Uploaded by democracynow on Oct 25, 2011
www.democracynow.org - Oakland police stormed the Oakland Occupy protest encampment outside City Hall just before 5 a.m. PDT. Police lobbed flash grenades and reportedly fired tear gas. Initial reports say at least 70 people have arrested and the police tore apart the protest camp. Democracy Now! gets a live report from the park by legal observer Marcus Kryshka. Nearly 2,500 people have now been arrested in protests since the start of Occupy Wall Street movement Sept. 17.
For the complete transcript, podcast, and for additional reports on the Occupy Wall Street movement, visit http://www.democracynow.org/tags/occupy_wall_street
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http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_19188378
Anti-Wall Street demonstrators march in Oakland
OAKLAND, Calif.—Hundreds of protesters in Oakland are marching toward City Hall several hours after dozens were arrested for not breaking an encampment as part of the Occupy Wall Street protest.
The protesters took to the streets Tuesday evening after gathering at a downtown public library. Police officers in riot gear met them en route and several small skirmishes broke out.
The march comes after police earlier swarmed into an encampment firing tear gas and rounds of bean bags before removing about 170 demonstrators who had been staying overnight on a plaza outside City Hall for more than two weeks.
City officials say 85 people were arrested, mostly on suspicion of misdemeanor unlawful assembly and illegal camping.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.
Under cover of darkness early Tuesday, hundreds of police swept into Oakland's Occupy Wall Street protest, firing tear gas and beanbag rounds before clearing out an encampment that demonstrators had hoped would stir a revolution.
In less than an hour, the two-week-old, miniature makeshift city was in ruins.
Scattered across the area were overturned tents, pillows, sleeping bags, yoga mats, tarps, backpacks, food wrappers and water bottles. Signs decrying corporations and police still hung from lampposts or lay on the ground.
Protesters had stayed awake through the night, waiting for the expected raid.
Officers and sheriff's deputies from across the San Francisco Bay area surrounded the plaza in front of City Hall at around 5 a.m. and closed in. Eighty-five people were arrested, mostly on suspicion of misdemeanor unlawful assembly and illegal camping, police said.
About 170 protesters were at the site, but no one was injured, Interim Oakland Police Chief Howard Jordan said at a news conference following the raid.
"I'm very pleased with the way things went," Jordan said.
Television news footage showed protesters being taken away in plastic handcuffs without incident, though some protesters complained of rough handling by police.
Officers fired tear gas and bean bags when one group of demonstrators pelted officers with rocks and bottles near the camp's kitchen area, Jordan said.
"It was definitely chaos. People didn't want to get gassed," said protester Anthony Owens, 40, a computer programmer from Oakland who was at the scene when police moved in but was not arrested.
Some people in the camp left as word spread about possible police action, Owens said. Many of the remaining protesters locked arms and shouted as officers surrounded the plaza and moved in.
Witnesses reported seeing smoke rising from the area. The plaza was "contained" at around 5:30 a.m., city officials said.
By midmorning, city workers had started collecting the debris. Some would be held for protesters to reclaim, the rest would be thrown away, the city said.
The Oakland site was among numerous camps that have sprung up around the country, as protesters rally against what they see as corporate greed and a wide range of other economic issues. The protests have attracted a wide range of people, including college students looking for work and the homeless.
In Oakland, tensions between the city and protesters escalated last week as officials complained about what they described as deteriorating safety, sanitation and health issues at the site.
City officials had originally been supportive of protesters, with Oakland Mayor Jean Quan saying that sometimes "democracy is messy."
But the city later warned the protesters that they were breaking the law and couldn't stay in the encampment overnight. They cited concerns about rats, fire hazards, public urination and acts of violence at the site, which had grown to more than 150 tents and included areas for health care, child care and cooking.
"Many Oaklanders support the goals of the national Occupy Wall Street movement," Quan said in a statement on Tuesday. "However, over the last week it was apparent that neither the demonstrators nor the City could maintain safe or sanitary conditions or control the ongoing vandalism."
There were reports of a sex assault and a severe beating and fire and paramedics were denied access to the camp, according to city officials, who said they had also received numerous complaints of intimidating and threatening behavior.
Protesters disputed the city's claims about conditions at the camp. They said the protest was dominated by a spirit of cooperation that helped keep the site clean and allowed disputes to be resolved peacefully.
Lauren Richardson, a 24-year-old college student from Oakland, complained that the disheveled state of the camp following the police raid gave a false impression. She said volunteers collected garbage and recycling every six hours, that water was boiled before being used to wash dishes and that rats had infested the park long before the camp went up.
"It was very neat. It was very organized," Richardson said.
