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Wall Street Protesters Vow to Reoccupy on Movement's Anniversary
Occupy Wall Street hopes call will re-energise movement after a series of evictions from New York to Los Angeles
Activists at Occupy Wall Street have issued a call to thousands of protesters across the US to reoccupy outdoor public spaces to mark the movement's three-month anniversary.
Occupy Wall Street activists hope the call would re-energise the movement. (Photograph: Andrew Gombert/EPA) The Occupy movement has stalled in recent weeks after a wave of evictions swept away a raft of encampments, including the largest in Los Angeles, Philadelphia and New York. On Wednesday, it suffered a fresh blow as police in riot gear cleared Occupy San Francisco camp on the orders of the mayor, who had been sympathetic to protesters, while Occupy Boston lost legal protection against eviction.
Organisers said they hoped the call to reoccupy on the 17 December would galvanise and grow the movement.
Amin Husain, a press spokesman for OWS, said: "We know that occupation empowers people and eliminates fear. It permits individuals to assert themselves as political beings even although the system doesn't represent them."
"The question is not to make a splash, the question is how are we going to get the space to make that happen."
Sandy Nurse, one of the direct action committee responsible for the call, said: "The need for physical space is one of the top five priorities for direct action. My personal opinion is that people have gotten scared. They have gotten arrest fatigue. They are not willing to put their bodies on the line. But the call would re-galvanise the movement and remind it how powerful it is."
Citing the conference call by mayors across the US to deal with various encampments, Nurse said: "They have identified occupation as a threat to them – that's how powerful it is."
Eleven mayors participated in a conference call in November about Occupy protests in their cities, including those in New York, Denver and Portland, Oregon, but they denied any co-ordination of raids to clear encampments.
The need for a physical space has been on OWS's agenda since police raided Zuccotti Park in November. In a piece published this week in the first issue of Tidal, a magazine published by the Occupy movement, Judith Butler, academic and feminist theorist at the University of California, Berkeley, spoke of its importance.
Butler said: "When bodies gather together as they do to express their indignation and to enact their plural existence in public space, they are also making broader demands. They are demanding to be recognised and to be valued; they are exercising a right to appear and to exercise freedom; they are calling for a liveable life.
"These values are presupposed by particular demands, but they also demand a more fundamental restructuring of our socio-economic and political order."
At one point, the movement had more than 1,000 occupations, but now they have less than 100 – and that number is dwindling daily. With the onset of winter's plummeting temperatures – which was already driving people from Zuccotti Park before the eviction – and the hardening attitudes of city authorities against encampments, notwithstanding the dearth of public spaces in the US, seeking a place to camp is a massive challenge for activists.
Even within OWS, where the movement began, activists have a battle on their hands. In Zuccotti Park, the space's owners have imposed strictly enforced rules which no longer allow tents or sleeping bags, or allow people to lie down, which would make it impossible to set up camp.
The place they want to occupy on December 17, is Juan Pablo Duarte Square, a currently vacant lot on the corner of 6th and Canal Street in Soho, about 15 minutes walk' from Wall Street, named after the founder of the Dominican Republic.
But it has already proved controversial.
It is owned by the real estate branch of Trinity Episcopalian church in Wall Street, Trinity Real Estate, one of the largest real estate companies in New York.
Activists at OWS, which had previously counted Trinity church among their supporters, have repeatedly asked for the use of this space for a winter camp. But Trinity church has refused, drawing criticism from other church leaders and a handful of activists who went on hunger strike, pledging not to eat until the church allowed protesters on the site.
In a statement on its website, Trinity said it offered its continued support of the movement – including providing meeting space at church buildings – but not the use of its enclosed vacant lot at the city-owned Duarte Square, which it leases to the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council. The property, Trinity said, is unsuitable "for large-scale assemblies or encampments."
For activists, the matter is simple: they need the space and the church should hand it over.
Husain said: "They're part of the 1% and they are choosing profit over God."
The church is also facing pressure from the religious community.
Reverend John Metz, of the Episcopalian Church of the Ascension, in Brooklyn, who describes himself as a "real mainstream church guy" said: "Trinity church is in a challenging position. They are a church with an enormous real estate holding. It's one thing to deliberate and review grants. It's another thing for a church to respond in real time to one of the largest movement for social change that this country has see for four decades.
