Protect the Person to Your Left, Occupy Oakland, #J28, PART 1

We heard about Occupy Oakland's Move-In Day and read about their plans to occupy space and convert it into a community center. I was excited to participate in their actions, for both the learning experience and as a way to start connecting better with other occupations. In reference to Occupy Oakland, we are one and the same movement. We are all occupiers. We are brothers and sisters. And solidarity sees no regional difference.

A caravan of people who wanted to participate drove up to Oakland. I went because I wanted to learn how they defend and how they move en masse. I wanted to learn what it was like to take a building, perhaps, so we could create our own community space one day. To clarify, my (and to my knowledge -our) intent was never to represent Occupy LA. I went there as an autonomous individual, to support Occupy Oakland in solidarity and action, to follow their lead, to lend my body where they needed support. As always with careful considerations- lest we impose our structure/tactic on an action whose tactics/structure has already been determined.

I say all of the following knowing that there are terrible misunderstandings of why individuals are choosing to take more revolutionary roles in the occupy movement. I say this knowing that there is controversy over 'diversity of tactics' and many do not understand that diversity of tactics is a principle recognizing personal autonomy, responsibility and the idea that we cannot internalize the language of the oppressor to control or divide a movement. I say this with the consideration that fear of PR backlash sometimes leads to broad smearing and assumptions of any who defend these controversial tactics or asign them any merit. That being said, I will include in my debrief my perceptions of the role of the black bloc on #J28, which I found to be one of the most peaceful black bloc's I've ever seen... (which isn't saying much since I didn't even know about bb three months ago).. similar to the bloc at the Long Beach Port Shutdown.

The march started out like a party. Very peaceful. A masked clad woman dropped a bag of shields on the floor. Quickly many people looked around at each other as they grappled with the idea of walking onto the scene carrying shields.. "If you pick it up, just know that you are expected to be in front", she says. She's normal, just like me. Five more people brought out barricades. The march starts with a bloc of media... cameras everywhere.. we are all excited as we set out to do exactly what was promised to the city government, the police, and the community- Reclaim Space.. take a building. Nothing could be more occupy appropriate.

The march continues without any police interference, but they are definitely aware we are on the move. Helicopters, police just waiting to form lines to control our peaceful crowd. The air is tense, and in that moment I know that our action is almost impossible. Some of the same criticisms I've seen about Move-In day cross through my mind... how they announced their intent, the inability to trust communication flow in a mass group, why waste time at a building that is already surrounded by police? In retrospect, whatever we did that day, it feels like the police always meant to mass arrest us.

By the time we arrive at the first building site, the abandoned Kaiser building, the cops have already surrounded the building. There is no hope for overtaking the police line, even though the bloc has set up the barricades and pushed down the fence. If we would have taken the building, the bloc would have been where the police were- defending the reclaimed space. They never got that chance. The police fired smoke cannisters and aimed their rubber bullet guns at particular people by pointing them out.

The march moves along past the skirmish line near the Kaiser building. There are already lines of cops ready to kettle us on many sides. We continue and make a left on Oak St. towards the second building. A riot line forms and the police begin to fire tear gas, flash grenades, smoke cannisters and paint lead tipped bullets at random everyday marchers. The bloc forms, since they were still hung up at the Kaiser building and they march slowly with the crowd, then stop. They form a defensive line to resist the police violence being inflicted upon peaceful protesters. They advance five feet, then stop. They repeat. Immediately as the bloc gets closer the police begin firing directly at the protesters. They were aiming at people running away.. If the bloc did not have their shields and barriers, their bodies would have had the dents and burn marks that their barricades had. I know, because around this time I was hit with a flash grenade. And I wish I had a shield. It hit my right shoe, exploded up my leg onto my thigh, and ricocheted onto my right elbow. It was painful, but more shocking and traumatizing than anything else. Along this time, I was a bit lost, searching for the rest of the LA occupiers who I heard had been tear gassed.

Later, in my cozy jail cell filled with Oakland, Cal and Santa Cruz occupiers -refusing bologna and eating oranges with my tear gas tasting hands- I learned that the amount of tear gas used was NOTHING compared to the previous actions. And in that moment, I wondered if you grow a tolerance.

We regrouped at Oscar Grant Plaza and licked our wounds. Treated an LA occupier who had been hit with a rubber paint bullet. Wiped our stinging faces clear of the tear gas. I did not have time to think. In half an hour we set out again to try to take the third building. We marched like we were invincible; we took streets with our power and did not apologize for it. We stuck together. We asked, "whose streets?". We were peaceful. Though we had started out with more than a thousand, we only had about six hundred people left. We marched as the police scrambled to decide a tactical plan. They kettled streets and funneled us into a courtyard in which they blocked off all four exits. People ran casually from corner to corner asking to be let out, asking to be asked to disperse, wondering if there was a way out. There wasn't. A group using barricades tried to test the thinnest line. Tear gas was fired.

On the other side of the courtyard, a group rushed the fence. A mass of people, peaceful, beautiful people run free through the green space breaking the kettle imposed upon us by the OPD. In that moment, it felt as if their actions were the only way we would remain liberated. I say remain because we are already liberated with the spirit of this revolution. Why else would they come for us? We are peaceful. Yet they are on all sides.

Our escape was the most beautiful thing I've ever seen, evading their entrapment, resisting their insistence that we must be kettled, controlled, stopped because of their 'authority'. We were once again, undeterred. And this time when we continue the march, it becomes an FTP march.

