Saturday, November 19, 2011

Video Spreads of UC Davis Cops Pepper Spraying Occupy Students

Video Spreads of UC Davis Cops Pepper Spraying Occupy Students - MSNBC


Demonstrators were protesting dismantling of encampment 




University of California, Davis, student
Mike Fetterman, receives a treatment for
pepper spray by UC Davis firefighter
Nate Potter, after campus police dismantled
an Occupy Wall Street encampment on the
campus quad in Davis, Calif., Friday, Nov. 18, 2011.
UC Davis officials say eight men and
two women were taken into custody.
(AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)
DAVIS, California -- A video of police in riot gear pepper spraying demonstrators is spreading after 10 Occupy protesters were arrested on the University of California, Davis campus Friday, Sacramento NBC station KCRA reported.

The demonstrators were protesting the dismantling of the "Occupy UC Davis" encampment that was set up in the school's quad area.

"Police came and brutalized them and tore their tents down and all that stuff. It was really scary. It felt like there was anarchy everywhere," said student Hisham Alihbob.

Police told Sacramento's KTXL TV station that the students were given until 3 p.m. Friday to remove their tents from the campus. When students refused, police arrived at the given time. Students sat down cross-legged and locked arms when cops showed up and the pepper spraying began.

UC Davis Police Chief Annette Spicuzza said it would not be safe or sustainable for demonstrators to camp in the quad.

"It's not safe for multiple reasons," Spicuzza said.

At least one woman left by ambulance for treatment of chemical burns.

"We just successfully booted the police off campus in a non-violent way," Chris Wong, a student protester who said he was speaking for himself, not the Occupy group, told the Sacramento Bee.

Wong said he was one of the students sprayed, but he looked down and didn't get a full dose. He said students then circled the police and tried to hold their ground. The police eventually left.



© 2011 NBC News

Chicago "Day of Solidarity" March 11/17 #OWS - Bridge Sit-In & Arrests #OccupyChicago

Chicago "Day of Solidarity" March 11/17 #OWS - Bridge Sit-In & Arrests #OccupyChicago



Late Thursday afternoon and evening the streets of downtown Chicago. The nationwide "occupation" protests enter their second month. A coalition of groups gathered at the Thompson Center for a rally and speeches. Following the rally the demonstrators took to the streets.

The target was the nearby La Salle street bridge where they stopped filling the bridge and blocking traffic. A small group of about forty sat down and after repeated warnings they were arrested. Following the arrests the marchers turned around and marched back down towards La Salle and Jackson the center of Chicago's occupation.

Fact Checks: America’s Media War on OWS

America's Media War on OWS by Stephen Lendman

Early reporting was scant, dismissive, and offensive. Much still belittles, denigrates and marginalizes a significant movement.

Fox News claims protesters don’t pay taxes or know what they want, are supported by Iran’s Ayatollah Khamenei and Hugo Chavez, and represent the lunatic left wing.

Bill O’Reilly quipped, “Do we have all kinds of crackheads down there.” He added that Zuccotti Park is “dirty and filthy. There’s rats running all over. There’s dope all over the place. They’re having sex outside at night and all of this stuff.”

Fox News reporter Charles Gasparino accused protesters of embracing “communism and there is no doubt about it.”

New York Times former executive editor Bill Keller ignored global activism in a column about “good news,” asking, “Bored by the soggy sleep-ins and warmed-over anarchism of Occupy Wall Street?”

Washington Post columnist Charles Krauthammer called protesters “indignant indolents saddled with their $50,000 student loans and English degrees (wanting to) “eat the rich.”

Despite occasional better reporting, much resembles Telegraph writer Nile Gardiner’s article about “the decline and fall of Occupy Wall Street,” saying:

It’s “been an act of desperation by the liberal Left, which now represents a small minority of Americans in terms of ideology. (It’s) descended into anarchy. (It’s) an anachronism, a wannabe 1960s-style protest movement in an America that has moved on.”

“And it is above all a symbol of a Left in decline amidst an increasingly conservative nation that has had enough of the kind of big government, anti-free market policies the liberal protesters crave.”

Gardiner’s right about one thing. Protesters want big government for the rich ended. They rage against privatizing profits, socializing losses, and trashing their rights for Wall Street and other corporate favorites. Other than that, he pathetically inverted truth. So do many others like him.

On November 15, Washington Post writers Eli Saslow and Colum Lynch headlined, “The Occupy movement: More trouble than change?” saying:

“The movement began as a protest of major economic and political issues, but lately the most divisive issue has become the protests themselves.” Nationwide “encampments….have become rife with problems of their own. There are sanitation hazards and drug overdoses, even occasional deaths and sexual assaults.”

Fact check

In hundreds of cities nationwide, OWS protesters represent direct democracy social activism. Except for occasional incidents common anywhere, they’re peaceful, unified, dignified, harmless, and resolute. As a result, baseless accusations vilify them.

In New York, OWS reported factually about one sexual assault incident. The perpetrator was arrested. “From the moment the incident was discovered to the present time, the survivor has been surrounded by a network of allies and trained advocates offering resources to provide emotional, medical, and legal support.”

OWS activists support her. They’re “saddened and angered (about) some members of the media and public,” blaming them and the survivor for the assault. Getting it right isn’t what major media do. Their specialties include distortion, misreporting and ball-faced lying.

“Is this an occupation or an infestation? City officials have long complained about the disruptiveness of Occupy Wall Streets, but in the past week, police officers began raiding encampments in the middle of the night, citing a public safety disaster.”

Fact check


Serving Wall Street, other corporate interests, and political Washington, rogue cops nationwide want OWS protesters intimidated, constrained, and if possible, silenced.

At issue isn’t public safety or other concerns. It’s serving wealth and power interests at the expense of beneficial social change. Heroically, OWS activists pursue it.

“Recent news updates from Occupy protests read like a crime blotter,” including a shooting, a suicide, two drug overdoses, a molotov cocktail, a sexual assault, sanitation, a rat infestation, violating a noise ordinance, and more. “Democracy has rarely looked so messy.”

Fact check

Hyperbole, exaggeration, and fabrication substitute for accuracy and full disclosure. Whatever challenges entrenched power gets vilified, pilloried, and discredited.

OWS represents direct democracy. It’s entirely absent at federal, state and local levels. Protesters want it restored. After being evicted from New York’s Zuccotti Park, one activist walked through it with a sign reading, “Grand Reopening Under New Management.” There’s no turning back now.

Washington Post writer Jennifer Rubin symbolizes America’s media depravity by promoting violence, mass murder, and vicious racial hatred of Palestinian Arabs. Nonetheless, disciplining and/or firing her’s not considered.

Her “Right Turn” columns appear regularly along with other extremist Post writers. On November 15, her latest article headlined, “Occupy movement deteriorates,” saying:

“The left-wing punditocracy’s fascination with the Occupy Wall Street and its progeny movements has declined in inverse proportion to the upswing in violence, mayhem and public filth stemming from those about whom the left was cooing only a couple of weeks ago.”

Fact check

Protesters nationwide are peaceful, law-abiding, model citizens. In contrast, goon squad cops assaulted them violently. Doing so violates constitutional and statute law. Verbal “filth” oozed from Rubin’s column. Truth was entirely absent.

“No more are the liberal pundits interesting (sic) in measuring the level of support for what they only weeks ago characterized as a genuine political movement. Ignored are reports of sexual assaults. No mention is made among the OWS cheerleaders of the latest effort to re-establish order in Oakland, Calif, and Burlington, Vt.”

“Funny how the left’s assertion that this was a grand political awakening has now gone down the memory hole….(L)eft-leaning elites tried mightily to ignore the instances of anti-Semitism, violence and fouling of public places. When that became impossible, they simply chose to ignore the whole disgusting mess.”

