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Correcting the Abysmal 'New York Times' Coverage of Occupy Wall Street
Allison Kilkenny on September 26, 2011 - Nation

Over the weekend, my inbox exploded with angry messages from people who had just read this New York Times article (though it reads more like an op-ed) about the Occupy Wall Street protest. Ginia Bellafante gives a devastating account of the event's attendees, depicting them as scatterbrained, sometimes borderline-psychotic transients.

Bellafante, who is not a reporter but a columnist for the Times, offered a representation of the protesters that is as muddled as the amalgam of activists' motives she presents in the span of the article. She first claims a Joni Mitchell lookalike named Zuni Tikka is a "default ambassador" of the movement. In one of the following paragraphs, she then describes the protest as "leaderless." Either the people at Zuccotti Park have official leadership or they don't (they don't, by the way). So either Tikka is an official spokesperson who warrants first-paragraph favorability, or Bellafante's own biases persuaded her to put the kooky girl dancing around in her underwear in the spotlight.

The more serious aspect of the protestthe "scores of arrests" that occurred over the weekend including the arrests of more than eighty people, several of whom the police first penned and then macedis offered as an aside in Bellafante's article (she doesn't mention the macing at all). By the way, none of the young women in the following video are in their underwear.



Bellafante goes on to (rightfully) wonder why the response to the widening class divide hasn't come in the form of a more serious movement. A proposed hypothesis never emerges, even though Bellafante almost stumbles across one when she describes a young man who is stopping by only in "fits and spurts" because his mother fears he'll be tear-gassed by the police. It sounds as though Bellafante is on the cusp of critiquing the US police state that has completely terrified the activist community into submission, but then she retreats.

The main bone the article wishes to pick is the scattered ideologies of the attendeesa fair point. However, Bellafante never attempts to do the job of real journalism here, which is to use this slice of life to help her readers understand the world around them. Instead, she comes across as a rubbernecker leering at a particularly bloody wreck.

Okay, she managed to interview a few strange and inarticulate individuals, but I could do that at any protest. No meeting of this kind is a monolith, and you can always find a couple people who are there simply because the cause is fashionable, or their friends dragged them along, or they're tripping balls and just stumbled across the thing and are desperately looking for a safe place to ride out the terrible journey. Gawking at these people doesn't help us understand, say, why a million other people haven't joined them in the streets, demanding an end to the corporate hijacking of their country.

Now, in Bellafante's defense, the protesters described in her article do exist, and they're super-loud and eye-catching. But in my experience, the quiet people who mingle on the edge of the crowd are the ones you want to speak tothe sort of half-in activist who will probably have to go back to work on Monday, if they're lucky enough to have a job.

I'm reminded of Matthew Prowless, a 40-year-old father of two, who attended the Occupy Wall Street protest, and who is as unassuming of a man as I've ever seennot someone who would have caught Bellafante's gaze. He wore a baseball cap and stood with his friend by a group of black bloc protesters, whom Matthew was eyeing curiously like they were exotic fish in an aquarium.

When I spoke with him, Matthew called the louder aspects of the protest (the black bloc, the "protest yoga," etc.) distractions from the far more serious cause.

"My home has been seized, I'm unemployed, there's no job prospects on the horizon. I have two children and I don't see a future for them. This is the only way I see to effect change. This isn't a progressive issue. This is an American issue. We're here to take our country back from the corporations," he said, adding he fears for the future of the United States where corporations can now spend unlimited, anonymous dollars to elect the candidates of their choices. After the protest ended for the day, Matthew couldn't occupy the park because he had to go care for his two children.

I also spoke with a young man named Kevin Stanley, a nurse who made the trek to the protest filled with optimism and left feeling simultaneously elated and disappointed. He was alarmed that the protesters (he calls them "kids") are held up in Zuccotti Park without the presence of medical professionals. During his time there, he treated three cases of hypothermia and a person going through withdrawal as well as infected wounds from not being able to care for open blisters.

