Posts Tagged ‘occupy wall street’

Chicago’s NATO Protest 2012

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

Stores and businesses closed. Windows were boarded up. Visiting NATO dignitaries (the objects of the protest, to be sure) were warned not to wear suits or corporate attire while strolling around downtown. In a surrealistic version of nostalgia for 1968, the Chicago Establishment worked itself into a defensive frenzy over the prospect of anti-war demonstrators on the streets.


Alan Chin – Chicago, Illinois May 2012

The Occupy movement, after a wildly successful autumn followed by a long, frustrating winter, sought to protest NATO’s continuing war in Afghanistan with massive rallies. However, as it turned out, the largest demonstration numbered in the thousands — perhaps 10 thousand people – rather than the hordes that were unrealistically expected. Moreover, the vast majority of marchers were entirely peaceful, led by Veterans Against The Wars who symbolically returned their medals and spoke movingly of how they felt that their blood had been sacrificed in vain these last ten years.


Carlos Javier Ortiz – Chicago, Illinois May 2012

Chicago police, though, felt that the presence of no more than a hundred more radical “Black Bloc” anarchists was enough to trigger a full-scale melee of swinging billy clubs. Several dozen protesters were hit, bleeding, and scores arrested. It seemed self-fulfilling theater – for both sides – rather than any true expression of either crowd control or popular agitation. But the injuries are real.

–Alan Chin

Occupy May Day 2012

Thursday, May 3rd, 2012

Facing Change photographers document May Day Occupy rallies and marches in New York, Washington DC, Chicago, and Oakland as tens of thousands of people took to the streets amidst heavy police presence:


Occupy Wall Street activists staged a May Day Rally calling for a general strike in memory of the history of May 1st as a day dedicated to workers’ rights. Photograph by Andrew Lichtenstein / facingchange.org

Oakland, California

There were many different agendas coalescing together for the May Day protests in Oakland: Immigrants’ rights activists, labor marking the historic holiday, and the Occupy movement seeking to rejuvenate itself.

A large peaceful crowd marched through most of Oakland, but small groups of anarchists engaged in petty vandalism, spraying paint on bank windows and confronting the police, who responded with tear gas. Media attention focused on these incidents, detracting from the real issues.

The longshoremen shut down the port for a day. The nurses are on strike. Those facts were overshadowed by tear gas and street theater.

–Andrew Lichtenstein


About 75 Occupy Chicago protesters held sit-ins outside at two Bank of America branches. Photographs by Carlos Javier Ortiz / facingchange.org

Chicago, Illinois

On a rainy, sweater-wearing day, about a thousand people gathered in Union Park and the two miles to downtown. It was a holiday atmosphere, culminating in a sit-in of activists at Bank Of America branches.

Immigrant rights advocates chanted in Spanish: “Hey Obama! Escucha estamos en la lucha!” (Hey Obama! Listen, we’re in the fight! – “we” meaning the Latino immigrant community and its significant votes.)

Chicago is hosting a NATO summit later this month, and more protests are expected with President Obama and world leaders present.

–Carlos Javier Ortiz


Occupy DC protesters at Malcolm X Park (Officially known as Meridian Hill Park) for a day of music, games, and speeches. Photograph by Lucian Perkins / facingchange.org

Washington D.C.

A small group of several hundred demonstrators met at Malcolm X Park, two and a half miles from the White House, and festively walked through neighborhoods. In the park, there were guitars and games, including “Corporate Pin-the-Donkey” in which a blindfolded protester pins a board with stickers of companies.

It was a low-key day, and the protest reached the White House at 6:30 in the evening. Along the way, curious bystanders took photographs and some shouted their support.

–Lucian Perkins


Between Broome and Spring Streets, Lower Manhattan. Photograph by Alan Chin / facingchange.org

New York, New York

Drizzling rain in the morning threatened to dampen the turnout in New York City, but the sun came out by the early afternoon and 20,000 people marched from Union Square to Wall Street in one of the larger protests nationwide.

Demonstrators gathered at Bryant Park in midtown Manhattan, and staged protests at the Bank of America, Time Warner, Fox, and hedge fund companies. Another group crossed the Williamsburg Bridge from Brooklyn, and were joined by a hundred Black Bloc anarchists. They carried a large “Fuck the Police” banner, and clashed with the NYPD on Houston Street, several were arrested. The police covered one bloodied protester’s head and face with a sweatshirt in an apparent attempt to prevent him being photographed in this condition. Some photographers were harassed by protesters as well as the police, as tensions rose on all sides.

Nonetheless, the predominant feeling, as elsewhere, was celebratory rather than confrontational. The crowd danced in Union Square as musicians performed onstage. Protesters wore costumes and colorful banners. The parade down Broadway was orderly, high-spirited, and stretched for a mile.

The Occupy movement may struggle to define itself in an enduring way after unexpected early success and police repression, but it quietly proved on May Day that peaceful protest can be determined and widespread in the face of violent incidents and short attention-spans.