Fact check

Her comments lack truth and full disclosure. They feature hyperbole, hate, misreporting, and uncalled for pejoratives. Nor does she recognize real social, economic and political grievances. Why else would growing millions want change?

Thousands of nationwide OWS activists represent them. More join them daily. Rubin and others like her represent the malignancy that’s destroying America.

Shamefully, Washington Post editors put up with her. Its journalism fell from grace after Woodward and Bernstein’s heyday.

The New York Times also strayed from far June 13, 1971 when publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger said Pentagon Paper secrets “had to be revealed….people had the right to know.”

Belatedly in 1996, The Times said “Johnson Administration (officials) systematically lied, not only to the public, but also to Congress, about a subject of transcendental national interest and significance.”
Today, basics substitute for muckraking exposes. Distortion, exaggeration, misreporting, and ball-faced lies replaced truth and full disclosure.

Journalists like HL Mencken, Charles Edward Russell, Lincoln Steffens, Upton Sinclair, IF Stone, and Helen Thomas aren’t welcome.

Rubin/Judith Miller types replaced them. Gutter journalism trash is featured. Everything wrong about America is highlighted. Managed news and commentary insures readers and television viewers know nothing.

Major media journalism always fell short. It’s hard imagining how much lower it can sink. Why else are growing numbers turning elsewhere for real news and information. Hopefully it’s just a matter of time until they all do.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog and listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy listening. He is also the author of “How Wall Street Fleeces America

Who Smashed the Laptops from Occupy Wall Street? Inside the NYPD's Lost and Found

Who Smashed the Laptops from Occupy Wall Street? Inside the NYPD's Lost and Found - Motherboard

If you’re looking to recover any personal effects swept up early Tuesday morning in the NYPD raid on Zuccotti Park, epicenter of the Occupy Wall Street movement, there’s only one place that may have what you’re looking for. Only it doesn’t have a marked address.

The Department of Sanitation has a brand new building. Situated at 650 W. 57th Street – the corner of 12th Ave. and 57th St., in the wastelandish Far West Side – Sanitation’s address is only marked on the 57th St. side, with no sign or anyone around to point out the recovery booth, which is around the back side in a stark, wind-tunnel underpass. (To be sure, this Sanitation press release gives a run down for all those looking to recover property.)

This is where we find Isaac Wilder, head of the Free Network Foundation, late Thursday morning. Wilder, who we first met on Day 3 of the occupation, is an integral part of OWS’ Signal Corps, a working group that had been dedicated to providing free Wi-Fi to demonstrators within Zuccotti. During the raid, all of Wilder’s stuff, including the FNF’s Freedom Tower, a thin, maybe nine-foot-tall pole, loaded on all sides with nondescript routers that had been beaming out wireless access since early on in the occupation, was confiscated not long after he and another 200 or so protestors were hauled away after barricading themselves in the middle of the park. Matt LiPani, a Sanitation representative, tells us that in the raid’s aftermath 151 Sanitation workers carted away the belongings to 650 W. 57th St. in “our collection trucks.”

And so now, at the unmarked underpass entrance, Wilder’s looking for his backpack, and his Freedom Tower. And $5000 in cash. This is all the money he has.

No press is being allowed in to check out what we quickly hear is a large heap of damp, mangled, cat-piss smelling stuff. So Wilder heads in on his own at around 10:30 AM, turning back to us and giving a quick, solemn head-nod before disappearing inside.

After about 30 minutes he sends us a text: “no sign of tower or backpack.” When he finally surfaces after another 30 minutes, descending a staircase into the howling, drabish underpass, the face gives it away.

Wilder hasn’t slept much in the last 36 hours. He looks shelled, haggard. He told us earlier how he and many others affiliated with the Signal Corps were held in a separate “dungeon-like” cell below the main holding tank at 1 Police Plaza in Lower Manhattan beginning early Tuesday morning through Wednesday evening. But beyond that, his report from inside the heap holds true: No backpack. No cash. No tower.

Worse, it was as if someone along the way purposefully destroyed all confiscated electronics, a strategic smashing of at least part of the digital record logged by full-on occupiers. “Dude, all the laptops are in a row," he tells us, baffled and raking his shock of brown hair. "They’ve all been smashed with bats.” When asked about the mangled property, LiPani admits that, inevitably, certain items could’ve been damaged in the shuffle: “I’m not surprised,” he says, to hear of damaged laptops. He adds that the DSNY is providing clearance forms to those occupiers concerned their property may’ve been mishandled or misplaced.

But Wilder wants footage – visual proof to show to whoever it is he hopes will step up, legally, to defend the FNF. Hell, we want footage. At some risk, admittedly, we hand him an iPhone. He heads back inside.
Resurfacing a few minutes later, he shows us these:





It’s exactly two months into “Occupy,” now a global movement. Until now, Wilder has been staunchly advocating for what he sees as something extending beyond the confines of any single occupied space: decentralized, open-source, free networks. He may very well still be all about that mission.

But something just seems off. Something has shifted – in Wilder, in OWS. “Maybe we don’t need the tower,” he admits, a marked repositioning of what we’ve come to know of this well-spoken 21-year-old college drop-out from Kansas City. Maybe an occupation doesn’t need material components, he goes on. Maybe we don’t need the park.

With that, as we all make way for the Columbus Circle subway, an older woman representing Zuccotti’s Comfort Committee working group catches Wilder by the sleeve. She hands him a red scarf. It’s brisk, windy. Low 40s.

“You see?” he says, turning to us while wrapping the wool snug around his neck. “You see what happens when you just let go? You get things.”
CONNECTIONS:
by Brian A. Anderson, with additional reporting by Erin Lee Carr and Chris Gill. Reach Brian at brian@motherboard.tv. Follow Motherboard on Twitter.
Images via Isaac Wilder

Friday, November 18, 2011

15 Trillion In Debt, But We Can Kill Anyone In An Hour... Nailed It?

15 Trillion In Debt, But We Can Kill Anyone In An Hour... Nailed It? - Information Liberation

The US government is officially 15 trillion in debt, unofficially over 116 trillion, but don't worry, the regime can now kill anyone anywhere in the world within an hour using a "hypersonic" missile!

From AFP
WASHINGTON — The Pentagon on Thursday held a successful test flight of a flying bomb that travels faster than the speed of sound and will give military planners the ability to strike targets anywhere in the world in less than a hour.

Launched by rocket from Hawaii at 1130 GMT, the "Advanced Hypersonic Weapon," or AHW, glided through the upper atmosphere over the Pacific "at hypersonic speed" before hitting its target on the Kwajalein atoll in the Marshall Islands, a Pentagon statement said.

Kwajalein is about 2,500 miles (4,000 kilometers) southwest of Hawaii. The Pentagon did not say what top speeds were reached by the vehicle, which unlike a ballistic missile is maneuverable.
Of course, to actually accept this technology even works as described is hugely questionable. As Tom Woods discusses in the video below, most of these "super weapons" are just scams to get taxpayer loot.

Occupy Portland Occupies a Bridge and Banks for n17

Occupy Portland Occupies a Bridge and Banks for n17 - OccupyPDX



Occupy Portland Protesters joined N17 National Day of Action in solidarity with Occupy Wall street by occupying banks and bridges.

At 8am protesters held a rally on the east side of the Steel Bridge where 25 people were arrested in a peaceful sit-in action. Throughout the day hundreds of Portlanders joined the in non-violent occupations across downtown of the Wells Fargo, Chase and Bank of America.

OWS "Beware of the Zeitgeist" by Lost Children of Babylon (Music Video)

OWS "Beware of the Zeitgeist" by Lost Children of Babylon (Music Video) - Activist Post



The Lost Children Of Babylon (LCOB) present...