It's a shame Bellafante didn't run into Kevin, because they actually agree on the poor organization aspects of the event.

"Many times the communal nature of things will get the actual task done quickly, but all the competing views with no defined hierarchy just reminds me of Lord of The Flies," he said.

For every batshit-crazy quote Bellafante presents, I can match it with a calm, articulate response from another attendee. I guarantee that. However, that's not the point. I'm not a believer in the "perfect objectivity" goal for journalists because it's impossible to ever obtain. Human beings inherently possess prejudices and biases that blind them to aspects of reality. Bellafante is less likely to see the Matthews. I'm less likely to see the black bloc.

Yet we risk much when we traipse into this false-equivalency territory. The two approaches I've described above aren't given level platforms in our society. Bellafante reaches a far, far larger readership, and the ones who dismiss protesters always do because their corporate overlords love depicting protesters as flower-waving, stoned-out-of-their-gourds hippies. If you think those are the only people on your side, why get off the couch at all?

This rubbernecking style of journalism is particularly dangerous right now because it amounts to criticizing a burning house for the color of its curtains. The curtains might be brash, ostentatious and completely unhelpful in maintaining the overall flow of the home's ambiance, but it's perhaps not the most pertinent detail of the moment. Here's a more pressing question: Why are the people Bellafante described in her article the ones left behind?

The teargas aside starts to tap into something important: how the police state and its domestic weaponry and bureaucratic assist with the needs for permits to do anything in protests have successfully crippled the activism community. Activists are afraid. You can smell it in their midst. They talk about the constant presence of agent provocateurs and undercovers at every protest. They share battle stories of being abused by the police, like being tazed or held so long in makeshift police pens that they had to defecate in their clothing. And these are the brave ones that still show up to the protests.

It's not mere paranoia. We know for a fact that the FBI monitors activism groups, and this practice reached a frenzied level during the Bush administration years. These intimidation practices continue under President Obama in the form of raids.

Now, imagine you have a job you can't get time off from, or kids. Are you going to risk that precious job security, or the safety of your children, to go protest in an event that mayif you're really luckyget some dismissive coverage in the New York Times?

There was a time when individuals cast aside those fears because they had union-protected jobs, and unions organized events with tens of thousands of confidence-inspiring fellow members in attendance. While those events do still occur, they're a rarity these days as union membership dwindles, the privatization of the country continues and the establishment media still don't grant them fair coverage when they do occur. Not one of the young people I spoke to at the Occupy Wall Street protest said they were union members. Bellafante is right in the sense that they are scattered, lost and leaderless, but she never explores why that's the case.

While the left loses the valuable organizational mechanism of unions, the right has gained corporate masters like the Koch brothers to disseminate millions of dollars into astroturfing campaigns to organize and destroy on their behalf. While the left makes signs, the right has already deployed troupes to scream at town hall events.

These are the kinds of massive oppositional forces activists find themselves facing these days: an incredibly oppressive police state and a corporate cash monster bearing down on them from the right. Meanwhile, their union support army is either in retreat or preoccupied fighting other battles on other fronts in Wisconsin or Ohio, or one of the other forty-eight states where anti-union legislation was introduced this year courtesy of ALEC, a front group that serves as proxy for corporate interests.

Instead of bemoaning the fact that protesters haven't arrived in matching uniforms with a coherent PowerPoint presentation, these are the issues we should be addressing. Of course the majority of Zuccotti Park occupiers are young, brash and lost. They'd have to be to do something like this, and risk getting hypothermia for the chance to be ignored and belittled by the media. Young people are always the first ones willing to risk comfort and security for the romantic vision of a better tomorrow.

