At least one hundred US cities participated in an October 15 Global Day of Action yesterday. Each demonstration was part of a growing “Occupy” movement that was ignited by Occupy Wall Street just over four weeks ago.
A few of the cities attempted to start permanent camps, like Occupy Wall Street has successfully done in Liberty Park. But, in cities like Chicago, the police enforced a park curfew and arrested about 175 protesters who refused to leave Grant Park.
I was in New York City to cover the day of action. The day began with a march on Chase Bank in Manhattan. It was peaceful and 800-1000 people participated in the march.
From Chase Bank, the march headed to Washington Square, a site where. It stretched for at least five to six blocks. The police were noticeably overwhelmed. They had to keep traffic moving and manage a march of about a thousand people.
An Occupy Wall Street organizer maintained communication with a police sergeant. They discussed options for the march route and formed an agreement on how to move in and out of the park.

The march was kept on the sidewalk with police motorcycles riding along the curb to prevent anyone from stepping in the street. The police also walked alongside the curb to keep the protesters on the sidewalk.
Pedestrians walking in New York congregated on the corners to watch the march that was moving toward Washington Square. Many took out their cameras to take photos and video and some even cheered. “Those are the Occupy Wall Street protesters,” some said. There was an interest among bystanders that I think many protests rarely receive and that should make Occupy Wall Street proud. One woman told her kids why she had cheered: “I support them. I wish I could be with them.”
The demonstrators entered Washington Square just after noon. A general assembly was held. In the middle of the assembly, an antiwar march that had been organized on Wall Street under the banner of “Wall Street is War Street” entered the park from the east side.
Meanwhile, reports of what police called a “sit-in” at a Citibank branch near Washington Square surfaced. Twenty-three people with Citibank accounts tried to close their bank account. They were locked into the bank by Citibank security guards. The NYPD was called to arrest those locked into the bank. One woman was even outside the bank and pushed back into the bank to be arrested by NYPD.
This was not a “sit-in” but an attempt by consumers to stop using a service they no longer wished to use. However, Citibank refused to let citizens carry out this entirely legal and justified action.
By 3 pm ET, the march re-formed and took off from Washington Square to take Times Square. It marched up 6th Avenue for more than twenty blocks. Like the march to Washington Square, everyone was corralled onto the east side of the sidewalk until a group of protesters came up on the west side of the street.
White-shirted officers became agitated and scrambled over to stop the protesters moving up the west side of the street. I watched as it appeared the protesters were going to be kettled like they were on September 24 when Officer Tony Bologna pepper-sprayed the female protesters on the sidewalk. Police blocked off the sidewalk and attempted to defuse the “situation” by sending protesters to join the march on the east side. Pedestrian traffic became backed up because of the officers’ decision to move people across the street. After it appeared all the protesters had been sent across the street, police let pedestrians through. But a few blocks later another group of protesters was back on the west side marching. The police ended their futile attempt to keep a much smaller group from walking on the west side of 6th Ave.
Along the way, I noted that the police were scrambling to stand in front of any bank branches that were passed to protect the entrances from any direct actions. At the HSBC bank branch and at a Citibank, officers stood right in front of the door and prevented any “protester” from going in and out.
The march finally reached Times Square around 5:30 pm ET. There were already thousands of people waiting behind police barricades in Times Square. I walked into Times Square and was caught in a swell of pedestrian traffic. No police were around to keep the pedestrians moving. So, people were pushing their way through a mob to go north on 7th Avenue.
I managed to push my way through and get to 46th St , 7th Ave and Times Square to stand on a space right in the middle of the street across from the area where there are risers for tourists to congregate and take photos of Times Square. I was right next to the area where white-shirted officers, TARU and uniformed police were organizing the operation they had planned to arrest and control the demonstrators.
The dynamics shifted when a white-shirted officer led the march from Washington Square, which had been stopped on Broadway, down 46th St to the intersection where I was standing. The energy of the demonstrators was revitalized. A group of people in front of the T.G..I. Friday’s on the corner were excited to be joined by the marchers. It was this move by police that helped create the standoff that resulted in a few of the arrests from the night.
