The occupation is dead. Long live the occupation.
Amidst the massive media coverage of the military-style eviction Tuesday morning of the original Occupy Wall Street encampment at New York’s Zuccotti Park, an interesting factoid surfaced thousands of miles away.
In an interview with the BBC, Oakland mayor Jean Quan, whose police force forcibly evicted that city’s embattled Occupy encampment early Monday, casually mentioned that she “was recently on a conference call with 18 cities across the country who had the same situation. . . .”
Sure enough, since the weekend there have been a string of such evictions – not just the highest-profile encampments in New York and Oakland, but also Detroit, Portland OR, St. Louis, Salt Lake City, and several other major US cities.
The circumstances of those cities vary wildly. In some, the encampments were on public property; in others (like Zuccotti), they weren’t. In some (like Portland OR), damage to park soil, grass, and plants was an issue; in some, the campers set up on pavement. Same for sanitation and for the relationship of campers (sometimes good, sometimes not) to the politically well-connected businesses often adjoining the encampments’ central locations. In some encampments, factions of black bloc anarchists or other itchy youth have led to property destruction or tense confrontations with law enforcement. In some places, that simply hasn’t been an issue.
The reason Quan’s mention of a conference call involving 18 cities – most of whom have apparently followed up with coordinated eviction places – is significant is that it suggests the public rationales for eviction given by political and law enforcement leaders in each city are bullshit. Sure, a lot of these encampments pose problems for their host cities, from sanitation to depressed business to the costs of police overtime. The “same situation” these 18 cities (and many more) have in common isn’t any one of these problems – it’s the deep desire of civic leaders not to have dirty fucking hippies parked in a visible place they don’t “belong,” and, beyond that, having them question the legitimacy of the very processes that provide local politicians their power.
I honestly cannot remember leaders of multiple cities banding together like this to coordinate a response to local demonstrations. While organizations like the National Conference of Mayors routinely meet and consult to exchange ideas and advocate for urban-oriented legislation, this sort of cooperation smacks of federal coordination at some level.
That said, such evictions are attacking symbols, not the Occupy movement itself. For starters, while the encampments of a few dozen cities have been evicted or withered away, hundreds remain, and in many more support actions are ongoing even without a central 24/7 encampment. Occupation was always a tactic, not the end, and recent actions like Bank Transfer Day, occupations or picketing at bank branches, and occupations of foreclosed properties (business and private) have substantially expanded the young movement’s repertoire of tactics. In any particular city, there are an almost infinite number of places to occupy, a similar number of deserving targets to protest, a wide variety of available tactics, and, at least for the moment, a lot of energy for making that happen.
The evictions we’re seeing this week remind me of the periodic sweeps some cities indulge in to clear out their homeless populations. They don’t, of course; they just waste a lot of time and energy pushing the homeless from one neighborhood to another. Only jobs and affordable housing and health care programs get people off the streets.
Similarly, whether the public or political leaders like a particular tactic or not, the Occupy Movement has identified a problem that a large chunk of the public recognizes as real: that our political and economic systems are rigged to benefit the one percent and to screw everyone else. The Occupy movement is not about encampments; it’s about withdrawing the consent of the governed from that rigged system, and creating the political space to force a fairer system. It may or may not be effective in the long run, but the demand to address that issue, now that it has been loudly named, is not going away. No matter how many members of the one percent are in on the next conference call.
While organizations like the National Conference of Mayors routinely meet and consult to exchange ideas and advocate for urban-oriented legislation, this sort of cooperation smacks of federal coordination at some level.
Does that mean you think DHS/FBI were in on it? Or just the fact that mayors(mostly Democratic) were scheming?
Doubt there is federal coordination – the Obama admin coordinating on behalf of Bloomberg vs. OWS? not likely. more likely Bloomberg , who is not only the mayor of Wall St, he builds his wealth on Wall St, coordination. keep in mind, he’s the guy who bypassed a vote of the citizens to get term limits changed so he could run for a third term as mayor (during which tenure his personal fortune has tripled in value); he’s the mayor who doesn’t think it’s the citizens business where he goes on the weekends (to one of his houses around the world? which?. ppl outside the NY area don’t realize he’s just Koch lite because y’all don’t get any info about his doings.
Whether or not the top levels of the Obama administration coordinated with Bloomberg, other mayors and their police departments, it seems there may have been coordination from the FBI and/or DHS at some level: http://www.examiner.com/top-news-in-minneapolis/were-occupy-crackdowns-aided-by-federal-law-enforcem
ent-agencies#ixzz1dp02mDDE
(Note: just one reporter with one anonymous source and not a lot of details, but still a possibility—and no surprise to those who know the FBI’s history, if it’s true.)
.
"But I will not let myself be reduced to silence."
Perhaps the idea to coordinate came from watching the Koch tactics of co-opting state legislative agendas through ALEC.
yes, good thought. DHS and FBI making reports on OWS in no way implies a crackdown authorized by mayors was coordinated on the federal level. I’m sure Bloomberg is happy to imply that it came from the federal level.
