police assistance, please contact MOFTB, 212-489-6710 and we will direct you to a TCD officer who can further assist you with your shoot.


Image

The Commanding Office of the NYPD Movie & TV Unit wrote:The NYPD Movie/TV Unit was founded along with the Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting in 1966. In the four decades since, the Unit has worked in concert with the MOFTB to successfully balance the needs of New Yorkers and the production industry, facilitating the production of tens of thousands of films, television shows, commercials, music videos and still photography shoots across the City. When projects shoot at an exterior location which requires traffic control, or has a scene with prop firearms, weapons or actors in police uniforms, members of the Unit are assigned -- at no cost -- to be on set.




Image

Image
“blunting the idealism of youth is a national security project” - Hugh Manatee Wins
User avatar
psynapz
 
Posts: 1090
Joined: Mon Nov 10, 2008 12:01 pm
Location: In the Flow, In the Now, Forever
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby thurnundtaxis » Tue Dec 13, 2011 8:16 pm

^^^^ Bravo Psynapz!

The money to finance this type of operation could quite easily come from the coffers of Russell Simmons, Kanye West, Russell Brand, Katy Perry, David Crosby, etc. etc.

All of those 1% income bracket celebrities would be putting their money where their mouths are by offering real logistical and tactical support to the movement.

But, really, they seem to only want the publicity photos and the "cool anti-establishment" street cred that showing up and giving sound-bite support statements unfortunately portray to their dumbed down fan base.
User avatar
thurnundtaxis
 
Posts: 537
Joined: Sun Nov 12, 2006 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Elihu » Wed Dec 14, 2011 12:58 am

But take heart, because I have overcome the world.” John 16:33
Elihu
 
Posts: 1424
Joined: Wed Mar 16, 2011 11:44 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby American Dream » Wed Dec 14, 2011 8:37 am

Rape and the Occupy Movement

December 14, 2011

By Maeve Mckeown
Source: New Left Project

On October 26th a woman was raped at Occupy Glasgow and the previous week a woman was raped at Occupy Cleveland. There has been relatively little reporting on these incidents, either in the news or among activists. The incidents are a dreadful personal tragedy for the women involved, but what do they mean for the Occupy movement more generally? In this article, I suggest there is a deep tension in the movement between collective politics and individual autonomy, and a serious lack of feminist understanding.



Collective Responsibility

Violence against women is a pervasive problem across society, and sadly, it doesn’t stop at the doors of activists. What is different about rape occurring at occupations, however, is the fact that the activists have formed into groups, presumably taking some responsibility for each other. In some ways the groups’ responses to what has happened to individuals who were under their care is as shocking and saddening as the incidents themselves.

Both occupations sought to distance themselves from the women who were raped. Occupy Glasgow said that,

"Occupy Glasgow is shocked and deeply saddened about the alleged sexual assault on one of the individuals that have been co-inhabiting George Square with the separate Occupy Glasgow movement.??

Since October 15, Occupy Glasgow have provided free food, shelter and clothing to some individuals who had none of their own and we immensely regret any harm that may have befallen one of these individuals.”
(my emphasis)

Occupy Glasgow claimed the woman was part of a separate group, so not under their care.

The woman at Occupy Cleveland, a 19 year old with learning difficulties, was told by the organisers to share a tent with the man who raped her. When questioned on this one of the organisers said, “your assignment would be your own choice of what you want to do.” The reasoning behind this statement is that Occupy is a leaderless movement – nobody is officially told what they are supposed to do, so everything is in effect a personal choice. This is true even for a young, novice activist with learning difficulties. They also said, “this is all about personal decision and consent and we offer tents and that’s all.”

In other words, both occupations claimed it was the women’s personal responsibility that a) she was camping with them and b) she was raped; instead of recognising that the group had some responsibility for the women’s safety. In one respect, this can be interpreted as victim-blaming. Of course, if an adult joins an occupation it is their choice. However, the establishment of camps sets up expectations that participants will look out for each other and, at minimum, respect each other. Probably the last thing the women were thinking was that they might be raped if they joined the occupations – they probably assumed the opposite, that there is safety in numbers - so to argue their it was their own choice to be there and that they bear the risks of sexual violence that arise from that is wrong. That is not a risk they should have had to bear because it was not a foreseeable risk, and therefore not something they can be held responsible for.

