May 1, 2012  |   
                                        
                                        
Photo Credit: Occupy Wall Street Aerial Shot, NYC
 
 
                     
                
All over the world, May 1st is celebrated as 
International Workers Day. Yesterday, May Day also marked the 
reemergence of the Occupy movement, with events in cities all over 
America. AlterNet's reporters were in the field -- here are their 
dispatches from New York and the Bay Area.
Midtown NYC, morning 
-- Sarah Jaffe
Midtown is a great place for chanting; your voice echoes off the tall
 buildings and you can hear it blocks away. Even better for marching 
bands, bells and whistles.  There may not actually be 99 pickets, but 
midtown Manhattan is clogged with them in the morning, and they're 
inside the heads of the people on the street--I walk past a couple 
discussing our "cruel," unequal society as I hurry from picket to 
picket.
 I made it to Bryant Park a few 
minutes after eight in a haze of rain, and found a crowd of around a 
hundred huddled under their umbrellas or the ones at tables in the park.
 The Rude Mechanical Orchestra were clustered around their instruments 
but not playing, and Occupiers chatted with one another. 
My first picket stop was at the New
 York Times building, where the United Auto Workers (UAW) were picketing
 under a lovely awning in support of the National Organization of Legal 
Services Workers, (UAW Local 2320). The lawyers and legal support staff 
of Legal Services NYC provide free legal aid to New York's low-income 
folks who need support--they help fight evictions, support the 
unemployed, work on benefits for the disabled, and more. And they're 
facing cutbacks from their board, who want them to give back part of 
their healthcare benefits--not to mention cuts to the services they 
provide. "We make next to nothing," a legal services worker told me, 
pointing out that her benefits allow her to do a low-paid service job 
and take care of herself and her family. 
Meanwhile, none of the cuts 
have hit management. Their target for the day's picket was Michael 
Young, the vice chair of the Board of Directors at Legal Services NYC, 
who has been the point person in negotiating with the union. 
As we stood talking, the Rude 
Mechanical Orchestra and a small march rolled in, playing "Which Side 
Are You On?" and thrilling the workers, who didn't seem terribly 
connected at first to the larger May Day celebrations. The picket line 
turned into a dance party, and the band played along with chants of "Hey
 hey rich boy, my job is not your toy" and "We're legal services for the
 poor, fired up won't take no more." 
From Twitter, colleagues Allison 
Kilkenny, John Knefel and I heard reports of arrests at the Bank of 
America tower, which was surrounded by barricades when we arrived but 
quiet at the moment, so I moved on to News Corp headquarters--where the 
ticker outside the building warned "Occupy plans to shut down city 
today, gathering at Bryant Park". It made a lovely backdrop for the 
lively picket line, featuring several members of OWS's Direct Action 
working group as well as banners and activists from Picture the 
Homeless, SEIU, VOCAL-NY (including
Wayne Starks, who I spoke with on Tax Day), and other local groups. 
 
As they marched, the crowd repeated
 the crimes of Rupert Murdoch and News Corp--not only "Murdoch spies," a
 reference to the phone hacking scandal in the UK, but "News Corp called
 for closing HIV food pantries, housing for people with AIDS." 
From News Corp, I moved on to 
Chase, where a small but determined band was chanting "Save our homes, 
modify loans!" outside the branch on 47th and Madison, but no one had 
made it to the main headquarters, location of many an Occupy event, yet.
 I saw a march rounding the corner as I headed the other way, trying to 
catch a march that had left News Corp for the headquarters of the 
Paulson Group, one of the world's largest hedge funds, but instead I 
crossed paths with a small march flying an anarchist flag, singing 
"Ain't no power like the power of the people because the power of the 
people don't stop." 
The marchers were young, mostly 
white, but the one arrest came when a young black man, whose name, I was
 told, was Gregory Walker, was slammed against a glass window and thrown
 to the ground--I didn't see what happened to cause his arrest, but I 
did watch him loaded into a police van and the crowd spontaneously broke
 into "Solidarity Forever." 
Back at Bryant Park, the scene 
had picked up and the feeling was more Liberty Square than grim 
determination. A woman mic-checked to offer belly dance lessons, and I 
chatted with Betsy Fagin at the Library, back in action. Screenprinters 
had the next table over from the Library, and were churning out prints 
of a Guy Fawkes mask decorated with spring leaves. I caught up with Pam 
Brown and Suzanne Collado of the Occupy Student Debt campaign, who had 
been at their own picket outside of NYU, protesting student debt and the
 university's expansion plan (financed, of course, with students' 
money). 
The park is also serving as a 
staging location for marches--I spoke with organizers pulling together 
an immigrant worker justice march, departing at 11 to his Praesidian 
Capital, Wells Fargo, the Capital Grille, Chipotle and Beth Israel, in 
support of workers trying to organize, Wells's support for 
anti-immigrant legislation through ALEC, wage theft and discrimination, 
the 
Coalition of Immokalee Workers' Fair Food Campaign, and laundry workers who clean hospital sheets, respectively. 
 