Police on horseback were brought in after 6 pm ET. The police wanted to re-open the street to traffic. They attempted to move the barricades. But, the protesters wanted to stand their ground. The NYPD commanded the police on horseback to gallop into the crowd to force the protesters back. Also, officers began to rush into the crowd to arbitrarily pull a few people out for arrest.
The arrests were violent. One arrest I witnessed involved a white-shirted officer putting the megaphone in the ear of a young man being arrested. With the blue-shirted officer kneeling on the back of the young man, the white-shirted officer shouted through the megaphone, “Stop resisting arrest! You’re resisting arrest! Put your hands behind your back,” as if he could physically move his hands with the officer kneeling on him.
The barricade began to shake and the police fought to keep the barricade from falling. Instantaneously, the barricades across the street where I was standing began to shake. Police scrambled over to steady those barricades.
During the arrest, I watched a horse shit on the police officer making the arrest. A surreal moment played out as the officers had a Times Square cleanup crew of African-American men, who probably barely make minimum wage, come in to sweep up the shit that was all over the intersection. Right in the middle of a scene that could have erupted into something crazy, these men in red uniforms pushed trash barrels into the intersection, put the shit in the trash can and then sauntered off to go clean some other shit somewhere else.


Following this incredibly tense moment and the surreal horse shit cleanup, I watched the police presence in the intersection increase exponentially. The officers had flexicuffs for arrests and orange netting. There were even police in riot gear. Police vans showed up and a few more police on horseback arrived. But, nothing decisive was happening. It just seemed like the police were going to wait around here for hours before calling on people to disperse. (In fact, one female officer told someone who asked her when she would be off work how long she expected to be out here and she said the police were prepared to be here until 2 am ET.)
I looked into the distance and saw police in riot gear headed down 46th St. This was after 7 pm ET. They were coming up behind the group of protesters that were on the street. The group was surrounded. A white-shirted officer got on a blue megaphone and started hollering at the crowd to empty out of the street. Some left, but a sizeable group remained at 46th and Times Square right by the barricades.

Right at 8:00 pm, the police began to move the barricades back so no protesters would be on the street. The protesters wanted to stand their ground and they pushed back. The force of the police was overwhelming and resisting the movement of barricades ultimately was a waste of energy.

The focus of the standoff now became the group in front of the T.G.I. Friday’s. They did not want to leave. The horses were right there to rush the crowd. The police presence grew and closed in on the protesters on the corner. The protesters refused to leave before the police backed down and were told numerous times over a megaphone by a white-shirted officer that they would be under arrest if they didn’t move.
Across the way, by the risers, there was still a sizable group of Occupy Wall Street protesters. The group on the corner that was being ordered to disperse wanted to join this group. A few of the demonstrators pleaded with the white-shirted officers to let them through to the other side. The group by the risers held up the megaphone they had constructed in Liberty Park.


The barricades were moved and the protesters were allowed to cross over. They were not arrested. The officer gave into the wishes of the group. It was then that I realized how powerful the movement had become. Weeks ago, if that had happened, a mass arrest would have taken place but in Times Square the police did not want to make headlines. They did not want to further energize the movement like they had with the pepper-spraying incidents and the mass arrest of over 700 demonstrators on the Brooklyn Bridge.
Add this victory to the one achieved around 6 am ET on Friday when Brookfield Properties decided it would not use the police to force Occupy Wall Street to leave for a cleaning. Add to this the fact that representatives of Mayor Michael Bloomberg have tried to meet with lead organizers of Occupy Wall Street (which the organizers have refused to do). The movement is gaining a kind of power that occupiers probably never thought they would achieve.
I left the scene just before 9 pm ET. My phone was dead. I was exhausted and needed to eat and sleep so I could upload photos and video (which will be posted soon) and properly report on what I had seen in Times Square.
Reportedly at least 74 were arrested yesterday. (And, later in the night, police forced Occupy Wall Street participants out of Washington Square, where they were attempting to launch a second site of occupation. Fourteen were arrested for refusing to disperse.)
[OccupyWallSt.org's report on October 15.]
*
The media reported Occupy Wall Street went global yesterday. The truth is Occupy Wall Street was already global and had been since it began. The organizers themselves launched an occupation action because they were inspired by what citizens in Tunisia, Egypt, Spain and Greece had done this year. They saw what they were doing as part of a global revolution that had to happen against the forces of greed and corruption in the world, which are forcing austerity measures on people in many, many countries.