Moreover, the individualistic responses of the groups are illogical and incoherent because the Occupy groups can bear collective responsibility. According to methodological individualists there is no such thing as collective responsibility. Groups are simply the sum of individual actions. This seems deeply counter-intuitive, however. It means that corporations cannot bear responsibility for what they do, so BP could not be said to bear responsibility for the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. It also means that states can’t bear responsibility for their wrongdoings.

In the 70s and 80s, philosophers who sought a concept of collective responsibility were particularly concerned to find a way to avoid individuals failing to act when somebody needs help. They were motivated by, amongst other incidents, the rape and murder of Kitty Genovese in New York in 1964, in which thirty-eight separate individuals were aware of what was happening and did nothing. This is a classic example of the bystander effect - an emergency situation where no one helps the victim. Philosophers argued that members of communities have a responsibility to look out for each other in order to prevent such harms befalling group members. The question in the case at hand is whether the Occupy groups in which the rapes occurred can be held collectively responsible for the rape of women in their care.

In the Genovese case the individuals in the vicinity were random and had no connections to each other. It is highly contested whether such aggregates can bear any responsibility for the harms that befall the victims. By contrast, the occupations are groups. Among theorists of collective responsibility there is a considerable degree of consensus about when “conglomerate” groups can bear responsibility qua group. According to Peter French’s influential distinction between aggregate and conglomerate collectivities, a conglomerate collectivity is a group that has a decision-making structure, an enforced code of conduct for individuals that doesn’t apply outside the group, and an identity that is more than the sum of individual members (if people leave or join the group, the identity of the group remains the same). These types of groups can bear collective responsibility, e.g. corporations or states.

The Occupy groups meet these standards. They have internal decision-making structures – general meetings. They have codes of conduct for members. And, they have identities that are more than the sum of the individual members – Occupy Glasgow will be Occupy Glasgow if some members leave or if new people join. In other words, the Occupy groups can plausibly be said to bear collective responsibility for their members.

To say that these groups can bear collective responsibility is not necessarily to blame them for the rapes occurring. However, it does mean that they should have accepted that for harm to befall a group member means that the group is at least partly responsible. In light of this, the responses of both occupations to the rapes are particularly shocking. Despite the fact that the occupations act as groups, speak as groups, and exist as groups, the women who were raped are on their own. I’m sure that the groups are happy to claim the women’s positive contributions as part of the group effort: for example, if one of the women had organised a successful flashmob the group would be happy to claim it as part of Occupy Glasgow or Cleveland. Once something bad happens to a member, however, it has nothing to do with the group; if a woman has been raped it is her own fault for being there in the first place. In Glasgow, they claimed she wasn’t really part of the group anyway; in Cleveland, a 19-year old apparently should not have done what the organisers told her she ought to do.

Acting as a group means taking responsibility for the good and the bad, not claiming that bad things are a question of personal responsibility of the victims. Moreover, if the groups want to make it about personal responsibility, why bring the victims in at all? The group could have supported the victims and shunned the rapists.

In my view, there is a serious problem here. The inability of the Occupy groups to recognise their collective responsibility for members is symptomatic of a deeper ideological problem.

Autonomy, Security and Vulnerable People

The first assumption of autonomist movements is that people are autonomous. Is this true? Are people autonomous? Some are, most aren’t. Many people are dependent: children are dependent, the elderly are dependent, many adults are dependent through disability, mental or physical ill-health; and most adults will go through some phases of dependency over the course of their lifetime.

There are degrees of non-autonomy. Dependency is at the extreme end. Vulnerability is also on that scale. Many groups in society are vulnerable due to prejudice, ignorance, oppression and domination by more powerful groups. Women are vulnerable in this way. To be clear, it’s not that women are incapable of achieving autonomy, of course they are; it’s that the social conditions of sexist societies constrain their autonomy. The constraints on women’s autonomy are external, not internal, and it is these external conditions that generate women’s vulnerability.

Many people have overlapping vulnerabilities. For example, the woman at Occupy Glasgow was pregnant, and the woman at Occupy Cleveland was a 19 year old who attends a high school for teenagers with learning difficulties. It’s not about placing people in boxes according to their objectively defined vulnerabilities, “you are a woman, you go here”. It’s about being sensitive to the multiplicity of individuals’ circumstances and needs.

Starting from the assumption that people are autonomous obscures the fact that most people aren’t. Autonomy for all might be a goal, but it does not accord with reality. In its crudest forms, autonomism starts from the viewpoint of the privileged and generalizes from that viewpoint, and in so doing it occludes difference. For a movement that claims to speak for the 99%, it is not good enough to only speak for, and provide a space for, autonomous people. If you are going to provide a space for “the 99%”, it must be recognized that many people have vulnerabilities, which generate different needs.