Volunteers at the medical tent erected on the site said paramedics had not been kept away.
On Thursday, the city ordered the protesters to vacate, though they did not set a deadline. Protesters said the number of people at the camp had steadily dwindled since the city posted the letter, while those who remained understood they would likely face a confrontation with police.
After Tuesday's raid, police maintained a heavy presence around downtown Oakland. Streets were closed off by police barricades, and at least two helicopters were in the air shining lights down. Dozens of officers were on the streets, and police in riot gear were seen facing off with shouting protesters, who briefly blocked traffic on a busy thoroughfare.
City officials advised downtown businesses to delay opening and city employees to come in late.
Police also cleared a smaller encampment from a park near the plaza on Tuesday morning.
The city said protesters would be allowed to return to the plaza after it was cleaned up and could stay between the hours of 6 a.m. and 10 p.m. but not overnight.
Many protesters said the raid had only served to strengthen their resolve that the protests would continue. A flier handed out along the police barricades at the edge of the plaza Tuesday morning asked Occupy Oakland demonstrators to reconvene at the city's public library in the afternoon.
In Sacramento, District Attorney Jan Scully said Monday she would not file charges against more than 70 protesters arrested while occupying the city's Cesar E. Chavez Plaza.
But The Sacramento Bee reports that city officials said they would still seek to prosecute the protesters for violating a city ordinance against loitering after curfew (http://bit.ly/rH1JX7). Those cases would be handled by the city attorney's office rather than the district attorney.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2053502/Occupy-Oakland-protests-Marine-veteran-shot-face-police-rubber-bullet.html
Marine veteran fighting for life after being shot in the face with gas canister during Occupy Oakland clashes
By Hannah Roberts and Mark Duell
Last updated at 10:56 PM on 26th October 2011
A U.S. Marine veteran is in a critical condition in hospital tonight after being injured by a police gas canister during last night's Occupy Oakland protests, which saw running battles break out between authorities and protesters as a crowd tried to reclaim an encampment.
Scott Olsen, 24, of Daly City, California, an Iraq veteran and member of Veterans for Peace, suffered a skull fracture and brain swelling after being hit in the head during the riots. Officers had cleared the site of demonstrators around 12 hours earlier in a dawn raid where at least 85 people were arrested.
Police gave repeated warnings to demonstrators to disperse from the entrance to Frank Ogawa Plaza in the Californian city before firing tear gas canisters into the crowd at 7:45pm on Tuesday evening. There were reports from officers that some protesters had been throwing rocks.
Scroll down for video
Clashes: Members of the Occupy Wall Street movement carry away Marine Veteran Scott Olsen, a Veterans for Peace member, after he was hit by a tear gas canister shot by the police near the Oakland City Hall.
Pictured: Scott Olsen, 24, of Daly City, California, an Iraq veteran and member of Veterans for Peace, suffered a skull fracture and brain swelling after the incident
Heavy-handed tactics: A woman in a wheelchair covers her mouth after police in Oakland, California, released tear gas to disperse Occupy Wall Street protesters
Getting away: The Occupy Wall Street demonstrator in a wheelchair is pushed away as authorities deploy tear gas in Oakland, California
'It's terrible to go over to Iraq twice and come back injured, and then get injured by the police that are supposed to be protecting us,' Mr Olsen's roommate Keith Shannon told The Guardian, adding that he served in Iraq in 2006 and 2007 before leaving the military last year.
Protesters evicted from Atlanta camp
Dozens of protesters were evicted early this morning from a park in Atlanta and 53 who refused to leave were arrested by police.
Police entered Woodruff Park just after midnight following two warnings to Occupy Wall Street demonstrators in the Georgia city.
Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed said demonstrators were becoming ‘increasingly aggressive’ but said the arrests were made without incident.
They had been camping in the park for nearly three weeks. He said last week protesters could stay there at least until November 7.
But he changed his mind last weekend after the protesters tried to hold a concert without plans for adequate security or crowd control.
Mayor Reed said he had other safety concerns as the number of tents in the park increased to more than 75.
'Oakland Police Department fired a tear gas canister at his head, fracturing his skull,' said Mr Olsen's friend Joshua Shepherd. A spokesman for Highland General Hospital confirmed that Olsen was being treated for injuries sustained during the protest. Oakland police have not yet commented.
SCOTT OLSEN: FACTFILE
Age: 24
From: Onalaska, Wisconsin
Lives in: Daly City, California
Member of: Iraq Veterans Against the War and Veterans for Peace
Iraq service: 2006 and 2007
Served in: 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines
Mr Olsen is also an Iraq Veterans Against the War member and served in 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines. His parents live in Wisconsin and they are expected to fly out to see him, reported The Guardian.
