US: Brutal police crackdown on protestors

Wall street occupation continues and spreads

As we publish this article here on socialistworld.net the occupation movement has begun to spread all over the US. For example occupations are due to begin in Boston today and Seattle tomorrow. Many local unions have also begun to pledge support to the movement. In the last few days the New York Transport Workers Union, one of the biggest unions in New York, voted to support the movement and to send members to the occupation on Friday afternoon. The Teamsters union has also voted to support the occupation and members of the United Pilots Union have been on the demonstrations in uniform. This development of sections of the organised working class linking up with the movement is significant. This process must be encouraged and further developed for the movement to continue growing into a challenge to the big business attack on living standards.

Socialistworld.net

On Saturday September 24, the “Occupy Wall Street” struggle set out on a march through New York City. This was the eighth day that young people, workers and activists had been occupying a plaza in Manhattan’s financial district two blocks away from Wall Street. It started as a routine march. The usual slogans were chanted: “Banks got bailed out! We got sold out!” “Whose streets? Our streets!” “Tell me what democracy looks like? This is what democracy looks like!”

It was spirited and energetic from the start. This ongoing occupation has drawn national and international attention, seen as attempt to stand up to corporate greed and challenge the domination of the big banks over our economy, our government and our lives. It has drawn inspiration from the mass youth occupations in Spain and Greece, as well as the revolutionary upheavals in Tunisia, Egypt and across North Africa and the Middle East.

Many participants are long-time activists that have been organising for years. Others are completely new to organising and protesting, participating for the first time in their lives in a social struggle. While many are inexperienced, they’ve shown a tremendous persistence and fighting spirit. They chant: “All day. All week. Occupy Wall Street!”

As we began to march north up Broadway avenue, our numbers gradually grew and the march started to move into the streets, blocking traffic. With no predetermined march route or official city permit, the police struggled to keep up, trying in vain to direct and control the march and push it back to the sidewalks.

“Whose Streets? Our Streets!”

Unlike most demonstrations in New York City, we were not penned in like animals, forced to one side of the street, isolated and marginalised from the rest of the city. Bystanders watched and waved and some joined in. We marched through Washington Square Park, where more young people joined. Our numbers were well over 1,000 marching freely through the streets of Manhattan, our voices heard loud and clear.

Since moving to New York about four years ago, and attending countless demonstrations, protests, marches, actions and speak outs, I have never been on an action where we were able to freely march through the streets. We covered about 2.5 miles, arriving eventually at Union Square. We were not suffocated by the pens or sidelined by a motorcade of police motorbikes. For the first time in a long time people in New York were able to practice their right to free assembly without infringement or restriction.

It was a tiny victory for the working people and the youth of this city, a victory that the police and city government were eager to snuff out. This occupation, now lasting over a week, is not simply a nuisance. The ruling establishment is actually very afraid that this could spread and grow, and threaten “order” in the city. But the only order which exist is an order in which the rich get richer and the rest of us are left behind, where the super-elite, the “top 1%,” run society while “the 99%” have no voice. This is why Occupy Wall Street has raised the slogan “We are the 99%!” in an attempt to fight back and be heard.

After rallying very briefly at Union Square, the march turned around to head back “home” to the encampment at the newly renamed Liberty Plaza. The police had amassed a bigger force behind us and unfurled large orange nets. At first it seemed like they only intended to channel the march, split us up and disrupt the action. But we quickly learned these were giant fish nets cast widely to catch as many people as possible.

The Cops Get Violent

The police turned aggressive, violently pushing protesters, grabbing them, throwing people to the ground and arresting them. We ran but they hemmed in dozens at a time, pinning them between nets and buildings. I narrowly escaped a net and we chanted on the opposite side calling for the release of our brothers and sisters.

We were peaceful. They were violent. We were exercising our freedom of speech and freedom of assembly and they brutally violated these rights. A small group of young women, who were trapped in a net, standing perfectly peacefully, were suddenly pepper-sprayed by a senior police officer for no reason. The video of this incident has gone viral, prompting international news coverage. Around 100 were arrested, including several bystanders who were not part of the protest, held in busses and jail cells for hours, and only released at 5 a.m. the next morning.

The police had one aim. Intimidation. The outrageous behaviour on their part was intended to strike fear into the youth on the demonstration and break our spirit. Police violence may indeed make some people more fearful of protesting, but it also inspires wider outrage and solidarity. Overwhelmingly the core of the movement has stayed strong and continued the occupation.

This exposes the completely hypocritical role of the police force and the state. They brutally suppress any attempt to peacefully speak out against corporate domination. Meanwhile the real criminals and crooks on Wall Street walk about freely. They are making billions off our work, demanding we pay for their crisis and are protected by an oppressive regime that uses the police force when and how they choose.

Most of us made it back to the plaza exhausted but excited, shaken but angry, and determined. I found out back at the plaza that one of our comrades had been arrested. Later, he compiled a video of the march, including footage from his own arrest. We were all concerned for the welfare of our brothers and sisters who had been assaulted and arrested arbitrarily.

(Police brutality starts at 15 minute mark and again at 18 minute mark)

Expanding the Struggle

But I also began to think about where this movement was headed. It has captured the imagination of hundreds of people and captured the attention of perhaps hundreds of thousands around the world. There is constant discussion and debate about how it can become bigger. Many of the new people are excited by the energy and the strong sense of community within the occupation and are asking: “Why are there not more people here?”

There is no simple answer but one thing is for sure. There are thousands out there who are very sympathetic to this movement, many of whom would like to participate but may not be able to. They have jobs and families and can’t afford to occupy a space indefinitely. They are either not able or maybe not yet prepared to make big sacrifices, but they want to support this action. The question is not simply how we can get more people to the occupation but how we can get more people involved in the movement in general.

With the attention that ‘Occupy Wall Street’ is receiving and the army of full-time activists, Liberty Plaza could become a hub for organizing a wider struggle. As a next step we could call another mass demonstration on Saturday with some basic demands like: Make Wall Street Pay for the Crisis; Tax the Super-Rich; Jobs Not Cuts; Education and Health Care, Not War and Bank Bailouts; Stop Police Brutality and Defend Our Democratic Rights. This way, thousands of people could participate and help grow the movement. Occupy Wall Street should publicly call upon all progressive organizations, especially the unions, with their thousands of members and resources, to participate and mobilize for mass demonstrations.

There is also talk of spreading the occupation to other cities. Already in the works is an occupation of Washington, D.C., on October 6 (www.october2011.org). Something is changing in this country. Working people and youth are becoming more politicised and radicalized. There is deep anger that is growing daily in U.S. society and it is bubbling just below the surface. It cannot be contained forever. It will explode.

Occupy Wall Street reflects some of this anger and radicalization that is developing. From Wisconsin to New York City we are experiencing the aftershocks of social earthquakes now rocking the planet. These earthquakes are caused by the deep subterranean tensions of an enduring global economic crisis. The epicentres of these quakes have so far been seen across Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, and other parts of the globe. But it may not be too long before the tremors in the U.S. become full-blown social convulsions.

Special financial appeal to all readers of socialistworld.net

Support building alternative socialist media

Socialistworld.net provides a unique analysis and perspective of world events. Socialistworld.net also plays a crucial role in building the struggle for socialism across all continents. Capitalism has failed! Assist us to build the fight-back and prepare for the stormy period of class struggles ahead.
Please make a donation to help us reach more readers and to widen our socialist campaigning work across the world.

Donate via Paypal

Liked this article? We need your support to improve our work. Please become a Patron! and support our work
Become a patron at Patreon!

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*


September 2011
M T W T F S S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930