(JAI:  From the below:  "The stated goal for the day was to “move-in” to a
large, abandoned, building to turn it into a social and political center.
It is a long vacant convention center... "

This is reminiscent of the YJC's attempt to reclaim a shuttered public
library
http://uprisingradio.org/home/2011/12/14/youth-justice-coalition-cleans-up-abandoned-library-in-south-la-confronted-by-police/

Actions like this has real substance, in my opinion.  The struggle
reclamation of abandoned (first) public property with a goal of turning
these abandoned public buildings into centers useful to the working class
is, again in my opinion, an act of proletarian heroism.

This is real occupation.  An act for-something and not merely an
act-in-itself.

When the YJC seized that library I was there 25 minutes after I got the
info and was walking to it when two 40+ year old brothers on bicycles
sipping wine were muttering aloud to the police in the and across the
street "All them kids is tryin' ta do is open up a m'f'ng library and these
m'f'g police is bothering them...them lousy m'f'ers."

These are actions that our class will support and I salute the efforts of
the YJC and Occupy Oakland for making this critical turn in the class
struggle.  This ought set example wherever the Occupy movement takes
actions.

Occupy, Reclaim and and Make New Abandoned Public Resources

Should this movement take wing then how long, comrades, is it before we
begin to occupy abandoned private properties so that those w/o shelter
might find it; and, how long comrades before we then take control of, renew
and reinvigorate abandoned factories and farms?

And then, comrades, how long will it be before we take control of all major
industrial and agricultural production so as to provide, finally, for we
who go to work and we who want to go work?

There is a better world to be had!

JAI
RAC-LA

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Subject: POC-OWS What Really Happened in Oakland (text + video)
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Date: Sun, January 29, 2012 9:13 pm
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 What Really Happened at Occupy Oakland on Jan. 28

by admin on January 30, 2012  http://www.thenorthstar.info/?p=176


  <http://www.thenorthstar.info/?p=176#>17<http://www.thenorthstar.info/?p=176#>

For the internet, here’s a first-hand account of Occupy Oakland on Jan. 28,
2012, because the news never tells the full story. I’ll tell you about the
street battle, the 300+ arrests, the vandalism, the flag burning, all in
the context of my experience today. This is deeper than the headlines. No
major news source can do that for you.

The stated goal for the day was to “move-in” to a large, abandoned,
building to turn it into a social and political center. It is a long vacant
convention center –- the only people ever near there are the homeless who
use the space outside the building as a bed. The building occupation also
draws attention to the large number of abandoned and unused buildings in
Oakland.

The day started with a rally and a march to the proposed building. The
police knew which building was the target, surrounded it, and used highly
mobile units to try and divert the protest. After avoiding police lines,
the group made it to one side of the building. Now, this is a very large
building, and we were on a road with construction fences on both sides, and
a large ditch separating us from the cops. The police fired smoke grenades
into the crowd as the group neared a small path around the ditch, towards
the building. They declared an unlawful assembly, and this is when the
crowd broke down the construction fence. A few people broke fences to
escape the situation, others because they were pissed. A couple more fences
were taken down then necessary, but no valuable equipment was destroyed.
They only things broken were fences.

The crowd decided to continue moving, and walked up the block to a more
regular street. We decided to turn left up the street, and a police line
formed to stop the march. They again declared an unlawful assembly. The
protesters challenged the line, marching towards the police with our own
shields in front. The shields, some small and black and a few large metal
sheets. The police fired teargas as the group approached, and shot
less-than-lethal rounds at the crowd. The protesters returned one volley of
firecrackers, small projectiles, and funny things like balloons. A very
weak attack, three officers may have been hit by something but none of them
got injured. Tear gas forced many people back. The protesters quickly
regrouped, and pressed the line again. This time the police opened fire
with flash-grenades, tear gas, paint-filled beanbag shotguns, and rubber
bullets.

After the police fired heavily on the protesters, they pushed their line
forward and made a few arrests. The protesters regrouped down the block and
began to march the other way (followed by police), back to Oscar Grant
Plaza.

All of this occurred during the day, but it was that street battle that set
the tone for the police response later in the evening. After taking a break
in Oscar Grant Plaza, feeding everyone and resting, the group headed out
for their evening march. Around 5 p.m., the group took to the street at
14th and Broadway and began a First-Amendment sanctioned march around the
city. The police response was very aggressive.

