Occupy Oakland Shuts Downtown, Port Areas

Judith Scherr
Inter Press Service / News Report
Published: Friday 4 November 2011
“Throughout the day, various groups snaked around the city, ending at Oscar Grant Plaza. Community college students participated in one of those marches.”
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The early morning sun bounced off of the 150 or so multicolored tents that crowded into the re-populated Oscar Grant Plaza Wednesday, just one week and one day after police raided the Occupy Oakland camp and evicted its occupants using tear gas, batons and possibly rubber bullets.

By 9 a.m., a crowd of more than 1,000 had claimed the busy intersection near the plaza, halting the flow of traffic in the center of the city. A banner was strung across the intersection, proclaiming death to capitalism.

“Strike, occupy, shut them down, Oakland is the people’s town,” they chanted.

Towards evening, the crowd grew and thousands of people - reported variously between 4,500 and 15,000 - marched to the Port of Oakland, making it virtually impossible for dock workers and truckers to get to work, had they wanted to do so. Port Director Omar Benjamin announced that the port had been shut down.

Occupy Oakland’s general assembly, in a meeting of around 1,600 people, decided just last Thursday to attempt a General Strike. Skeptics said they should have waited longer to plan better. But people were so angered by the police action initially supported by the mayor – particularly in light of the Iraq veteran whose skull was fractured by a projectile thought by many to be a police tear-gas canister - that they did not want to delay.

While unions couldn’t formally endorse the day as they might a strike against the bosses, many did encourage workers to take vacation or furlough days and participate.

The Oakland Education Association supported the action and turned out in force. Michele Espino and Mitchell Singsheim teach at East Oakland’s Castlemont High. Teachers are overworked and underpaid, Espino said, crediting the underfunding of education.

Singsheim noted that, “We don’t have a single computer in our school.” And that’s where the digital divide and the 99 percent comes in: “You are extending the inequities that are in our country,” he said.

Postal workers, threatened with severe cuts, were also on hand. “The working class people are under attack,” said postal worker Jose Carlos. “I see this movement representing what is happening in this society.”

Service Employees International Union member Gino Long works at Highland Hospital, where they’re looking at outsourcing his unit. Gerald Baxter, a subway worker and member of SEIU said the strike would educate the 99 percent.

“The one percent (of wealthiest U.S. citizens) already knows what’s going on,” he said. “A lot of the 99 percent have had a Jedi mind trip played on them and they don’t really understand and I believe that this is an opportunity for education.”

Some 200 city workers, part of SEIU, took the day off. One, who declined to give her name, said she sees herself part of the 99 percent, as her department is shrinking. “City services are going away,” she said. “The system is not working.” She added that she had some concern with protesters occupying public space.

Throughout the day, various groups snaked around the city, ending at Oscar Grant Plaza. Community college students participated in one of those marches.

Frederick Watson is an unusual community college student. He’s 58 years old and has been away from school for 40 years. He’s in a special program called Bridge, where students study basic skills they may have forgotten. Eliminating the entire program is under discussion. Learning “gives me something to be proud of,” he said.

One of the main themes of the day, given the harsh police response to the occupation, was the general behavior of police in its role defending the one percent.

“Oakland is demonstrating to occupy activists everywhere that the 99 percent must say no to police violence, no to gang injunctions, no to the violence of the prison-industrial complex,” said Angela Davis, former member of the Black Panther Party and retired UC Santa Cruz professor, speaking at one of the rallies.

“Economic justice includes freedom from police aggression,” she said. “Economic justice includes freedom from racist violence.”

Kenneth Barker, an African American high school freshman, made a similar point, in a more personal way. He said he gets good grades and loves poetry, but is stereotyped by police.

“I don’t appreciate when I’m walking down the street when I get harassed by police because of the color of my skin,” he said.

There were separate marches to the Plaza for families with children: “Too little to fail,” said one of their signs. Disabled people, facing severe cuts in funding for their home health-care assistants, also marched separately to the nearby state building - the state is responsible for the funding they may lose - where they blocked the doors.

The day was mainly peaceful, however, some people reportedly smashed bank windows and windows at a Whole Foods store, where it had been announced that management would not permit employee absences to go to General Strike events.

Media is reporting that late Wednesday night, a breakaway group broke into a downtown Oakland building that formerly housed homeless services and that there were arrests, although the number could not be independently confirmed by deadline.

It was reported that in other cases, protesters were able to dissuade individuals from vandalizing property.

Oakland Police kept pretty much out of sight most of the day.

Most marches to the banks in the area – there were several that day – took on a carnival atmosphere with marching bands, giant puppets and lively chants such as “we are the 99 percent – shut down the one percent” and actions that included taping information pieces to walls outside of banks that mocked Wells Fargo for its support for militarism and private prisons.

“The banks have been bailed out, but we never got our bailout,” said Yvette Felarco speaking to a group of protesters at the Wells Fargo Bank. “We’ve lost homes; we’ve lost jobs; police have attacked innocent black and brown people on our streets. We’re fighting to keep our schools open. This is our day today and we’re not going anywhere.”