"This is an opportunity to engage in mutual actions to transform a space, and make it a catalyst for the revitalisation of public squares that have all been eliminated in the United States, to create a space where the cause for social justice can be forwarded."
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Show AllOccupy Boston continues -- despite an unsuccessful threat by Boston Police to shut it down last night...
States, counties, cities, school boards all across Merka need the big purge. We recall that the mayors and other stewards of local governance failed the people by allowing themselves to be bribed by Japanese korporations for the privilege to install slave factories in these local districts to wickedly/pervertedly fill the void created by Merka's outsourcing of the means, ownership and control of production - to Japan!
These so-kalled stewards of the community deserve to be crated up and outsourced themselves. Occupy your local community, NOW, people!!
Occupy the Means of Production!!! FOREVER!!
What?
Dear Trinity Church:
Which side are you on?
Lessee, a church is fundamentally a mechanism to draw the people's loyalties away from themselves and toward some external "divine" being. And we see the church in question hanging onto the means of tyranny, its private property holdings and contracts, at the expense of the people and their movement toward self-empowerment.
The churche's actions are perfectly consistent with its principles! The puzzle is that the people continue to allow the church to divide them and enslave them!
After the consortium of mayors had their conference call we saw the concerted shutdowns of OWS encampments in the major cities especially. This is a perfect example of how our elected officials, even though they are part of the 99%, will take orders from the 1%, do their bidding, deny citizens their rights and maim people who are congregating in a peaceful manner. I do not believe that government/politicians will support the masses, not now, not ever.
Good points.
Agreed, The Corprate military and intelligence structures, which consume a vast portion of the US military and "intelligence" budget are instructing the mayors. Both are ultimately taking their marching orders the corporate financeer overlords, people who can make or break mayors and ambitious security operatives.
The co-ordinated effort means that other bigger brothers are also watching and the Compy Combine will do its thing on anything the occupy movement.
The US Church of WASP may have the best choirs and the best Liberals, and they are very nice to gays, but they just aren't up for the taking responsibilty for the full on Occupation.
Occupy should just go Occupy. That will at least get the Curch of WASP off thre hook for insurance liability. I don't think such good liberals as these really have the steel to sick the jackboots on the occupiers, so a stalemate will allow OWS to grow free of police interference.
It could be great!
I was talking with a friend the other night and he told me of his father, who was a hard working man all his life. Every Sunday he gave his tithe to the church, tried to help his fellow man however he could.
Then, things reversed on him. It wouldn't be forever, but for a month or two, he didn't even have enough to feed his family, so he went to his church and asked if they could help him out, just to get him through the crisis.
His church told him, "We don't do that."
He said, "I have been giving you my 10% every Sunday for twenty-five years. You are telling me that you won't help me in my time of need?"
They reaffirmed it. He is no longer a church member.
I have seen in CD several articles from ministers who are on the front lines, trying to keep the peace between fascist police and peaceful demonstrators, have been gassed, beated and arrested. They have sent out a plea to other churches and ministers asking, "Where are you? Why aren't you out here on the lines bearing witness?" Usually, they seem to be ignored.
The same holds for press reporters and photographers. We are going through the same scenario as when the Nazi Party was getting started in Germany. Slowly increasing violence against any protest. Suppression of news in favor of propaganda machines.
The 99.9% have got to keep the pressure up against the 0.1% and their many vicious, well trained minions. The alternative is to become serfs of the Oligarchy, fighting amongst ourselves for the few crumbs that drop from their tables, to try to feed our families.
Of course, they feel that is the natural order of things, just like it was in the 1890's.
In the past dozen or so years, we have seen many of the advances that were secured to We the People be expunged in favor of fascist control by the oligarchy. They are trying to put the finishing touches on it now. Voting rights trampled upon, agencies that were to protect the environment so our children would have something left are emasculated or just done away with, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly regulated or trashed, privacy eliminated by a surveillance state.
All for the love of power and greed of a tiny handful of humanity. And we, by our apathy, are letting them get away with it.
WAKE UP! WAKE UP!! WAKE UP!!! before it is too late.
[Closed rogue bold tag]
Occupy Louisville is still encamped. In today's Courier-Journal, Joe Phelps, a Baptist minister posted an op-ed. We must forward it to Trinity Episcopal.Here's an excerpt:
"I recently heard a national religious leader argue that the primary work of the church is not about speaking to justice issues of our day, but rather about “saving souls,” to get people’s heavenward direction assured. Only then should attention to social justice be considered, he argued.