The first step in dealing with difference is recognizing it. Then once it is recognized, finding ways to accommodate it. Women’s vulnerability to sexual violence needs to be recognized in order to find measures to mitigate it. It’s not about patronizing women and ensuring that the “autonomous men” protect the “vulnerable women”, it is the social conditions that need to be addressed and mitigated. It could be argued that it is overly demanding of fleeting protest camps to mitigate the threat of violence against women. But the converse is that if they fail to do so, they are not representing the 99%. It’s simply another case of the privileged claiming to speak, and act, on behalf of everyone else.

It is not realistic to assume that once people join an “autonomous zone” that individuals will shed decades of socialization in sexist norms and suddenly treat each other equally. It’s essential, in that case, to come up with a viable alternative for security, which treats people’s vulnerability seriously. Autonomists have obvious and valid complaints against the police. But hating the police is not the same as hating security. Vulnerable people require some form of security; an all-out rejection of security leaves the vulnerable even more vulnerable. Of course, the need for security can be hard to see from the viewpoint of male privilege and the belief that you can protect yourself. It’s not so easy when you’re a woman, you’re pregnant or have learning difficulties, and are sleeping in a tent in a city centre or park.

Interestingly, both Occupy Glasgow and Occupy Cleveland have said that they are “working with the police”. The police (rightly) have a terrible rep among activists in the UK. They are brutal, unaccountable, have done morally outrageous things like allowing undercover agents to have relationships with activists, beating people nearly to death etc. It’s also true that the police protect the interests of private property (i.e. the interests of a few rich people against the great unwashed masses). But they also serve another function. That is, to protect individual members of society from each other.

I’m not going to eulogise the police here. Clearly when it comes to rape, the track record of the police and the criminal justice system in both the UK and US is abominable. But if you ask the majority of women (anarcha-feminists excluded) if they would want to live in a society with no police force, I would hazard a guess that they would say no. The police at least provide some sense of security against the threat of violence from male spouses, family members, friends, acquaintances, strangers and activists; and a very distant glimmer of hope that you might get justice. This is not to say that society could not find a better way to organize security than a police force. Maybe it could, maybe it couldn’t. But as long as patriarchy rules, some form of protection is needed. A “Safer Spaces Policy” isn’t going to cut it. Relying on comrades for protection, if the actions of Occupy Glasgow and Cleveland are anything to go by, is not very reassuring.

It’s not just about security and “protecting the vulnerable”, however. It’s about creating a culture where rape and sexual assault will not be tolerated; ensuring men don’t rape. Misogynistic power relations need to be understood and interrupted. The men involved in the Occupy movement, or men who join the camps however fleetingly, need to know that rape and sexual assault or harassment will absolutely not be tolerated. They will be immediately evicted from the camps if they harass women, and handed in to the police if they rape or assault a woman. Security is only one side of the coin when it comes to preventing rape; the more important side is men not raping.

There is a tension in the Occupy movement between speaking as a collective – “we are the 99%” – and emphasising individual autonomy. If you speak as a “we”, you are speaking as a group. The group needs to provide security for its group members and foster a culture of equality and intolerance of persecution of oppressed social groups. The fact that the occupations act as groups but then stress individual autonomy when the group fails in its responsibilities highlights this internal ideological tension. The occupy movement needs to decide what it is – are the camps “collectives”, or simply aggregates of individuals? If it is the former, they need to take some responsibility and provide security for group members and change their internal cultures. If it is the latter, they will only be safe for already autonomous individuals and cannot hope to speak on behalf of the 99%.

What next?

The Occupy movement needs a serious injection of feminist politics. This doesn’t mean having a token female facilitator at meetings or patting one’s self on the back for listening to a woman speak until she has finished; it means recognising that women have different needs that need to be met and finding practical and viable ways of meeting those needs. The fact that there has been scant discussion of these rapes and what to do about it highlights the fact that, even among activists, violence against women is not taken as seriously as it should be. The Occupy movement needs to wake up to this problem and do something about it.