The scene was reportedly calm but tense early this morning as a crowd of hundreds of protesters from last night dwindled to just a few dozen.
Police had announced on Tuesday night over a loudspeaker that those who refused to leave could be targeted by 'chemical agents'. One woman in a wheelchair, who was struggling to breathe, had to be helped away by friends while another woman, hit by a canister, was carried off.
Jerry Smith, 35, said a tear gas canister had rolled to his feet and sprayed him directly in the face. Mr Smith said: 'I got the feeling they meant business, but people were not going to be intimidated. We can do this peacefully, but still not back down.'
The protesters were trying to make good on a vow to retake an encampment that Occupy Oakland activists had remained in for 15 days, until police evicted them early on Tuesday.
More...
The evening demonstration started around 5pm, when about 400 people began marching from a public library toward the plaza which police had surrounded. Trouble began about an hour into the protest, with officers in riot gear blocking in protesters.
Bloodied: Violence broke out in running battles between police and protesters as they tried to retake the camp in Frank Ogawa Plaza which was earlier in the day
Warnings: Occupy Wall Street protesters flee after police deploy tear gas to disperse a crowd of around 400 that gathered in Oakland city centre
Not giving up: The Occupy Wall Street campaigners returned to try to retake the camp that had been cleared earlier in the day in Oakland
Scary sight: Occupy Wall Street protesters run from tear gas deployed by police at 14th Street and Broadway in Oakland, California, on Tuesday
Some threw turquoise and red paint at the riot police officers' faces and helmets while others pleaded for a peaceful protest. Protesters who tried to fight with police and were clubbed and kicked in return.
Authorities were denying reports that they used flash bang canisters to help break up the crowd, saying the loud noises came from firecrackers thrown at police by protesters.
'I got the feeling they meant business, but people were not going to be intimidated. We can do this peacefully, but still not back down'
Jerry Smith, protester
The number of protesters diminished with each round of tear gas. Police estimated that there were roughly 1,000 demonstrators at the first clash following the march.
About 200 remained after the final conflict around 11:15pm on Tuesday night - mostly young adults, some riding bicycles, protecting themselves from the noxious fumes with bandanas and scarves wrapped around their faces.
'This movement is more than just the people versus the police,' Mario Fernandez said on Tuesday night. 'It's about the people trying to have their rights to basic services. This crowd isn't going anywhere anytime soon.'
City officials said that two officers were injured. At least five protesters were arrested and several others injured in the evening clashes. But city officials said 97 people were arrested in the Tuesday morning raid on the camp.
Night lights: Police prepare to enter Occupy Oakland's City Hall encampment on Tuesday night after they cleared the protesters on Tuesday morning
Bring it: A group of police officers stand ready near Oakland City Hall, as Occupy Wall Street demonstrators rally against the early morning police raid
Banners: A group of Occupy Wall Street demonstrators chant in Oakland's financial district during a demonstration in response to the early morning police raid
Dispersing: Police fire tear gas into a crowd of hundreds of Occupy Oakland protesters on Tuesday night as they tried to retake a camp
Accused: Those arrested face charges for camping or assembling without a permit in Frank Ogawa Plaza in Oakland
City staff last week warned that they might have to shut down the site, where camping and cooking is exacerbating an existing rat problem in the centre.
The problem is normally under control, but has been aggravated by the extra food and people in the area according to Oakland officials.
'Over the last week it was apparent that neither the demonstrators nor the city could maintain safe or sanitary conditions, or control the ongoing vandalism'
Oakland Mayor Jean Quan
While protesters at the New York site have been treated to gourmet restaurant meals and organic take-away food, conditions in the Oakland camp are thought to have become unsavoury as the tented town became semi-permanent.
'Over the last week it was apparent that neither the demonstrators nor the city could maintain safe or sanitary conditions, or control the ongoing vandalism,' Oakland Mayor Jean Quan said in a statement.
Once cleaned, it is expected to be reopened and protesters will be free to use it for daytime demonstrations.
Attacked: A policeman is hit in the neck with red paint after the protest turned angry when the encampment was cleared and arrests made
Pulling it down: Oakland police search tents of Occupy Wall Street demonstrators (left) and release tear gas around the plaza early yesterday
Coming face to face: Conditions in the Oakland camp are thought to have quickly become unsavoury with protesters confronting officers in full riot gear
Debris: The plaza remained cordoned off at midday yesterday for a clean-up after it was cleared for being unsanitary, according to local authorities
Cast out: An Occupy Oakland demonstrator watches from behind a barricade following the eviction after police officers decided to clear the site for being unsafe
Yesterday morning police officers began to clear the plaza before dawn and had 'contained' the area in about an hour. About 350 people were in the plaza at the time. Police deployed beanbags and sprayed gas at protesters but there were no reports of injuries.
