OWS Oakland Takes Over City, Shutting Down One of the Biggest Ports in the Country...But Nightfall Brings More Chaos and Teargas
November 2, 2011 |
But first: did a small group of activists manage in just 5
short days of organizing to bring about the first general strike in the
United States in generations?
Not exactly. But while there was no broad, city-wide
general strike of the sort last seen in this country in 1946, the effort
was anything but a failure. A day of scattered actions across the city
culminated in a massive "occupation" that shut down the Port of Oakland,
the fifth busiest container port in the country. When it was announced
that operations had been suspended for the night, thousands of people
partied around trucks halted in their tracks, celebrating a victory in
their struggle with authorities that began with the violent eviction of
Occupy Oakland last week. The Oakland police, and Mayor Jean Quan, stung
by negative press stemming from the clashes, essentially gave the port
to the movement.
Since the Taft-Hartley Act was passed in 1947, unions have
been forbidden from participating in general strikes, but there was no
doubt that the longshoremen were firmly on the side of the protesters.
The occupiers arrived in waves, and at first small groups blocked the
entrances to port facilities, letting workers out at the end of their
shifts, but preventing their replacements from taking the next shift.
One by one, longshoremen arrived to find a picket line blocking their
entrance. In every case, they expressed solidarity -- honking their
horns and in some instances getting out and talking to the protesters,
and then pulled a u-turn and went home -- their contracts specified that
they wouldn't be required to work if there was a disturbance at the
port.
Throughout the day, about half of the businesses in
downtown Oakland shuttered, many with signs expressing solidarity with
the occupiers. The city's economy may not have been brought to a halt,
but it was not functioning to full capacity.
Angela Davis gave a rousing speech at 9:30 that morning to
kick off the day's proceedings. A "children's march" circled Frank
Ogawa Plaza -- renamed Oscar Grant plaza by the protesters in honor of
the young man shot to death by BART police on New Year's 2009. They
chanted, "Play nice and share!"
A group of high school students told me that their
principal had circulated a memo giving them the day off. Calls to the
school district to find out today's attendance figures weren't returned
at press time, but the Los Angeles Times reported that 16
percent of the city's teachers didn't show up for work. There were many
children and young people in the crowd, many attended by their parents.
Calling the day of protests and direct actions a "general
strike" may have raised the bar too high, but it also resulted in an
almost unbelievable amount of media coverage -- far more attention than
ever garnered by protests against the Iraq war, which were attended by
hundreds of thousands. In that sense today could be seen as a major
victory for the Occupy movement. This may have provided a model for
other occupations to follow in the coming months.
But at around midnight, the peaceful protests that had
marked the day devolved into something uglier. It began when a group of
activists "occupied" an abandoned building. Soon after, word spread that
police were preparing to evict the squatters. A call went out to defend
the site, and about 100-200 people answered it, filling the street a
few blocks away where the building was located and erecting a barricade
out of whatever was at hand in an effort to prevent police from reaching
the scene.
About an hour later, 16 vans filled with police clad in
riot gear arrived at an adjacent corner and began to stage. They formed
into several lines and prepared to move in (forgive the blurry
pictures).
At that point, somebody set the barrier on fire, an order
to disperse was given, and for the next 2-3 hours, a series of clashes
followed in which numerous rounds of teargas, flash-bangs and non-lethal
rounds were fired at protesters.
Joshua Holland is an editor and senior writer at AlterNet. He is the author of The
15 Biggest Lies About the Economy: And Everything else the Right
Doesn't Want You to Know About Taxes, Jobs and Corporate America. Drop him an email or follow him on Twitter.
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