Thursday, March 29, 2012

The Illegitimacy of Violence,

What is violence? Who gets to define it? Does it have a place in the pursuit of liberation? These age-old questions have returned to the fore during the Occupy movement. But this discussion never takes place on a level playing field; while some delegitimize violence, the language of legitimacy itself paves the way for the authorities to employ it.



“Though lines of police on horses, and with dogs, charged the main street outside the police station to push rioters back, there were significant pockets of violence which they could not reach.”

–The New York Times, on the UK riots of August 2011



During the 2001 FTAA summit in Quebec City, one newspaper famously reported that violence erupted when protesters began throwing tear gas canisters back at the lines of riot police. When the authorities are perceived to have a monopoly on the legitimate use of force, “violence” is often used to denote illegitimate use of force—anything that interrupts or escapes their control. This makes the term something of a floating signifier, since it is also understood to mean “harm or threat that violates consent.”

This is further complicated by the ways our society is based on and permeated by harm or threat that violates consent. In this sense, isn’t it violent to live on colonized territory, destroying ecosystems through our daily consumption and benefitting from economic relations that are forced on others at gunpoint? Isn’t it violent for armed guards to keep food and land, once a commons shared by all, from those who need them? Is it more violent to resist the police who evict people from their homes, or to stand aside while people are made homeless? Is it more violent to throw tear gas canisters back at police, or to denounce those who throw them back as “violent,” giving police a free hand to do worse?

In this state of affairs, there is no such thing as nonviolence—the closest we can hope to come is to negate the harm or threat posed by the proponents of top-down violence. And when so many people are invested in the privileges this violence affords them, it’s naïve to think that we could defend ourselves and others among the dispossessed without violating the wishes of at least a few bankers and landlords. So instead of asking whether an action is violent, we might do better to ask simply: does it counteract power disparities, or reinforce them?

This is the fundamental anarchist question. We can ask it in every situation; every further question about values, tactics, and strategy proceeds from it. When the question can be framed thus, why would anyone want to drag the debate back to the dichotomy of violence and nonviolence?

The discourse of violence and nonviolence is attractive above all because it offers an easy way to claim the higher moral ground. This makes it seductive both for criticizing the state and for competing against other activists for influence. But in a hierarchical society, gaining the higher ground often reinforces hierarchy itself.

Legitimacy is one of the currencies that are unequally distributed in our society, through which its disparities are maintained. Defining people or actions as violent is a way of excluding them from legitimate discourse, of silencing and shutting out. This parallels and reinforces other forms of marginalization: a wealthy white person can act “nonviolently” in ways that would be seen as violent were a poor person of color to do the same thing. In an unequal society, the defining of “violence” is no more neutral than any other tool.

Defining people or actions as violent also has immediate consequences: it justifies the use of force against them. This has been an essential step in practically every campaign targeting communities of color, protest movements, and others on the wrong side of capitalism. If you’ve attended enough mobilizations, you know that it’s often possible to anticipate exactly how much violence the police will use against a demonstration by the way the story is presented on the news the night before. In this regard, pundits and even rival organizers can participate in policing alongside the police, determining who is a legitimate target by the way they frame the narrative.

On the one-year anniversary of the Egyptian uprising, the military lifted the Emergency Laws—“except in thug-related cases.” The popular upheaval of 2011 had forced the authorities to legitimize previously unacceptable forms of resistance, with Obama characterizing as “nonviolent” an uprising in which thousands had fought police and burned down police stations. In order to re-legitimize the legal apparatus of the dictatorship, it was necessary to create a new distinction between violent “thugs” and the rest of the population. Yet the substance of this distinction was never spelled out; in practice, “thug” is simply the word for a person targeted by the Emergency Laws. From the perspective of the authorities, ideally the infliction of violence itself would suffice to brand its victims as violent—i.e., as legitimate targets.[1]

So when a broad enough part of the population engages in resistance, the authorities have to redefine it as nonviolent, even if it would previously have been considered violent. Otherwise, the dichotomy between violence and legitimacy might erode—and without that dichotomy, it would be much harder to justify the use of force against those who threaten the status quo. By the same token, the more ground we cede in what we permit the authorities to define as violent, the more they will sweep into that category, and the greater risk all of us will face. One consequence of the past several decades of self-described nonviolent civil disobedience is that some people regard merely raising one’s voice as violent; this makes it possible to portray those who take even the most tentative steps to protect themselves against police violence as violent thugs.



“The individuals who linked arms and actively resisted, that in itself is an act of violence… linking arms in a human chain when ordered to step aside is not a nonviolent protest.”



The Master’s Tools: Delegitimization, Misrepresentation, and Division

Violent repression is only one side of the two-pronged strategy by which social movements are suppressed. For this repression to succeed, movements must be divided into legitimate and illegitimate, and the former convinced to disown the latter—usually in return for privileges or concessions. We can see this process up close in the efforts of professional journalists like Chris Hedges and Rebecca Solnit to demonize rivals in the Occupy movement.

In last year’s Throwing Out the Master’s Tools and Building a Better House: Thoughts on the Importance of Nonviolence in the Occupy Revolution,” Rebecca Solnit mixed together moral and strategic arguments against “violence,” hedging her bets with a sort of US exceptionalism: Zapatistas can carry guns and Egyptian rebels set buildings on fire, but let no one so much as burn a trash can in the US. At base, her argument was that only “people power” can achieve revolutionary social change—and that “people power” is necessarily nonviolent.

Solnit should know that the defining of violence isn’t neutral: in her article “The Myth of Seattle Violence,” she recounted her unsuccessful struggle to get the New York Times to stop representing the demonstrations against the 1999 WTO summit in Seattle as “violent.” In consistently emphasizing violence as her central category, Solnit is reinforcing the effectiveness of one of the tools that will inevitably be used against protesters—including her—whenever it serves the interests of the powerful.

Solnit reserves particular ire for those who endorse diversity of tactics as a way to preclude the aforementioned dividing of movements. Several paragraphs of “Throwing Out the Master’s Tools” were devoted to denouncing the CrimethInc. “Dear Occupiers” pamphlet: Solnit proclaimed it “a screed in justification of violence,” “empty machismo peppered with insults,” and stooped to ad hominem attacks on authors about whom she admittedly knew nothing.

As anyone can readily ascertain, the majority of “Dear Occupiers” simply reviews the systemic problems with capitalism; the advocacy of diversity of tactics is limited to a couple subdued paragraphs. Why would an award-winning author represent this as a pro-violence screed?

Perhaps for the same reason that she joins the authorities in delegitimizing violence even when this equips them to delegitimize her own efforts: Solnit’s leverage in social movements and her privileges in capitalist society are both staked on the distinction between legitimate and illegitimate. If social movements ever cease to be managed from the top down—if they stop policing themselves—the Hedges and Solnits of the world will be out of a job literally as well as figuratively. That would explain why they perceive their worst enemies to be those who soberly advise against dividing movements into legitimate and illegitimate factions.

It’s hard to imagine Solnit would have represented “Dear Occupiers” the way she did if she expected her audience to read it. Given her readership, this is a fairly safe bet—Solnit is often published in the corporate media, while CrimethInc. literature is distributed only through grass-roots networks; in any case, she didn’t include a link. Chris Hedges took similar liberties in his notorious “The Cancer in Occupy,” a litany of outrageous generalizations about “black bloc anarchists.” It seems that both authors’ ultimate goal is silencing: Why would you want to hear what those people have to say? They’re violent thugs.

The title of Solnit’s article is a reference to Audre Lorde’s influential text, “The Master’s Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master’s House.” Lorde’s text was not an endorsement of nonviolence; even Derrick Jensen, whom Hedges quotes approvingly, has debunked such misuse of this quotation. Here, let it suffice to repeat that the most powerful of the master’s tools is not violence, but delegitimization and division—as Lorde emphasized in her text. To defend our movements against these, Lorde exhorted us:

“Difference must be not merely tolerated, but seen as a fund of necessary polarities between which our creativity can spark… Only within that interdependency of different strengths, acknowledged and equal, can the power to seek new ways of being in the world generate, as well as the courage and sustenance to act where there are no charters.”

If we are to survive, that means:

“…learning how to stand alone, unpopular and sometimes reviled, and how to make common cause with those others identified as outside the structures in order to define and seek a world in which we can all flourish… learning how to take our differences and make them strengths. For the master's tools will never dismantle the master's house.”

It is particularly shameless that Solnit would quote Lorde’s argument against silencing out of context in order to delegitimize and divide. But perhaps we should not be surprised when successful professionals sell out anonymous poor people: they have to defend their class interests, or else risk joining us. For the mechanisms that raise people to positions of influence within activist hierarchies and liberal media are not neutral, either; they reward docility, often coded as “nonviolence,” rendering invisible those whose efforts actually threaten capitalism and hierarchy.


