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marmar

(77,080 posts)
Mon Mar 19, 2012, 07:28 PM Mar 2012

"I really want to encourage you to not let this moment slip by. Our ship has really come in."

from Democracy Now!:





.........(snip).........

AMY GOODMAN: Hundreds heeded Michael Moore’s call and helped swell the ranks of the Occupy protest Saturday night. Democracy Now! correspondent and now Guardian reporter Ryan Devereaux tweeted, quote, "Today’s events feel like any given day last fall with #OWS."

Well, Ryan joins us now to talk more about Occupy Wall Street. We’re also joined by two of the people who led a discussion at the Left Forum about strategic directions for the Occupy movement: Frances Fox Piven, professor of political science and sociology at The Graduate Center, City University of New York, author of Challenging Authority: How Ordinary People Change America, a frequent target of right-wing pundits; and in D.C., we’re joined by Stephen Lerner, the architect of the Justice for Janitors campaign, on the executive board of the Service Employees International Union, has been working with labor and community groups nationally on how to hold Wall Street accountable.

We welcome you all to Democracy Now! Ryan, let’s begin with you with an update on what took place on Saturday night.

RYAN DEVEREAUX: Well, on Saturday night, protesters had been in the park since about 1:00 in the afternoon, and it had been a day that had been marked with some tension, but also a lot of joy. People were really enjoying the opportunity to be in the park again to talk to each other, to meet new people and discuss issues. At about 11:30, though, a representative from Brookfield Properties, which owns Zuccotti Park, said that he was working with Brookfield security, made an announcement that people had to leave the park because they were violating the rules. I asked him what rules they were violating. He said that they had brought in sleeping equipment and erected structures in the park, and these were violations of the rules. He made this announcement via megaphone, but he was drowned out by protesters. And I should say that the structures that I witnessed were a tarp that was strung over a cord tied between two trees, and protesters also had—they had symbolic tents up on polls that they were carrying around. It wasn’t as if they had created a tent city in the park or anything like that.

But the protesters decided to stand their ground, and the police moved in, in lieu of the Brookfield security. And it was rows upon rows of police officers coming into the park through the front entrance, coming down the stairs. And the protesters, dozens of them who chose to stand their ground, were gathered in the center of the park. Their arms and legs were locked. They were sitting in planters right there in the middle of Zuccotti. And the police moved in to break them apart. It was a violent scene, by just about all accounts, police ripping protesters apart from each other, people being hit, people being dragged across the ground, multiple reports of young women being pulled by their hair across the ground. I saw a young woman writhing on the ground in pain with a white-shirted police officer standing over the top of her telling her to shut up. It was really gruesome. I talked to a lot of people who were there on the eviction on November 15th, and they said that the course of the day, you know, the interactions with the police and the protesters were the most violent they had seen. Following people being pulled out of the park, you know, dozens of arrests, there was a winding march through the city, which resulted in, you know, a handful of—a handful more arrests. ..............(more)

The complete piece is at: http://www.democracynow.org/2012/3/19/police_arrest_73_in_occupy_wall



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"I really want to encourage you to not let this moment slip by. Our ship has really come in." (Original Post) marmar Mar 2012 OP
Yes, the time is now to seize the moment for real change... tex-wyo-dem Mar 2012 #1
Yes, peaceful, creative and strong.....Occupy. Magoo48 Mar 2012 #2

tex-wyo-dem

(3,190 posts)
1. Yes, the time is now to seize the moment for real change...
Mon Mar 19, 2012, 09:22 PM
Mar 2012

This is one of those times in history where real, revolutionary change is ripe...the energy is there and you can feel it!

But real change will be met by real resistance, not only by normal everyday people fearful of change, but brutal resistance by the ruling class that profits from the status quo. They will not cede power quietly and will use every power they have to stop a revolution in the making.

This is nothing new...has happened over and over in every corner of the world at every time in known history. Some revolutions are stamped out or forced underground (at least for a while), others succeed and change the world forever.

I am continually amazed at the courage and conviction of the occupiers. Thank you, from the bottom of my heart, to them all...

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