'This movement is more than just the people versus the police. It's about the people trying to have their rights to basic services. This crowd isn't going anywhere anytime soon'
Mario Fernandez, protester
The protest was the Oakland branch of a movement launched more than a month ago as Occupy Wall Street in New York.
The demonstrators are angry at government bailouts of big banks, high unemployment, and economic inequality in the U.S. Demonstrations have spread across the nation and overseas, although crowds remain relatively small in most cities.
The city claimed conditions at the Oakland plaza had begun to deteriorate by the second week of the protests with police, fire and medical care reporting they were denied access to the plaza to respond to service calls. The city also said it had received reports of a sexual assault and a severe beating.
Officials also said the plaza was damaged by graffiti, litter and vandalism. Hundreds of demonstrators have been arrested in New York since the protests began. There have also been numerous arrests in other cities.
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/americas/2011/10/201110266201951908.html
Police crack down on Oakland protesters
Police in riot gear have used non-lethal weapons on a crowd of more than 1,000 people attempting to march on to Oakland's city hall to condemn arrests made at an "Occupy Wall Street" camp.
Police dispersed the crowd with what appeared to be stun grenades and set off tear gas to drive the demonstrators away from a plaza in Oakland's business district that had been at the centre of Tuesday's conflict.
Ali Winston, a journalist at the scene, described to Al Jazeera the police's tactics.
"It's really, really tense and I think the cops are trying to walk a fine line, but I don't think they are going to back down and neither are the demonstrators."
- Cat Brooks, protest organiser
"There have been two incidents of tear gas, flash-bang grenades and less-than-lethal projectiles beanbags being fired at the crowd," he said.
"In one instance, they used CS gas - which is a stronger version of tear gas that affects your respiratory system as well as your eyes, as well as burning your skin. So that's happened twice since then."
While police accuse protesters of throwing large fire crackers at officers, Winston said that had only occurred earlier in the day when police raided and dismantled the protesters' encampment.
"That refers to an incident earlier this morning when the initial camp, when the initial occupation camp, was dismantled by police. Two fire works were set off. I was down there. They were M1000, M80 calibre fireworks.
"Since then, there have been flash-bang grenades lobbed from behind police lines at demonstrators ... anything that's been lobbed after 5:00 am has been a police flash-bang grenade. It happened at least four times."
Witnesses reported seeing several people taken into custody, but an Oakland police spokeswoman said the department would not confirm any arrests until Wednesday.
"It's really, really tense and I think the cops are trying to walk a fine line, but I don't think they are going to back down and neither are the demonstrators," said Cat Brooks, an organiser.
Protest leaders said their march was aimed at reclaiming Frank Ogawa Plaza, which had served as a camp location for two weeks of protests against economic inequality in the city until police cleared it by firing beanbags and tear gas at camp residents.
Demonstrators living in the camp claim to be the Oakland version of the Occupy Wall Street movement launched more than a month ago in New York.
Encampment raided
Oakland police arrested 85 "occupy" protesters sleeping in the Frank Ogawa Plaza encampment on Tuesday morning.
Most of the people arrested were taken into custody on suspicion of illegal lodging, a misdemeanour.
Karen Boyd, the Oakland police spokesperson, told Reuters news agency that "those arrested now face charges for camping or assembling without a permit".
In depth coverage of US financial crisis protests
Boyd said the Oakland police began to clear the plaza before dawn and had "contained" the area within an hour.
About 350 people were in the plaza when police began to clear the area by deploying beanbags and spraying tear gas at the protesters.
Boyd said that there were no reports of injuries. However, protesters and witnesses claim otherwise.
A female demonstrator described her version of the police clearing to a local news agency.
"They were like you, we have a few minutes and then even before the minutes passed they started shooting off. And then, even the fact that everybody left, they kept shooting," the unidentified woman said.
Jean Quan, the mayor of Oakland, said in a statement that she told protesters to cease overnight camping and cooking at the plaza.
"Over the last week it was apparent that neither the demonstrators nor the city could maintain safe or sanitary conditions, or control the ongoing vandalism," Quan said.
The mayor's office said conditions at the plaza had begun to deteriorate by the second week of the protests with police,
fire and medical care reporting they were denied access to the plaza to respond to service calls.
Officials also said that the plaza was damaged by graffiti, litter and vandalism.