Who knows where the “Occupy” movement is headed? That is the beauty of the moment. Possibilities for a better future in America are more possible now than ever before. Young people are stepping out and putting their bodies on the line all because they believe in the revitalization and reinvention of democratic society. They understand that the power has to be shifted from the few—the corporations, the political class and the richest 1%—to the many—the citizens, who should be more included in the decision-making process. They understand that citizens have to take responsibility for putting this country on the right track so that casino capitalists, greedy bankers and even war profiteers are not allowed to expand their adventurist and entrepreneurial neoliberal agenda and ventures.
Rebellion is changing the terms of the debate. The presence of people out in the street is influencing what politicians and talking heads say on news programs.
It is only the beginning. It will only continue to escalate and grow because Americans are angry, they’ve had enough and they see the system is rigged by two parties that operate in service to Wall Street, the military or the security industrial-complex, which protects the financial and ruling elites. They will deliberate over what to do about the systemic problems in this country and rebel until they think these systemic problems have been addressed.



101 Comments

thank you Kevin!
OWS bringing about justice
this is great reporting. thanks.
Great report Kevin and great broad perspective commentary.
PS:
There be citizen people action and there be citizen horse action. If they arrest that horse, I’ll go her/his bail and think it a bargain too.
“During the arrest, I watched a horse shit on the police officer making an arrest.”
Thanks for your continued excellent reporting, Kevin. I am so sorry you had to witness that horse shitting on that poor policeman. I sincerely hope you were not too emotionally distressed by that dreadful sight.
The horse was just commenting according to his first amendment rights. Can FDL afford therapy for Kevin?
OT – please excuse, but I have had to log in 9 times this morning. Anyone else? What’s the problem?
Great report, Kevin.
Minor nit: the bank is HSBC, not HBSC.
Twain – no problems here.
Great reporting, Kevin!
The horse deserves a carrot for that. And it prolly needs a shrink itself for help dealing with it’s feelings towards its handlers.
Even my sleepy little hollow of Hilo had several hundred marching through downtown yesterday…! *g*
Unfortunately, I was stuck on Mauna Kea until it was over…! 8-(
However, there’s another one scheduled for tomorrow that I’ll be attending and shooting some video of…!
Great reporting! Tweeted and liked KG!
Look out, motherfuckers! We’re comin’.
Thanks for taking the time for putting all that down for us, Kevin. Posted to my FB.
Occupy is happening. Here after a week it has grown to several hundred and a long march after a long rally. No actual occupation yet.
Ah, got it.
FYI – I have no problems with horses shitting on police officers especially if they are during arbitrary arrests.
Sad to say one horse was put down after collapsing in the line of duty yesterday. Poor horse. He/She never stood a chance in a world where officers use horses to trample over protesters.
As I typed on the prior thread, committing peace is very threatening to a police state.
Until I read that sentence, I was wondering about how well the horses are trained in crowd control. I took riding lessons for several years, and have an inkling about how horses can get spooked under unpredictable circumstances. (I even, at the urging of a “friend” foolishly went on a fox hunt for which I was a totally unqualified rider. What could I have been thinking.)
I know the horses are supposed to be “trained,” as are cops & the U.S. military, and look at how well that training works out for them and their victims. If NYPD mounted police are schmart (LOL), they oughta be rethinking the use of horses as intimidation tactics.
The tents at Occupy Oakland are an awesome sight. An overhead picture is here.
Thanks ever so much for being there, Kevin, and thanks for posting a very informative and entertaining report.
Just one bit was particularly questionable to me though: the numbers of people attending the protest/demonstration that you posted seem way low. I’ve read of much larger numbers being estimated than what you posted. I, of course, don’t know for sure about the numbers. I’m just asking.
Kool pic. And Oakland’s climate is a lot milder than NYC’s.
Any info on why/how the horse collapsed?
Ugh. That’s just terrible. I was marvelling at how calm and centered the horses looked on the youtube clips in the midst of all the madness between activists and the handlers. Sad.