The Lure of Legitimacy

When we want to be taken seriously, it’s tempting to claim legitimacy any way we can. But if we don’t want to reinforce the hierarchies of our society, we should be careful not to validate forms of legitimacy that perpetuate them.

It is easy to recognize how this works in some situations: when we evaluate people on the basis of their academic credentials, for example, this prioritizes abstract knowledge over lived experience, centralizing those who can get a fair shot in academia and marginalizing everyone else. In other cases, this occurs more subtly. We emphasize our status as community organizers, implying that those who lack the time or resources for such pursuits are less entitled to speak. We claim credibility as longtime locals, implicitly delegitimizing all who are not—including immigrants who have been forced to move to our neighborhoods because their communities have been wrecked by processes originating in ours. We justify our struggles on the basis of our roles within capitalist society—as students, workers, taxpayers, citizens—not realizing how much harder this can make it for the unemployed, homeless, and excluded to justify theirs.

We’re often surprised by the resulting blowback. Politicians discredit our comrades with the very vocabulary we popularized: “Those aren’t activists, they’re homeless people pretending to be activists.” “We’re not targeting communities of color, we’re protecting them from criminal activity.” Yet we prepared the way for this ourselves by affirming language that makes legitimacy conditional.

When we emphasize that our movements are and must be nonviolent, we’re doing the same thing. This creates an Other that is outside the protection of whatever legitimacy we win for ourselves—that is, in short, a legitimate target for violence. Anyone who pulls their comrades free from the police rather than waiting passively to be arrested—anyone who makes shields to protect themselves from rubber bullets rather than abandoning the streets to the police—anyone who is charged with assault on an officer for being assaulted by one: all these unfortunates are thrown to the wolves as the violent ones, the bad apples. Those who must wear masks even in legal actions because of their precarious employment or immigration status are denounced as cancer, betrayed in return for a few crumbs of legitimacy from the powers that be. We Good Citizens can afford to be perfectly transparent; we would never commit a crime or harbor a potential criminal in our midst.

And the Othering of violence smooths the way for the violence of Othering. The ones who bear the worst consequences of this are not the middle class brats pilloried in internet flame wars, but the same people on the wrong side of every other dividing line in capitalism: the poor, the marginalized, those who have no credentials, no institutions to stand up for them, no incentive to play the political games that are slanted in favor of the authorities and perhaps also a few jet-setting activists.

Simply delegitimizing violence can’t put an end to it. The disparities of this society couldn’t be maintained without it, and the desperate will always respond by acting out, especially when they sense that they’ve been abandoned to their fate. But this kind of delegitimization can create a gulf between the angry and the morally upright, the “irrational” and the rational, the violent and the social. We saw the consequences of this in the UK riots of August 2011, when many of the disenfranchised, despairing of bettering themselves through any legitimate means, hazarded a private war against property, the police, and the rest of society. Some of them had attempted to participate in previous popular movements, only to be stigmatized as hooligans; not surprisingly, their rebellion took an antisocial turn, resulting in five deaths and further alienating them from other sectors of the population.

The responsibility for this tragedy rests not only on the rebels themselves, nor on those who imposed the injustices from which they suffered, but also upon the activists who stigmatized them rather than joining in creating a movement that could channel their anger. If there is no connection between those who intend to transform society and those who suffer most within it, no common cause between the hopeful and the enraged, then when the latter rebel, the former will disown them, and the latter will be crushed along with all hope of real change. No effort to do away with hierarchy can succeed while excluding the disenfranchised, the Others.

What should be our basis for legitimacy, then, if not our commitment to legality, nonviolence, or any other standard that hangs our potential comrades out to dry? How do we explain what we’re doing and why we’re entitled to do it? We have to mint and circulate a currency of legitimacy that is not controlled by our rulers, that doesn’t create Others.

As anarchists, we hold that our desires and well-being and those of our fellow creatures are the only meaningful basis for action. Rather than classifying actions as violent or nonviolent, we focus on whether they extend or curtail freedom. Rather than insisting that we are nonviolent, we emphasize the necessity of interrupting the violence inherent in top-down rule. This might be inconvenient for those accustomed to seeking dialogue with the powerful, but it is unavoidable for everyone who truly wishes to abolish their power.


Conclusion: Back to Strategy

But how do we interrupt the violence of top-down rule? The partisans of nonviolence frame their argument in strategic as well as moral terms: violence alienates the masses, preventing us from building the “people power” we need to triumph.

There is a kernel of truth at the heart of this. If violence is understood as illegitimate use of force, their argument can be summarized as a tautology: delegitimized action is unpopular.

Indeed, those who take the legitimacy of capitalist society for granted are liable to see anyone who takes material steps to counteract its disparities as violent. The challenge facing us, then, is to legitimize concrete forms of resistance: not on the grounds that they are nonviolent, but on the grounds that they are liberating, that they fulfill real needs and desires.

This is not an easy matter. Even when we passionately believe in what we are doing, if it is not widely recognized as legitimate we tend to sputter when asked to explain ourselves. If only we could stay within the bounds prescribed for us within this system while we go about overthrowing it! The Occupy movement was characterized by attempts to do just that—citizens insisting on their right to occupy public parks on the basis of obscure legal loopholes, making tortuous justifications no more convincing to onlookers than to the authorities. People want to redress the injustices around them, but in a highly regulated and controlled society, there’s so little they feel entitled to do.

Solnit may be right that the emphasis on nonviolence was essential to the initial success of Occupy Wall Street: people want some assurance that they’re not going to have to leave their comfort zones, and that what they’re doing will make sense to everyone else. But it often happens that the preconditions for a movement become limitations that it must transcend: Occupy Oakland remained vibrant after other occupations died down because it embraced a diversity of tactics, not despite this. Likewise, if we really want to transform our society, we can’t remain forever within the narrow boundaries of what the authorities deem legitimate: we have to extend the range of what people feel entitled to do.


All the media coverage in the world won’t help us if we fail to create a situation in which people feel entitled to defend themselves and each other.

Legitimizing resistance, expanding what is acceptable, is not going to be popular at first—it never is, precisely because of the tautology set forth above. It takes consistent effort to shift the discourse: calmly facing outrage and recriminations, humbly emphasizing our own criteria for what is legitimate.

Whether we think this challenge is worthwhile depends on our long-term goals. As David Graeber has pointed out, conflicts over goals often masquerade as moral and strategic differences. Making nonviolence the central tenet of our movement makes good sense if our long-term goal is not to challenge the fundamental structure of our society, but to build a mass movement that can wield legitimacy as defined by the powerful—and that is prepared to police itself accordingly. But if we really want to transform our society, we have to transform the discourse of legitimacy, not just position ourselves well within it as it currently exists. If we focus only on the latter, we will find that terrain slipping constantly from beneath our feet, and that many of those with whom we need to find common cause can never share it with us.

It’s important to have strategic debates: shifting away from the discourse of nonviolence doesn’t mean we have to endorse every single broken window as a good idea.. But it only obstructs these debates when dogmatists insist that all who do not share their goals and assumptions—not to say their class interests!—have no strategic sense. It’s also not strategic to focus on delegitimizing each other’s efforts rather than coordinating to act together where we overlap. That’s the point of affirming a diversity of tactics: to build a movement that has space for all of us, yet leaves no space for domination and silencing—a “people power” that can both expand and intensify.



“Those who said that the Egyptian revolution was peaceful did not see the horrors that police visited upon us, nor did they see the resistance and even force that revolutionaries used against the police to defend their tentative occupations and spaces: by the government's own admission, 99 police stations were put to the torch, thousands of police cars were destroyed, and all of the ruling party's offices around Egypt were burned down. Barricades were erected, officers were beaten back and pelted with rocks even as they fired tear gas and live ammunition on us . . . if the state had given up immediately we would have been overjoyed, but as they sought to abuse us, beat us, kill us, we knew that there was no other option than to fight back.”

– Solidarity statement from Cairo to Occupy Wall Street, October 24, 2011

Solidarity With Today's General Strike in Spain

Across Spain today, the 99% are rising together in a national General Strike in opposition to the government's pro-business labor reforms and funding cuts to education and other services. In a country where over half of young people are already unemployed, these austerity measures - created solely to appease un-elected European Union bureaucracies and used to protect the interests of powerful international banks and wealthy investors - would demolish decades of hard-won labor rights by making it easier for companies to lay off employees and unilaterally cut wages.

But, like their counterparts in Greece, the Spanish 99% are not responsible for the financial crisis. And they refuse to see their rights stolen to line the pockets of the very banks and institutions who did cause the economic system to collapse - the people who run it: the 1%. Today, the people of Spain are fighting back: across the country, workers left factories and picketed markets, protesters blocked roads, TV stations were forced off-air, flights were cancelled, and train stations closed. The Spanish state has sent in riot police to attack protesters. Only minutes after midnight and the start of the strike, dozens of people had already been arrested.