Watch the Democracy Now video at this link: http://www.democracynow.org/2011/10/26/police_fire_tear_gas_flash_grenades
October 26, 2011
Police Fire Tear Gas, Flash Grenades as Protesters Try to Retake Occupy Oakland After Predawn Raid
Oakland police repeatedly fired tear gas and flash grenades Tuesday night as protesters attempted to retake the Occupy Oakland encampment outside City Hall—only 12 hours after police tore apart the camp and arrested more than 90 people in a pre-dawn raid. Observers said that at times the downtown resembled a war zone last night. Some protesters are being held on $10,000 bail. We speak to Rachel Jackson of the Oscar Grant Committee Against Police Brutality and State Repression about how the police are handling Occupy Oakland. We also are joined by John Avalos, San Francisco city supervisor and a candidate for mayor of San Francisco. On Tuesday, Avalos introduced a resolution supporting the right of the Occupy San Francisco protest to continue its peaceful assembly in public spaces. [includes rush transcript]
Here is the video that Lightwins posted, only in slow motion. You can clearly see the path the projectile takes from the police officer to the people.
ACLU has filed a class action lawsuit against OPD: If they get enough names they will do a suit. 415-621-2488. There has been a file opened for Occupy Oakland
Don't they just always seem to blow it ?
http://www.theawl.com/2011/10/the-livestream-ended-how-i-got-off-my-comp...
Friday, October 28, 2011
71
The Livestream Ended: How I Got Off My Computer And Onto The Street At Occupy Oakland
When I heard the “We Are the 99%” slogan, I worried. I am movement-skittish. I don't like being spoken for. Anytime I hear the language of political clichés, whether about “workers” or “job creators,” my ears shut down. I know those vocabularies, and I don't agree with the worldviews that produce them.
So I didn't go to Occupy Oakland during the two weeks it was a camp in the Frank Ogawa/Oscar Grant Plaza. My partner, who doesn't share my qualms, went frequently. He would come home and tell me about what he'd seen: the media center powered by an electricity-generating bicycle, the daycare center, the full-time kitchen, which fed all the members of the camp, many of them homeless. He told me about the library and the tiny “community garden” of potted plants. He told me how interesting it was to watch this small impromptu community struggle, not only with the police and with the city, but also, because it refused to shut anyone out, with the problems that characterize Oakland itself: mental illness, health and environmental issues, poverty, racial tension, need.
I listened with enormous interest, but I still didn't go. At the risk of making this too much about me, I need to make my beliefs and reasons clear, such as they are (and were):
• I do not believe the police are evil.
• I do not believe in utopian societies.
• I distrust extremists of whatever stripe.
• I believe inflammatory rhetoric shuts down rational thought.
• I was (and remain) afraid of nighttime Oakland—the desperate Oakland that Occupy Oakland insisted on caring for and actually living with.
• I am lazy, prone to migraines, and unwilling to be cold, wet, uncomfortable and in constant danger of arrest.
In short, I'm a moderate: small, fearful, skeptical, selfish, with privilege aplenty. I have health care through the university, where I'm both a student and a teacher. I'm half-Hispanic, but I scan as white. I'm a not atypical Bay Area type: liberal, taxpaying, cautious, law-abiding (maybe to a fault), trying to hang onto the things I have. I have an iPhone, for heaven's sake.
I am, moreover, a liberal with a lifelong habit of opting out of the political conversation—and out of most kinds of activism—because I find its language dishonest, combative and unjust. I understand perfectly that our politics proceed according to a kind of barter system where each side continually overstates its convictions. I understand that the nation is a behemoth, and that to shift it, however minimally, requires the kind of herculean effort that very few people can muster. No wonder there's so little moderation among the grass-roots organizers on right and left alike; it takes an unhealthy obsession to even want to participate in a system that can't and won't hear you unless you scream.
That said, not being (for example) an anarchist myself, I can't in good conscience profess a commitment to anarchist principles in hopes that the country will shift slightly to the left. It's not how I'm built, and I hardly think I'm unique.
So I was fascinated by Occupy Oakland, but my interest was—I frankly admit this—more anthropological than political. Out of respect for the people whose commitments were real, I stayed away and wondered privately, maybe even smugly, when the movement that was trying so idealistically to remain democratic and leaderless would have to regulate itself and generate a leadership, a security force, a justice system—all the accoutrements a society needs in order to function.
But I listened, and I read about it, and I followed the relevant Twitter hashtags. I remained a spectator, which is more or less how I've felt and behaved my entire life.