No, a movement can't be supported on a shaky foundation, nor do I expect journalists to also serve as activism advisers, but Bellafante's piece does nothing to help us understand why Zuni Tikka is the last woman standing.
I saw that the Pilot's Union was there today in solidarity and because they are also in dispute with the airline owners. Plus I hear that some of the police are refusing to do duty there. Up to 100 of them.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 2011

A Few Seconds Till Midnight?


[Image: wail+st.jpg]




Watching what is happening from afar I see that even the main stream media is finding it hard to continue ignoring "Occupy Wall Street" and this got me wondering why? Iconic photos such as the one to the left will sellnewspapers but that may not be the entire reason. Usually the media is silent on protests against the empire.

Texanna via Penny may have an answer.

"This may be a way of redirecting the anger from the real issues that brought the protesters together. By channeling the anger toward policemen, people will start calling the police the problem, the police will hate the protesters for hating them, and eyes turn away from the financial terrorism that is causing all this."


Aside from the illegitimate arrests and violence against the 'occupiers,' the biggest problem is that there needs to be more protesters in the street.Several hundred thousand would be more like it. Peaceful and loud.

Hats off to those who are there! Wall Street just wants this gathering to go away so they can get back to their theft as usual but with the protests spreading to more cities the fat lady is far from singing.

Peter with a comment also at Penny's makes a good point.
"For me, the huge video cam presence is the real story. Never before has this police brutality story been witnessed with such clarity. This is revolutionary!
People need to have info REPEATEDLY pounded into their thick skulls That's how the Viet Nam war was presented to the people and the people turned against it. Every night the teee veee showed the atrocities of war and people FINALLY got it.
Likewise police brutality must now be REPEATEDLY pounded into the peoples awareness. If the MSM doesn't do this then the peoples(video cam) media must do it!"
[Image: wallstreetprotest.jpg]

Back in January Hillary Clinton had this to say about the Egyptian street protests but it seems that it will not always be applied here in the land of the bill of rights.
"We support the fundamental right of expression and assembly for all people and we urge that all parties exercise restraint and refrain from violence."
Hillary has always been such a liar.

One question that has been asked for a long time is that if the SHTF will the police and military have a large enough number of those who refuse to violently attack their fellow Americans who are protesting against the machine and so turn the tide towards the people. We don't know if the report of Over 100 NYPD Officers Refuse to Work in Support of Occupy Wall Street Movement is true but it would be a big step in the right direction. We'll see.

We also don't know if it's seven minutes to midnight or perhaps it's more like 15 seconds till. What we do know is that the show is speeding up and it's always up to us as a collective to stop the hands before the whole thing blows up. If the protests continue and start having an effect, behind the scenes a decision may be made for a diversion. We'll see about that too ... and maybe soon.
Occupy Wall Street: Inquiries launched as new pepper-spray video emerges


NYPD officer Anthony Bologna faces two investigations as video emerges of a second pepper-spray incident


By Robert Mackey and Karen McVeigh


September 29, 2011 "The Guardian" -- The senior New York police officer at the centre of the Occupy Wall Street pepper spray controversy fired the gas at protesters a second time just moments later.
After new video emerged on Wednesday showing the second incident, New York police commissioner Ray Kelly told reporters that the Civilian Complaint Review Board would investigate the officer, deputy inspector Anthony Bologna.


The New York Police Department's own internal affairs bureau also plans to open an investigation, the New York Times reports.


The investigations were announced after bloggers and activists drew attention to video posted online which showed that Bologna fired pepper spray on two occasions last Saturday as officers broke up a protest march through Greenwich Village.


The first footage shows him targeting a group of female protesters who were being penned in by officers on East 12th Street. The latest video shows another incident on the same street, shortly after the first, when he fired more pepper spray towards at least one of the same women, after they were recovering from the first incident.


On both occasions, the officer appears to have violated New York Police Department guidance on how the gas should be used.


In response to the Guardian's appeal to readers to help us reconstruct Saturday's events on East 12th Street, one protester wrote to say that she was sprayed with gas by the officer both times.