"Beware The Zeitgeist" Occupy Wallstreet
Produced by The Snowgoons
Video directed by Chris Logan Harley

From the album "Zeitgeist: The Spirit Of The Age"
Available on iTunes: http://bit.ly/tY4moD

Pre-Order the new LCOB album now!
"El's Appendices: The Scroll Of Lost Tales"
CD Available on wwwFatBeats.com: http://bit.ly/s89tds

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Fake terror plots, paid informants: the tactics of FBI 'entrapment' questioned

© falseflags.wordpress.com
Fake terror plots, paid informants: the tactics of FBI 'entrapment' questioned by Paul Harris

Critics say bureau is running a sting operation across America, targeting vulnerable people by luring them into fake terror plots

David Williams did not have an easy life. He moved to Newburgh, a gritty, impoverished town on the banks of the Hudson an hour or so north of New York, at just 10 years old. For a young, black American boy with a father in jail, trouble was everywhere.

Williams also made bad choices. He ended up going to jail for dealing drugs. When he came out in 2007 he tried to go straight, but money was tight and his brother, Lord, needed cash for a liver transplant. Life is hard in Newburgh if you are poor, have a drug rap and need cash quickly.

His aunt, Alicia McWilliams, was honest about the tough streets her nephew was dealing with. "Newburgh is a hard place," she said. So it was perhaps no surprise that in May, 2009, David Williams was arrested again and hit with a 25-year jail sentence. But it was not for drugs offences. Or any other common crime. Instead Williams and three other struggling local men beset by drug, criminal and mental health issues were convicted of an Islamic terrorist plot to blow up Jewish synagogues and shoot down military jets with missiles.

Even more shocking was that the organisation, money, weapons and motivation for this plot did not come from real Islamic terrorists. It came from the FBI, and an informant paid to pose as a terrorist mastermind paying big bucks for help in carrying out an attack. For McWilliams, her own government had actually cajoled and paid her beloved nephew into being a terrorist, created a fake plot and then jailed him for it. "I feel like I am in the Twilight Zone," she told the Guardian.

Lawyers for the so-called Newburgh Four have now launched an appeal that will be held early next year. Advocates hope the case offers the best chance of exposing the issue of FBI "entrapment" in terror cases. "We have as close to a legal entrapment case as I have ever seen," said Susanne Brody, who represents another Newburgh defendant, Onta Williams.

Some experts agree. "The target, the motive, the ideology and the plot were all led by the FBI," said Karen Greenberg, a law professor at Fordham University in New York, who specialises in studying the new FBI tactics.

But the issue is one that stretches far beyond Newburgh. Critics say the FBI is running a sting operation across America, targeting – to a large extent – the Muslim community by luring people into fake terror plots. FBI bureaux send informants to trawl through Muslim communities, hang out in mosques and community centres, and talk of radical Islam in order to identify possible targets sympathetic to such ideals. Or they will respond to the most bizarre of tip-offs, including, in one case, a man who claimed to have seen terror chief Ayman al-Zawahiri living in northern California in the late 1990s.

That tipster was quickly hired as a well-paid informant. If suitable suspects are identified, FBI agents then run a sting, often creating a fake terror plot in which it helps supply weapons and targets. Then, dramatic arrests are made, press conferences held and lengthy convictions secured.

But what is not clear is if many real, actual terrorists are involved.

Another "entrapment" case is on the radar too. The Fort Dix Five – accused of plotting to attack a New Jersey army base – have also appealed against their convictions. That case too involved dubious use of paid informants, an apparent over-reach of evidence and a plot that seemed suggested by the government.

Burim Duka, whose three brothers were jailed for life for their part in the scheme, insists they did not know they were part of a terror plot and were just buying guns for shooting holidays in a deal arranged by a friend. The "friend" was an informant who had persuaded another man of a desire to attack Fort Dix.

Duka is convinced his brothers' appeal has a good chance. "I am hopeful," he told the Guardian.

But things may not be that easy. At issue is the word "entrapment", which has two definitions. There is the common usage, where a citizen might see FBI operations as deliberate traps manipulating unwary people who otherwise were unlikely to become terrorists. Then there is the legal definition of entrapment, where the prosecution merely has to show a subject was predisposed to carry out the actions they later are accused of.

Theoretically, a simple expression, like support for jihad, might suffice, and in post-9/11 America neither judges nor juries tend to be nuanced in terror trials. "Legally, you have to use the word entrapment very carefully. It is a very strict legal term," said Greenberg.

But in its commonly understood usage, FBI entrapment is a widespread tactic. Within days of the 9/11 terror attacks, FBI director Robert Mueller issued a memo on a new policy of "forward leaning – preventative – prosecutions".

Central to that is a growing informant network. The FBI is not choosy about the people it uses. Some have criminal records, including attempted murder or drug dealing or fraud. They are often paid six-figure sums, which critics say creates a motivation to entrap targets. Some are motivated by the promise of debts forgiven or immigration violations wiped clean. There has also been a relaxing of rules on what criteria the FBI needs to launch an investigation.

Often they just seem to be "fishing expeditions". In the Newburgh case, the men involved met FBI informant Shahed Hussain simply because he happened to infiltrate their mosque. In southern California, FBI informant Craig Monteilh trawled mosques posing as a Muslim and tried to act as a magnet for potential radicals.

Monteilh, who bugged scores of people, is a convicted felon with serious drug charges to his name. His operation turned up nothing. But Monteilh's professed terrorist sympathy so unnerved his Muslim targets that they got a restraining order against him and alerted the FBI, not realising Monteilh was actually working on the bureau's behalf.

Muslim civil rights groups have warned of a feeling of being hounded and threatened by the FBI, triggering a natural fear of the authorities among people that should be a vital defence against real terror attacks. But FBI tactics could now be putting off many people from reporting tip-offs or suspicious individuals.

"They are making mosques suspicious of anybody. They are putting fear into these communities," said Greenberg. Civil liberties groups are also concerned, seeing some FBI tactics as using terrorism to justify more power. "We are still seeing an expansion of these tools. It is a terrible prospect," said Mike German, an expert at the American Civil Liberties Union and a former FBI agent who has worked in counter-terrorism.

German said suspects convicted of plotting terror attacks in some recent FBI cases bore little resemblance to the profile of most terrorist cells. "Most of these suspect terrorists had no access to weapons unless the government provided them. I would say that showed they were not the biggest threat to the US," German said.

"Most terrorists have links to foreign terrorist groups and have trained in terrorism training camps. Perhaps FBI resources should be spent finding those guys."

Also, some of the most serious terrorist attacks carried out in the US since 9/11 have revolved around "lone wolf" actions, not the sort of conspiracy plots the FBI have been striving to combat. The 2010 Times Square bomber, Faisal Shahzad, only came to light after his car bomb failed to go off properly. The Fort Hood killer Nidal Malik Hasan, who shot dead 13 people on a Texas army base in 2009, was only discovered after he started firing. Both evaded the radar of an FBI expending resources setting up fictional crimes and then prosecuting those involved.

Yet, as advocates for those caught up in "entrapment" cases discover, there is little public or judicial sympathy for them. Even in cases where judges have admitted FBI tactics have raised serious questions, there has been no hesitation in returning guilty verdicts, handing down lengthy sentences and dismissing appeals.

The Liberty City Seven are a case in point. The 2006 case involved an informant, Elie Assaad, with a dubious past (he was once arrested, but not charged, for beating his pregnant wife). Assaad was let loose with another informant on a group of men in Liberty City, a poor, predominantly black, suburb of Miami. The targets were followers of a cult-like group called The Seas of David, led by former Guardian Angel Narseal Batiste.

The group was, perhaps, not even Muslim, as its religious practices involved Bible study and wearing the Star of David. Yet Assaad posed as an Al-Qaida operative, and got members of the group to swear allegiance. Transcripts of the "oath-taking" ceremony are almost farcical. Batiste repeatedly queries the idea and appears bullied into it. In effect, defence lawyers argued, the men were confused, impoverished members of an obscure cult.