I didn't have to wonder very long at what they would do if we hadn't been able leave. The second kettle was much quicker, and the police spent less time worried about moving in their lines at a reasonable rate. We were marching, to my knowledge (since the third building was locked and inaccessible) back to Oscar Grant Plaza, when yet another police line formed. I looked to my rear, and saw another line closing in. They tightened the space to mass arrest us because we had escaped the larger courtyard earlier. A group escaped through a rod iron fence by scaling it.. another group starts for the YMCA building.. requesting for the workers there to let us in. They opened the doors.

People rush for the doors upon realizing that we are surrounded. As soon as this rush happens, the police riot line at the rear rushes in at people. Panic ensues. I try to remain calm as I realize we are probably all going to be arrested. I run away from the cops, not towards any escape.. but to be as far away from their batons as possible. There is a corner in between the steps to the YMCA and the building itself- a tiny corner with a tree. We trip over each other, herded, running, fearful of trampling one another, into that corner. They beat us anyway. We huddle, 150 people pressed into the wall of the YMCA as they beat people on the outer rim. Slowly, row by row they arrest us. At least 200 people huddled in a corner. Many around me had not been arrested before and kept repeating- "they can't arrest all of us can they?". In my head I know they can. The space is small but the crowd is thick, and eventually I find some comrades from Los Angeles. The tense situation becomes realized. We are all going to be arrested. And then, why give them the satisfaction? People decide to smoke whatever is on them, it turns into a chant fest. "We all live in a terrorist regime".. "this is a hostage situation"... "Another world is possible".
We were never given a dispersal order. We were simply notified by megaphone that we would all be arrested. Welcome to unlawful detainment.
 
My picture was taken twice. Once, in normal booking for my mugshot. Another time at the scene of the arrest before getting on the bus. It is my opinion that the first picture before getting on the bus was to compile a book on occupiers involved in the protest. I think that they have finally understood that we will not give up, and are now taking the opportunity to use these mass arrests to compile an occupier-specific database. I had also heard that before the march began, there were police with a book of pictures looking for 'leaders' to arrest before the day got started.
 


After the second kettle in which I was arrested, I cannot account for what happened in terms of people blocking some of the police buses from leaving or breaking into City Hall and vandalizing it, or burning the American Flag. I was for all intents and purposes during J28 "unarrestable" since I have pending charges in LA. But what I saw on J28, the blatant police repression, the lack of any sort of hesitation in firing on peaceful protesters, the strategic planning to use protesters as pawns to experiment with urban warfare, kettling and mass arrest.. exposing our 'freedom and democracy' for what it is- an illusion. I have no qualms about the burning of the American Flag. Whereas before I may have cringed, or wondered at the PR viability, it is clear to me that we must call and expose their actions to our fullest capabilities. If this means burning the symbol of freedom, democracy and civil rights in this country- after a day of our civil rights being assaulted, then yes. And please, this can and should be a point of diverging opinions. I see no need to argue the merits of flag burning. All i'm saying is after what I saw this day- it seems very appropriate.

To be fair the property destruction that happened at City Hall did not occur until much later that night, after the attempted liberation of three buildings, two kettles and the mass arrest of 400 people. It cannot be used to justify the mass arrest because there was no property destruction during the day. The flag burning was done by a man who apparently burns flags at almost every event he attends.

Santa Rita Jail was terrible. We were packed into holding cells 25 deep, no blankets, no phone-calls, nothing. The mayor caved to political pressure, ordered OPD to mass arrest us, and they passed the burden onto the Alameda County Sherrifs whose morning shift was pissed to say the least. I've met the PIC and it looks nothing like justice. A prison industrial complex so ingrained in our minds as discipline that it is not challenged. A system built upon our backs, surviving off of our fear and enabled by our obedience. This movement has created many different type of activists. For me, my experiences have led me to the realization that the gross injustice of my time is that I am living in a police state.

Please stay tuned for Part 2: Why Resistance? an account of the Oakland Black Bloc on #J28

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3 Comments

Sue Basko's picture

Move in to a building in use.

Nice account.  Do you know that the Kaiser Auditorium is neither unused nor vacant?  It is being used each day as a staging and storage area for the 12th Street reconstruction.  Perhaps it would have made more sense to ASK the city for a space as a community center.  Such a space was given to OWS in NYC and such a space was offered to Occupy LA.  Occupy Chicago has rented a space - an act they have been able to do without any arrests, battles, or drama.

The planned purpose of this event was to cause conflict with the police and lead to arrests.  I thought it was very dishonest of the planners not to tell people that, and not to tell them they were trying to "move in" to a building that is already occupied and in use daily.   It is "closed" due to being used for a different purpose for a while, but it is not empty, unused, unowned, or unwanted. 

 At some point, you have to decide if you want DRAMA or you want RESULTS.  Cut the drama and martyrdom and you can get results.   Acting sensibly is much less exciting but a whole lot more productive.  

Having said that, it made great television.  I rooted for the underdogs (protesters) and was happy to watch some escape the kettling.

However, if someone actually wants a community center, there are logical ways to get one, and this was not that.

do you have evidence?

You (as a lawyer) asserted the following:  "The planned purpose of this event was to cause conflict with the police and lead to arrests."

Please provide convincing evidence of this accusation.

 

F28: Demonstrate to Stop the Suppression of the Occupy Movement



No Rubber Bullets – No Beatings – No Tear Gas – No Mass Arrests


Drop all charges against the Occupiers.


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