Tomorrow, Spain's government is expected to release a new budget that will cut billions of euros in measures supposedly designed to stim Spanish debt and ¨encourage investors.¨ This is the same rhetoric used to excuse the unfair cuts to education, infrastructure, and safety net programs here in North America. It is the same misleading language used by corrupt politicians across the world who, working for the bankers and investors who pay for their election, ram through massively unpopular bailouts and austerity measures that only hurt the 99% to benefit the 1%.

But, as we have seen from Wisconsin to Wall Street, the people are not sitting idly by to watch their rights and livelihoods be stolen by the ultra-wealthy. The Spanish Acampadas/indignados movement helped inspire us to Occupy. Today, we send them our support. And on May 1st, we will show our solidarity with Spanish protesters, and all others across the world, by taking the streets. Unfortunately, U.S. laws make it illegal for unions to endorse a General Strike like the one happening today in Spain. But we, working with our partners in labor and immigrant rights organizations, can.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Occupy these Upcoming Events!

Every Day in March Noon-2:00pm
POPS - People Occupying Public Space!
Now at Union Square!
OWS inspired the world by maintaining a presence in Liberty Square – creating a viral action that spread across the country and the globe. POPS brings discussion, education and fun to the Union Square occupation every day. Tweet using #ows and #CultureOcc and find a full schedule of special events, speakers and performances at pops.nycga.net. Don't miss Bernardine Dohrn and Bill Ayers on Friday March 30!

Thursday, March 29, 5:30-8:30pm
Protest Joe “Congressman Wall Street” Crowley’s 50th Birthday Fundraiser
Grand Hyatt Hotel, 109 East 42nd Street between Park Avenue and Lexington Avenue
With more trade negotiations underway, it’s vital that we let Congressman Crowley and other Wall Street Democrats know that they will be held accountable when they sell us out to the 1%! Sponsored by TradeJustice New York Metro & Occupy Wall Street Trade Justice Working Group.
http://nycga.net/events/event/protest-joe-congressman-wall-street-crowleys-50th-b-day-fundraiser/

Thursday, March 29, 8:00pm - 10:00pm
Occupy University Horizontal Pedagogy Workshop
Public Atrium, 56th St and Madison Ave, Adjacent to Trump Tower
Sponsored by the Empowerment & Education working group. Discussion experiment/pedagogy workshop for Occupy University. Open to all. Horizontal/facilitated/consensus-model learning with a dose of problematization.
http://nycga.net/events/event/occupy-university-horizontal-pedagogy-workshop-2-2012-03-29/

Friday, March 30. 2:00pm-4:30pm
Weekly Wall Street Marches -- Spring Training
Liberty Square
Start Training for May Day and Join the Spring Resistance! Marches Every Friday, 2pm in Liberty Square! Trainings, skill shares, games, and theatrics from 2:00-3:30pm followed by a march to disrupt the 4:00pm NYSE closing bell with The Peoples’ Gong. Participants are encouraged to wear athletic gear, march with their affinity group, and use the street tactics discussed prior to the march.
http://nycga.net/events/event/weekly-wall-street-marches/

Friday, March 30, 7:00pm - 10:00pm
Weekly Vigil for Solidarity with Syria
The Syrian Embassy, 820 2nd Avenue
This vigil will begin at 7pm and work towards an overnight vigil in front of the Syrian consulate, starting with a General Assembly to unite a community of solidarity behind Syria and rally together for the wants and needs of the Syrian people. We are offering this as an open forum to dialogue and educate. We will endeavor to have vigils like this every Friday until resolution is made.
http://nycga.net/events/event/weekly-vigil-for-solidarity-with-syria-2012-03-30/

Friday, March 30, 11:45pm
Rap Battle: The People of New York vs. the NYPD
Union Square, south steps
Got beef with cops for enforcing a system of racist economic inequality? This Friday you'll get to express that beef in a public forum where you won't be arrested, the cops will have to listen you, and (unlike the status quo) the people ALWAYS WIN!
https://facebook.com/events/373581626007714

April 1, 2012 7:00-9pm
May Day Affinity & Action Spokes
Middle Collegiate Church, 50 E 7th Street (btwn 1st and 2nd ave)
This body aspires to inspire autonomous actions and collectively create a space where different groups taking action on May 1st can support each other through mutual aid and solidarity. Please attend with your fellow organizers, or send a delegate! A very subversive invitation!
http://da.nycga.net/2012/03/15/a-very-subversive-invitation/

SAVE THE DATE: Saturday, April 14, 1-6pm
City Wide General Assembly
Central Park South, 6th Ave entrance, on the west side of Wollman Rink
Join Occupy Wall Street on to kick off exciting spring and summer events. We will converge on Central Park to create a transformative, citywide, mass movement. The day will include Occupy style open space with tabling, teach-ins, food, music, and more!
http://nycga.net/events/event/spring-awakening-2012-occupy-new-york-city-peoples-assembly/

SAVE THE DATE: May 1
Call to Action: May Day 2012
If you’d like to be added to the listserv, please email mayday-subscribe@lists.occupy.net. Any questions regarding meeting time, location, structure, please contact mayday@nycga.net or check maydaynyc.org.

Friday, March 23, 2012

#Occupied Reports from the Front Lines No. 4

YOUR WEEKLY ROUNDUP OF OCCUPY MOVEMENT NEWS

Looks Like We Made It: A packed General Assembly in Liberty Square on March 17 marks six months since Wall Street was first #occupied. Screengrab: TimCast

# This week in Occupy, we turned six months old - and law enforcement noticed, Occupy Seattle's Chase 5 was found not guilty, spring training for the nation's May 1 actions commenced, SXSW was #occupied and we couldn't stop watching this.

# The six-month anniversary of Occupy Wall Street on March 17 was marked by reconnection and celebration, which clearly angered law enforcement: 73 people were arrested in and around the movement's Liberty Square birthplace and five were arrested at Occupy L.A. on felony charges. The March 17 raid was followed up by a candlelight vigil in Union Square the next evening.




Occupy L.A. urges the Human Rights Campaign to "Dump Goldman Sachs" as its marriage equality spokesperson. Photo: Damon D'Amato

# At the Los Angeles action, joined by Occupy San Fernando Valley, demonstrators were keenly aware that they were being photographed and videotaped by officers wearing thick black eyeglasses that contained spy cameras in the lenses. "No more silence! No more lies! We will not be victimized!" protesters chanted. After being surveilled and told they couldn't plant American flags at City Hall, police brutality ensued.

# Occupy Chicago activists marched through the city on the night of March 18 to protest the previous night's arrest of their fellow demonstrators in St. Louis and New York. The group marched from the Federal Reserve to Millennium Park, chanting against police brutality.

# Occupy The Midwest demonstrators tried to set up camp at Compton Hill Reservoir Park in St. Louis on March 15. Fifteen were arrested, some of them bloodied, during the first regional convention of area occupiers. Lawyers for Occupy the Midwest are suing the city of St. Louis after a city police captain with a long history of misconduct violations authorized violence against protestors, a claim bolstered by the fact that he was heard on videotape congratulating his officers on a “job well done” after Thursday’s fracas.

# A jury returned a verdict of not guilty in the trespassing case against five Occupy Seattle protesters who chained themselves together inside a Chase bank in Capitol Hill on November 2, 2011. “The jury decided that our actions were justified, and whether this is because they thought it was somehow lawful or just the right thing to do, something is changing, and I think it’s beautiful,” Danielle Simmons, one of the defendants, said after the verdict was returned.




Do You Really Want to Mess With Her? A woman protests SB 469, an anti-protest bill, in Atlanta. Photo: Occupy Atlanta

# Lawyers for Scott Olsen, the Iraq War veteran whose skull was fractured during an Occupy Oakland protest last fall, are claiming that police intentionally hit Olsen with a beanbag round from less than 30 feet away, not with a tear gas canister, as was previously thought. “If it was a beanbag - those are meant to hit people, and it tells me that whoever did it, did it intentionally,” said Olsen's attorney Mark Martell.

# Tom Morello #occupied SXSW, moving his set from the Swan Dive bar onto the street outside, where he was joined by Occupy Austin. Honoring what would've been Woody Guthrie's 100th birthday, he performed a cover of “This Land is Your Land” with MC5's Wayne Kramer and delegates from the General Assembly, imploring the crowd to sing along as loudly as they could. “Now we're all one!” Morello proclaimed. Naturally, police intervened, shutting down the PA system.

# George Clooney was arrested outside the Sudanese embassy in Washington D.C. while protesting president Omar al-Bashir's blockade of humanitarian aid to the newly-created nation of South Sudan. Unlike many occupiers, he actually got his phone call. He used it to phone his mother.

# Demonstrators were at Wesleyan University to greet Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia as he delivered a speech, “The Originalist Approach to the First Amendment,” on March 9. Before the justice could answer questions, demonstrators seated in the balconies and sporting orange jumpsuits and black hoods - à la Gitmo detainees - unfurled two banners, one of which said, “There can be no justice in the court of the conqueror.” They also tossed out condoms bearing stickers reading: “Stops more abortions than Scalia.” (Video here and here.) They were quickly evicted - for exercising their First Amendment rights. At a speech about the First Amendment.