Then the camp was disbanded. People in the camp knew this was coming and took care, the night before, to remove the wooden pallets they'd set up as walkways to protect the grass from being trampled. They removed the stove that had been donated by a union. The police came and tore down the camp at 4 a.m. A bigger crowd assembled that afternoon at 4 p.m. in front of the public library and began to march through Oakland.
I watched the ABC livestream and kept up on Twitter as the crowd got bigger and bigger. People downtown started joining. The crowd headed for Snow Park, the site where a second camp had started.
Now, I had seen Snow Park by accident the day before—I parked nearby without realizing it, and as I walked to my destination, I started seeing chalk outlines on the sidewalk. They were outlines of shadows: shadows of meters, trash cans, bicycles, all traced in blue chalk.
It was as if someone had decided to make all the city's objects into sundials for a very specific time of day. A bored and creative protester, I realized, when I looked up from the sidewalk and saw a cardboard sign that said “Welcome to Occupy” in front of the pretty green park dotted with tall oaks and a few tents. That would be the last day of the occupation; the next day, the chalk outlines were still there, frozen in time, but the tents and bicycles were gone. It's hard to imagine anything more ephemeral than a chalk outline of a shadow, so it's strange when such a thing outlasts a social experiment that included people and food and tents and signs.
This is as good a metaphor as any for the reality Occupy Oakland represents, at least to my mind: shadows that persist even without their originals. And, to a lesser extent, words at odds with their meanings.
Behold, for example, what Snow Park looked like during the “occupation”:
and from the other side:
This is what it looked like after the police “evacuation”:
The “evacuated” park is packed with bodies, the “occupied” park is idyllically empty save a well-tended camp of some ten to 15 tents, and this all makes a kind of sense in our embattled country where corporations are people, special people who have the same rights as we do but none of the responsibilities. (Immortal people who won't be troublesome and go to public parks; clean uncomplicated people without hands to cuff or eyes to teargas or bodies to arrest and jail.) They're people, moreover, whose right to bribe politicians is protected as “free speech." Without getting dramatically Orwellian, it's reasonable to say that our words have lost some of the concreteness that made them useful.
Anyway, the protesters left Snow Park and marched through the streets, turning unexpectedly (or as unexpectedly as a huge crowd can), confusing police, who were trying to split the crowd and start arrests. Then it came: hundreds of police officers, comprised of 15-17 different agencies including Palo Alto and San Leandro, in riot gear. I watched on the ABC livestream and read on Twitter as the police charged the crowd with “unlawful assembly” and warned that they had five minutes to disperse before they'd release a chemical agent. I watched as the crowd refused to move. I watched as the police pulled on their riot masks.
And then the ABC livefeed went dead.
My Twitter feed went crazy with reports of tear gas.
I refreshed the livefeed frantically. “This broadcast has ended,” it said.
ABC claimed that it ran out of fuel (see the caption under the image), so those watching quickly switched over to the CBS livestream. Then this happened:
To clarify: the Tweet on the right, offering CBS as an alternative, came seconds before the row of Tweets on the left. When the ABC livefeed went down, everyone watching switched.
Then the CBS feed turned into a picture of the Capitol.
To sum up: the only two mainstream media live-feeds switched off at precisely the same instant—the minute before fifteen police departments working together engulfed a peaceful group of protesters in tear gas.
That crucial minute, when the media (whether by accident or in compliance with police orders) enabled the police to tear-gas peaceful American citizens untelevised, shares something with the time of day recorded by those chalk shadows on the sidewalk. It's an ephemeral moment, but it lasted much, much longer than a minute should. It's a shadow whose original has disappeared, and it's all the more significant for that.
Given our image-saturated society, it's hard to explain how the absence of an image can be more dramatic, a bigger scandal, than the hundreds of disturbing videos of citizens being attacked by police. We're used to thinking of surveillance as the enemy. Big Brother abides, and I can testify that there's something undeniably eerie about the news helicopters hovering over my neighborhood. But for those helicopters hanging in our sky for hours and hours, waiting for a story, to disappear precisely when the story breaks—that's a different kind of sinister, a different kind of wrong.
Police brutality is, on the other hand, overly familiar. It's a phrase we know too well; part of what should shock us about it is the easy way it rolls off the tongue. But we're used to shock by now; “shock and awe” is in our national lexicon and we're no longer either shocked or awed by it. People observe, sagely, in comment threads across the Internet, that yes, sometimes the police use excess force, but this is what happens when people don't obey police orders (however unlawful those orders might be). Honestly, what did they expect?
Those people tend not to know Oakland's history with the police, or the police's history with Oakland, they've probably never experienced anything remotely like police brutality themselves, and they also tend to let a winking cynicism about how the world works disguise their resignation and passivity. (I should know—I'm not too far from being one of them.)