–Alan Chin and Anthony Suau

 

There have been at least 7,106 documented arrests in 114 U.S. cities as of May 1, 2012 since Sept 17 2011. On May 1st :

Date
Occupy City

No. of Arrests

Description

Source
5/1/2012 Seattle 8 Violence, arrests at Seattle May Day protests Link
Portland 12 Arrests in early Portland May Day protest Link
Oakland 25 25 arrests in Oakland May Day protests Link
Miami 3 Occupy Miami protesters march; three arrested Link
New York 30 In New York, a final May Day march ends at Wall Street Link
Philadelphia 2 2 Arrested in Occupy Protests Link
Los Angeles 13 At least 13 arrested in L.A. May Day protests Link
Albany 23 Arrests mark Occupy’s return Link

Occupy DC Eviction 2012

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

Washington DC
February 4, 2012

Early Saturday morning, the U.S. Park Police entered McPherson Square, only two blocks from the White House. Their stated mission was to remove the large tarp that OccupyDC had placed over the statue of General James B. McPherson. It had been raised to protest the announcement that the ban on camping in federal parks would be strictly enforced.

Previously, the relationship between the encampment and police had been generally good; protesters were given some leeway. But the authorities reversed their position after pressure from Republican Congressional leaders directed by Rep. Darrell Issa of California, ironically the wealthiest member of Congress with a net worth of over $450 million dollars.

Initially, Occupy DC cooperated with the Park Police and agreed to dismantle the tarp and have their tents inspected. In exchange, several Occupiers would be allowed to monitor these inspections. The police divided the park into quadrants and systematically started this process. But as the hours wore on, word spread from the monitors that the police were removing tents that passed code as well as ones that did not.

The demonstrators became upset, and when the police moved to another quadrant, Occupiers tried to block them. Violence then erupted throughout the day as officers continued to tear down tents and cart away bedding and protesters’ belongings, some with trash and dead rats.

By early evening, when the Park Police approached the last section of the park and moved in to clear out the Occupy Library, many protesters decided to make a last stand. They proved no match for the police who charged in, some on horses, and others on foot carrying shields and clubs. A few injuries and 11 arrests ensued, including one officer who was hit by a brick, and the arrest of photojournalist Jerry Nelson. As the Occupiers were pushed out onto K Street, they stood in a cold drizzle of sleet and rain, their numbers dwindling. Bewildered, they watched their camp being further dismantled.

PHOTOGRAPHS + TEXT by LUCIAN PERKINS / facingchange.org

Occupy Wall Street Eviction 2011

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

Over the last two months, Occupy Wall Street spread across the nation as each new economic statistic grimly confirms the disparity between rich and poor continuing to grow while unemployment remains high and stagnant. The protesters were initially mocked and denigrated, but public outcry galvanized by pepper spray and mass arrest police tactics added to the persistence and popularity of the movement.

© Alan Chin / FacingChange.org

The response from local governments has varied from city to city. In New York it was marked by heavy-handedness tempered with reluctant tolerance. This week, there was a conference call of city governments across the country to coordinate a crackdown. For the protesters, this drives home one of their key points, that the structure of political and economic power has become too tone-deaf and disconnected from realities on the street.

On Monday night, the heavy hand reasserted itself with force in Lower Manhattan. The police evicted the demonstrators in the middle of the night without warning, arrested several hundred of them, and denied journalists access to witness the operation. Mayor Bloomberg cited safety and sanitation as justification — legitimate concerns, to be sure, as the encampment attracted some crime and complaints of noise — but the timing and manner of his decision in the face of a court order left little doubt that respect for civil liberties took a back seat to reasserting the status quo.

© Alan Chin / FacingChange.org

The courts then supported Bloomberg after the fact, permitting 24-hour access to Zuccotti Park but not sleeping bags or tents, effectively ending the original protest for the moment. Crowds gathered the next day in different locations to continue demonstrating.

The number of people actually sleeping at any given moment were never large, perhaps several hundred; but tens of thousands passed through over sixty days. Some were unlikely allies, like establishment politicians and culturally disparate labor union workers, others came to gawk, some to disagree and debate. Especially as the weather got colder, spirits had been flagging as activists debated what to do next.

© Anthony Suau / FacingChange.org

By evicting the protesters in such a contentious manner, the mayor and the police may have inadvertently rejuvenated the movement. Whether that turns out to be the case or not, the protest succeeded in changing the national conversation: There is now a clear populist alternative to the Tea Party.

TEXT by Alan Chin  / PHOTOGRAPHS by Anthony Suau and Alan Chin

Occupy Wall Street 2011

Friday, October 7th, 2011

Occupy Wall Street is an ongoing series of demonstrations in New York City based in Zuccotti Park, formerly “Liberty Plaza Park”. The protest was originally called for by the Canadian activist group Adbusters; it took inspiration from the Arab Spring movement (particularly the Tahrir Square protests in Cairo, which initiated the 2011 Egyptian Revolution) and from the Spanish Indignants.

The participants of the event are mainly protesting against social and economic inequality, corporate greed, and the influence of corporate money and lobbyists on government, among other concerns. Adbusters states that, “Beginning from one simple demand – a presidential commission to separate money from politics – we start setting the agenda for a new America.” The protest’s organizers hope that the protesters themselves will formulate their own specific demands, expecting them to be focused on “taking to task the people who perpetrated the economic meltdown.”

By October 6, similar demonstrations had been held in Washington, Los Angeles,Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, Miami, Portland, Maine, Jersey City, Trenton, Portland, Oregon,  Seattle, Denver, Kansas City, MO, Austin, Ann Arbor, and Cleveland.