So far so good. What’s needed now is a powerful narrative about how the bankers gambled with the economy knowing that the government and the Fed would bail them out if they lost big. There are a lot of things wrong about what happened in the FIRE, but the ‘Greenspan put’ is probably the easiest one for ordinary people to understand. OWS has won the first round by earning the attention of the public. The next round is creating the story line, and getting it set in cement before the MSM can dismantle it.
They are beautiful, these young people; and they are doing a beautiful thing.
What strikes me most when I think about them – I perched in the Civic Center Plaza where OccupyMemphis now lives – is their self-possessed, generous, open spirit as they take ownership of the situation before them. Conspicuously, they blame not the true culprits, who are we, their parents. We’re the ones who tuned out of participation in public life and tuned in to Dancing With the Stars. We are the ones who dozed off and let the influence of our elected officials be vested solely in the interest of the 1%. We are the ones who let the conditions of a future-less future obtain.
I feel blessed to be among them.
Superb reporting, Kevin.
Thank you, for being there … and being “here”.
DW
Every word so true.
Has anybody seen or heard anything new vis a vis Ari Douglas’ injuries or photos/videos that better show what happened to him?
Indeed, October has some of the best weather in the East Bay. Day one of the Oakland occupation was last Monday. There was a light rain but still, it was a warm day so it wasn’t a problem. Here are some pics I took on Day 1.
I think this is current.
http://twitpic.com/71fem0
Well said.
Also, a tweet from Olbermann mentioned the arrest.
Nothing like a first-hand account from a trusted source. Thanks, Kevin! And as a Chicago resident, I’m sure know that the 11pm park “curfew” is rarely enforced and in the unusual circumstance where it is, it’s usually directed against youth or people of certain races.
Be afraid Conservaturds.
The Night Of The Living Occupiers - Coming soon to a square near you. Or maybe to your lawn.
I like what Dr West has to say. A lot.
I looked at the still photo. Whatever are the PTB thinking?
I thought this was a great response to those who want a list of demands:
Thanks, Kevin, for your detailed reporting! And if you do find out about that horse, could you please let us know?
Cops in riot gear on horses v. peaceful Americans exercising their 1st Amendment rights — awful.
Related:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/16/david-axelrod-gop-occupy-wall-street_n_1013955.html
David Axelrod: GOP Candidates Don’t Understand Anger Behind Occupy Wall Street Protests
WASHINGTON (AP/The Huffington Post) — A senior political adviser to President Barack Obama is charging that the Republicans seeking the presidency don’t understand the American public’s pent-up anger over corporate excesses.
—————-
OTOH, the Dems and the WH understand it perfectly:
They fucked us, we realized it, we don’t like it, and we’re not going to help you do it again.
If the protests worldwide are any indication, if it were me I’d be thinking,”Oh shit, where are we gonna go to be safe now that we’ve managed to piss off and exploit people on every continent.”
Ames might have been right here:
http://exiledonline.com/escape-from-america-the-strange-scary-billionaires-behind-the-libertarian-inspired-sea-castles/
God bless the protesters.
What numbers are you seeing? There were tens of thousands in Times Square.
Dems, the WH and the GOP: “We no longer have the Consent of the Governed.”
Where is our MLK?
When I begin to see politicians blame themselves for the current situation, then I’ll know some progress has been made.
As long as they keep blaming someone or some group for problems, I’ll know they are simply doing what they have always done–escaped their own hand in things.
Another question, but on a different subject; Does Wall Street corrupt Washington, or Washington corrupt Wall Street?
Our MLK = OWS
Both, but the meaningful difference is: Washington is obligated to resist that corruption. Wall Street is simply behaving according to its nature. See the Parable of the Frog and the Scorpion.
“the true culprits … are we, their parents. We’re the ones who tuned out of participation in public life and tuned in to Dancing With the Stars. We are the ones who dozed off and let the influence of our elected officials be vested solely in the interest of the 1%. We are the ones who let the conditions of a future-less future obtain.”
Sorry, I hear this somewhat often, but I don’t buy the self-flagellation guilt-trip. It happened – shit happens – over a period of time. I, and many others I’m sure, could not have imagined things would turn out the way they did.
The 1% corrupt both to consolidate the power of the 1%.
I just spoke with my cousin in Santa Rosa (Calif). The occupation started there yesterday with 3,000 people attending. An impressive number for a city that size.