.
Mayors deny colluding on ‘Occupy’ crackdowns
"But I will not let myself be reduced to silence."
Remember 2010 when Tea partiers were showing up at rallies across the country, carrying guns and signs with thinly veiled threats to assassinate Democrats?
Strange that they were never herded into free speech zones or rounded up in police actions at the time, isn’t it?
This is the nature of the occupation tactic. They don’t rally for a few hours then go home. They stay there, taking over a part of the city.
It’s a confrontational tactic by design.
Administration Complicity:
http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2011/11/homeland-security-coordinated-18-city-police-crackdown-on-occup
y-protest/
That story takes the same unsourced claim from the open-source news blog “The Examiner.”
This is starting to become like the right-wing media, where everybody reads the same story one twenty different blogs, and they all link back to one source who has no evidence.
I can remember that happening. Multiple cities banded together to suppress the Civil Rights movement in the South (until the 1% said they weren’t going to relocate factories where there was racial strife).
The story that seems to be coming together is that concern in police departments triggered the homeland security interoperability agreements and contingency plans in some areas, which brought the FBI into a coordinating role. And DHS Federal Protective Services, which is the security for federal facilities, was brought in where those facilities exist. Federal courthouses and Federal Reserve Bank buildings are the most frequent locations of a lot of big-city Occupy Wall Street encampments.
As this coordination ramped up, the mayors used the National Conference of Mayors as a vehicle for coordination of their policies (and stories).
Health and safety keep coming up as concerns specifically because those are the only reasons that can legally justify a city pushing folks around. And the cities have used the local mainstream media to push these stories.
For their part, police departments have spun out “worst case scenarios” to scare the public.
And the middle of the night raids are not new either. The first in my memory was October 1967 when the DC police coordinated the “dispersal” or antiwar demonstrators at the Pentagon by going through at 2am swinging their nightsticks wildly. That was before riot suits and long batons and pepper spray (but tear gas was liberally used).
The FBI from its inception has been hostile to reformist and labor-oriented groups. And J. Edgar Hoover solidified its power as being untouchable by Presidents, Congress, or accountability. Louis Freeh has maintained that power. If they want to, both Attorney General Holder and President Obama will find it impossible to rein in the FBI and its suppression of the protesters. Or to go after the 1% or right-wing terrorists who are more than doddering old men trying to re-enact their war on the civil rights movement. (BTW, Toccoa GA was where a black army officer was murdered in the early 1960s for being uppity enough to make the rank of colonel. That part of Georgia has a history.)
And DHS Federal Protective Services, which is the security for federal facilities, was brought in where those facilities exist.
Odd, then, that there’s been no crackdown in DC.
That is odd, isn’t it, if the driving force was from the “highest levels of government”. My reading of it is that the coordination was instituted by the mayors and their police chiefs, first working through tactical interoperability agreements with the local FPS officers, where there were federal facilities protected by FPS. And then they coordinated through the Police Executive Research Forum, which might have a DOJ or DHS grant just for city-to-city coordination. The other federal agency that was likely deeply involved was the FBI. And the FBI has a record of being a bit of a loose cannon when it comes to protest movements.
Juan Cole: Police Crackdowns on OWS Coordinated among Mayors, FBI, DHS
As expected, Cole’s story links to the same unsourced claim from the open-source news blog “The Examiner.”
This is starting to become like the right-wing media, where everybody reads the same story one twenty different blogs, and they all link back to one source who has no evidence.
While organizations like the National Conference of Mayors routinely meet and consult to exchange ideas and advocate for urban-oriented legislation, this sort of cooperation smacks of federal coordination at some level.
Why? The US Conference of Mayors is a well-staffed organization with permanent staff, including experts on policing. What exactly about a conference call among 18 mayors “smacks of federal coordination?”
From sleeping on the State House portico to being carted off to the Richland County Detention Center. Occupy Columbia’s luck ran out today. Gov. Nikki Haley gave them two hours to move their stuff off the lawn and set a 6pm curfew for the grounds. In the press briefing, Haley several times talked about “urinating in the bushes”, “toilet paper on the grounds”, and “mattresses on the lawn” — obvious hyperbole for a group that has gone out of their way to keep their area clean.
There seem to be two motives for the eviction. The first is the upcoming Christmas tree lighting and display; the governor did not “want parents fearful of bringing children to see the Christmas tree”. The second, not mentioned, is wanting not protesters during the SC primaries.
The governor said they didn’t apply for a permit because they were a leaderless group (meaning that the State wants somebody’s signature and legal liability.) Her advice to the group was “go get a leader like everyone else.”
Other questions at the news conference dealt with ethics in some of the decisions that Gov. Haley had made that benefited businesses.
The governor opened the news conference with two items that she claimed would bring jobs to South Carolina.