The Chain of Obedience (by StormCloudsGathering)
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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
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@occupyeden-blog
The Chain of Obedience (by StormCloudsGathering)
An Open Message to Police & Military (by StormCloudsGathering)
Have American Police Become Militarized? | NYT
âŚlately images from Occupy protests streamed on the Internet â often in real time â show just how readily police officers can adopt military-style tactics and equipment, and come off more like soldiers as they face down citizens. Some say this adds up to the emergence of a new, more militaristic breed of civilian police officer. Others disagree.
What seems clear is that the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, and the federal Homeland Security dollars that flowed to police forces in response to them, have further encouraged police forces to embrace paramilitary tactics like those that first emerged in the decades-long âwar on drugs.â
Both wars â first on drugs, then terror â have lent police forces across the country justification to acquire the latest technology, equipment and tactical training for newly created specialized units. +
Fifteen year old beaten by Portland Police last night. Photo by the Oregon.
"This is my worst nightmare," says Stephen Wicker, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at Cornell. "As a professor who studies electronic security, this is everything that I have been working against for the last 10 years. It is an utterly appalling invasion of privacy with immense potential for manipulation and privacy theft that requires immediate federal intervention."
ANONYMOUS - A MESSAGE TO THE WORLD! (by RepublicCouncil)
Occupy Melbourne do it in their tents!
Occupy Melbourne Tent Monsters (by TheFreemanSmith)
Last night we took the Coast Commercial Bank (now owned by Wells Fargo, and three years vacant) at 75 River St. in Santa Cruz, and are establishing it as a community center. These are inspiring and exciting times!
Weâve thus far held several organizational assemblies, have set up a media and...
Needs more cops, but overall an admirable effort from @TPB_Stun
Slavery is the legal fiction that a person is property. Corporate Personhood is the legal fiction that property is a person.
William Meyers
A policeman violates procedure and points his gun at a journalist during #OccupyLA.
This is scary.
Agenda-setting
SEATTLE â
Occupy Wall Street demonstrators in Seattle, Portland and Oakland have taken up a new tactic in their protests against wealth inequality: Squatting in vacant properties.
In Seattle, protesters have taken over a formerly boarded up duplex across the street from Garfield High School. They have painted the bare wood sidings with green, black and red paint, and they have strung up a banner that says âOccupy Everything - No Banks No Landlords.â
The red and black anarchist flag also decorates the front.
âToo many homeless. Too many unoccupied buildings. That doesnât make sense,â is the official stance of the duplex occupiers, said Ariel, a demonstrator who declined to give her full name.
Squatting marks a move away from the public demonstrations that have marked protests in cities around the country. The move is an attempt to re-energize the protests in Oakland and Portland - two cities that have seen violent clashes with police.
âWho knows, maybe squatting will be the next pressure point,â said 42-year-old Arlo Stone, who has squatted in Portland and Seattle.
After its eviction, the Occupy Portland encampment scattered. Organizers have called for members of the movement to occupy foreclosed properties on behalf of the former owners who lost the houses.
Occupy Portland organizer Andrea Townsend, 28, said providing a safe, warm place for former members of the Occupy Portland movement should be a focus for the city, and said squatting is a way to keep attention on the issue of homelessness.
âYouâre building a self-sustaining community thatâs toward what this movementâs about,â said Townsend, a self-described anarchist.
Occupiers in Oakland have also taken over at least one property and are showing other members how to do more squatting. From âIntro to Squattingâ to âProperty Law and Squattersâ Rights,â a recent âteach-inâ in Oakland featured six hours of lessons for squatters. The lessons were given by the San Francisco homeless advocacy group called Homes, Not Jails.
In Seattle, the duplex occupants declined to allow The Associated Press inside, saying they want to remain âunder the radarâ - even after the official Occupy Seattle website posted about their actions.
There are between eight and 15 people staying at the house on any given day, Ariel said. She said volunteers are fixing electric wiring and installing insulation among other work.
Volunteers could be seen taking trash to a truck on a recent afternoon. A rainwater retainer sits in front of the duplex. The group took over the building more than 10 days ago.
The duplex these Occupy Seattle protesters have taken over was owned by a couple who held several properties in the region, including a multimillion waterfront home on Mercer Island that has also been foreclosed. One of them died in 2009. It wasnât immediately clear if the owner had a listed phone number.
The building is located in Seattleâs Central District, a historically African-American and working class neighborhood that has seen gentrification over the years.
Still, Ariel said the main reason they chose this house was because it was vacant for several years.
Garfield High Schoolâs principal hasnât fielded any complaints about the Occupy house, Seattle Schools spokeswoman Teresa Wippel said.
âHe said he has not observed any changes to the school environment as a result of the Occupy Seattle folks being across the street,â she said.
Seattle police are aware of the people squatting, but havenât received any phone calls about it, spokesman Mark Jamieson said.
Things werenât as welcoming in Portland.
Police moved in and evicted more than a dozen occupiers in a foreclosed home in northeast Portland more than 10 days ago. Two people were arrested, while the rest left without incident, according to police.
Another three people were evicted from houses on Monday, but Sgt. Pete Simpson said itâs unknown whether the squatters were members of the Occupy Portland encampment that was evicted on Nov. 13.
Simpson said heâs aware that the movement called for people to occupy foreclosed homes, but said itâs difficult to distinguish between the people who would squat in homes as a political statement and those that do it for shelter.
âThe vacant property issue is of concern in cities nationwide,â Simpson said. âWeâll treat them all as trespassers.â