Kevin was talking about an earlier march, with 800-1000 people (I had heard 2000 or so). There were several marches and actions throughout the day starting at 11 AM, and converging in Times Square at 5-6 PM with 10,000-20,000 people total there reported (then more actions later downtown again). None of the aerial photos or videos I’ve seen do justice to the numbers in Times Sq. going in all directions from the photos, so I think the numbers were on the high end, or higher.
*heh* I heard that there would be an occupation there. Progressive place, though, deep blue.
Well, it IS California. Hell, even San Diego is blue, or at least bluer than just a few years ago. Here’s a local story on the Santa Rosa occuation. Btw, at the Oakland rally yesterday, the mayors of Oakland, Berkeley and Richmond were in attendance.
Yes, tens of thousands in Times Square are the numbers that I was seeing reported. Since that is what you’re writing now in reply to my question, I must have misunderstood something in you original post.
Please understand.
I don’t mean literally all of us. I am referring to the broad demographic group that is responsible. I am sure not blaming you. I don’t even know you. I’m not flagellating myself either. Just the broad demo.
This Just In: New York Times appears to be unaware that Something Is Happening in Times Square. (I checked out the online edition and found…Nothing!)
How could that be?
And your comment is certainly true as to the broad demo. We all went to sleep from the 70′s on, to all intents and purposes, while the evil meanies of the right worked night and day to advance their agenda and create the machinery necessary to sustain and enhance their gains. We played the most passive defense, at best, while they played the most agressive possible offense. They never let up for a moment in seeking further advances, and they never hesitated to re-fight the few battles they lost along the way. Now we are waking up, and we have a chance to rectify some of the horrible things that became the new normal while we conceded all that ground. And we better not blow it this time.
Not fit to print. /s
I just finished catching up with the press coverage in the South from yesterday. There are some obvious blackout areas if you look at the items.
But, there is also evidence of a wider movement (maybe only half a dozen folks in one place yesterday) that is spreading. Here are some of the places that had news coverage that I did not expect:
Amarillo, TX
Tyler, TX
Fort Smith AR
Shreveport LA
Biloxi MS
Johnson City TN
Paducah KY (really!)
Owensboro KY
Greenville SC
Spartanburg SC
Bradenton FL
Naples FL
Macon GA
Hendersonville NC
http://october2011.org/blogs/margaret-flowers/dr-cornel-west-and-14-others-arrested-protesting-corporate-power-us-supreme-c
Occupy Atlanta at the tomb of Dr.Martin Luther King
I thought we had the best irony and symbolism for this movement here in NYC, but Gainesville, FL has us beat: Bo Diddley’s son is arrested for not leaving a “Freedom of Speech” stone in Bo Diddley Park.
yes, very upset here about the horse.
now this 99%er is even more angry!
I’m VERY upset about the horse being put down, as I dearly love horses and all other animals, but I’m also concerned to know whether anything the protesters did was in any way the cause of its injuries. I can’t tell anything from the video I’ve seen. (Of course, the cops had no business introducing horses into that situation in the first place, no possible excuse for that.) As with the scooter incident (where the available video is also inconclusive due to several key moments not being visible), I’m very concerned that the movement not have its credibility damaged. The opposition will lie about us anyway, but if they ever have an actual fact on their side, the damage will be much, much worse.
davidcnswanson David Swanson
Dr. Cornel West and 14 others Arrested Protesting Corporate Power at U.S. Supreme Court | War Is A Crime .org: bit.ly/nbJI3e
http://warisacrime.org/content/dr-cornel-west-and-14-others-arrested-protesting-corporate-power-us-supreme-court
This is the frontline and I hope Occupier’s do more Occupying here.
yes, i have no idea how that went down.
bottom line: horses should not be on the streets!
most esp. if there’s potential for confrontations.
the police need to stop this ignorant and
inhumane practice.
Video looks as if they were using the horses to push into the crowd. Bad idea for both sides.
In Kevin’s new video up above, I see there was some kind of street work going on, the two red and white stacks indicate that. Not sure if that is the same place where the horse went down, but it might have stepped into the excavation if that was the spot. Horses should never have been deployed. In fact, all the police need to do is get out of the way, the marchers would move on and nobody would get hurt. BUT. they are desperate to provoke a violent confrontation, that could not be more evident.
yes, terrible.