On the way out, I spoke with 
Jerry, who told me about the Summer Disobedience school that will be 
held every Saturday in Bryant Park, training activists in pickets, 
marches, street theater, and much more. 
Wildcat Strike -- NYC
-- Anna Lekas Miller
The 
Wildcat Strike --
 designed to bring together non-unionized, or unionized workers whose 
unions had not approved the strike -- was one of the unpermitted actions
 of May Day. Protestors and strikers came at the risk of their own 
arrests and the authorities had the right to "do whatever they want."
I arrived at Sara Roosevelt Park half an hour early--there were already fifty or sixty police huddled on the corner of 2nd Avenue and 
East Houston. At that point, there were maybe ten protestors.
"I feel like they're the ones that should be protesting and we should
 be the cops," I joked to one of the few other protestors in the park.
"I know. I wish we could pull out our batons and tell them that they're blocking the sidewalk," he replied.
A few minutes later, fellow protestors and marches streamed in from 
Brooklyn, fresh from having walked across the Williamsburg Bridge. To my
 surprise, the police began to subside, merely observing the 
demonstrators as they played music, held signs and chanted.
Though the crowd was mostly young and though not exclusively white, 
far from racially diverse, their occupations -- and reasons for showing 
solidarity at the wildcat march in particular -- were vastly different.
"I am a not union metal worker, working a pretty low range for my 
skill set," said Rachel, a young woman holding a foil flag as an 
artistic allude to metal workers. "I'm here to represent those who are 
actually in labor who don't want to be part of a permitted 
anti-capitalist march and stand in solidarity with my fellow workers who
 might be afraid or can't afford to be here."
Gregory, a doctoral student and graduate teaching assistant at SUNY 
Stony Brook College also came to use the wildcat strike as an 
opportunity to express himself in protest.
"I'm a union member, I'm a public employee of the state--and as a 
public employee, we are legally not allowed to strike. The wildcat 
strike provides a space for those of us who can't strike for whatever 
reason to still express ourselves in protest."
Gregory went on to talk about how his role as an instructor, and a 
member of the Graduate Student Employees Union (GSEU) made him align 
himself more with student strikers than other instructors. As students 
face state budget cuts, and increasing tuition and debt, he sees his 
role as an instructor as part of the larger struggle around education 
rather than precarious labor.
"I make $15,000 a year -- I should be striking for myself, but actually I'm striking for my students."
After a fairly civil twenty minutes of chatting, singing, live music 
and navigating the march -- a march began. The first young man that 
tried to even so much as leave Sara Roosevelt Park was immediately 
tackled to the ground and arrested by the NYPD. After digesting the 
chaos, demonstrators decided to run en masse to the south end of the 
park, many jumping over the railings to avoid the police and began 
marching south towards Chinatown.
The police followed, a ridiculous-looking parade of 30 riot cops on 
mopeds following strikers on foot on the sidewalk and on bicycles in the
 streets. Throughout the crowded, but peaceful march, vans and other 
arrest vehicles began to follow the mopeds, indicating imminent arrests.
Ironically, the extreme police presence was blocking traffic and 
inconveniencing the flow of the city far more than the strikers.
Once the march reached Houston and Lafayette -- almost a complete 
square from where it began -- the cops donned their riot gear and took 
out their batons. Protestors were kettled onto the sidewalks, spilling 
off of them and threatened if even so much as a foot was in the street. 
One nicely dressed man, without provoking anyone, was arrested and 
thrown to the ground.
After being halted by the police, the march continued up Broadway -- 
ever racing riot cops to resist being surrounded, the march continued 
and ended at Washington Square Park.
Free University: Madison Square Park, noon-3pm. 
-- Sarah Seltzer
The sun came out over Madison Square Park as the OWS Free University 
kicked off. Forgive the pun, but the class war was definitely in 