Yet targets the group supposedly entertained attacking included the Sears Tower in Chicago, Hollywood movie studios and the Empire State Building. Even zealous prosecutors, painting a picture of dedicated Islamic terrorists, admitted any potential plots were "aspirational", given the group had no means to carry them out.

Nonetheless, they were charged with seeking to wage war against America, plotting to destroy buildings and supporting terrorism. Five of them got long jail sentences. Assaad, who was recently arrested in Texas for attempting to run over a policeman, was paid $85,000 for his work.

This year the jailed Liberty City men launched an appeal and last week judgment was handed down. They lost, and officially remain Islamic terrorists hell-bent on destroying America. Not that their supporters see it that way.

"Our country is no safer as a result of the prosecution of these seven impoverished young men from Liberty City," said Batiste's lawyer, Ana Jhones.

"This prosecution came at great financial cost to our government, and at a terrible emotional cost to these defendants and their families. It is my sincere belief that our country is less safe as a result of the government's actions in this case."

Drone Warfare: Murder By Joystick

Drone Warfare: Murder By Joystick by Zen Gardner



Does anyone even notice? Does anyone even care anymore? Is the world so callous they can't even see, feel or think? Are western "leaders" so power drunk they've taken to virtually shooting fish in a barrel for fun and profit?

Looks that way to me.
US drone terror bombing of Somalia combined with US instigated invasion by Somalia's neighbors like Kenya and Ethiopia create more death and destruction than the famine.
Seventy-nine more people have been killed in US assassination drone attacks in southern Somalia, bringing the death toll to 146 over the past two days, Press TV reported. The US military launched terror drone attacks on Bilis Qooqaani town, which is located 448 kilometers (278 miles) southwest of the Somali capital Mogadishu, on Friday. At least 79 people were killed and several others were injured in the strikes. PressTV

What if this was your daughter?

Give Obama Another Piece-of-body Prize


These drone forays are unauthorized, completely uncalled for and totally unprovoked.

And wickedly murderous.

Innocent civilian Palestinian children playing in their yards are massacred by Israeli joystick cowards in sanitized hidden military bases in Tel Aviv. Pakistani teens are blown up on their way to school by idiot commuting American boneheads playing war games in a sheltered base in Nevada. Unsuspecting Africans are mowed down indiscriminately by futuristic robotic death machines managed by moronic military computer geeks looking for a thrill or promotion.

This is sick and there isn't nearly enough outrage about it.

How can the US make these forays into Pakistan, Somalia, Yemen and now Turkey and who knows where else murdering anonymous guilty-by-being-in-line-of-sight humans by remote control? Is the world so bullied into "accept it or face the consequences", or have the horrific realities of mechanized war become so distanced from the western psyche that they simply can no longer feel?

A drone's view. What will it think of your activities?

Worse Yet


Does this signal a grand silent imprimatur by the predominance of the world's populace that this "war on terror" has been granted some kind of Orwellian preemptive combat authorization? Smells that way to me.
9/11 "patriotism" has mutated into blood lust. Sick, sick world.


Is There No Saying No Anymore?


Just as the Obama administration singlehandedly authorized the US led waltz into Libya, or Bush swept aside American freedoms following the staged 9/11 attacks, or the banksters are unilaterally bailed out and protected following their global financial heist, so the war "drones" on. And on.

I'm ashamed of the lack of public outcry at these sanitized random murders. Maybe it's the fluoride and chemtrails having their desired effect, I don't know. But there's still no excuse. Anyone with an iota of consciousness should be OUTRAGED at what's going on!

Americans better wake up. This doesn't go unnoticed and unaccounted for in the Universal Grand Scheme of things. What goes around comes around. Big time.

Americans will certainly reap what they've allowed and even insanely encouraged their country to sow.

And It ain't gonna be pretty.

-Zen

Related:

November 14, 2011: 'US, Israel blatantly support terrorism'
November 17, 2011: Both the US and the UK Governments Support Slavery of Their Own Citizens

OWS only stronger after two months

OWS only stronger after two months - RT



Today the Occupy Wall Street movement turns two months old. A movement which started in the financial capital of the world has now manifested itself into a worldwide movement. The fight against corporate greed has brought thousands of activists to the streets nationwide. On the two month anniversary, which is being called the "national day of action," RT's Marina Portnaya gives us a timeline of the Occupy movement.

Related:

November 15, 2011: The Brave New World of Occupy Wall Street - Amy Goodman
November 15, 2011: This is What Revolution Looks Like by Chris Hegdes

OWS protester left bloody and bruised by NYPD

OWS protester left bloody and bruised by NYPD - RT



Occupy Wall Street protester Brendan Watts was assaulted by police after he knocked off a police officer's hat and was thrown to the ground and beaten according to OWS reporter John Doyle.

84-Year Old Dorli Rainey, Pepper-Sprayed at Occupy Seattle, Denounces Police Crackdowns

84-Year Old Dorli Rainey, Pepper-Sprayed at Occupy Seattle, Denounces Police Crackdowns - Democracy Now



www.democracynow.org - Police departments across the country are coming under criticism for using excessive force against Occupy Wall Street protesters during the past two months. In Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn apologized Wednesday, hours after an 84-year-old retired Seattle school teacher named Dorli Rainey was pepper sprayed in the face during a protest. Photographs of her moments after she was pepper sprayed went viral, showing the chemical irritant and liquid used to treat it dripping from her chin. According to Occupy Seattle organizers, a priest and a pregnant teenager were also pepper sprayed Tuesday night. Dorli Rainey joins us from Seattle. "My problem is not only with police brutality," Rainey says. "It is with the progressively worse attitude of the police."

For the complete interview, read the transcript, download the podcast, and for additional Democracy Now! reports about the Occupy Wall Street movement, visit http://www.democracynow.org/tags/occupy_wall_street

Paramilitary Policing of OWS: Excessive Use of Force Amidst the New Military Urbanism



www.democracynow.org - Democracy Now! hosts a discussion on policing and the Occupy Wall Street movement with Chuck Wexler, director of the Police Executive Research Forum, which helped organize calls among police chiefs on how to respond to the Occupy protests, and with Norm Stamper, the former police chief of Seattle, who recently wrote an article for the Nation magazine titled "Paramilitary Policing From Seattle to Occupy Wall Street." "Trust me, the police do not want to be put in this position. Cities need to ask themselves, is there another way to handle this conflict?," Wexler says. Stamper notes, "There are many compassionate, decent, competent police officers who do a terrific job day in and day out. There are others who are 'bad apples.' What both of them have in common is that they 'occupy,' as it were, a system, a structure that itself is rotten. I am talking about the paramilitary bureaucracy." We are also joined by Stephen Graham, author of "Cities Under Siege: The New Military Urbanism," and by by retired New York Supreme Court Judge Karen Smith, who worked as a legal observer Tuesday morning in New York after the police raided the Occupy Wall Street encampment. "I was there to take down the names of people who were arrested... As I'm standing there, an African-American woman goes up to a police officer and says, 'I need to get in. My daughter's there, I want to know if she is OK.' And he said, 'Move on, lady,' and they kept pushing with their sticks, pushing back and she was crying... he throws her to the ground and starts hitting her in the head," says Smith. "I walk over and I say, 'Look, cuff her if she's done something, but you don't need to do that.' He said, 'lady, you want to get arrested?' I said, 'Do you see my hat? I'm here as a legal observer.' He said, 'Do you want to get arrested?' and he pushed me up against the wall."