About 15 minutes into the march, the police attempted to kettle the
protesters. This march was entirely non-violent; nobody threw shit at the
cops and an unlawful assembly was never declared. This is a very important
detail. The march was 1,000+ strong, conservatively. The police were very
mobile, using 25+ rented 10-seater vans to bring the ‘troops’ to the march.

For their first attempt at a kettle, the cops charged the group with police
lines from the front and back. They ran towards us aggressively. Us being
1,000+ peaceful marching protesters. The group was forced to move up a side
street. The police moved quickly to surround the entire area; they formed a
line on every street that the side street connected to. Police state
status: very efficient. They kettled almost the entire protest in the park
near the Fox theater. AFTERWARDS, as in after they surrounded everyone,
they declared it to be an unlawful assembly BUT OFFERED NO EXIT ROUTE. Gas
was used, could of been tear or smoke gas.

The crowd then broke down a fence that was on one side of the kettle, and
1,000 people ran across a field escaping a police kettle and embarrassing
the entire police force. It was literally a massive jailbreak from a
kettle. The group retook Telegraph ave. and left the police way behind.

At this point, I was on edge because I knew the police were not fucking
around tonight. Because of the incident earlier in the day, I realized they
were effectively treating the peaceful march as a riot. There was not
rioting, or intentions to riot, just dancing, optimism, hope, and walking.
But clearly the police thought differently, and I knew they would try to
trap us again without warning. From the moment I saw riot police running
towards are march from both directions, I knew the Constitution would not
apply in Oakland tonight. The police made that very clear. My friends
thought differently, thinking that they would not be arrested for marching.
They are currently in jail.

The second, and successful, kettle occurred as the protest was headed back
up Broadway, at Broadway and 24th. Again, the police appeared quickly in
front of the crowd, as well as a line behind the crowd. This time there was
no side street. A few people attempted to escape into the YMCA; some
misinfonformed news reports claim that the YMCA got ‘occupied’. Around 300
people were trapped, mostly young people. At this point I had fallen behind
the line of riot police in back of the crowd, and when the kettle was
sprung I was on the other side of the police line. I have a policy of
avoiding arrest, but I feel like I’ve been striped of some dignity. I’ve
seen some shit go down in Oaktown, but I’ve always avoided arrest because
it was easy. Most mass arrests occur when people choose to break the law
(like occupying Bank of America in downtown San Francisco and pitching a
tent to send a statement to UC Regent Monica Lozano on BofA’s board –
respect). At “unlawful assemblies,” people are usually extracted by a quick
attack of 5+ cops on their “targets” (previously identified and profiled
protesters). If the crowd is too large, they use teargas.

Tonight was different. When I fell behind the group, I knew they were going
to arrest a very large number of peaceful protesters without declaring an
unlawful assembly at the location. And then they did. I thought this shit
was reserved for G20s and World Trade Organization meetings. I felt shame
for being intimidated away from my rights. “Unlawful assemblies” feel like
a boot stomp on the first amendment, but this was like them wiping their
ass with the constitution and force feeding it to me.

300+ were arrested, corralled below the YMCA at 23rd and Broadway. The only
announcement that was made was one I’ve never heard before:

*“You are under arrest. Submit to your arrest.”*

The 300 protesters were then arrested, one by one. They were zip-tied and
sat in rows while they waited to be processed. The Oakland Police
Department set up an entire processing station behind police lines, where
they searched and identified every protester. They were slowly loaded onto
buses, including local public AC transit buses. This took about 4 or 5
hours.

Outside the police lines, things were still happening. A group that escaped
the trap decided to head back to Oscar Grant Plaza. I do not know how, but
they opened the front door to city hall and occupied the building. Opened,
as in no window smashing. The move was not meant to be an occupation but
more of a show of solidarity to the 300 arrested protesters down the
street. When all the people being arrested heard the news, they let out a
big cheer.

At this point I ran to Oscar Grant Plaza. When I arrived there were only
eight riot cops guarding the open front door, but more arrived very
quickly. No one was inside the building anymore, but many had gathered in
the Plaza. Someone burned an American Flag in front of City Hall. I’ve seen
the same guy do it before; frankly he’s weird and it’s kind of his thing.
One thing to note is the police arrested to wrong part of the protest. Most
people arrested were young peaceful types. Aggressive protesters, and
anyone with a record, are usually very good at avoiding arrest. Point
being, back at the plaza opportunists began their work. I saw some young
“jugalos” spray-painting a wall with “jugalos for life” shit and then take
photos next to it. They were just young and stupid kids; some good
protesters cleaned it up later in the night. Some CBS and FOX news crews
forced to leave the scene, with people spanking their van. They had already
gotten the footage of someone burning an American flag in front of City
Hall, so their work was done. The crowd was angry about what happened, and
milling around the plaza and downtown area. At one point, the first of the
9 busloads of protesters drove past 14th and Broadway. People cheered for
the ones inside, and chased it down, slamming on the sides of the bus. None
of the other buses came past the plaza. There is about 30 police in the
immediate area, 20 in front of city hall, and 10 near 14th and Broadway.
Clearly they were stretched thin and did not expect the City Hall incident.
Mutual aid been called it; I saw cops from Oakland, Alameda County Sheriff,
Pleasanton, and Berkeley.