The protester, Ashley Drzymala, also sent us a link to this raw footage, which shows - at about the 3:56 mark - the officer spraying protesters as they retreated from the area of West 12th Street where he had used the gas on another group about a minute earlier.


More at the link:


http://www.informationclearinghouse.info...e29259.htm
Anthem For Wall Street (And Worldwide) Protests

[COLOR=#888888][FONT=Helvetica Neue]Posted on September 29, 2011 by WashingtonsBlog

(See below for notes on the music.)

The king's men
Have betrayed us
Tricked us out of
Our homes
No one else
Gonna save us
We must stand up
On our own
Divided
We've been conquered
For too long
We've played their game
United
We'd be invincible
So rise up
And shake off our chains
We've been fooled
By the banker
The sheriff
And the priest
We've been ruled
By the con man
The scoundrel
And the thief
Divided
We've been conquered
For too long
We've played their game
United
We'd be invincible
So rise up
And shake off our chains
Feel
The power
Streaming out
Through our souls [Note: if you're an atheist, think of it as our source of courage, or just change the last word to "soles"]
Now's
The hour
Come together
And let's roll
Here we are
In the meadow
It is time to
Decide
From afar
The army's nearing
Are we slaves or
Will we fight?
Divided
We've been conquered
For too long
We've played their game
United
We'd be invincible
So rise up
And shake off our chains
Feel
The power
Streaming out
Through our souls
Now's
The hour
Come together
And let's roll




Words and music Copyright © 2010-2011 George Washington/Washington's Blog.
Notes on the music: The drums are similar to U2′s "Bloody Sunday", the guitar similar to U2 in some parts and the main riff from Little Steven's "Freedom" in other parts, and there are elements of Simple Minds' "Sanctify Yourself" or "[url=http://www.google.com/search?q=youtube+"Don't+You+Forget+About+Me"&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a]Don't You Forget About Me[/url]" and I know, I know Led Zeppelin's "
By Matt Sledge
Huffington Post, September 29, 2011

New York City labor unions are preparing to back the unwieldy grassroots band occupying a park in Lower Manhattan, in a move that could mark a significant shift in the tenor of the anti-corporate Occupy Wall Street protests and send thousands more people into the streets.
The Transit Workers Union Local 100's executive committee, which oversees the organization of subway and bus workers, voted unanimously Wednesday night to support the protesters. The union claims 38,000 members. A union-backed organizing coalition, which orchestrated a large May 12 march on Wall Street before the protests, is planning a rally on Oct. 5 in explicit support. And SEIU 32BJ, which represents doormen, security guards and maintenance workers, is using its Oct. 12 rally to express solidarity with the Zuccotti Park protesters.
"The call went out over a month ago, before actually the occupancy of Wall Street took place," said 32BJ spokesman Kwame Patterson. Now, he added, "we're all coming under one cause, even though we have our different initiatives."
The protests found their genesis not in any of the established New York social action groups but with a call put out by a Canadian magazine. While other major unions beyond the TWU have yet to officially endorse Occupy Wall Street, more backing could come as early as this week. Both the New York Metro Area Postal Union and SEIU 1199 are considering such moves.
Jackie DiSalvo, an Occupy Wall Street organizer, says a series of public actions aimed at expressing support for labor -- from disrupting a Sotheby's auction on Sept. 22 to attending a postal workers' rally on Tuesday -- have convinced unions that the two groups' struggles are one.
"Labor is up against the wall and they're begging us to help them," said DiSalvo, a retired professor at Baruch College in her late 60s who has emerged as a driving force in the effort to link up labor and the protests. DiSalvo is herself a member of the Professional Staff Congress, which represents teachers at the City University of New York.
Recent anti-labor actions like Scott Walker's in Wisconsin "really shocked the unions and moved them into militant action," DiSalvo said, and the inflammatory video of a NYPD deputy inspector pepper-spraying several protesters on Saturday also generated union sympathy.
"There's a lot of good feeling. They've made a lot of friends," said Chuck Zlatkin of the postal union.
When a band of about 100 protesters showed up at a postal workers' rally featuring Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) on Tuesday, complete with purple hair and big drums, "they went a long way towards touching people and making connections," Zlatkin observed.
If unions move to support the protests in a major way, that could mean thousands more people marching in Lower Manhattan. Thus far the protesters have not managed to come near the 10,000 or so who attended the unrelated May 12 march on Wall Street. The Strong Economy for All Coalition, which receives support from the United Federation of Teachers, the Working Families Party, plus SEIU 32BJ and 1199, previously helped put together that demonstration. Now they will be rallying for the grassroots group.
"Their fight is our fight," director Michael Kink said. "They've chosen the right targets. We also want to see a society where folks other than the top 1 percent have a chance to say how things go."
Asked if the union support could dilute the message of the Occupy Wall Street protesters -- which has itself been dismissed as incoherent -- organizer DiSalvo said the rag tag group's stance would remain unchanged.
"Occupy Wall Street will not negotiate watering down its own message," she said, union support or not.
[URL="http://october2011.org/blogs/kevin-zeese/nyc-transit-union-joins-occupy-wall-street"]
http://october2011.org/blogs/kevin-zeese...all-street[/URL]
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eptember 29, 2011 - TAMPA, FL - Do you want to know what some police officers are really talking about regarding the protestors at the Occupy Wall Street rally? At officer.com, a police officer in the forum by the name of crass_cop started a thread entitled, "Dirty stinky hippies in NY dont like how theyre treated when they azz up..".

