More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Richard (RJ) Eskow

GET UPDATES FROM Richard (RJ) Eskow
 

State of Siege USA: Why Would They Target #Occupy Now?

Posted: 11/15/11 07:47 PM ET

Suddenly the Occupy movement is under siege everywhere. There's been a wave of simultaneous, seemingly coordinated clampdowns on peaceful demonstrators in cities all across the country. Why now?

It could be nothing more than one heck of a coast-to-coast coincidence, at least theoretically speaking. But there are indications that this might have been at least partially planned and coordinated at a national level.

Either way the timing's very interesting -- and, for some people, very convenient. The nation's expecting a deficit package from the undemocratic super committee, anticipating another possible free trade deal, and waiting to see whether Wall Street will go unpunished for its foreclosure crime wave. All that makes this a very good time for dissident voices to suddenly disappear.

Unfortunately for them, it's not going to be that easy.

The Ides of November

Occupy Oakland became famous after the brutal police suppression that led to the wounding of Scott Olsen, the Iraq war veteran. And Occupy Wall Street is the flagship site, the Tahrir Square of the new movement. That makes them high-value targets.

This week the Oakland location was struck first, followed by the blow against Wall Street. Similar police crackdowns occurred in Portland, Denver, and Phoenix. Oakland Mayor Jean Quan may have let a little too much information slip when she told an interviewer that she "was recently on a conference call with 18 cities across the country who had the same situation."

The Oakland crackdown was quickly followed by Bloomberg's move against Occupy Wall Street. That one-two punch took out the two most visible occupations, and it was quickly followed by similar moves in other cities.

That led to widespread speculation that this wave of police actions was planned and executed at the national level. As Joshua Holland commented, it's unclear whether this wave of activity was "coordinated" or not.

There are a range of possibilities. This might have been a coordinated assault. Or those mayors may have only been sharing information and ideas. Or it could have been something in between.

To know the answers we'll need to know who was on the call, whether anyone participated from the Federal government (either on the call itself or in the planning process), and what was said. Whatever happened on that call -- or before and after -- there's been a lot of action all of a sudden. Doesn't it make you wonder?

Why now?

Whatever the background story is, if you're working for the 1% this is an excellent time to make the occupations vanish. Look what's coming down the pipeline:

Unrepresentative Democracy: The Congressional "Super Committee" has a deadline coming up. Everyone from the Wall Street Journal to the President of the United States are pressuring its members to come up with a deal. One of the proposals on the table would protect the tax privileges of the 1% by preserving their Bush tax cuts, and would fund that cushy deal for the rich by cutting Medicare and Medicaid while very possibly raising taxes on the middle class.

And that's the Democratic offer. What are the Republican ones like? Don't ask.

The Committee's ideas have been overwhelmingly rejected by a majority of American voters in poll after poll. But if the committee "succeeds," its agreement will be unveiled to the US public and then fast-tracked to Congress for a procedurally-rigged voted, on November 23. That's just about a week from now.

Free trade ain't free: Today President Obama attended the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit and worked his fellow leaders on behalf of the Trans-Pacific Partnership free trade accord. That accord is strongly supported by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the same large corporate interests who pushed NAFTA and other free trade agreements.

At the same time, the president of South Korea made a surprise visit to his nation's legislature to push for the Korea-U.S. Free Trade Agreement. If he's successful, that accord could be announced at any time.

These free trade agreements aren't "free," of course. There's a price to be paid, and the 99% will pay it: in jobs, stagnating wages, and a struggling economy. Politicians in both parties want to bask in the glow of any new agreement, and would like to claim these are developments worth celebrating. Voices of protest aren't in the script.

Let me call you "sweetheart": The Administration has been pressuring the Attorneys General of our largest states to accept a shamefully sweet "settlement" with Wall Street that would grant them immunity from prosecution from their well-documented mortgage crime wave, a spree that included documented cases of perjury, investor fraud, and tax evasion. Nobody would go to jail, people wrongfully evicted from their homes might receive as little as $1500 in compensation, and banks would still have the mechanisms in place (through "MERS") to do it all over again.

The Occupy movement has highlighted the legal double standard that lets Wall Street executives commit crimes over and over, and yet these sweetheart deals keep coming. Only last week Citigroup executives were allowed to pay a fine (actually, their shareholders will pay it), "admit no wrongdoing," and promise not to break the law again, for a kind of fraud for which they had they had already paid fines, admitted no wrongoing, and promised not to do it again.