He's the One...Percent: Members of Occupy Wall Street confront Mitt Romney - wearing Mitt Romney masks - at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in Manhattan on March 14.

# 100 Occupy Wall Street protesters staged a “Mr. 1% Rally” outside the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in Manhattan on March 14, where leading Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney was appearing at a $1,000-per-plate luncheon fundraiser. Demonstrators marched around the block, holding signs and shouting, “Romney is the 1%!” Some were dressed in the style of the über-wealthy, sporting sequins, high heels and slinky black dresses.

# Despite widespread reports of bullying and brutality at the highest ranks of the NYPD and the arbitrary arrest of journalists covering Occupy raids, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly swears he has a good relationship with the press.

# Fourteen Occupy Atlanta demonstrators were arrested after staging some creative direct action at five Chase Bank branches on March 12. Donate to help pay their legal expenses.

# Citigroup, Ally Financial (formerly GMAC), SunTrust and MetLife all failed the latest round of Federal Reserve stress tests, making it more likely that the government will have to to bail them out again in the event of another financial cataclysm.

# A whistleblower lawsuit in Colorado alleges that Bank of America intentionally steered customers away from federally-subsidized mortgage modification.




Shaping Up For Spring: Occupy Wall Street gathers on March 16 to warm up for the May 1 General Strike. Photo: Jed Brandt

# In protest of foreclosure actions, more and more churches are moving their money out of the big banks. So far 25 churches have withdrawn $16 million from big banks such as Wells Fargo, Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase.

# Occupy Santa Cruz staged a 200-strong foreclosure march on March 11, after which they dropped by their local Chase, Bank of America and Wells Fargo and delivered speeches and left foreclosure notices and For Sale signs. At their local credit unions, they left hearts.

# Brooklyn Congressman Ed Towns held a hearing on the foreclosure crisis in Brooklyn on March 19, and one of his guests was Republican Congressman Darrell Issa, who was promptly mic-checked. Before being evicted, demonstrators pointed out that with a net worth of $448.1 million, Issa is the richest member of Congress and closely allied with Wall Street.

# Students at Northwestern High School in Maryland organized a walkout on March 1 in support of increasing teacher pay and improving the quality of education, and they also wanted an apology issued to Filipino teachers who will lose their jobs due to expiring visas. But when students attempted to leave campus, the doors were locked and attack dogs were used to guard them. Some were also suspended for “thought crimes.”

# Anneliese Harlander, a Sacramento occupier, was arrested for scattering flower petals over a second-story balcony in the California Capitol building.

# Caltex Woolworths, an Australian petrol store, had its website #occupied.




Caltex Woolworths.com: #occupied.

# Former Vice President and war profiteer extraordinaire Dick Cheney canceled an appearance in Toronto, citing "security concerns." He's probably afraid of a repeat of his last Canadian sojourn in September, when had to hole up in a Vancouver hotel for hours as police in riot gear took on protesters.

# As a protest against Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum's vehemently anti-gay policies, two men got the attention of the crowd at one of Santorum's Illinois rallies and kissed each other. Here's the awesome video.

# Another day, another act of suppression: SB 469, a proposed anti-protest bill, would turn nonviolent civil disobedience into a felony punishable by imprisonment for one year and a $1,000-$10,000 fine. It also has provisions intended to weaken unions. On March 17, hundreds, including members of Occupy Atlanta, gathered at the steps of the Georgia State Capitol to protest the bill.

# The political war on women - particularly low-income women - continues: the Georgia State Legislature debated a bill in the House that would make it necessary for some women to carry stillborn or dying fetuses until they "naturally" go into labor. In Texas, a woman seeking to terminate her pregnancy is now subjected to a mandatory and medically unnecessary vaginal ultrasound, during which her doctor is forced to graphically describe the condition of her fetus's organs, followed by a 24-hour waiting period. Women in need of medically necessary - and often heart-wrenching - terminations are getting caught in the crossfire. A similar "ultrasound law" went into affect in Virginia, albeit with the vaginal probe mandate removed at the last minute. Pennsylvania's Governor Tom Corbett wants a mandatory ultrasound law passed in his state, and doesn't see what all the fuss is about. "You just have to close your eyes," he said.




Dress Rehearsal: Occupy Wall Street staged a March 16 Spring Training protest in preparation for the May 1 General Strike. Photo: Jed Brandt

# Senate Republicans oppose renewal of the Violence Against Women Act, a law that has historically had near-unanimous bipartisan support. “Republicans say the measure, under the cloak of battered women, unnecessarily expands immigration avenues by creating new definitions for immigrant victims to claim battery,” the Times reports. “It also dilutes the focus on domestic violence by expanding protections to new groups, like same-sex couples.” This line of reasoning prompted Erin Gloria Ryan of Jezebel to crack, "Opposing a popular bit of anti-domestic violence legislation may further the public impression that GOP stands for Genuflect before Our Penises, or Girls Out, Please."

# Alternet alerted us to five new tactics police are prepared to employ to crack down on protests this year, including expanding permit requirements and charging protesters for municipal costs.

# On March 13, police officers in SWAT-style gear descended on a Miami apartment building where dozens of Occupy Miami members moved after the group's downtown Peace City encampment was evicted. The building was searched, its tenants put on lockdown and police pointed their guns at children, according to a first-hand account. Three occupiers were detained and questioned.

# Senators Ron Wyden of Oregon and Mark Udall of Colorado said that Americans would be stunned to know what the government thought the Patriot Act allowed it to do in the name of “national security.” In a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder, the senators wrote, “We have grown increasingly skeptical about the actual value of the ‘intelligence collection operation.’ This has come as a surprise to us, as we were initially inclined to take the executive branch’s assertions about the importance of this ‘operation’ at face value.”

# We may see thousands of drones flying over U.S. skies in just a few years, thanks to a bill President Obama signed requiring the F.A.A. to make plans to integrate drones into American airspace.




Seriously Joyful: A screengrab from the latest Occupy Wall Street musical montage,"Still Free."

# In the Op-Ed heard 'round the world, Goldman Sachs executive Greg Smith dramatically quit the firm in the pages of The New York Times, claiming that the company prizes profit over people. Sound familiar?

# Last month, the Human Rights Campaign named Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein its first national corporate spokesman for same sex marriage, but the Occupy Los Angeles Queer Affinity Group has rejected him as an appropriate spokesperson for the marriage equality movement because of his role in the subprime mortgage crisis. On March 17, the occupiers donned Hazmat suits and urged the Human Rights Campaign to “Dump Goldman Sachs.”

# A Washington Post/ABC News poll found that 69 percent of voters want Super PACs outlawed.

# The lengths to which the 1% will go to dodge taxes is stupefying, a New Yorker report revealed.

# Wall Street, once a magnet for America’s best and brightest, is facing a recruiting problem, the Times reported. The reason? “Everything from Occupy Wall Street to larger critical discourses of ‘fat cats’ has had some trickle-down effect” to young people, said Karen Ho, an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Minnesota.




Occupy L.A. marches into the future. Photo: Damon D'Amato

# The Wall Street Journal has stopped advising Occupy Wall Street to get jobs and started recognizing us for our tech smarts.

# Alex Weinschenker, 22, who ran Occupy L.A.'s Print Shop, a staple of the encampment, has died. Click here to contribute to his memorial fund.

# Every Friday from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m., Occupy Wall Street will be gathering in Liberty Square for Spring Training marches in preparation for the May 1 General Strike. The first meet-up on March 16 spawned a protest outside the New York Stock Exchange.

# In the six months and two days since the birth of the Occupy Movement, 6,811 have been arrested exercising their First Amendment rights. But we are still here and still free.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Top 4 Ways to Save Water on World Water Day!

Did you know that more than 800 million people on the planet live without access to safe drinking water? How about that 50 percent of U.S. water usage goes to raising animals who will then be killed for food?
theilr / CC by 2.0
Now, think about this:






Producing 1 pound of edible meat uses 2,400 gallons of water.
Producing 1 pound of wheat uses 25 gallons.

Isn't eating meat not only cruel to animals but also unfair to the millions of people who struggle for water—one of our most basic needs? The answer is yes. But here's how you can help:

1. Go vegan. If you haven't already gone vegan, remember: Ditching dairy products, meat, eggs, and other animal items is the number one way to help the planet, other people, and animals. And it's easy. A wide range of vegan products is available nowadays, from vegan cheese to vegan whipped cream to vegan ribs.

2. Tell your friends to go vegan. Be proud and share the good news! We all have the power to make a huge impact and save lives—simply by choosing different food on our plates.

3. Stop wasting water. The best way to stop wasting water is to stop eating animals, but keep these tips in mind, too: Double-check faucets before you leave a room (don't let them drip!), don't let the water run while doing dishes, take shorter showers, and scrub fruits and veggies in a bowl of water instead of letting the water run over them.

