Is Only Getting Bigger: 20,000 Rally in New York to Support Occupy Wall Street
October 5, 2011 |
Photo Credit: Sarah Jaffe
It's 10 PM in Liberty
Plaza and the jubilant 20,000-plus crowd from the day's solidarity march
has dwindled, now, to the faithful, the regulars, having debated and
decided by consensus against another attempt at marching.
The
police have dropped barricades around the entire plaza, but rumors that
they are coming in are so far unfounded. The medical team has calmed
down and are eating pizza from the boxes being carried throughout the
plaza. A giant projection on the wall of a building across Trinity Street reminds the protesters "The Whole World is Watching #OccupyWallStreet."
A
large group of people are holding signs and singing "This Little Light
of Mine" down at the base of the plaza, almost to Trinity Street, where
Ed Schultz of MSNBC is broadcasting his show live on the other side of
the police barricade. An officer tells me the barricades aren't shutting
us in, I'm welcome to leave at the corners of the plaza.
Despite
an earlier clash with police (28 arrests reported, a far cry from
Saturday's 700-plus) as a breakaway march from the permitted,
union-supported solidarity rally headed down Wall Street proper, the
plaza is mostly quiet.
Chris
from the medical team, a firefighter from New Jersey, tells me that he
treated one marcher who made it back to the plaza after having been
pepper-sprayed. Videos and photographs are starting to circulate online of the clash with police, which include two Fox 5 reporters hit with batons and pepper spray.
Phillip Anderson, a local blogger and activist, was on the march to Wall Street and told me this story:
"We saw a ton of people crossing Broadway and decided to see what was happening. Easily 1000 people headed toward Wall Street; the cops made sure we didn't go straight there, so we took a circuitous route. When we got to Wall and William St., there was a barricade along the west side of William, along Cipriani, and people on the balcony above with glasses of champagne."It was obvious the cops weren't going to let the crowd go right so they went east down Wall, and then I don't know what happened but they came back loud and moving fast, drums banging. Instantly the cops moved the barricade to the east side, there were cops on horses, cops on scooters, they barricaded themselves in the middle and the crowd got to the edge of the barricade and then everyone just shut up. Dead quiet. I'm going to give those cops a lot of credit, they opened a corner and let the crowd walk out and the scooter cops escorted them almost all the way back."
The chant from the crowd, he said, was "Cops are the 99%!"
*******
Earlier
in the day, over 20,000 people packed Foley Square near New York’s City
Hall and marched to Liberty Plaza to support the occupiers, who are on
day 19 of their protest. Colorful union signs dotted the crowd as well
as the handmade kind, showing delegations from the United Auto Workers,
Amalgamated Transit Union, Teamsters, City University of New York
faculty, and many, many more. And all of the protesters that I spoke to
knew exactly why they were there.
"When someone's looking for a job, they're not visible," Jesse LaGreca, a blogger at Daily Kos
who recently became an Internet celebrity for his smackdown of Fox News
in an interview that leaked to the Web, told me. The occupation, and
the massive march in support, made those problems visible. LaGreca's
takedown of Griff Jenkins, who he called "one of the biggest
cheerleaders for the Tea Party movement," resonated with activists tired
of not being taken seriously. He pointed out "The last thing they want
is someone who can clearly state why we're here. It's called Occupy Wall
Street, not big bake sale, for God's sake."
he march moved off slowly through
the financial district, I ducked into a cafe and struck up a
conversation with Joel Wise, a tall, burly member of Operating Engineers
Local 68 from New Jersey. Wise noted that his union had yet to express
an opinion on the occupation, but told me “I’m here as an American,
proud to be a union member.” He told me that the sign he’d been
carrying earlier, which he’d given away on the street, had read “The Tea
Party is Owned By Big Business.”
Wise’s
friend commented, “If they keep monetizing debt, it’s gonna be ugly,”
and Wise continued “Most people are outraged that white-collar criminals
weren’t prosecuted. If you steal a loaf of bread, or a kid sells some
weed, they go to jail for five years, but these guys stole millions.”
******
As
I leave Liberty Plaza at 10:30, a lawyer hands me his card, telling me
"I used to be a prosecutor here, I know what they're capable of." The
man, whose card declares him to be Musa Ali, a proud supporter of the
LGBT community, then joins the legal team in a small huddle.
I
am struck once again at the ease with which the organization here falls
back into its duties. The medics treat the injured or sick, the food
team hands out pizza, rumors are quashed with a quick "mic check" and
the legal team works to keep people out of jail--or get them out quickly
if they do wind up there.
I
walk out past the barricades, a girl passes me with her dog, and police
vans move down the street. An officer tells me that I'm probably better
off picking up a train to the north rather than the south, and I take
his advice, hearing a round of cheers erupt behind me from something
going on in the plaza.
And so
the uneasy truce at Liberty Plaza holds, but the protesters inside
remember the feeling of elation, of support from the huge crowds
earlier. It's not just rhetoric; they know that they are the 99%.
This is only getting bigger.
Sarah Jaffe, Alternet
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