FASCISM EXPLODES: US VIOLENTLY SUPPRESSING OWS PROTESTS

US VIOLENTLY SUPPRESSING OWS PROTESTS COPWATCHNEWS

NYPD сops blast LRAD sound cannons at #occupywallst #ows

NYPD сops blast LRAD sound cannons at #occupywallst #ows 12160.info

Here's the Risk: "Occupy" ends up doing the bidding of the global elite

Here's the Risk: "Occupy" ends up doing the bidding of the global elite by Patrick Henningsen


History shows us it is easy for 'grassroots' campaigns to become co-opted by the very interests they are fighting against

A 21st-century grassroots movement faces many pitfalls. This was as true back in 1968 as it is today. It could be infiltrated by law enforcement and intelligence agencies, or co-opted by a major party. As the state continues to creep further into our lives, activists can expect that it will use all its resources – not just the violent reaction seen in New York overnight, but also its agents, informants and surveillance packages – in its effort to monitor both sides of any serious social debate. Even bleaker, however, is the possibility that the movement was actually planned and launched by the very establishment activists thought they were waging a battle against in the first place. The larger the movement, the more interested a major party becomes in absorbing it into either the left or the right side of the current two-party paradigm.

The sudden emergence of America's Tea Party movement in 2007 is a good example. Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul, its inventor, used it as a springboard to highlight libertarian and constitutional issues during his 2008 campaign. Soon after, it was co-opted by key political and media influencers from the US right wing, associating itself less with a libertarian manifesto, and more with emerging figures within the Republican establishment. Now it is has morphed into nothing more than a block of voters whom the Republican party can rely to strike a deal with during an election cycle.

Arguably, the Occupy Wall Street movement has already drifted into the shadow of the Democratic party – with a number of Democratic establishment figures from the top down endorsing it. The Democrats' own media fundraising and media machine, Move On, has visibly adopted the cause. Like the Tea Party before it, the Occupy block would swing a close election during a national two-party race, functioning as a pressure-release valve for any issue too radical for the traditional platform.

Alongside this is the threat of being infiltrated. Scores of declassified documents, along with accounts from veteran activists, will reveal many stories of members who were actually undercover police, FBI or M15. In the worst cases of infiltration, undercover agents have acted as provocateurs. Such incidents normally serve to radicalise a movement, thus demonising it in the eyes of society and effectively lessening its wider political appeal.

Although the global Occupy movement has branched out in an open-source way, many of its participants and spectators might be completely unaware of who actually launched it. Upon investigation, what one finds is a daisy chain of non-profit foundations, all tied together by hundreds of millions per year in operational funding. The original call for Occupy Wall Street came from non-profit international media foundation Adbusters. Like many non-profits, Adbusters receives its funding and operating capital from other behind-the-scenes organisations. According to research conducted by watchdog Activistcash, Adbusters takes a significant portion of its money from the Tides Foundation, an organisation partnered with one of Wall Street billionaire oligarch George Soros's foundations, the Open Society Institute.

Although mostly hidden from the public eye, all major foundations and professional thinktanks undertake research and host training seminars, which are used to influence certain public and foreign policies, and thus, must have a political agenda. Theirs is the venue of choice for activities that cannot officially be conducted on the government clock.

Freedom House is another of Soros's Open Society partners. It supports the Centre for Applied Nonviolent Action and Strategies (Canvas), an organisation started by Serbians Ivan Marovic and Srdja Popovic. After playing a pivotal role in the CIA-backed deposing of Serbia's Slobodan Milosevic, the western media hailed Marovic as a democratic genius, but it came out later that his programme came out of an elite Boston thinktank's "regime change" manual, From Dictatorship to Democracy, written by Harvard professor Gene Sharp. Sharp's book is a bible of the colour revolutions – a "regime change for dummies". His Albert Einstein Institution has received funds from the National Endowment for Democracy and the Open Society Foundations, and his work serves as a template for western-backed opposition leaders in soft coups all around the world.

There are also reports of Canvas activity during the early days of Occupy Wall Street, including a video of Marovic himself addressing the general assembly. Currently, Canvas are touting their recent role in working with Egyptian and Tunisian protesters from as early as 2009, teaching skills that helped bring down their presidents and spark regional revolt.

When the dust settles and it's all said and done, millions of Occupy participants may very well be given a sober lesson under the heading of "controlled opposition". In the end, the Occupy movement could easily end up doing the bidding of the very elite globalist powers that they were demonstrating against to begin with. To avoid such an outcome, it's important for a movement to have a good knowledge of history and the levers of power in the 21st century.

• Patrick Henningsen is speaking on Deep Politics and the Revolutions Business at Tent City University at St Paul's on Sunday, 20 November at 4pm

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Occupy Wall Street Eviction Testimonial, Liberty Square 11/15

Occupy Wall Street Eviction Testimonial, Liberty Square 11/15 - Occupy TVNY



 Moments after the arrest of his fellow occupiers, a resident of Liberty Square relates a firsthand account of the eviction and destruction of the encampment, an event that was emotional for police as well as protesters.

In the Face of Repression – Notes from OccupyOakland Nov 15th

In the Face of Repression – Notes from OccupyOakland Nov 15th by Miki Kashtan

 Early morning on Monday, November 14th, the Oakland Police once again evacuated the OccupyOakland camp. That was the day I was planning to attend the facilitation committee meeting. Being unsure about whether or not a meeting would take place, and knowing how long it would be before I could attend a meeting again, I decide to take a chance and go.

The plaza is barricaded on all sides, with only employees being allowed to enter. Some restaurants are openly displaying their menus in an empty plaza full of sanitation workers. Who would be buying food when no one can enter, I wonder. Later I see police allowing some people – I imagine only those looking “respectable” – to walk into the plaza to order food out. Something ironic about closing off the entire plaza when one of the reasons for evacuating it was to support local businesses. I ask the policeman how he feels about the whole thing. He shrugs his shoulders and says he’s just doing his job, doesn’t have an opinion. I offer my reflection that it’s tough to be there and do what he does. He says that being a cop is tough, period.

At the 14th and Broadway intersection, which has become identified with the movement, a small crowd has gathered. More police are standing in a line behind the barricades, some of them in riot gear, others more loosely guarding the place. Their faces are generally blank, except when no one is standing in front of them and they talk with each other, rather casually. What is it like on the inside to be each person I see? This question haunts me always, especially on a day like today, when I look at people, the police, and imagine them to be doing things that are difficult for at least some of them to do.

A man who identifies himself as a vet, probably from the Vietnam era, is talking with immense passion to one of the officers. He says something about how he can see that the officer is also a vet, and that he knows that deep in his heart he doesn’t want to be working to protect the 1%. The officer appears heroic in his efforts to remain blank while staring directly at the vet behind massive sunglasses. The media is interviewing a man, maybe in his 50s, who is well dressed and holds a sign saying “Re-occupy Oakland ASAP”. On the other side something about why can’t the city and police be more imaginative. The media ask everyone, apparently, if they believe the movement should be responsible for the cost of removing the camp. A woman walks by screaming at the top of her lungs, occupying some other reality. Someone gives her five dollars, and she quiets down temporarily.

I watch in disbelief as so many workers are cleaning up the plaza. Is anyone really thinking that the occupiers won’t come back? I wonder, again and again, what leads people to keep trying to repress movements, when the evidence is so overwhelming that repression, especially of nonviolent movements, tends to strengthen them. Is it a gesture to assure businesses that the city is doing all it can to support them? I wouldn’t want to be Jean Quan these days.

A woman who’s been with the Occupation since the beginning is arguing with a visitor from Eugene, OR who’s been an activist since the 60s. I listen to them quietly, finding myself on both sides of their argument. She is talking about making sure that the brutal reality of life of the marginalized remains in public display. He’s talking about how attracting homeless people and addicts is preventing the movement from attracting others, and points vaguely at the buildings behind him, the places where people work. He talks about how afraid people are to take a day off from work to attend a strike. She talks about how amazing it is that some people have had food for all this time and are finding themselves again. He talks about how organizing and offering services are not the same. She talks about having a public space to have meetings and organize. He talks about making the movement accessible to all people.