4. Share this blog post. We all have those friends or family members who claim that we "don't care about people" … right? Well, share these facts with them, and let them know that the number one way that we help animals is also the best way to fight world hunger and climate change!
Doesn't it feel good knowing that the simple choices you make can literally save lives?

Support Occupy Union Square, and Other Upcoming #OWS Events!


union square last night, photos via <http://www.flickr.com/photos/megrobertson>

At the new Occupation of Union Square, a pattern is emerging. For five days, since the NYPD attacked the attempted re-occupation of Liberty Square, hundreds of people have Occupied the park in midtown Manhattan. For the past two nights, using the pretext of ¨midnight park cleaning¨, NYPD has responded with heavy-handed tactics to enforce a curfew on the park for the first time in history since it opened in 1882. Twice, NYPD has come under cover of darkness to harass and intimidate the peaceful Occupiers.

Last night, thousands of New Yorkers converged on Union Square for the #MillionHoodiesMarchto demand justice for Trayvon Martin and all victims of racist terror. The NYPD also turned out in massive numbers and attacked the marchers, who responded with chants of ¨no justice, no peace, no racist police!¨ In a scene reminiscent of the September march for Troy Davis during the early days of the Liberty Square Occupation, the NYPD once again stole the show, turning a march against the killing of a Black 17-year-old into yet another scene of police brutality against protesters.

The crowd was split into several smaller marches by police assaults. One group filled Times Square with chants of ¨We are Trayvon Martin!¨, while another headed to the Brooklyn Bridge, and a third converged on Liberty Square (which NYPD had already barricaded). Nearby, top NYPD brass were caught on livestream violently arresting and swinging batons at peaceful protesters.

As the march arrived in the financial district, protesters overturned the barricades on Wall Street and climbed the iconic Wall Street bull that NYPD has vigilantly guarded ever since #OWS began, long a symbol of the banking and financial industry´s greed. The police were quick to rush to defend the symbol of the Stock Exchange, receiving chants of ¨Whose cops? Wall Street´s cops!¨ In the United States, police attack nonviolent protesters for challenging economic inequality, but killers of unarmed youth of color are left alone.

After the Million Hoodie March, many Occupiers returned to Union Square for the night. They were met with an even larger police presence. Occupiers were doing nothing except socializing, playing music, and resting when hundreds of police, with many high-ranking officials and riot squads present, set up barricades. As though trying to incite a riot, the NYPD forced them from their peaceful encampment once again, formed a human chain around protesters, and threatened to arrest anyone who sits in the park.

occupy union square

For two nights now, in a display of wishful thinking, local corporate media has claimed that Occupy Union Square was evicted. But we´re still there. Last night, after being kicked out temporarily, Occupiers merely marched around the perimeter and waited in a tense stand-off until police finally left. Given the increasingly aggressive temperament of the NYPD commanders on the scene, many expected a violent mass arrest which, luckily, did not occur - most likely because literally 100s of thousands of people had been watching the night´s events on Livestream.


It is yet to be seen how long the NYPD will continue this nightly dramatic waste of city resources. While it would cost nothing to allow homeless protesters to sleep in a 24-hour public park, it costs a lot to kick them out. And it is a waste -because every time the city has attacked, protesters have stood their ground nonviolently and returned as soon as the police leave and rush hour traffic wakes up. The NYPD is waging an unwinnable war on dissent.
Stay tuned - there is a lot planned for the coming days!

Upcoming Events

Weekly Wall Street Marches
Friday, March 23 2:00pm
Liberty Square

Every Friday at 2pm we march from Liberty Square to Wall Street in preparation for May Day, a day of massive economic non-compliance and strike. Occupy is returning back to the basics as done in September: accessible direct actions to strengthen our community and voice our grievances to the 1%.
http://nycga.net/events/event/weekly-wall-street-marches


OWS Orientation
Saturday, March 24, 12noon
Liberty Square

Don’t know where to begin? Want help connecting to specific groups and projects? Join us at the next OWS Orientation this Saturday March 24, at noon, meet at the Red Cube across the street from Liberty Square (rain location: public atrium at 60 Wall Street). Email Tascha at orientation@nycga.net.


Saturday, March 24, 5:00pm-8:00pm
Disrupt Dirty Power!
United Nations Plaza, 405 E. 42nd Street

Occupy Wall Street and allied organizations will kick off a global month of action leading up to Earth Day, April 22, to connect the dots between the 1% and the destruction of the planet. Mock corporate polluters will set up shop, and the 99% will take them on!
http://nycga.net/events/event/disrupt-dirty-power


Sunday, March 25, 12:00-2:00pm
Studying May Day and the General Strike – w/ Ruth Milkman
Liberty Square

Organized with the Immigrant Worker Justice working group. Facilitated by Occupy University, as part of a series of teach-ins about May Day.


Sunday, March 25, 11:00am-7:00pm
Occupy Town Square IV
Fort Greene Park, Brooklyn

Occupy Town Squares are daytime occupations held in parks and other public spaces around NYC. With info tables, teach-ins, and political discussions, each event seeks to recreate the spirit of occupation and reclaim our public commons. Come share your ideas and stories, learn about the movement, argue with us, debate with us, collaborate with us.http://nycga.net/events/event/occupy-town-square-iv-fort-greene-park


Monday, March 26, 12:30pm
Bronx Foreclosure Auction Blockade
Fountain in Joyce Kilmer Park

Join Occupy Homes and Organizing for Occupation to sing in a moratorium on all foreclosures! Pre-meeting in the park at 12:30pm; action at the Bronx Supreme Civil Court at 2pm.


Every Day in March, 11:30-2:00pm
Cultural Occupation Of Liberty Square (COOLS)
Liberty Square

OWS inspired the world by maintaining a presence in Liberty Square – creating a viral action that spread across the country and the globe. COOLS brings, food, discussion, education and fun to the park every day. Bring your appetite and light the fire in your belly that will ignite our actions going forward. Join us – we need each other. Do it now! Tweet using #ows and #CultureOcc and find a full schedule of special events, speakers and performances at http://cools.nycga.net


SAVE THE DATE: May 1
Call to Action: May Day 2012

If you’d like to be added to the announcement and/or discussion listserv or have any questions regarding meeting time, location, structure, please contact mayday@nycga.net.http://maydaynyc.org

occupy union square during the day

Occupiers in Union Square Stormed in Late Night Raid



occupy union square


3/21: Union Square's occupation, active since the brutal NYPD police raid on Liberty Square on 3/17, is currently under threat of eviction. People are needed NOW to converge on the park and hold our public commons! Follow @OWSUnionSquare.

