Over the last week crackdowns have occurred at occupied spaces nationwide. On Nov. 10th eleven mayors participated in a conference call about "Occupy" protests in their cities. Mayor Jean Quan of Oakland, CA confirmed the conference call during an interview on the BBC. Amy Ruiz, spokesman for Portland, Ore., Mayor Sam Adams denies the talk was a strategy session. "It was more like a therapy session," she said.
The fact remains; five of those eleven conference Mayor's have since launched military style police assaults against citizens occupying areas in their cities and all five mayors cited crime, poor sanitary conditions and local merchants’ complaints to justify the eviction of protesters and all insisted public safety concerns outweighed the demonstrator's free-speech and freedom to assemble rights.
It is not only mayors who were coordinated. Police departments also displayed a disturbing tactical union. Chuck Wexler, director of the Police Executive Research Forum, organized calls on Oct. 11 and Nov. 4. Such things were discussed in these meetings as the need to secrecy, rapid deployment to prevent reinforcement of numbers by occuption sympathizers, the use of overwhelming force (riot gear and assault weaponry like tear gas canisters and rubber bullets), and the prevention of media coverage.
More disturbing still is persitent rumor of homeland security and FBI participation in the coordinated assaults.
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Saturday, November 12, 2011
Hopes Slim For Continued Peaceful Occupation of Oscar Grant / Frank Ogawa Park in Oakland
OK. I admit it. I'm impressed.
I waited to see what would be the result of the hastily called General Assembly to convene at 6 PM on the steps of the Oakland Public Library. I wondered, "how many occupiers would attend? Would or could GA reach an action consensus?" I also mused, "what would a victory for the movement possibly look like considering the forceful eviction?"
Armed only with a well-read past and a vague concept, thinking a successful counter-attrition rate might be ten to one and knowing the arrests early morning were somewhere around eighty, I set my sights for a successful attendance at the evening's General Assembly at eight hundred or more and was waiting.
And things went quite well.
By six o'clock at least 800 supporters of OccupyOakland had convened in General Assembly at the Oakland Public Library steps. By 7:30 Assembly attendees had risen to 1,500 and a consensus had been reached. They would march to Oscar Grant Plaze and insist the police assembled there return it to them.
Oakland Police Critically Injure Iraq War Vet
During Occupy March
The attempt to retake Oscar Grant Park having been thwarted by police standing their ground and dispersing the protesters with teargas cannisters, rubber bullets and bean bags, a new General Assembly was called by the occupiers for the next day (Oct 26th), again at the steps of the public library.
Oct 26th. Mayor Jean Quan, who had been out of town for a meeting, returned to Oakland claiming she had known nothing about the police raid on the encampment in the early hours of the day before and insisted the police action had been arranged by City Administrator Deanna Santana on Oct. 19 with consultation from interim Police Chief Howard Jordan and oedered the night before.after campers repeatedly blocked paramedics and police from entering the camp despite reports of violence and injuries. She then ordered a minimum police presence at Frank Ogawa Park and instituted an investigation of police actions the 25th of October.
At 6:00 PM 3,000 protesters gathered for the General Assembly on the Library steps. Again consensus was reached. The 3,000 would March to Oscar Grant Plaza. The march was without incident and when they arrived at the Plaze the occupiers found it deserted and surrounded by chain link fence. The fence was dismantled, neatly stacked off to the side and the plaza was reoccupied.
An uneasy peace has held but support for Jean Quan's position for continuing peaceful negotiation with the occupiers has continued to deteriorate on the city council. It appears, after a man was shot and killed Thursday near the encampment site cries for law and order have prevailed. Eviction notices have been served on the Occupiers, one on Friday, one Saturday morning and another late Saturday night.
While some occupiers packed up and moved away, the majority still remain committed to the occupation and the eviction notices have been routinely burned.
video commentary on Oct 25th arrests
Last post I was waiting. The OPD along with seventeen law enforcement agencies from San Jose to Solano County* descended before sunrise on the OccupyOakland encampment at Oscar Grant Park (which the overlords continue to refer to as Frank Ogawa Plaza) and they had dutifully arrested some eighty occupiers who bravely held their ground and non-violently defended their lawful and constitutional right to peacefully assemble, and to petition for redress of grievances.I waited to see what would be the result of the hastily called General Assembly to convene at 6 PM on the steps of the Oakland Public Library. I wondered, "how many occupiers would attend? Would or could GA reach an action consensus?" I also mused, "what would a victory for the movement possibly look like considering the forceful eviction?"
Armed only with a well-read past and a vague concept, thinking a successful counter-attrition rate might be ten to one and knowing the arrests early morning were somewhere around eighty, I set my sights for a successful attendance at the evening's General Assembly at eight hundred or more and was waiting.