So far I have only addressed the attacks in Glasgow and Cleveland, but there have been other reported rapes in the Occupy movement. A known sex offender has been arrested for the rape of a 14-year-old girl at Occupy Dallas. A woman was raped and robbed at Occupy Baltimore. Occupy Baltimore distributed leaflets encouraging members not to report sexual assaults to the police but to report it to the group instead. There have been accusations of sexual assaults at Zuccotti Park, and at Occupy Portland and Oakland. These rapes are not unfortunate one-off incidents: they represent a systematic failure.

Interestingly, Occupy LSX’s new venture, The Bank of Ideas, is non-residential and has a ban on drugs and alcohol. Obviously, the physical presence of the Occupy protests over the long-term in city centres is part of what’s made them so visible and important. However, if it puts vulnerable people in danger then I would suggest this tactic needs some reconsideration. Non-residential protests don’t put women at risk in the same way. In light of this, I think the non-residential Bank of Ideas is a step in the right direction.

To anticipate some criticisms, let me clarify a few points. Firstly, I’m not saying inclusion is the be-all and end-all of all protest movements. I’m saying that for a movement that claims to speak on behalf of the 99% it is crucial. If the Occupy movement is claiming to speak for the 99%, they need to recognise the multifarious needs of different types of people, and to cater for them. It’s no good saying “We are the 99%” but we exclude disabled people. Or “We are the 99%” but if you’re a woman you’re responsible for your own safety. We might be “the 99%” economically (and even that is a dubious claim), but we are not all white, male, heterosexual, able-bodied men; most of us aren’t and we need our differing needs met if we are going to camp outside together.

Another criticism will be how can I possibly suggest the police have any good qualities whatsoever. They are our oppressors! To reiterate, I’m not saying the police per se are good, I’m saying institutional security in some form is essential as long as social inequalities and oppression exist. I’m also arguing that collectivities ought to provide security for their members; which in the case of states is the police force, in the case of occupations it still needs to be worked out.

Finally, it could be argued that I haven’t really recommended anything apart from injecting feminist politics into the movement, which potentially means shutting the residential camps down. I don’t mean to put a dampener on the future of long-term direct action. The wave of resistance that has emerged across the globe this year has been an inspiration. The point I wish to make, however, is that if you’re going to have live-in protests, it is essential to ensure that members of the group are not endangered by that protest. Steps must be taken to prevent sexual violence in the camps, and members of the groups need to take responsibility for each other and make amends when collective responsibility fails. Otherwise other forms of protest should be taken up instead. In this respect, here are a few concrete suggestions:

§ If the camps want to continue, all the Occupy groups should set up working groups to research how past and existing communes have gone about providing security, and how they have or have not been successful in that.

§ Instead of handing out leaflets telling women not to report their attackers, how about handing out leaflets to men saying that if they rape or sexually assault someone they will immediately be handed-in to the police, because all members of the movement are equal and deserve equal respect.

§ In terms of tackling the internal culture of the camps, they could consider trialling the feminist consciousness-raising approach with mixed groups to discuss sexist and misogynist attitudes within the camps.

§ A final suggestion is that Occupy Glasgow and Occupy Cleveland, who have failed their group members so spectacularly, ought to provide formal apologies to the victims.


Like I have argued above, this spate of rapes and sexual violence that has plagued the Occupy movement is not a case of unfortunate isolatable incidents. It is a systematic failure. It is a failure to recognise women’s needs, a failure to have learnt anything from the feminist movement, a failure to recognise vulnerability and non-autonomy, and a failure to accept collective responsibility. All this can be traced to the inner tension between collective politics and individual autonomy. The short-term solution is to stop camping, or to provide effective security and make sure men know they will be arrested immediately if they sexually assault someone; the long-term solution is to work out what this movement is really about.


From: Z Net - The Spirit Of Resistance Lives
URL: http://www.zcommunications.org/rape-and ... ve-mckeown
American Dream
 
Posts: 19946
Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 4:56 pm
Location: Planet Earth
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby elfismiles » Wed Dec 14, 2011 9:21 am


TIME's Person of the Year: The Protester
A year after a Tunisian fruit vendor set himself ablaze, dissent has spread across the Middle East, to Europe and the US, reshaping global politics and redefining people power.

Image
'Mohammed suffered a lot. he worked hard. But when he set fire to himself, it wasn't about his scales being confiscated. It was about his dignity.'
—Mannoubia Bouazizi, Tunisia
Photograph by Peter Hapak for TIME

http://www.time.com/time/specials/packa ... %2C00.html

User avatar
elfismiles
 
Posts: 8512
Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 6:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (4)

PreviousNext

Return to General Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 163 guests