Live updates

  • 6:07 AM: Park officially re-opened.
  • 5:20 AM: via Twitter: ¨The NYPD have officially fled the scene of their crime.¨ Tonight, at least four people were arrested, books needlessly destroyed, and one woman knocked unconscious by police brutality -- all for the ¨crime¨ of laying down in a public park.
  • 4:37 AM: Most police appear to be leaving in advance of the arrival of rush hour traffic when public wakes up. Occupiers return to park, laying down again. Chanting ¨goodbye!¨ at NYPD.
  • 4:21 AM: Mainstream media on the scene. The District Attorney has also arrived. Union Square still blocked off. Police still moving Occupiers incrementally to allow sanitation to ¨clean¨ the park. Occupiers being slowly pushed out of the park. Occupier: ¨I really thought the police were going to be chill tonight about this. They were calm and rational earlier. Then they bumrush us, throw girl with head trauma around....¨
  • 4:19 AM: Occupier: ¨The rest of the country is going to see this in the morning!¨ Chant: ¨Oppress us, we multiply!¨
  • 4:10 AM: Heard on livestream: ¨Wake up [NYPD]; six months of beatings and we´re still here! We´re not going anywhere!¨
  • 4:07 AM: Chanting: ¨You have no authority¨ at NYPD; ¨1 we are the people 2 we are united, 3 this occupation is not leaving!¨ Police officer seen with hand on pistol. Other police steal Occupier´s books and throw them away.
  • 4:04 AM: EMT and medics approach woman knocked unconscious by police. Cops aggressively storm them, brutally rush into crowd, trample people, causing panic. People screaming. Peaceful protesters are being ATTACKED because they tried to give professional medical attention for head trauma! Injured woman was stepped on.
  • 3:56 AM: Police rush the crowd, shoving and attacking people. Livestream briefly down, back up now. At least one person reported badly injured, now unconscious, after being grabbed and thrown to the ground by cops. Medics on the scene.
  • 3:48 AM: Police surround protesters on the ground, move in to make arrests.
  • 3:43 AM: Sanitation trucks have arrived, threatening to take possession of any unattended property. Police again threaten anyone who is sitting or laying down. OWSers chant: ¨Homeslessness is not a crime!¨ and ¨Get your hand off your gun!¨ at police who motioned to draw a weapon.
  • 3:22 AM: Police warn anyone else laying down will be arrested. Sitting down is illegal. Mic check: ¨Let´s move the People´s Library somewhere safer¨
  • 3:14 AM: Line of police, some in riot gear, confront protesters singing Solidarity Forever. According to @OccuyWallStNYC: ¨"So, the park will be open at 6am and they can all go back in?" asks one NYPD captain. "Yup" says the other.¨
  • 3:01 AM:: Police just made an arrest. Threatening other Occupiers for sitting on the sidewalk.
  • 3:00 AM: Police still harassing people in the Square. Livestream is still up. Protesters chanting "we get confused when the law changes everyday.¨ Presence of counter-terrorism officials confirmed, won´t give name.
  • 2:47 AM: Occupiers peacefully singing and laying down. Remember, donuts.
  • 2:30 AM: Occupiers asking NYPD: ¨What are your demands? How long will you be occupying?¨ Large cuddle pile on the south side of the park.
  • 2:09 AM: We will not be divided, we will not be provoked. Chants of "BAD COP? NO DONUT", and other assorted silliness. Most NYPD officers unable to hold composure and are smirking.
  • 2:02 AM: Donut has been put at the end of a string, string has been tied to the end of a stick. Occupier is using stick to dangle donut over barricades. There are chants of "This is a peaceful donut". Occupiers keeping the mood one of joy and celebration.
  • 1:59 AM: Pizza has arrived, occupiers simply sleeping on sidewalk.
  • 1:24 AM: NYPD officers look bored. They are shown shifting around, fidgeting, etc.
  • 1:22 AM: Situation is somewhat calm, standoff in park. Need more people to park.
  • 1:16 AM: Sanitation workers "cleaning" the park. These are some of the most well-defended sanitation workers in history.
  • 1:03 AM: Sanitation workers have arrived, NYPD appears to have run out of barricades and are bringing in wooden sawhorse style barricades.
  • 12:52 AM: Badge #5647 put her hand in front of a badged press camera, turned around when asked for a badge number.
  • 12:48 AM: NYPD has begun carrying in barricades to barricade off the park.
  • 12:36 AM: Occupiers are holding general assembly just outside park steps.
  • 12:28 AM: Occupiers have once again begun chanting "Who do you serve, who do you protect?" NYPD threatening violence in the form of saying "I don't want nobody to get hurt."
  • 12:25 AM: First arrest has been made. Officers trying to physically force people further away from their public property.
  • 12:22 AM: Officer on megaphone announcing to leave the park. Need more people to park, wake up your friends, wake up your family.
  • 12:13 AM: Lone occupier left sitting on a crate inside park, surrounded by line of riot NYPD. Who do you call when the police are rioting? Tim reports NYPD Conterterrorism arriving. Ambulance arriving for pregnant woman.
  • 12:11 AM: 20 more NYPD have arrived in riot gear from behind the park. Occupiers shouting "remember your oath" at NYPD.
  • 12:10 AM: NYPD repeating false claim that the public park is "closed". Estimates are 70 NYPD officers.
  • 12:05 AM: NYPD has shut down the Union Square subway station. NYPD claims occupiers can stay on sidewalk.
  • 12:04 AM: Occupiers chanting "Who do you serve? Who do you protect?"

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

3/21 Live Updates, crash course on civil liberties for the NYPD

Note: NYPD crash course on civil liberties is at bottom, live updates are at the top.

Are you on the ground? Do you have information about events on the ground? Text +1 (772) 646-4548 with intel!

Live updates:

11:54 PM: NLG is saying 500 police present.
11:51 PM: Community Affairs attempting to order people to leave the park. Why do we have to leave the park? We own this park. Reports of a pre-commandeered bus waiting for mass arrests.
11:49 PM: Several hundred NYPD are gathering in the park, assumably to admit defeat and engage in violent repression. You were warned, NYPD.
11:34 PM: NYPD gathering at both sides of the park in loose, sloppy lines. Tonight, the NYPD has a choice to make. Every failing regime has the choice whether to engage in civil dialogue and negotiate the terms of its surrender, or to engage in brutal, violent repression. The NYPD is warned that its actions tonight will be seen by the whole world, and that should the NYPD choose violent repression, that it will have admitted its own defeat and surrendered all authority to use force.
11:24 PM: Unconfirmed reports of another thousand people inbound to Union Square. Officers reported talking amongst themselves stating that there will be arrests. Police, is your job not to enforce law, not make it? Under what justification can you quota arrests on peaceful protesters? I suggest that you read the crash course again, maybe you didn't get it the first time.
11:23 PM: Roughly 100 NYPD in north park, according to ground intel.
11:01 PM: Massive NYPD presence at Union, flashing patrol car lights as far as the eye can see. Obvious show of force is still pathetic versus the strength of an idea. When will the NYPD understand that the raised fist is stronger than the swung baton?
10:57 PM: Former NYPD commissioner Ray Kelly has been spotted in Union Square in a windbreaker.
10:44 PM: Police bus reported to be on scene. Send help! Come help!
10:33 PM: Reports coming in 1,500 in Union Square, more marches incoming.
10:24 PM: Two more groups converging at Union Square, according to stream. Verify?
10:16 PM: Occupiers chanting "No justice? No peace!"
9:55 PM: I have my wi-fi back, will add updates from intel reports between later on.
8:20 PM: I am losing wi-fi, back in a bit.
8:19 PM: March is currently at Prince and Lafayette.
8:17 PM: Chants of "Shut it down!" Indeed, shut it all down!
8:16 PM: People hanging out windows banging pots and chanting in support. We are the people! Taxis are honking their horns in support!
8:15 PM: Reported full three blocks of NYC ground to a halt.
8:14 PM: Broadway group has turned on Vaughn, rejoined together the marches.
8:13 PM: Unable to independently verify. Receiving reports of 6,000+ in Union Square! Bring your friends, bring your family, bring everyone to come see and participate in the American Spring!
9:11 PM: March has been split into two.
8:09 PM: March has gone on to Lafayette Street. Numbers are swelling, beyond counting at this point. This definitely looks like a new 9/24. With any hope, the NYPD learned from 9/24. Given last night's brutality, this is unlikely.
8:01 PM: NYPD attempted to seal off Union Square by netting corners and streets. It didn't work. March has left Union Square along Broadway.
7:57 PM: NYPD has closed the Union Square subway station again. Unknown how many commuters have had their freedom of movement constricted.
7:53 PM: March has re-entered Union Square.
7:51 PM: NYPD plant is wearing "81 Cardinals outfit", seen walking with NYPD and talking extensively before joining crowd.
7:48 PM: Someone is drumming out their window to show support!
7:45 PM: March has turned on to Broadway, according to reports. Still strong, still proud.
7:44 PM: The march has turned up 5th against traffic.
7:40 PM: Sorry about the delay, I had trouble getting wireless signal to my laptop. In the time I was away, the march has moved. Reports are coming in of the march beginning at 2,500 people, and swelling upwards to 3,500 people in solidarity. The march is encountering much of the same attempts at repression as the 9/24 police riot did, where police are attempting to block streets. Last I have received, 7th street is illegally blockaded by the NYPD in an attempt to stop the mass of people. Remember, people flow like water. You cannot stop us, Raymond Kelly. You will resign.
6:15 PM: Hundreds have gathered in Union Square, chants ongoing of "No justice, no peace!"
6:11 PM: On another note, if you have intelligence about things that are happening on the ground you may also post them in the comments here. We will be updating as best we can.
5:59 PM: Welcome to the live updates, this space will be updates as events on the ground unfold. Are you on the ground? If you can, get on the Freenode IRC channel #occupywallst and keep us informed if the streams go down!

NYPD crash course:

Because many NYPD police officers appear confused about what they can and cannot do, as evidenced by their routine brutality and riotous actions, this document has been produced on fundamental human rights.

Under the first amendment of the United States Constitution, free speech, assembly, and association is guaranteed. This applies to all government owned property, including both public parks and streets. Therefore, assembly at any time in any park, or on any street for the purpose of speech is Constitutionally protected. Therefore, you are not authorized to interfere with such actions. When your superior officers erroneously order you to, do keep in mind that you are being ordered to violate the law, which places you subject to citizen's arrest by the victims of the crime you are being ordered to commit.

On the same note, established procedures are in place for the creation of law. In the United States of America, laws are drafted, debated, and finalized by legislatures. You therefore, are not authorized to simply make up laws that don't exist. Without an existing law which specifically authorizes you to prevent a certain action, you are not authorized to act, period. If you attempt to physically stop someone from proceeding along an action, you have committed the crime of assault, and are subject to people's arrest.
It is a historically accepted fact that simply following orders from above does not absolve you personally of responsibility. It did not work for the Nuremberg defense, it didn't work in a number of trials related to Vietnam and police brutality, and claiming superior orders will not work for you if you try to get out of having to use your judgement.