This is crass_cop's initial post:
Theres a few videos on the link. man I LOVE how OC works wonders at clearing a sidewalk!!!

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/0...1_lnk3%7C98743

Tensions are rising at the Occupy Wall Street protest, currently in its eighth day, as organizers for the protest claim that 80 have been arrested. Eyewitness accounts report that "dozens" have been arrested. Police would not confirm the exact number. Videos and eyewitness accounts show violent clashing between protesters and the police.

WNYC reports that "of the dozens arrested, most were for disorderly conduct, obstructing vehicular and pedestrian traffic, resisting arrest and, in one case, assaulting a police officer, the police said."

The skirmish escalated in Union Square Saturday afternoon, as Twitter users report a huge influx of police officers. This video, below, appears to show female protesters being penned and maced by police officers:
JasperST added, "I'd love to see fire hoses employed, it would clean them up and clear the streets and sidewalks for traffic."

Crass_cop: "Yeah...I love how the chick just falls to her knees and starts screaming!"

Reils49: "I thought that NYPD Lt. did a nice takedown on that kid in the orange shirt."

Gunslash: "Mace isn't that bad! I once took a load in the face from my partner, hardly put me out. We had a talk later though, I told him to warn me next time he pulls out and starts spraying."

Danno2399: "I love how these videos show absolutley nothing of what happened just the a group of cops getting the situation under control. But hey I work in lower Manhattan and my thing is this I have to get to work, you want to protest for an injustice you percieve I cant and won't stop you that's your right as an American but you don't have the right to cause possible dangers to pedestrians vehicular traffic and the Police Officers who have to be there to make sure you don't hurt yourself or others stand where your told don't get in anyones way and you'll be fine."


EmmaPeel: "Fricken communists. Couldn't happen to a nicer bunch."

Options_open: "They seem to be protesting against.... well, everything. At one point they were chanting about unnecessary government spending. I found it ironic considering myself and probably a hundred other officers there because of them were on overtime. ChaChing! Please keep protesting... I could use the money!!"

Big_Will: "I got 14 hours cash money off those savages. Hopefully they can keep it going for a few more weeks my gas guzzling SUV needs new tires."

Click here to read the entire thread before it gets pulled from their website.
[video]http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/44710536#44710536[/video]