Five times.

While the timing is closely held, an agreement could be announced at any time. It's easy to see how they might want to keep lower Manhattan clear of the 99% for that one.

November Again

"Whenever I find myself growing grim about the mouth; whenever it is a damp, drizzly November in my soul; whenever I find myself involuntarily pausing before coffin warehouses, and bringing up the rear of every funeral I meet .. then, I account it high time to get to sea as soon as I can."
- Herman Melville, "Moby Dick"

We're seeing the same plays being run from the same playbook, over and over again. One year ago there was another "bipartisan" panel, the President's Deficit Commission, whose proposal was scheduled to being fast-tracked through Congress by bypassing normal legislative procedure. Republicans were still holding the line on low taxes for the rich while Democrats were willing to do a deal with them, crooked bankers were getting off scott-free, and both parties were pushing job-killing trade agreements.

Plus ça change and all that. Except that this year we have the Occupy movement. And whether they're coordinated or not, a lot of people are going through a lot of trouble to take it away from us. If they expect us to go "out to sea" like a Melville character they've got another think comin'. (Besides, who can afford an ocean voyage these days?)

It's November again. But Occupy's here and it's not going away. There will be a new wave of demonstrations on November 17. You can learn more about how to participate here. Nothing clears the rainfall of the spirit like the bright light of direct action.

Citizen movements are inconvenient for the people in power, but look at it this way: Isn't it time they had a dank, drizzly November of the soul? Or at least let us have a little glimpse of the warm sun they've been keeping all to themselves? The rest of us have had more than our share of rain already.

 

Follow Richard (RJ) Eskow on Twitter: www.twitter.com/rjeskow

Suddenly the Occupy movement is under siege everywhere. There's been a wave of simultaneous, seemingly coordinated clampdowns on peaceful demonstrators in cities all across the country. Why now? It ...
Suddenly the Occupy movement is under siege everywhere. There's been a wave of simultaneous, seemingly coordinated clampdowns on peaceful demonstrators in cities all across the country. Why now? It ...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 198
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4  Next ›  Last »  (4 total)
11:21 PM on 11/17/2011
PEOPLE ARE ANGRY and they are telling you loud and clear in no uncertain terms : THINGS ARE BROKEN and not working for the majority of the people. Everything has been pushing on the middle class for so long - the dam finally broke. Now - there is the beginning of the global revolution .. and what simple thing did the 1% really needed to do? Provide healthcare, living wages and freedom to live for the majority of the people - keep a decent salary for themselves but not engage in fraud and deceptive business practices to make more than an adequate living, Ethical business practices would have kept the majority of America happy and our financial markets sound ... but NO! Now people have to fight ... and when you have nothing to lose ... well, what do you expect?
10:12 AM on 11/17/2011
Maybe the Occupy folks need to look and sound more like the tea baggers to be left alone. It is only the cry of the selfish right in this country that is given credence as a movement, and as having political positions that need to be addressed. we are such a lost country.
11:06 PM on 11/16/2011
They will be back.

If things don't improve they will be back and maybe not as peaceful.
People without jobs who want to work and are angry and disgusted AND suffering will not be held back indefinitely.

BTW....this is a protest movement of people who WANT to work or are underemployed and is NOT a movement of lazy welfare types.

--------------------------------------
The problem for those in power (politicians and oligarchs) is that the great recession (or whatever you want to call it) has gone on too long.

If there had been returning prosperity or even decent economic conditions, most of the people would have forgotten the worst abuses of Wall Street, banks, and politicians.

But....BUT.....the economy has gone downhill for most Americans.
There is too much suffering and anger AND Wall Streeters, banksters, and politicians haven't done much to help.

Things are getting worse....and ordinary people do NOT forget who did it to them and won't forget until things get better.