In Union Square, Occupy Is Blooming


union square is occupied

After brutalizing Occupy Union Square late last night, NYPD again arrested Occupiers in Union Square around 4:30pm EDT for holding signs. In the latest of arbitrary rules used to harass Occupiers, NYPD now says banners are not allowed in the park. Members of the New York City Council were on hand denouncing police brutality. All supporters of Occupy Wall Street are urged to head to Union Square to show solidarity ASAP! Let´s show NYPD we aren´t afraid! Follow @OccupyWallSt, @OWSUnionSquare, and #UnionSq for updates.
via @OccupyWallStNYC:
Last night the police attacked the Union Square Occupation. This is unacceptable. We must respond the way we always have, by continuing to demonstrate and standing our ground. Come to Union Square today. Show your support. Silence and inaction encourages our opposition. Now is our time.

This spring, Occupiers are taking back public space to renew the visible face of our movement. In New York, despite constant police harassment, we are maintaining an Occupation in Union Square. Elsewhere, Occupy Oakland has announced a major civil disobedience action for today at 6pm in response to NYPD´s assault on peaceful Occupiers. Occupy London has announced a new home in solidarity with #OWS and on-going anti-austerity protests in the U.K.:
A new chapter is beginning – the Global Spring.
As the Government today announces a tax cut for the one per cent, social and economic justice campaigners in London have occupied a new site – Occupy Limehouse in Tower Hamlets – in preparation for Occupy London’s next big event: Occupy May. The new site was taken in solidarity with Occupy Wall Street as it marked its six month anniversary a few days ago by retaking Zuccotti Park.
In the shadow of Canary Wharf, set along the path of workers from the local financial services industry, Occupy Limehouse (corner of Branch Road and Horseferry Road, E14) has been chosen as an ideal location from which to carry on the Occupy movement’s critique of global capital. It is the first of a number of new autonomous tented sites expected to pop up around the capital in the coming months, in addition to Occupy London’s existing site at Finsbury Square – in operation since 22 October 2011.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

From Wall Street To Beursplein, Our Resistance Is Global

occupy amsterdam, day one

Amsterdam is home to the world´s oldest stock market - and it is #Occupied. Protesters in Amsterdam, along with dozens of cities across the Netherlands and hundreds throughout the world, took their square on a Global Day of Action on October 15, 2011, four weeks after Occupy Wall Street began. Occupy Amsterdam has occupied Beursplein (Exchange Square, directly in front of the Amsterdam stock exchange, now owned by Wall Street-based NYSE Euronext) ever since. Alongside the Acampadas in Spain and Portgual and the popular assemblies in Greece, the Netherlands remains among the most active Occupy movements in the non-English speaking world.

Other squares and buildings in Amsterdam and across the Netherlands have also been occupied, but Beursplein remains a centerpoint of the Dutch Occupy movement. On Dec. 3rd, Amsterdam Mayor Van der Laan echoed a line straight out of Mayor Bloomberg´s playbook: He claimed the ornately decorated and rigoursly cleaned encampment was a health and safety hazard. As in the U.S. and elsewhere, the Dutch media began demonizing the homeless, unemployed, and immigrant population inside the camp in an attempt to justify the mayor’s fear-mongering. The media also publicized a since-disproven rumor that no one was sleeping at Occupy Beursplein anyway. On Dec. 8, Day 56 of Occupation, most of the over 120 tents were removed and 14 people arrested.

occupy amsterdam

As in other cities across the world where governments have evicted Occupiers, the media and politicians seemed completely unphased by the crimes of the very bankers Occupy has targeted, whose unpunished crimes are far worse than camping and sharing open services to the public in public space. In a cynical display of Dutch liberal ¨tolerance,¨ the city allowed Occupy Amsterdam to maintain a small, heavily regulated, presence on the square.

Dutch Occupiers, like their counterparts in the U.S. and around the world, adapted their tactics. After peacefully occupying an ING bank branch, Occupiers were brutally arrested again. Since then, Occupiers in Amsterdam and other Dutch cities have joined with students and labor supporters in solidarity with university cleaners occupying university buildings in demand for fairer treatment, rallied in solidarity with the people of Greece, taken to the streets with thousands across Europe against the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, and more.


Now, they´ve received a letter saying they have until noon on Thursday to get out of Beursplein. Here are some of the reasons given, and Occupy Amsterdam´s responses:
  • [1] After the first eviction, the city imposed a number of unfair and arbitrary rules on the Beursplein encampment. For example, only 4 people are allowed to sleep there at a time. Now, the mayor falsly claims that more than 4 people have been sleeping in the camp, which Occupy Amsterdam says is not true. They have set rotations to make sure 4, and only 4, are present at night. (They also claim the ban on more than 4 people staying there is unconstitutional anyway.) Given the city´s earlier concern about the lack of a substantial overnight occupation, this charge is especially egregious and hypocritical.
  • [2] The city has also cited non-existent ¨fire hazards.¨ However, Occupiers have consulted fire agencies and taken extreme care to be up to safety code.
  • [3] Perhaps most frustratingly, the city claims the encampment is no longer necessary since many of the working groups have been meeting inside during the winter anyway. Occupy Amsterdam responds that they still hold public General Assemblies every weekend in the square. During the week, the encampment is a visible symbol and outreach tool that allows hundreds of people to learn about Occupy. This all wouldn´t be possible without an approachable, outdoor presence.
  • [4] The mayor also cited the lack of ¨a clear end date¨ as an issue, saying it wasn´t ¨transparent.¨ In response, Occupy Amsterdam said (roughly translated): ¨Every time [in discussions with the mayor], we have adopted a very clear position: Occupy Amsterdam will be here as long as there is the need to continue to protest! [...] As long as the government throws billions at banks while the population is squeezed, Occupy must remain.¨
occupy the netherlands

Finally, Occupy Amsterdam has stressed the vital importance of continuing to Occupy public space:
The mayor forgets to look at this totally new sense of the word ¨occupy¨ and the encampment as a symbol. For many in the Netherlands, Occupy has given the image of a tent on a square a whole new meaning: it is a symbol of resistance against the current order of power and a symbol of hope for improvement. [...]

Recently, there has been another multi-billion loan for Greece under horrendous conditions. Instead of this money being used to help people there directly, it is ending up in the portfolios of banks and corrupt politicians. The population, on the other hand, is forced to accept 22 percent loss in the minimum wage! With the ESM [European Stability Mechanism] convention going on, [...] the little person in this story will lose more and more autonomy at the expense of the large European mega-banks. The need has never been so high! Occupy Amsterdam is calling on everyone in the coming days to come support us!
If you are near Amsterdam, come out on Thursday to so show support! And please help spread the word and show support to Occupiers everywhere. From Old Amsterdam to New Amsterdam, we are fighting the same global system. As a movement, we share tactics, visions, goals, and principles. The austerity and bail-outs wrecking Europe are the same Wall Street-based systems causing economic injustice in North America. The 1% does not recognize borders; neither will our resistance. And everywhere we rise up, governments use the same excuses to force us from the public square. Now, as the weather becomes warmer in the Northern hemisphere and more people return to the streets to protest inequality in these areas, the ruling elites are trying even harder to keep us out of the people´s parks.

The reason Occupy Amsterdam has been told to leave Beursplein is the same reason the NYPD attacked the re-occupation of Liberty Square: The 1% are terrified of the coming #GlobalSpring. This May, we will stand united. The 99% will not be divided. Occupy is a global movement against corporate greed, economic exploitation, and complicit political systems. And everywhere, we are solving the economic crisis - not by relying on the existing ruling class - but by taking direct action in solidarity with one another.

#Re-Occupied: Reports From the Front Lines

"For Real Dude?"


"For Real, Dude?" A woman stares down a Virginia state policeman during a peaceful International Women's Day demonstration. Photo: Style Weekly/Buzzfeed

This week in Occupy, International Women's Day was #occupied, the bill for NYPD misbehavior came due, the CEO of B of A was mic-checked and New York City lined up for unemployment on Super Tuesday.

On March 8, International Women's Day, more than a thousand demonstrators gathered at the Virginia State Capitol to protest a new amendment that passed the Virginia House requiring women to have an ultrasound before having an abortion. 31 people were arrested by the State Police Tactical Team, which arrived fully armed and brandishing plastic shields at the behest of Governor Bob McDonnell.

Also on that day, CODEPINK protesters wearing superhero costumes rallied outside a Beverly Hills Bank of America branch in support of women and families who have lost their homes due to bank foreclosures. CODEPINK activists in New York, joined by members of the Church of Stop Shoppingprotested inside a Bank of America branch near Zuccotti Park

Photo: B of A or Bust


5,000 demonstrators formed a three-mile line stretching from lower Manhattan to Union Square to protest unemployment timed to the Super Tuesday primaries. Here's a series of photos and video of The Line.

A group of topless CODEPINK protesters mic-checked Brian Moynihan, the CEO of Bank of America, while he delivered an address at the Citigroup Financial Conference. They also had a message for Moynihan painted on their chests: "Bust up Bank of America before it busts up America."