Does the movement have enough resources to keep organizing and provide services at the same time? Can the movement appeal to the many who are still uninvolved, barely aware of what’s happening, while the activities that expose the structural conditions continue? Can the occupiers truly figure out how to handle the intense divisions within the movement while standing up to persistent repression? The woman talks about how the very people who are advocating property destruction, which she opposes, are also the people who help out at the camp, set up services, feed the poor. In the evening I find out that the interfaith people who refused to leave the plaza and got arrested while singing spiritual songs got thanked by unexpected people, healing some of the rift between the “diversity of tactics” contingent and the “strict commitment to nonviolence” contingent.

I think about the ongoing conversation I’m part of about whether it’s even possible to be nonviolent in our culture, where so much ongoing violence is done in our name all the time, whether we know it or not, choose it or not. I want to believe there is still room to make the choice not to add more violence by inflicting it personally. I see how any bit of violence, even minimal property destruction, makes it so much easier to justify the repression. More and more people direct increasing amounts of anger at the occupation. They say it’s destroying the fledgling efforts to revive Oakland’s downtown and maintain local businesses. That Oakland is a city of the 99%, including the local business owners.

I know what the woman is saying. Removing the occupation would only remove the issues from public awareness without solving them. It would just be business as usual again, which has allowed massive and growing numbers of people to suffer daily indignities, poverty, lack of access to resources, and marginalization. In the absence of making it impossible for business as usual to continue, what would otherwise provide the energy for making change? The OccupyWallSt organizers have worked diligently on maintaining relationships with the local businesses. I won’t stop believing there’s a way for things to work for everyone. Maybe the woman and the man can yet hear each other. I point them in this direction by reflecting back to both what I hear from each of them, how they fundamentally want the same thing. Before I leave, I ask them to do the same with each other before responding. They like the idea.

As I arrive home, I am struck by how absent the occupation is in my neighborhood, by how many people’s lives are, still, wholly unaffected. Meanwhile, for some people, something different is happening that is changing their lives. They have seen themselves and others create something that was thought impossible only weeks ago. At least for a while there’s no going back. The man, earlier, even while telling the woman repeatedly that their efforts won’t work, admits to being impressed and surprised that they pulled off the general strike. There is some magic happening, something I don’t understand, something I want to support.

Just down the street from my home I watch a woman I don’t know enter her car, an SUV, and drive off, innocent of knowledge that she is doing the next thing with her uninterrupted daily life while dozens were arrested and hundreds are marching to regain access to the plaza. She and they live in entirely different realities. Later I hear that the occupiers are back at the plaza, and are holding a general assembly with many hundreds of people. I remember my conversation from the morning with a UC Berkeley professor who is worried about more repression on campus. I watch a video showing the police attack the demonstrators on campus a week ago. He is afraid of more. I remind him, and myself, how numbers can reduce the possibility of violence. I ask him to invite the faculty to issue a call to the public to come and protect the students. I think again of the anonymous woman in her SUV. What can any of the occupiers do, what kinds of decisions or actions can they take that will reach her? Can she be woken up to imagine a different world, without rich and poor? What would it take for the occupations to become an unstoppable mass movement?

While writing I get news of the eviction taking place in NY. The repression continues. I watch the live streaming in disbelief. No amount of engaging peacefully with residents and local businesses has protected the people. My heart is both breaking and oddly excited. As I am winding down writing this piece, I am watching the live stream and reading the OccupyWallSt site. I am not surprised to learn that civil disobedience is now being planned. Something comforting, in the midst of the shock about the police, in knowing that this movement is allowing more and more people to realize that “we cannot fix our crises isolated from one another.” A group of people are marching, belying the stereotype of the movement being unemployed white people in their 20s. For this moment, in this action, people are walking together. Young and old, black and white, they are chanting, in part, “we say no to the new Jim Crow.” Separation, the very foundation of what makes our current system possible, is being challenged, and the future, for this moment, feels open again in the midst of the difficulty. In the words, once again, of the anonymous writer of the site: “you can’t evict an idea whose time has come.”

To read more pieces like this, sign up for Tikkun Daily’s free newsletter, sign up for Tikkun Magazine emails or visit us online. You can also like Tikkun on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

#NOV17 – #OccupyWallStreet To Shutdown Wall Street On International Day of Action

#NOV17 – #OccupyWallStreet To Shutdown Wall Street On International Day of Action - Alexander Higgins Blog

Occupy Wall Street calls for shutdown of Wall Street and NYC subways on the Nov 17th international day of mass non-violent action with over 400 events scheduled nationwide.




Thursday
November 17th
International Day of Action

Facebook Event | Twitter #N17 | Direct Action Resources

Over 408 Events scheduled nationwide. Find one near you here or create an event in your area.

On Thursday November 17th, the two month anniversary of the Occupy Wall Street movement, we call upon the 99% to participate in a national day of direct action and celebration!

New York City

BREAKFAST: Shut Down Wall Street – 7:00 a.m.

Mic Check The Subway – Thursday, November 17 at 7:00am, NYC Subway

Liberty Plaza – 7:00 am: SHUT DOWN WALL STREET RESIST austerity

Enough of this economy that divides us – it’s time for an economy that works for all. We will gather at 7:00 a.m., before the ring of the Trading Floor Bell, to confront Wall Street with the stories of people on the frontlines of economic injustice. There, before the Stock Exchange, we will exchange stories rather than stocks.

RSVP and more details here for Shut Down https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=288654331165960

LUNCH: Occupy The Subways – 3:00 p.m.

3:00 pm: OCCUPY THE SUBWAYS RECLAIM our democracy!

Throughout the boroughs, we will gather at 7 central subway hubs, to listen to a singular story from one of our hardest-hit and most inspirational neighbors.

We will start by Occupying Our Blocks! Then throughout the five boroughs, we will gather at 16 central subway hubs and take our own stories to the trains, using the “People’s Mic”.

STUDENT STRIKE: Gather at Union Square
https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=163447200417067
  • Bronx
    • Fordham Rd
    • 3rd Ave, 138th Street
    • 163rd and Southern Blvd
    • 161st and River – Yankee Stadium
  • Brooklyn
    • Broadway Junction
    • Borough Hall
    • 301 Grove Street
    • St Jose Patron Church,185 Suydam St, Bushwick
  • Queens
    • Jackson Heights/Roosevelt Ave.
    • Jamaica Center/Parsons/Archer
    • 92-10 Roosevelt Avenue, Jackson Heights
  • Manhattan
    • 125th St. A,B,C,D
    • Union Sq. (Mass student strike)
    • 23rd St and 8th Ave
  • Staten Island
    • St. George, Staten Island Ferry Terminal
    • 479 Port Richmond Avenue, Port Richmond

DINNER: Take The Square – 5:00 p.m.

Community members, community groups and labor are taking their fight for jobs and economic justice out of the park, and into the streets, in this first nationally coordinated day of action between organized labor and Occupy Wall Street. for more info and to RSVP: https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=140299612738681

Across the country, our infrastructure is falling apart; our bridges, our roads, our public transit systems are in a state of disrepair. Enough! It’s time to revitalize our economy with the creation of local jobs which serve our country as a whole!

At 5 pm, tens of thousands of people will gather at Foley Square (just across from City Hall) in solidarity with laborers demanding jobs to rebuild this country’s infrastructure and economy. A gospel choir and a marching band will also be performing.

Afterwards we will march to our bridges. Let’s make it as musical a march as possible – bring your songs, your voice, your spirit! Our “Musical” on the bridge will culminate in a festival of light as we mark the two-month anniversary of the #occupy movement, and our commitment to shining light into our broken economic and political system.

Details and RSVP here:

https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=138388816263680&context=create
Take a sick day, come out from the darkness surrounding Wall Street and into the light!
Resist austerity. Rebuild the economy. Reclaim our democracy.
Resist austerity. Rebuild the economy. Reclaim our democracy.