Seems like I saw similar horse “tactics” against demonstrators during Tahrir or Iranian uprisings.
see: “I Am Not Moving”
I strongly disapprove of animals being used like that. It’s cruel and offensive.
Sorry, my attempt to create link failed.
http://youtu.be/RGRXCgMdz9A
Agreed. Deeply cruel and offensive, to horses and to demonstrators.
*heh* I’ll stand outside the gates of the Port, waving a sign or two if they happen to ‘cruise’ into Hilo…!
one of the most totally infuriating, see red, start yelling and throwing beer cans (full ones), things on earth is a so-called ‘free speech zone’. Or even worse, ‘protest pen’. The US of A is supposed to be a free speech zone. We should not put up with the trampling of speech any sooner than we put up with teh 1% stealing our bloody money.
This should be an interesting GA.
I hope they do it, and they better stock a lot of champagne and coke, because that’s the last they’ll get. They’ll be on a diet of 100% seafood if the 99% have anything to say about it.
Exactly.
Video of Cornell West getting arrested.
I wonder why they took him inside the building – why not to a wagon?
There’s not too many Port-of-Calls in my Neighborhood…!
very vivid description indeed:
“During the arrest, I watched a horse shit on the police officer making the arrest. A surreal moment played out”
Also. check this out. Bank of America arresting protesters who want to close their accounts:
Bank of America refusing to close account
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=tK0O30aFT7g
If I may add one ironic note: And they’re smart enough to call out a generational division like, oh, “don’t trust anyone over…”
I watched a horse shit on the police officer making the arrest.
Ain’t Kharma a b*tch…? *g*
Awesome.
Take the park on Halloween? Hmm.
I agree 100%. But this wasn’t a free speech zone, it was a free speech stone.
There was a stone sculpture celebrating the Bill of Rights, with one stone for “Freedom of Speech,” all in Bo Diddley Park. So Bo Diddley’s son was arrested for “speaking” (not leaving) on a stone that celebrated free speech in a park that celebrated his father. Hence the irony/ symbolism.
The Kochs and the folks down at the Chamber of Commerce along with every Republican strategist on the payroll must be shitting their pants at what a real grass roots movement looks like. They couldn’t pull this off with ten times the money spent on charter busses and professionally printed signs.
Republicans used to say “November can’t come soon enough.”
Now they are probably trying to figure out how thay are going to postpone it.
zactly.
AGITATE!! AGITATE!! AGITATE!! – Fredrick Douglas
Agreed Louis, GG is not speaking for this BB.
Actually, Kevin, the 99% movement grew out of protests in Spain in May, and the global October 15th demonstration has been planned for some time, apparently. Check this history out:
http://www.lefigaro.fr/international/2011/10/14/01003-20111014ARTFIG00672-les-indignes-anatomie-d-un-mouvement-destructure.php
Yes. I wrote that in my post.
Hoping for the best, but it’s worth noting with regard to OWS gaining power that Europe has seen wider protests and general strikes that have done nothing to derail the neoliberal juggernaut. I’d hold off on a determination that OWS is gaining power. Gaining steam perhaps?
No, you wrote, “At least one hundred US cities participated in an October 15 Global Day of Action yesterday. Each demonstration was part of a growing “Occupy” movement that was ignited by Occupy Wall Street just over four weeks ago.” But the article I cited specifically attributed the term “99%” to a leaflet from the Spain demonstrations in May, and referenced the planning of the October 15th demonstration site that has been up for quite a while. That was what I was pointing to. I was very surprised to read it, and thought you might want to see it. The OWS people were actually emailed by people in Canada originally. But apparently, they themselves weren’t originators either. It was more than being “inspired” by Spain, apparently. I didn’t know that before reading the Figaro article.
Someone really does need to lay out where these ideas first sprung up. I consider myself part of the international anonymous “hivemind” and also feel like I’m part of a US discontent hivemind.
The 99% meme has proven wonderful and dominant. I knew that the Oct15 idea came from Spain or Latin America. The Oct15 turnout in Madrid was unparallelled in the whole world. I think we should look up to the people in Spain. We’re all in this together. If Spain has been leading, they should keep on keeping on. The whole world is looking towards you, Spain, for leadership.
Oh yes. It’s just that I get so furious I can’t see straight.