Beware 1%.....your greed will make the U.S. highly unstable.
And then come the consequences.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cecelia Nunn Haack
06:42 PM on 11/16/2011
Looking forward to Saturday...OWS, Occupy Portland, Occupy Washington and better yet, Occupy Congress. We must never forget we are the 99 percent -- our voices count.
photo
Lunamoth
Already against the next man-made disaster
10:55 PM on 11/16/2011
Those Congresspersons and Representatives are to represent us. Are they?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
maigrey
No GUT no glory!
05:22 AM on 11/17/2011
They all seem to be self-serving. Except Bernie Saunders.
But then I'm a complete cynic.
06:29 PM on 11/16/2011
Sigh.. you all do not get it. This is out of the Government's play book. 1. Start a movement that appears to be against it. 2. Make martyrs of some people. 3. Attack the movement through local governments. 4. Get the movement to increase efforts which will endanger society and show how this harms our freedom.. 5. Pass laws that will restrict people to keep movements like this from happening. WHICH in reality is restricting the whole population. WHICH is what the elitists want and keeps the general population down. AN old saying, follow the money...do it for follow the power. OWS points back to..... (you figure it out) This happened after Oklahoma bombing where search warrants are no longer needed. This occurred after Homeland Security came about where they can hold people without just cause, arrest people for any reason, formed TSA that is above the law, created restriction of movement in America..(TSA is searching vehicles on roads). Solution..get the bad people out of office and lets have a real democracy instead of letting government tell us what to do. Enforce the laws on the government "leaders" instead of creating this elitist group like we have now. Enforce the laws on all equally instead of preferential treatment like Citi. We already have the laws.. just no one has the bravery to enforce them against the elitist. But OWS is a plan. It is only going to help those in charge.
photo
Ender Wiggin
All Hail Discordia!
09:25 PM on 11/16/2011
which is still better than your alternative of "sod off to the couch, since it's all rigged anyway". There's a millions reasons why something won't work, or why someone else should fix it. Only YOU can choose to stand up for yourself. If you feel OWS doesn't represent your voice, then head down to your local occupation and take a turn at the People's Mic.
11:09 PM on 11/16/2011
If things get BAD enough.....you will see that too many of us are after the politicians.....
You won't be able to hold us back.

I love how some toadies tell us it is always impossible, yada, yada, yada.....

We would still be an English colony if everybody was a toadie of the then current government.
Remember that.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
maigrey
No GUT no glory!
05:26 AM on 11/17/2011
Absolutely loved that book, in reference to your moniker.
Thanks for standing up.
09:28 PM on 11/16/2011
wtf are you talking about? the government had no part in starting this movement so the whole basis of your argument is bs
05:29 PM on 11/16/2011
The timing does seem at least "suspicious," but characterizing the demonstrators as "peaceful" is at least debateable. Rush Limbaugh, of course, has his own "theory" concerning the crackdown. He argues that the crackdown occurred when it became clear that public sentiment was turning against the protests, even going so far as to suggest that the call to the mayors may have come from David Axelrod. I can't see any evidence for such a claim, but evidence for competing theories is similarly lacking. It's all conjecture at the moment. Perhaps we'll find out more in the weeks ahead.
11:10 PM on 11/16/2011
The OWS movement is basically peaceful.

But a few rotten apples spoil it at times.

Even the mostly peaceful tea baggers have had rabble rousers causing trouble.
11:43 PM on 11/16/2011
Certainly, it started peacefully enough. Did the succeeding waves of protestors who joined in have the same goals and ideals? My impression is that they didn't, but the media coverage has likely been slanted, with left-leaning outlets emphasizing the positives and right-leaning outlets emphasizing the negatives. It's difficult to make a final judgment. Protestors, by their very nature, are expected to be "passionate" in their views. And passions can overflow at times.
photo
intolleft
ObamaCare...getting you shovel ready
09:43 AM on 11/17/2011
Yea....where?
04:44 PM on 11/16/2011
Mr. Eskow has hit the mark on all points. This should be required reading for everyone.

Perhaps it is time for the OWS protesters to set their sights on occupying Washington, as Senators and Congressmen. Much education of the electorate is still required, but they have started the necessary discussions. The banksters and multi-national corporate bullies will not relinquish control except if their paid lap dogs are run out of office by the electorate.
photo
SamSeven
You're either with Humanity or you're not.
01:18 PM on 11/16/2011
I find it interesting how all these major cities across Canada and US clamped down on the OWS simultaneously. It means that We, the people, need to come back ten fold. Camp at the politicans house. Camp at the Chief of police's house -- Occupy Everywhere!!
10:55 AM on 11/21/2011
So I can come and set up camp in your front yard. Thanks this will save me money when I ever decide to take a vacation.
photo
SamSeven
You're either with Humanity or you're not.
01:16 PM on 11/16/2011
The Hyprocrisy of the Western world is truly amazing. The Western governments cheered on Tahir Square with their fight for democracy. YET when the OWS finally hits these North American shores, the Establishment is doing it's best to shut it up.