Trenton

Philadelphia

  • We’re Declaring an Emergency for the 99%!
  • Muncipal Services Bldg, across street, north of City Hall
  • 25 million Americans are looking for work—but Congress can’t pass a jobs bill
  • Super-Committee budget cuts could kill millions of jobs.
  • The economy works for the richest 1%—not the 99%.

Oakland

Portland

  • Occupying steelbridge in morning
  • Rally afterwards
  • Subsequently occupying banks

International Actions

Spain

General Strike

A general strike of university students will be taking place in the following cities: Barcelona, Girona, Lleida, Tarragona, Palma, Sevilla, Santiago de Compostela, Murcia, Madrid, Valencia, Castello, Alicante, Zaragoza

17:00: Demonstration in Madrid

Place: From Nuevos Ministerios to Puerta del Sol Square
Call: Assembly UAM-CSIC / 15M
http://tomalafacultad.net
http://madrid.tomalaplaza.net/2011/11/08/17n-manifestacion-estatal-por-los-servicios-publicos/

Belgium

Occupy University and School

Germany

Massive student strikes, flash mobs, rallies, and other actions will be taking place in dozens of cities: http://ism-global.net/germany_education_strike_nov17

Posters



High-quality, print-ready versions (11×17, 15×24, 23×36) are available as a freely downloadable .zip file.

Let’s get these posters everywhere! The artist’s only stipulation is that they cannot be sold, only given away.
Props to r.black for his amazing work!

UC DAVIS STRIKE AGAINST POLICE BRUTALITY & TUITION HIKES

UC DAVIS STRIKE AGAINST POLICE BRUTALITY & TUITION HIKES



Students, faculty, and staff at UC Davis have joined together as a response to the request from the protesters at UC Berkley for a system-wide strike. This rally in the quad was meant to raise awareness and fight against tuition hikes and to put an end to police brutality. The regents meeting that was scheduled to happen tomorrow November 16th was cancelled due to student protests.

Related Links:

http://reclaimuc.blogspot.com/

http://ucdfa.org/

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=246092445449061

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_f06VQOkI4

Homeland Security Coordinated 18-City Police Crackdown on Occupy Protest

Homeland Security Coordinated 18-City Police Crackdown on Occupy Protest - Washington Blog

 National Coordination Goes Against Protection of Local Accountability
According to Oakland Mayor Jean said that 18 cities coordinated police crack downs on Occupy protests.

Wonkette reports that Homeland Security likely organized the crack downs:
Remember when people were freaking out over the Patriot Act and Homeland Security and all this other conveniently ready-to-go post-9/11 police state stuff, because it would obviously be just a matter of time before the whole apparatus was turned against non-Muslim Americans when they started getting complain-y about the social injustice and economic injustice and income inequality and endless recession and permanent unemployment? That day is now, and has been for some time. But it’s also now confirmedthat it’s now, as some Justice Department official screwed up and admitted that the Department of Homeland Security coordinated the riot-cop raids on a dozen major #Occupy Wall Street demonstration camps nationwide yesterday and today. (Oh, and tonight, too: Seattle is being busted up by the riot cops right now, so be careful out there.)
Rick Ellis of the Minneapolis edition of Examiner.com has this, based on a “background conversation” he had with a Justice Department official on Monday night:
Over the past ten days, more than a dozen cities have moved to evict “Occupy” protesters from city parks and other public spaces. As was the case in last night’s move in New York City, each of the police actions shares a number of characteristics. And according to one Justice official, each of those actions was coordinated with help from Homeland Security, the FBI and other federal police agencies.
[...]

According to this official, in several recent conference calls and briefings, local police agencies were advised to seek a legal reason to evict residents of tent cities, focusing on zoning laws and existing curfew rules. Agencies were also advised to demonstrate a massive show of police force, including large numbers in riot gear. In particular, the FBI reportedly advised on press relations, with one presentation suggesting that any moves to evict protesters be coordinated for a time when the press was the least likely to be present.
***
(And for those who are understandably doubtful about Examiner.com as a news source,here’s an AP story from a couple hours ago that verifies everything except the specific mention of DHS coordination.)
Yves Smith notes:
The 18 police action was a national, coordinated effort. This is a more serious development that one might imagine. Reader Richard Kline has pointed out that one of the de facto protections of American freedoms is that policing is local, accountable to elected officials at a level of government where voters matter. National coordination vitiates the notion that policing is responsive to and accountable to the governed.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

The Forces of the Last Gasp, on Meat Street.

The Forces of the Last Gasp, on Meat Street.

Heretic Productions present... Les Visible with "The Forces of the Last Gasp, on Meat Street."

Arundhati Roy: Occupy Wall Street is "So Important Because it is in the Heart of Empire"

Arundhati Roy: Occupy Wall Street is "So Important Because it is in the Heart of Empire" - Democracy Now



 www.democracynow.org - Renowned Indian writer and global justice activist Arundhati Roy is preparing to address Occupy Wall Street on Wednesday. She recently joined us in the studio to talk about the Occupy movement. "What they are doing becomes so important because it is in the heart of empire, or what used to be empire," Roy said. "And to criticize and to protest against the model that the rest of the world is aspiring to is a very important and very serious business. So... it makes me very, very hopeful that after a long time you are seeing some nascent, real political anger here." She also discussed her new book, "Walking With The Comrades," a chronicle of her time in the forests of India alongside rebel guerillas who are resisting a brutal military campaign by the Indian government.

For the complete interview, read the transcript, download the podcast, and for additional Democracy Now! reports about the Occupy Wall Street movement, visit http://www.democracynow.org/tags/occupy_wall_street

Occupy Wall Street Library Evicted

Occupy Wall Street Library Evicted By Jason Boog

The NYPD have raided the Occupy Wall Street camp in Zuccotti Park, tossing tents, tarps, pallets, sleeping bags and 5,554 books into dump trucks.

The Occupy Wall Street librarians tweeted the eviction all night: “NYPD destroying american cultural history, they’re destroying the documents, the books, the artwork of an event in our nation’s history

… Right now, the NYPD are throwing over 5,000 books from our library into a dumpster. Will they burn them? … Call 311 or 212-639-9675 now and ask why Mayor Bloomberg is throwing the 5,554 books from our library into a dumpster.”

Here is a picture of the cleared park. According to the city’s eviction notice, the “property will be stored at the Department of Sanitation parking garage at 650 West 57th St.” But the librarians dispute this: “it was clear from the livestream and witnesses inside the park that the property was destroyed by police and DSNY workers before it was thrown in dumpsters.”


The OWS Library feed concluded with this tweet: “The NYPD has destroyed everything at  Occupy Wall Street and put it all in dumpsters, including the OWS Library. It’s time to #ShutDownNYC.”

Even though the New York City camp has been cleared, these People’s Libraries are popping up around the country. We are building a list of Digital People’s Libraries, if you want to contribute.

The police said that 150 people were arrested last night. Mayor Michael Bloomberg gave a news conference this morning about the eviction. “New York City is the city where you can come and express yourself …

What was happening in Zuccotti Park was not that.”

Editor’s Note: This post has been updated as the story evolved. (Photo via nic221 on Flickr)

Related:

OWS witness: Brutal lockdown in Zuccotti Park to fuel new protests

OWS witness: Brutal lockdown in Zuccotti Park to fuel new protests - RT



 The birthplace of the anti-corporate 'Occupy' movement in New York has been raided and cleared out by police. Hundreds of protesters who've been camped out in Zuccotti Park for two months have been evicted, and banned from coming back to stay. Officers reportedly used force to kick out some of the activists, with witnesses suggesting pepper spray and tear gas were also used. Authorities removed all tents, citing health and safety concerns. But protesters say that's just an excuse to sabotage a massive demonstration planned for Thursday. An 'Occupy' activist Alexa O'Brien who was in New York at the time of the police raid, says that the authorities' heavy-handed response has been an infringement on civil liberties.