Underpinning those fatalistic, head-shaking comments is a faith that the world works more or less the way it's supposed to. Don't do anything wrong and the police won't bother you. Vote and you'll be represented. Do your job and you'll be able to live in relative comfort. And if you want to change things, go through the proper channels. Start a petition! Write to your representative! If something really important happens, the news will surely cover it.
The rightness or wrongness of that sentiment varies wildly depending on what you look like and where you live. That's an incredibly unoriginal observation, but it's not the sort of thing you really understand until someone decides you look the wrong way. I, for example, am extremely unlikely to ever be accused of loitering, no matter how long I stand outside a certain building. The fact that I can stand in a public place for as long as I like and someone else can't means that I have more freedom than an equally deserving fellow American citizen. I have never had to fight for my right to stand in a public park, for example, or in a public square.
It is no coincidence, in other words, that the people who started Occupy Oakland in a public plaza know what it's like to have to fight for rights the rest of us don't spend much time thinking about. Nor is it a coincidence that they're comfortable facing down a police force whose willingness to use force is legendary. The people who started this are extreme; you have to be extreme and dedicated to be willing to risk your personal safety, your record and your sanity to organize a functioning mini-society right in front of City Hall.
My admiration for the grit and energy and idealism of those people doesn't change the fact that I, personally, am not extreme. So what do I, a citizen watching this encounter between a city and its police from the sidelines, do with what's happening in my community? What can I do? Can I participate? If so, how? How do I make my objections known?
The kind of person I am defaults to the ordinary channels. In the long-term, for instance, I can vote against someone in an upcoming election, or participate in an effort to recall someone. Not that this will change any of what's basically wrong, since the immortal corporation-people will always be able to outbuy (and therefore outspeak, and therefore outvote) me, you and everyone we know.
But in the short-term, I can write (again) to my representative. Or phone. Which, I realize, is about as effective as sending a message in a bottle.
Here's the thing: technology tilts the political machine so that only that which is public matters. Letters, phone calls, once the instruments of an engaged citizenry, used to function as public documents. That's not true anymore; the letter is quiet, nostalgic, quaint, difficult to reproduce or witness. Phone calls are unrecorded. A letter or phone call from a voter is like the tree falling in the forest: the question of whether or not it makes a sound is purely academic.
In fact, a letter or phone call to my representative is exactly the opposite of the chalk shadows on the sidewalk: it's an original that never even had a shadow, let alone an aftermath, or an effect.
But surely, the moderate within me insists, that same technology can save us. Email! Online petitions! The trouble is, the skeptic counters, that emails are incredibly easy to fake, and online petitions are ignored because they're so easy to generate and so difficult to verify. The electronic age has not helped voters. The ordinary channels are sort of like local channels on TV: they're still around, but nobody's really watching.
Except for those of us who are watching, and then the ABC live-feed goes dead.
At the moment when I understood that the police were pulling on their gas masks and I couldn't see what was happening, I got what was already obvious to so many: if I wanted to see the reality of Occupy Oakland, teargas, flash bangs and all, I couldn't rely on the ordinary channels. They weren't working. They'd run out of gas. I needed to go to Occupy Oakland. With all my reservations, resistance, reluctance, and inertia.
So I went.
The General Assembly took place at Oscar Grant Plaza (née Frank Ogawa). I was one of the 3,000 people spilling out of the Plaza. (The green spaces had been fenced by police.) The people I spoke with were warm, yet also distressed, strained. One woman said she'd voiced her concerns to two police officers at a coffee shop earlier that day. They told her she should go speak to the Chief of Police. When she asked that they stop joking, they said they meant it: the Chief of Police was giving a press conference across the street. They asked her, in all seriousness, to speak to him. So she crossed the street, found the press conference, and spoke to him.
As the crowd got bigger, the organizers made sure to keep aisles clear so that people could move back and forth. I watched as the fences the police had erected around the green space came down. Too quickly, at first. There was a chance people could get hurt. The crowd booed the group that took them down too violently. Dozens of people came forward to make sure it came down safely, then stacked the fences into a neat, organized pile:
Then the proposal was announced. I held my breath; this would determine whether I could sign onto this thing, whether this was the way for me, personally, to try to make my city and my country a better place. Amplified by the human microphone, the proposal called for a student walkout, and for people to refuse to go to work. The endeavor was framed as a “liberation.” It included the phrase “shut down the city” and an ultimatum to banks and corporations that unless they remained closed that day, they would be marched on.