I walked back down to the 300 arrests in progress to try and get some
information or spot my friends, but all I could do was wait and watch from
behind the police line. My phone died. Not much happened, a lot of waiting
and talking with people who also had friends on the other side. People
included one French women who talked about how in France this would never
be tolerated, and a teacher of one of Oakland’s 10 schools being closed who
was out on his birthday “for the kids.” Eventually, I decided I needed to
charge my phone, get on the internet, and figure out where and when my
friends will be released. Siting down on BART was great after a long day of
walking.

I got home and viewed OakfoSho and PunkboyinSF on Ustream to stay posted.
OakFoSho filmed the entire arrest from above, I was able to look for my
friends from his stream. All props to that guy. I saw that with the new
development at Oscar Grant Plaza, they had to call in mutual aid from San
Francisco, Marin, and San Mateo. They declared the 14th and Broadway an
unlawful assembly and slowly dispersed the dwindling crowd. No tear gas
this time!

Now that this incident is on-record, I’m gonna get a little sleep, then go
pick up my friends from jail.

If you only remember one detail be it this: Tonight’s mass arrest occurred
without a dispersal order. No law was broken. The only order given was:
“You are under arrest. Submit to your arrest.” 300 peaceful protesters
walking down a street were trapped and arrested unlawfully.

A note about police militarization: I saw some big guns and scary gear
tonight. Alameda County Sheriff seems to have an endless budget for that
shit. But tonight I saw something much scarier, that I’ve never seen
before. First, I saw that the police have a printed profile books of
protesters. I saw a cop flipping through pictures with descriptions,
talking about who on their list they’ve seen today. When resting in Oscar
Grant Plaza, a cop was filming the plaza from a rooftop in an adjacent
building. They’re always filming, some have cameras on their bodies now,
but this was clear spying and sophisticated intelligence gathering and
analysis. Second, a very large tank on wheels, with a water cannon on top,
rolled on scene. Someone said it was called a “grizzly”, but I can’t find a
photo anywhere. Help? It was massive, and I stood right next to it before
they brought it behind police lines. It was a hardcore, modern urban tank.
The police are funded and prepared to use a water cannon on protesters, if
need be. Know that.

The thing about Occupy, and especially Occupy Oakland, is it refuses to
exclude. We are the 99%, and we mean it. The homeless and disenfranchised
were welcome in the camp from day 1. The crime rate in Downtown Oakland
went down, and some people finally had a safe place to sleep. Idealistic
youth, Google techies, students, teachers, parents, children, poor,
homeless, workers, all coming together. It rekindled hope for a lot of
people. Occupy changed the conversation. The idea is more important than
any one protest. An idea cannot be stopped. It is no longer about
occupations; instead, it’s about bringing people together. The 99%, all
with their own problems and concerns, have brought their collective
attention to the root of the forces preventing them from making a better
world.

A lot of the people arrested today were my peers — a lot of young people
and students. For us, the Occupy movement can’t be diminished or co-opted —
it’s bigger than Occupy. I will seek the changes I marched for tonight
until I win or die. It is the task of my generation, worldwide, to return
power to the people. Governments around the world are quickly realizing
that our generation will not back down. This is bigger than ‘occupy’, this
is bigger than one country, one problem, or one protest. The people want
their world back. We are fighting for our future, and we are winning..

*Edit: Forgot to add this context – The Oakland Police Department will soon
be taken over by the Feds because of their poor conduct and inability to
change:
http://www.baycitizen.org/policing/story/judge-strips-power-oakland-police/*

*Originally posted here: http://redd.it/p1m34*

Tagged as: First Amendment<http://www.thenorthstar.info/?tag=first-amendment>,
Occupy Oakland <http://www.thenorthstar.info/?tag=occupy-oakland>, police
brutality <http://www.thenorthstar.info/?tag=police-brutality>, strategy
and tactics <http://www.thenorthstar.info/?tag=strategy-and-tactics>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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