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15 comments on "Occupy Oakland Shuts Downtown, Port Areas"

IRIRDo ahqerhcragsi

You should note that the aictrle does not even mention the assault on Scott Olsen, Kayvan Sabeghi, Scott Campbell and others. So it is not exactly an objective piece of journalism. As for negotiating, I am not opposed to that but many people are and I doubt that will change. More importantly, the point of the camp is to establish a semi-permanent protest against the system and doing so in public, visible and even illegal locations is a form of civil disobedience. You should note that many of the problems blamed on OO existed all along and have only been exposed by OO. Many homeless people who were getting services in the camp are now just left on their own. I don't see the city running around to help them.Finally, I will delete both of these comments shortly as the About page is not meant for a discussion and I always hate it when blogs allow comments there. I already deleted some comments here and I just have not figured out yet how to close comments on this page. Feel free to comment elsewhere.

halbhh

November 04, 2011 8:00pm

What wins in protests is numbers, having hundreds of thousands show up, more than once.

Big numbers only follow big causes, like ending wars, ending racism, big stuff.

So the real challenge for the occupy group is to think up a truly big cause, near the level of ending wars....

Speaking of which....

Jimmy Kelly

November 04, 2011 8:00pm

After 12 hours watching the OAKupiers free the streets we saw a new idea being born. We do not have to listen to traditional channels. there were tens of thousands organized inless than one week in the largest protest against big money in our lifetime. These were young people in their 20's and 30's lining up to stop international commerce. The bemoaning elected officials and the amassed police were powerless to stop the people from claming a new era. Eleven years of war, 20% under-unemployment and cuts to education and now social security? Maybe the dirty dozen plotting to make us all Athenians ought to come to Oakland. Capitalism without regulation-be it Glass-Seagall, NAFTA, or Socaled "Free"trade has mortgaged the youth and they are fighting back. KUDOS! Bernie Sanders Tells it like it IS!!!

Matthew Jacobs

November 07, 2011 8:19am

Jimmy.
These were young people in their 20's and 30's lining up to stop international commerce.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jimmy you're talking about peoples jobs.

halbhh

November 04, 2011 7:57pm

Throwing anything or setting any fires is the wrong language, and will not communicate.

Joshua Aasgaard

November 04, 2011 6:14pm

We could work for something even better. http://www.sacredeconomics.com/ Take a look. We don't have to fight the battles of the past or adhere to ISMs that have failed us all for too too long. Change is in the air. Let's make a difference this time. Clinton/Bush/Obama's generation failed. It's time for a better way. Of course, the Goldman Sachs criminals should see jail time. But we can let go of that past too if we start a new paradigm, a new way of living. It's possible, and it's happening on small scales in intentional communities all over the country and throughout Europe and parts of India, Indonesia, Thailand, Australia, and New Zealand. We can do better. Others have before us. Now, let's make something sustainable for our country, for our world, for our planet.

Matthew Jacobs

November 07, 2011 8:29am

Once I get past Your Flowery Rhetoric I find no there there. Are you purposing turning the Country of 320 Million people into a Commune or are you setting us up for The Brave New World.
So fill in the blanks if you can "a new way of living"

rozgnatt

November 04, 2011 1:32pm

Well, yes, we do want a socialist society - democracy is a social construct, and we'd like to have some democracy here...

friendjudy

November 04, 2011 12:44pm

I am so proud of all the Oaklanders who show up for these demonstrations. As a former demonstrator and arrestee from the '60s I have been hoping for many years that this would happen.

Kevin Boston

November 04, 2011 11:58am

Occupy Movement-- Shut Down ALL THE PORTS!!! NO MORE IMPORTS, YOU WANT IT, MAKE IT HERE IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA!!

Matthew Jacobs

November 07, 2011 8:44am

Lots of Smoke and Heat on these pages but...... Not Much Light

Matthew Jacobs

November 07, 2011 8:43am

Oh..... If I Only Had A Brain!!!!!!!

bionicknight

November 04, 2011 11:24am

HEY 99%! Are you angry? Use it!We have POWER! “Buying Power.” And, it’s about time we used it. Here’s how.STOP BUYING THINGS. STOP BUYING…EVERYTHING.WE CAN INSTANTLY STOP THE FLOW OF BILLIONS OF DOLLARS.STRANGLE THE COMPANIES THAT ARE KILLING US!We want a revolution, and this is how to force it.We want companies to hire us, politicians to vote for us, and this is how to force it.We have an army of millions and millions and millions of people! Let’s combine the power that we all have. VOTE, by NOT spending.Stop buying as much as you can. Stop buying from ALL of the big corporations, retailers and banks; Wal-Mart, Walgreen’s, CVS, Rite Aid, Kroger, Costco, Target, Home Depot, Best Buy, Sears, Lowe’s, Supervalu, Procter

Traveler123

November 04, 2011 11:24am

Don't get too carried away, Oakland. Shutting down capitalism isn't in anyone's best interest. We don't want to make the rich poor. We don't want a totally socialistic society. We want a mix. We want decent wages and a fair shake for everyone. We only want to REGULATE capitalism so that it succeeds without SCREWING the 99%. That's all America wants. A fair mix. The 1% can be rich and have their mansions, caviar, diamonds, several cars, etc. But they can't have shiploads of cash that belongs to everyone else. And they can't lie to us about where our money is, while stealing from us. We want good, responsible leadership, not sneaking little liars and thieves.