And things went quite well.
Oct 25th GA on library steps
By six o'clock at least 800 supporters of OccupyOakland had convened in General Assembly at the Oakland Public Library steps. By 7:30 Assembly attendees had risen to 1,500 and a consensus had been reached. They would march to Oscar Grant Plaze and insist the police assembled there return it to them.
During Occupy March
The attempt to retake Oscar Grant Park having been thwarted by police standing their ground and dispersing the protesters with teargas cannisters, rubber bullets and bean bags, a new General Assembly was called by the occupiers for the next day (Oct 26th), again at the steps of the public library.
Oct 26th. Mayor Jean Quan, who had been out of town for a meeting, returned to Oakland claiming she had known nothing about the police raid on the encampment in the early hours of the day before and insisted the police action had been arranged by City Administrator Deanna Santana on Oct. 19 with consultation from interim Police Chief Howard Jordan and oedered the night before.after campers repeatedly blocked paramedics and police from entering the camp despite reports of violence and injuries. She then ordered a minimum police presence at Frank Ogawa Park and instituted an investigation of police actions the 25th of October.
At 6:00 PM 3,000 protesters gathered for the General Assembly on the Library steps. Again consensus was reached. The 3,000 would March to Oscar Grant Plaza. The march was without incident and when they arrived at the Plaze the occupiers found it deserted and surrounded by chain link fence. The fence was dismantled, neatly stacked off to the side and the plaza was reoccupied.
An uneasy peace has held but support for Jean Quan's position for continuing peaceful negotiation with the occupiers has continued to deteriorate on the city council. It appears, after a man was shot and killed Thursday near the encampment site cries for law and order have prevailed. Eviction notices have been served on the Occupiers, one on Friday, one Saturday morning and another late Saturday night.
While some occupiers packed up and moved away, the majority still remain committed to the occupation and the eviction notices have been routinely burned.
Labels:
Occupy Movement,
OccupyOakland,
Oscar Grant Park,
OWS,
politics,
protests
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
The Occupy Movement comes under attack
It's 8 o'clock in the evening in Ohio. Either 4 or 5 o'clock in Oakland, California.
I find myself wondering; what does it look like at the Oakland Public Library?
Have area supporters of OccupyOakland flocked to the library?
How many will rise up to support their fellow occupiers forcibly evicted by arrest this morning at Oscar Grant and Snow Parks?
I find myself wondering; what does it look like at the Oakland Public Library?
Have area supporters of OccupyOakland flocked to the library?
How many will rise up to support their fellow occupiers forcibly evicted by arrest this morning at Oscar Grant and Snow Parks?
80+ protester were arrested in a pre-dawn enforcement sweep at Oscar Grant this morning. All the camp gear has been either destroyed or stolen and Video coverage of the eviction process has been scant. Media was held at a distance by police barricades and intimidation. Four or more were also arrested at Snow Park.
The bond for each of those arrested seems to be $10,000. More than likely they will be in jail until Thursday.
Labels:
Oakland,
Occupy Movement,
OccupyOakland,
Oscar Grant Park,
protests
Sunday, October 02, 2011
OccupyWallStreet Grows
.
Set Up Protest Encampment'
'... If there's going to be any kind of society worth living in, we’re going to have to create it ourselves."
Read the
Occupy Wall Street: FAQ
The Occupation Wall Street message was clear
“We are the 99 percent that will no longer tolerate the greed and corruption of the 1 percent
... We are building the world that we want to see, based on human need and sustainability, not corporate greed.”
The protest went on largely unnoticed and ignored by the main stream media until day 8. On that Saturday, more than 80 protesters were arrested as hundreds took part in yet another march to Wall Street.
On September 24th the gloves came off of at least some of the police. Police used arrest tactics better suited for taking down armed felons than arresting non-violent protesters exercising their freedoms of speech and of assembly. Videos of the abusive treatment went up on the internet and went viral. One officer in particular sullied the public perception of the NYPD.
From all the nation has come an outpouring of support and serious help has begun to arrive.
OccupyTogether
is attempting to keep track of and facilitate the formation of sibling occupy movements across America and around the world and there are six sibling movements here in my own state of Ohio alone. OccupyCincinnati, OccupyCleveland, OccupyColumbus, OccupyDayton, OccupyToledo and OccupyYoungstown.Back in New York three labor unions - National Nurses United, Laborers' International Union of America and United Steelworkers - have announced their solidarity wiith the occupation movement and each is intending to march to LibertySquare on Wednesday.
Lastly, in what may be the most unexpected endorsement,
ex-marine Ward Reily says he's bringing the Marines.
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