Well, I thought, feeling my heart sink, there it is: a proposal I could get behind, couched in language I can't accept. Much as I admire the courage and idealism in evidence here, this isn't a place where my perspective would be welcome. And that's okay—I'll go back to my colorless middle ground. (There are worse tragedies than not having one's moderation adequately represented.)
I was getting ready to leave when they announced that the crowd would break down into groups of twenty people to discuss the proposal, which would be put up to a vote. A 90% consensus was required for anything to go forward. My plans to leave were thwarted by the spectacle of 3,000 strangers neatly subdividing themselves into groups of twenty, sitting in circles in front of city hall, and sharing their ideas about how a civic action should be conducted.
Feeling like an interloper at this point, I was back in my anthropological mode, and planned to just sit back, listen, and learn what I could. But as people in my group spoke—a schoolteacher, a lawyer, a very young woman who might have been an undergraduate—it emerged that I wasn't the only one with reservations. This wasn't the group of hardline visionaries I expected; like me, they had questions. And, just like that, I found myself voicing the concerns I'd assumed my group was too radical to hear with any interest.
I explained that I found the language alienating rather than inclusive, combative rather than nonviolent. That the messaging of the 99% was powerful because it was so broad, and resisted breaking people down into familiar factions. That it was counterproductive to label citizens protesting an effort to “shut down the city” when we are the city. I argued, afraid that this eager coalition would collapse when it tried to grow because the 99% it claimed to represent would find the rhetoric needlessly aggressive. (As I would have, if I hadn't come.) Having seen how much people's sympathy for the police attack on protesters waxed or waned as a function of how they perceived protester nonviolence, I worried that hostile language would lose the public relations war, which is, and remains, Occupy Oakland's second front.
A fellow group member crystallized what I was trying to say by suggesting a prepositional change: rather than strike “on” or “against” Oakland, why not strike “for” Oakland?
My partner disagreed: the greatest danger, he argued, was losing momentum. With the camps gone, he felt there was less danger in extreme language than there was in letting all this civic energy disappear into apathy once again. Whatever was tried would be a learning experience, and would help improve the next effort. Another person in our group felt that the aggressive language was actually essential to the movement's success. Another worried about people who needed to go to work or might lose their jobs. Another worried about hurting small businesses.
Never in my life did I imagine I'd be sitting with a group of adults seriously debating policy as if our decision made a difference.
One representative from each group was invited to come up and address the General Assembly if they needed to express any concerns. One representative after another detailed their group's support for the proposal as well as their worries—from the timing of the strike to conflicts with other movements to concerns over student safety to the inclusion of the 99% who do in fact work for corporations and should be included, not alienated. My group chose me. I was nearly last in line, by which time the organizers asked us not to repeat any concerns that had already been voiced. And so I found myself standing in front of 3,000 people, saying out loud every word I'd planned to take home with me, tight-lipped and disappointed, resigned to watching silently from the sidelines. And every one of those words was repeated by the hundreds of people that make up the human microphone, while some people booed and most cheered.
And that's how I—a mealy-mouthed moderate visiting Occupy Oakland reluctantly, and for the very first time—was not only welcomed but spoke, was listened to, and was heard. I'll note here that the proposal passed, unamended, and the planning committees are open to anyone who wishes to be involved. The debate continues, and you can participate as much as you want to. After three decades as an American citizen and years of leaving messages for my representative, only last night, speaking into the human microphone, did I feel for the first time that my political participation could matter.
The best answer I can muster for the question of what an engaged citizen tired of being a spectator can do is this: try the ordinary channels and try being one of the 99%. It is not perfect. Nothing is. But there is room for more than your vote or your money: there is room for you, your body and your brain. It offers something our political system (increasingly peopled as it is by disembodied, bodiless, shadowless “corporate” persons) doesn't. It's this: talk into the human microphone, and your voice doesn't disappear. It's amplified. Talk, and you stand a chance of leaving, not a mark—nothing quite so permanent—but a chalk outline of a shadow that shows that you, too, were once here.
Last night Oakland Mayor Jean Quan released this video statement expressing how "deeply saddened" she was "by the outcome on Tuesday." A Take Back the Plaza event is scheduled for 6 p.m. tomorrow, and the General Strike & Mass Day of Action will happen Wednesday, Nov. 2.
Related: The Night Occupy Los Angeles Tore Itself In Two
Why Should We Demonstrate? A Conversation
Occupy Boston: The Glory And Imperfection Of Democracy
What Does The Bonus Army Tell Us About Occupy Wall Street?
Martin Luther King Jr.’s Lessons For Occupy D.C.
Why the Tea Party Hates Occupy Wall Street
Lili Loofbourow is a writer living in Oakland. She blogs as Millicent over here.