The Establishment may try to put their finger to whole up the dam; however no way will they stop the momentum. The more they push us the more WE need to Push Back.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robert SF
02:03 PM on 11/16/2011
There's a persistent belief among Americans that they live the best lives possible on Earth and that people in places like Egypt are ground into the dirt. This of course is not true. Certainly Egypt has a lower GDP/capita than the US; however, its cost of living is also lower. Just like us, Egyptians live indoors and have running water. Our youth unemployment is equal to that of Egypt's as well.
02:58 PM on 11/16/2011
Sure, go talk to some Egyptian women and see how their quality of life compares.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
edejan
12:48 PM on 11/16/2011
I think OWS is the 99% giving the politicians "one last chance" to turn the boat around and start working for the 99% again. The politicians are blowing it. They are taking the last little bit of good will the 99% are holding for them and they are destroying it. I only pray that OWS continues and grows until we root out the corruption in our system. If it fails, the future for out country and for our young people will be very, very bleak. OWS!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
inmyhumbleopinion
Vote third party.
12:08 PM on 11/16/2011
I saw one report last night in which the police are pulling down the Occupy tent cities. So one protester essentially said, "fine. We'll stay here in shifts. We don't have to camp out all day, just have a presence all day." I think that's a great strategy because there's nothing the police can do about peaceful assembly without violating the law.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DK in MS
Reinstate Glass-Steagall
11:59 AM on 11/16/2011
Why now? The election season is over and so they have about a 8 month window in which they can oppress the masses without any general push-back or political fallout.

We can thank the 24 hour news cycles and shrinking attention spans.
11:12 PM on 11/16/2011
The ONLY thing that will shut up the "protesters" would be an improving economy.

If that doesn't happen, the "protesters" will be back.

OWS....others....they WILL be back.

The suffering and anger is starting to boil over.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DK in MS
Reinstate Glass-Steagall
01:57 AM on 11/17/2011
You misunderstand me. My point is that it was a political decision to wait until after the elections were over to make these draconian moves against OWS so that the people in power could avoid political damage.

I hope you did not believe that I was supporting the police actions. To be clear, I do not.
LincolnBrigader
Proud American anti-fascist
11:54 AM on 11/16/2011
Great story, RJ. I asked pretty much the same questions yesterday in a post--that it was rather curious that simultaneous "aktions" were taken in multiple cities. The info about the conference call also raises questions, as you note. Regardless, we should look at this as an opportunity to shift gears and forge a mass political movement--a mass organization--that will serve as the genesis of a new party based on economic democracy as well as political democracy. It is what our great republic sorely needs, for what we have now is not a self-sustaining economic model. So much wealth has been siphoned off from the middle class that our consumer-driven economy has been undermined. What we need is DEMAND-side economics to counterbalance the "supply-side, trickle-down" nonsense that has defrauded the middle class. We need a new party to wrest our republic from the corporatists who own both parties. We need to build a party that represents the 99% and that is not beholding to the 1%, which, as we all know, is just a euphemism for "the ruling class." We need a New Popular Front.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
den1953
The best politicians are for free!
11:46 AM on 11/16/2011
Could you imagine the shock wave that would reverberate all over the world if the OWS should organize a weekly boycott of a Wall Street Corporation and no one bought any products or services from them for a week or two? This can be done through social media and by millions of people throughout the world!
03:09 PM on 11/16/2011
probelm is- the OWS movement only claimes to represent 99% of the country, but really only represents less than 1%. A boycott by people who are already eating out of trashcans isn't a real powerful tool. Maybe if OWS and TP'er supporters would stop blindly voting for Repubs and Dems, some real change would take place.
08:59 PM on 11/16/2011
Great idea! Would like to see it take off. My frame oif mind is to buy as little as possible - only replace things that finally die on me. I live without an i-phone or cell phone, no flat screen tv, I will wait until the old one dies - no i-pad or i-pod, Advetising creates needs for things we really don't need. The thought of the super committee is so revolting - this is a democracy? As of this time, at least three attornyes-general are still holding out on the sell-out by this administration to the banksters. I live in NYC, Bloomfart needs to see how most people live.
11:11 AM on 11/16/2011
The local officials have to consider the opinion of local voters. If these voters don't like OWS and have had enough, then the officials will act. If they don't act, they will soon be ex-officials.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
OutToLunch
take me drunk, I'm home...
01:46 PM on 11/16/2011
umm...OWS are also voters. ya know, fyi...
03:09 PM on 11/16/2011
Most of which are not local to the areas they are occupying.