While I appreciate this leader’s concern with the next-world future of others, his focus limits the Bible’s understanding of words like salvation, deliverance, and redemption and ignores our sacred stories and mandate to do justice.
The result is a church that has dropped the mantle of justice in favor of a religion of future rewards.
And we wonder why young people are leaving the church in droves.
And is it any wonder that the church is largely missing this present moment?
The church should celebrate the Occupy movement, the group that picked up the social justice mantle dropped by the majority of today’s church, and offer our stories of divine justice.
Like the story of Pharaoh, symbol of the monopoly of wealth held by the few, and what happens when leadership fears of scarcity turn Israelites into slaves.
Pharaoh monopolized the food as a way to assuage his fears of not having enough. The people needed food too, of course, so he gave them food in exchange for work.
When their work didn’t produce a living wage, they bartered away land to Pharaoh. Then their cattle. Then their freedom. Way led to way. When the strong exert financial and political power over the weak, eventually the system becomes sick." .
For full text go th www.courier-journal.com
The Occupy Movement may have had one of the first actions in 2008 when GOVERNOR BLAGOJEVICH stood by union workers and BOYCOTTED Bank of America resulting in the workers receiving their pensions.
"Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich announced Monday that he is asking all Illinois government agencies to suspend business with Bank of America. Blagojevich contended that Bank Of America received a multi-billion dollar bailout from the government and should accordingly restore credit to the Republic Windows & Doors company in Chicago"
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/12/08/illinois-governer-suspend_n_149272.html
The Occupy Movement may have had one of the first actions in 2008 when GOVERNOR BLAGOJEVICH stood by union workers and BOYCOTTED Bank of America resulting in the workers receiving their pensions.
"Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich announced Monday that he is asking all Illinois government agencies to suspend business with Bank of America. Blagojevich contended that Bank Of America received a multi-billion dollar bailout from the government and should accordingly restore credit to the Republic Windows & Doors company in Chicago"
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/12/08/illinois-governer-suspend_n_149272.html
Blagojevich was one brave cool dude. Who goes against Hitler?
The movement spread rapidly but was only an inch deep. Noam Chomsky spoke of deepening the movement as the first order of business. Unfortunately there were too many calls for organizing the movement and actionizing the movement too early. Decentralized movements take time to develop and patience is needed.
Although there is no one answer as to how to go forward, public college campuses are the obvious targets for recruitment this Winter. Set up temporary camps in cold climates, recruit , break down camp (travel light) and then vanish. Also set up temporary camps in public parks with good traffic exposure. Move the camps around from one place to another before the Cops can organize to remove you, then vanish and show up somewhere else. In cold climates take time off to be in home to regenerate. . Stress RISING ABOVE PARTISAN POLITICS to UNIFY the 99%. Ask people for support in whatever ways they can, especially moral support. The expansion of the movement is paramount. Get the message of UNITY out there.
Recruit larger numbers of veterans as individuals, not organizations, to participate. This is PARTICULARLY important because our society has elevated veterans to a very high level of respect.
Make sure the leadership of the various camps rotates among it's participants and does not centralize. Spread the idea that both major political parties represent the 1% and block Obama from posing as a 99% sympathizer, he is definitely NOT.
In warmer climates it should be much easier to do the above. Then when participation has deepened continue to focus on the BANKS BANKS BANKS. BANKS run the Country. EVERY EVERY EVERY action should be about the BANKS. Avoid Washington and the political parties. Keep the movement social and keep it expanding. Forget Washington the BANKS are your oppressors.
This situation represents a blessed opportunity for Trinity Episcopal Church. They can continue to be very successful business people who are marginally relevant to the surrounding community or they can be marginally less successful business people who have re-established their relevance in the community.
Does anyone question what the revolutionary known as Jesus would have chosen?
(12-10) 05:48 PST BOSTON (AP) --
Police officers swept through Dewey Square early Saturday, tearing down tents at the Occupy Boston encampment and arresting dozens of protesters, bringing a peaceful end to the 10-week demonstration.
Officers began moving into the encampment at about 5 a.m. to "ensure compliance with the trespassing law," police spokeswoman Elaine Driscoll said. The city had set a deadline for midnight Thursday for the protesters to abandon the site but police took no action until early Saturday, making Boston the latest city where officials moved to oust protesters demonstrating against what they call corporate greed and economic injustice.