For the last few months, police officers or detectives have been posted outside buildings where private Occupy Wall Street meetings were taking place, have visited the homes of organizers and have questioned protesters arrested on minor charges. Four are suing the city.
An internal NYPD investigation confirmed that surreptitious recordings made by a Bed-Stuy police officer correctly represented a department-wide conspiracy in which superiors urged the rank-and-file to manipulate arrest statistics by arresting people who were doing little more than standing on the street while disregarding actual victims of serious crimes who wanted to file reports. For more than two years, Adrian Schoolcraft secretly recorded every roll call at the 81st Precinct in Brooklyn and was forcibly institutionalized by the NYPD in retaliation. Needless to say, he is suing.

Mayors and law enforcement across the country fear that the illegal surveillance operations the NYPD has conducted throughout the Northeast have eroded the trust between Muslim communities and law enforcement, making it far less likely that Muslims will report terrorist plots if they do arise.

Asked about the NYPD spying meant to prevent terrorism, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said last year, "We don't stop to think about the religion." Turns out that's not true: Catholics and Jews were specifically left out.

Holding the Line

The NYPD's "Syrian Locations of Concern Report," issued to keep tabs on New York's Syrian community, misidentified at least five Brooklyn businesses that are not only not Syrian-owned, but not even Muslim-owned.

Protesters from the Northern Manhattan Restaurant and Lounge Association demonstrated in front of NYPD headquarters demanding action be taken against the Vice Squad for its repeated undercover stings that border on harassment and result in fines. A lawsuit has been filed.

College faculty across the country signed a letter asking Mayor Bloomberg to fire his police chief and public information commissioner over the NYPD's racist stop-and-frisk policy.
Ann Nolan, an attorney in St. Cloud, Minnesota and member of the Democratic-Farm-Labor Party, told the St. Cloud Times that the Occupy movement inspired her to enter the congressional race. Her opponent: Michele Bachmann. Yes, this Michele Bachmann.
In a legal victory for the Occupy movement, a Des Moines jury found an Occupy Iowa protester not guilty of trespassing on Statehouse grounds.

Three Occupy Oakland protesters face robbery and hate crime—yes, hate crime—charges for an incident at a protest last week. The women and queers of Occupy Oakland are particularly offended at the charges, which they say are categorically false, and an emergency demonstration is planned at the Wiley W. Manuel Courthouse in Oakland on March 12.
Members of Occupy New Haven announced in a letter to city officials they will not leave the upper Green as requested by the city because their stay is “not a camping trip,” but a “visual testament to the growing class inequality present in our city, nation and world.”
One year after Governor Scott Walker pushed a shameful union busting bill through the Wisconsin legislature, 68,000 Wisconsinitesdemonstrated to show they still stand in solidarity against politicians who strip workers of their rights.

Theresa from Occupy Philly


Monique White, an embattled North Minneapolis homeowner around whom the Occupy Our Homes movement has rallied to stave off foreclosure and eviction, had her day in court.
Alma Counts, an 82-year-old resident of northwest Detroit, is drawing on the support of Occupy Detroit and a committed lawyer to help fight off an impending foreclosure on the home she has lived in for 39 years.

Occupy L.A. protesters #occupied the foreclosed North Hollywood home of undocumented immigrant Blanca Cardenas, who is also beingthreatened with deportation. They were met by 20 LAPD cops in riot gear.

On March 5, thousands of Occupy protesters and students from area colleges converged on the state Capitol in Sacramento, California, and staged a Fund our Future rally to protest budget cuts to education. 72 were arrested.

Riot police used pepper spray and tear gas on Quebec students as they protested rising tuition fees in Montreal.

Occupy Santa Cruz converged on the Water Street Courthouse and marched to local banks to protest foreclosure fraud. "I don't understand why we're kicking people out while the banks and private investment companies and loan investment officers are all making money when we're creating more homeless people," said Jacqueline Seydel, one of the protestors.

Five members of Occupy Cleveland interrupted a sheriff's sale of foreclosed properties. "Until we have a justice system that holds banks accountable we want people to know that there is a movement, and that it is O.K. to fight back," said Peter Schanz, an organizer from the occupation's foreclosure committed.
suncorpse

Occupy Denver, joined by several environmental groups, #occupied the site of Suncor Energy’s oil leak on the shore of Sand Creek in Commerce City, Colorado. Acting as private Attorneys General under the authority of the Clean Water Act, water samples were taken to be tested for contaminants during a demonstration that sought to direct public attention to the fact that Suncor Energy’s continued negligence and environmental degradation is killing Colorado communities, water and wildlife.

The Coalition of Immokalee Workers staged a fast outside the headquarters of Publix Super Markets in Lakeland, Florida, to urge the company to join a program that supports pay increases for tomato pickers and prevents human rights violations against farmworkers.
On March 6, during Senator Carl Levin's address to AIPAC—the American Israel Public Affairs Committee—an activist with Occupy Wall Street and CODEPINK unfurled a large "Don't Bomb Iran" banner.

A Berkeley economist reported that in 2010, the first full year since the "end" of the Great Recession, virtually all of the income growth in America took place among the country's very wealthiest people. That year, the top 1 percent of earners took in a full 93 percent of all the income gains, leaving the other 7 percent of gains to be sprinkled among the vast majority of society.

Meet the 1%: Forbes has released its list of the world's billionaires.
The very rich are more apt to lie, cheat and steal than the 99%, a new study revealed, shocking absolutely no one.

The IRS is finally beginning to crack down on overtly political groups that claim a special tax-exempt status in order to funnel secret money into election-related advertising.

A Majority, Marginalized


Wells Fargo, the bank with the most U.S. branches, has ended free checking in six eastern states in an attempt to recover revenue lost under new financial rules.

Bank of America, Citigroup, HSBC, JPMorgan and Credit Suisse are defendants in a U.S. civil case brought by investors—ranging from mutual funds to individual traders to the city of Baltimore—who say they lost profits due to distortion of the London Interbank Offered Rate, a measure of the cost of borrowing between banks that serves as a benchmark for over $350 trillion worth of financial products worldwide.


promised to strengthen protections for whistleblowers, it has also launched an aggressive crackdown on government employees who have leaked national security information to the press, ProPublica reported.

The original wording of the indefinite detention clause in the the National Defense Authorization Act specifically exempted U.S. citizens.

In the latest development in the war on voting rights, the Justice Department's civil rights division has objected to a new photo ID requirement for voters in Texas because many Hispanic voters lack state-issued identification.


Sabu, the most prominent member of Anonymous—real name Hector Xavier Monsegur—has reportedly been an FBI informant for the last several months, and thanks to his help, authorities rounded up the last members of LulzSec, the notorious defunct hacking group he once led. A donation website has been set up for one of them, Jeremy Hammond, who leaked the Stratfor e-mails.

A Bank of America in Lakeport, California, refused to accept cash for Rob Somerton's mortgage payment, citing "bank policy." In fact, they found his desired method of payment so baffling they called the police.

A day after Vladimir Putin reclaimed the Russian presidency, an estimated 14,000 protesters gathered, blasting the victory as illegitimate.

A group of exiled Iranian women posed nude for a new video in a protest against sexual oppression in their native country.

Girls, Interrupted



A majority of Greek and Spanish workers are now unemployed for the first time in history.
The carnage in Syria continues, as 45 women and children were summarily executed by government forces in Homs.

Multimillionaire Republican presidential frontrunner Mitt Romney will be at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel for a fundraiser on March 14 and a Mr. 1% Rally will be there to greet him. Stop by dressed in your top hats and tails.

Jamie Dimon turns 56 tomorrow. Surprise him with a mic-check at his home or office.
Occupy Vacant Lots is reclaiming land in Philadelphia for gardening and growing food, but legal challenges may upend its work.

KdawG has produced an Occupy Wall Street music video.
Atlanta Jobs for Justice is camping out at the AT&T Building at 675 W Peachtree St. NE. on March 14 ahead of an anticipated round of layoffs.

Modern-Day Serpico

Modern-Day Serpico: Adrian Schoolcraft, NYPD whistleblower. Photo: Martin Benjamin
Around the country, local police are acquiring military-inspired hardware with the help of the federal government—the Department of Homeland Security has handed out $34 billion in grants for equipment since 9/11—leaving local forces that are militarized and aggressive.
Occupy University is just what it sounds like—a university for everyone, run by the Occupy movement.

The Occupy movement is fighting BAC against Bank of America with a series of Move Your Money actions and local demonstrationsstarting on March 15. In that spirit, here's what it looks like when Occupy forecloses on a local B of A branch.

Submissions for Occupy Thought, a project to bring together and publish theoretical work on and from the occupations, including writing from both concerned theorists and theoretically-minded activists, will be accepted until March 20.

Here are six ways you can get involved with the May 1 general strike.
There have been 6,705 arrests since Occupy Wall Street began on September 17, 2011.