RT on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
RT on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews

Must Watch: Keiser Report: Corporations Fear OWS

Keiser Report: Corporations Fear OWS



Every week Max Keiser looks at all the scandal behind the financial news headlines. This week, Max Keiser and co-host, Stacy Herbert, discuss the Good, The Bad and the Schwing Schwing of making companies scared by putting risk back onto their balance sheet. They also discuss clients getting smoked through massive ploys in the commodity markets. In the second half of the show, Max Keiser interviews Mike Maloney of GoldSilver.com about the latest in the precious metals market and about a $15 trillion Dow.

KR on FB: http://www.facebook.com/KeiserReport

Crackdown on OWS: Zuccotti Park Raided Under Media Blackout, Pepper Spray and Batons Used, Tents Cleared Out


Crackdown on OWS: Zuccotti Park Raided Under Media Blackout, Pepper Spray and Batons Used, Tents Cleared Out - Alternet.org

 "We're being evicted!" the text message went out to Occupy Wall Street supporters around 1 am.


 "The park has been cleared," the fourth text message read a few hours later, as bedragged, pepper-sprayed protesters, having lost their home in the park, reconvened for a GA in Foley Square and vowed to keep the occupation going. Over 200 had been arrested, including city council member Ydanis Rodriguez. Blocks away, Mayor Michael Bloomberg held a press conference at which he declared that police would be now able to search people entering the park.

There was post-raid gathering at 9 am at Canal and 6th Street for supporters to regroup and rally. Meanwhile, the National Lawyer's Guild has obtained a temporary restraining order "directing that occupiers be allowed back on the premises with their belongings." Reportedly, this will hold for several hours until a new hearing. However, after some members of the public re-entered the park, they were asked to leave again. At about 11 a.m, police were reportedly acting in contempt of the order, holding the park and preventing the mandated re-entry of the reconvened protesters.

Twitter pictures later in the morning showed Zuccotti Park was bare and stripped--ugly and undamaged, as it was before, after cleaning crews move through. Before that, however, police had heaped protesters' belongings together.

According to Twitter and the Occupy movement's texts as well as press releases from both the movement and the Mayor's office, the early morning raid cleared the protests' two-month-long "model society" of its infrastructure, including spaces and structures like the women's safe space tent, the medical tent, and thousands of books from the "People's Library" -- which were seen in the back of a dumpster.

Cops reportedly told people these confiscated items would be available at the Department of Sanitation.

Almost all of downtown Manhattan was blocked off in various ways, and protesters were beaten for being both on the sidewalk and the street.

Read more (includes video)..

Second member of Oakland Mayor Jean Quan’s team resigns due to Occupy Oakland response

Oakland Mayor Jean Quan is
quickly losing friends
Second member of Oakland Mayor Jean Quan’s team resigns due to Occupy Oakland response by Madison Ruppert

Last night marked the second resignation of a member of Oakland Mayor Jean Quan’s team which so far includes Deputy Mayor Sharon Cornu and Quan’s legal adviser and “longtime friend” according to Mercury News, Dan Siegel.

At 7:30 pm the Mercury News live blog covering Occupy Oakland announced that Deputy Mayor Cornu resigned, effective immediately.

Mayor Quan wrote in response, “Sharon has been a tremendous asset to my administration. We wish her well and I’m grateful for her contributions. I will be restructuring my administration and making additional personnel announcements in the coming days.”

 When asked for more details about the series of resignations over the Oakland Mayor’s handling, or mishandling, of the Occupy Oakland encampment Quan’s spokesperson Sue Piper claimed, “It’s a personnel issue,” in an email to Mercury News.

This is likely an attempt to avoid directly addressing the police brutality that has plagued the police response to Occupy Oakland and other occupations across the nation.

The resignation came after Dan Siegel, Quan’s legal advisor, announced that he was resigning over the raid on the encampment via Facebook this morning.

Siegel took a quite honorable stand against the assault on the First Amendment and the right of the people to peaceably assemble that has occurred in Oakland and across the country.

On his Facebook, Siegel wrote, “No longer mayor Quan’s legal adviser. Resigned at 2 a.m. Support Occupy Oakland not the 1 percent and its government facilitators.”

This is important not only because it is a clear sign that government is not wholly sided against the people of the United States, but also because Siegel and Quan had a long history together.

Their background makes this resignation that much more noteworthy given they have been friends for decades, dating back to when they both attended the University of California at Berkeley.

Siegel was a part of Quan’s transition team when she took office in January, after which he stayed on as an adviser.

Mayor Quan seems to be getting flak from all sides over the handling of the encampment, including from the Oakland Police Officers Association.

Earlier today they released a statement which thanked protesters for peacefully leaving the tent city while lauding Interim Police Chief Howard Jordan and City Administrator Deanna Santana.

The union has also criticized Quan recently over shifting position on the Occupy Oakland encampment.

Later in the day public workers began breaking down the tent city, including more than 100 tents, and according to Mercury News, the crews threw everything in the garbage with the help of two dump trucks.

In the raid over 30 activists were arrested including one individual from France and others from the East Coast.

Some of those arrested included many members of the clergy. Most of the demonstrators were cited by police for failing to disperse.

At 5:25 pm protesters reassembled at Frank Ogawa Plaza after the morning’s raid and said they were going to reoccupy it.

Later protesters urged the large crowd of several hundred people to march on UC Berkeley on Tuesday to help support them after the brutal assault they endured at the hands of police.

They said that large numbers will help students and professors reestablish their encampment which was destroyed by police after activists attempted – and failed – to block them by forming a human chain.

These activists were beaten and jabbed with batons and some were injured, including a professor who sustained broken ribs.

A Captain for the UC Police then defended their naked brutish thuggery by saying that linking arms was in fact an act of violence and thus justified the police offensive.

It remains to be seen how these numbers will reinforce the Occupation of UC Berkeley and how the police will react to swelling numbers.

Later it was announced that the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California and the National Lawyers Guild filed a federal lawsuit against the Oakland Police Department.

The suit calls for an emergency temporary restraining order to stop more police violence against the Occupy Oakland activists.

According to an order issued by United States District Court Judge Richard Seeborg, the city must respond by 5 pm on Tuesday.

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Timothy Scott Campbell, a videographer who was shot with a bean bag round when filming police earlier this month.

Other plaintiffs include Keerie Campbell, Marc McKinnie, Michael Siegel and Legal Observer for the National Lawyers Guild, Marcus Kryshka.

I must wonder why Scott Olsen, the veteran who was struck in the skull with a tear gas canister (and is now thankfully out of the hospital according to friends) isn’t a plaintiff along with the second veteran who was hospitalized due to aggressive police tactics.

“I was filming police activity at Occupy Oakland because police should be accountable,” Campbell said in a prepared statement. “Now I’m worried about my safety from police violence and about retaliation because I’ve been outspoken.”

In another prepared statement, an attorney for the National Lawyers Guild, Rachel Lederman, said that the police’s actions were “wholesale and fragrant violations of Oakland’s own Crowd Control Policy.”

The suit alleges that the Oakland Police Department violated the First and Fourth Amendment rights of protesters in attacking activists with flash bang grenades, projectiles and excessive amounts of tear gas.

Among other allegations the suit says that the Oakland Police Department violated their Crowd Control Policy which was put in place as part of a settlement agreement that was reached after another assault on a large 2003 protest.

Tents still occupy Snow Park near Lake Merritt but Interim Chief Howard Jordan announced that the Snow Park encampment would be raided as well without providing a time frame.

For more on Occupy Oakland and the fallout that is occurring thanks to Quan’s handling of the encampment, check out the live blog on Mercury News.

We will keep you updated as more information becomes available. 

Madison Ruppert is the Editor and Owner-Operator of the alternative news and analysis database End The Lie and has no affiliation with any NGO, political party, economic school, or other organization/cause. If you have questions, comments, or corrections feel free to contact him at admin@EndtheLie.com