As police moved in, about two dozen demonstrators linked arms and sat down in nonviolent protest and officers soon began arresting them, according to the Boston Globe.
The protesters were "very accommodating" to the officers, Driscoll said. Forty-six people were arrested on charges of trespassing and disorderly conduct, police said. No injuries were reported.
The entire operation lasted less than an hour. Crews then entered the area to begin cleaning it.
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2011/12/10/national/a050331S96.DTL#ixzz1g8qqa5hL
I live across the river from Boston - in Cambridge. This entire area, including the mayor's office, is made up of many "feel good" liberals...meaning it feels good to think of one/myself as liberal. But this doesn't cut the cheese. Massachusetts as a collective likes to think of itself as more liberal than other places around the U.S. It's irrelevant. It was a joke to think Mayor Mennino is nicer than other mayors or that our police aren't as brutal as other departments. It was also, since the first raids began with reports of DHS coordination, a bit silly to think that they wouldn't get to Boston.
Congratulations to all those activists and supporters of OWS, in the encampments and elsewhere, these many weeks. It's time to move on, and get this ball down the field. We as people were backed up to the goal line. It's time for some new play-calling, for what hopefully will be a long drive down the field. Although materially nothing has changed politically and economically, the power structure has been rattled by the spread of encampments nationwide. It is why they've reacted with such pre-meditated police brutality. They are afraid because their ultimate goal has been to impose debt peonage on us all without the slightest response from us beaten-down folk. They've pretty much done it. But now it's time for push-back. The country is woken up. No matter the ugly demonization of OWS in the MSM, the movement goes on.
This movement is for real. It's much bigger than the anti-establishment protests of 1968 because this time, it isn't about one or two issues -- it's about the whole enchilada, the way the rich have been systematically sticking it to everyone else for the last 40 years. It's about America's deindustrialization, about having our jobs outsourced, our wages stagnated, our cost of living only supported by going into debt slavery to the banks who foreclose on families and children as fast as they can, about having our unions busted, our attempts to unionize either thwarted or intimidated.
There's no justice in the legislative or regulatory structure of the government nor in the supreme court with their despicable gift to corporations to engage in election engineering. Got democracy? I don't think so. Fewer and fewer people think the U.S. is really democratic. The corporate state and the politicians who have been on board all the way, even in our 5th year of severe economic hardship, can no longer lie to us and get away with it, even though they keep trying. They've gone too far with their ideological greed. Things are so bad that in a little over two months, what started with a few activists meeting on a bench in lower Manhattan has reached such critical mass that most of the country supports OWS. Politicians are talking about it. Consultants and lobbyists for the corporate and political elite are talking about it. Why? Because they are scared. They are used to our apathy. And for the ultimate prize in cynicism and disrespect for people's intelligence, Obama, using clever co-optation, is trying to echo Teddy Roosevelt in his campaign stops -- can it get any worse? Please, no one listen to or be taken in by that drivel! He is an internationalist, a globalist through and through. The corporation's man. A leopard can not lose its spots. With the exception of Dodd/Frank -- which will be defanged by the time he allows the banks and Wall Street to dilute every part of it -- he has done nothing to re-set this country on course while restoring the rule of law. He is all about the status quo, with a little technocratic tinkering and fine-tuning. He came to office during a political/economic convulsion. He had such an opportunity to change things, but nothing changed. Here we are almost four years later, and we have to listen to these buffoons running for president all over again.
If only our mainline newspapers (and internet sites) could lend some decent fair-minded coverage to what's really at stake here. The European newspapers, even as individual member states are losing their sovereignty to the international banking cartel, at least get the significance of the moment and at times sing the praises of the OWS movement. Fairness? Here? I don't think so.
Watch the west coast Dec. 12th. Their action could be the model for future OWS actions around the country, as the movement shifts strategy from OCCUPY to DISRUPT!
As someone who has aprticipated in all manner of strikes, pickets, sit-ins and boycotts, I would suggest this about DISRUPTION:
1. Choose your targets well
2. Be sure that you have the numbers and logistics to actually DISRUPT your target, or else you end up looking crazy and ineffective. Direct action requires definite goals, well thought out strategy and tactics, and greater support of a larger community.
3. Have some lawyers on call.