session. Professors and experts gathered groups around htem throughout 
the benches and pathways of this park as midtowners walking by stopped 
to look. There was a lesson on "horizontal pedagogy,"--or how to teach 
without hierarchy--talks by noted leftist thinkers Chris Hedges and 
Francis Fox Piven, a discussion about native/indigenous resistance and 
another about gender constructs, and most pertinently, a student debt 
teach-in. One guy was even leading a class on "ancient political 
philosophy" and I thought about the Athenian forum.
This action was meant to--and did--accomplish two goals. First, it 
recaptured the "public square" aspect of Zuccotti Park occupation and 
other encampments, that sense of people radically coming together and 
talking to each other about major, transformative ideas without 
boundaries or rules. Secondly, it demonstrated by example a principle of
 communal, free, shared and sharing education without tuition or fees, a
 rejoinder to the rising tuition costs at institutions across the 
country.
As the "class" sessions came to an end under the sunshine, 
demonstrators talked in clusters, took pictures and gathered around the 
park's central fountain. And then the sound of chants, whistles, and 
guitars began to float over the park.
Protesters rushed over to Broadway to see the advancing "guitarmy" 
march--a musical, un-permitted, wild walk down from Bryant Park led by 
Tom Morello, its members spilling out onto the sidewalks and the center 
of Broadway flanked by the NYPD. Cheers and the sound of musical 
instruments ensued as the march continued on its way down towards the 
afternoon's destination: Union Square.
Global Justice
-- Alex Kane
The hundreds upon hundreds of protesters streaming into Union Square 
on May Day were greeted by an elaborate paper “maypole.” There was no 
need for explanation, as the top of the “maypole” read, “All our 
grievances are connected”—another way of saying “We are the 99%.”
Walk a couple hundred feet in the park, and there's an Occupy Wall 
Street group that fervently believes that maxim: the Occupy Wall Street 
(OWS) Global Justice Working Group. A contingent of about 30 people 
affiliated with the working group had gathered before the union-heavy 
permitted march from Union Square to Wall Street. The reason? To 
“declare our commitment to resist and to end wars at home and abroad,” 
in the working group’s own words.
The names Iran, Palestine, Egypt and more were written on the 
activists' placards. They joined thousands of demonstrators for a march 
that capped off a day full of actions highlighting economic inequality, 
police brutality, immigrant rights and more. In the streets, NY-based 
Palestine solidarity activist Dave Lippman provided the guitar strumming
 while others sang songs. “When you shop and when you dine,” they sang, 
“stand up for Palestine”—a plea for boycotts of Israeli products.
Activists from the Global Justice Working Group are full of knowledge
 and experience about struggles from Bahrain to Egypt to Palestine. It 
includes organizers involved with Code Pink, the War Resisters League, 
Adalah-NY and more--key groups that work on peace and justice issues in 
the city. And they want to bring their knowledge to the broader world of
 Occupy Wall Street activism. The march, and songs about struggles here 
and abroad, were one way of doing that.
“Very often in OWS you get people who don’t know what’s going on 
across the water,” explained Udi Pladott, an activist and former soldier
 in the Israeli army. “We’re trying to inject global issues into 
Occupy.” Towards that goal, the working group has sponsored events on 
Bahrain and held a teach-in on the global tear-gas industry.
“We want to make connections between the war on the poor here and 
wars abroad,” said Nancy Kricorian, an organizer with Code Pink. 
Conversations with working group participants made clear what those 
connections are: a system that rewards militarism with profits while 
demanding austerity for the poor.
Apart from Bahrain and Palestine, the specter of a war with Iran, and
 organizing to stop that possibility, was very much on the minds of OWS 
Global Justice Working Group participants. A number of signs at the 
march read “No to sanctions. No to war. No to state repression.” I spoke
 with Manijeh Nasrabadi, a PhD student at New York University and an 
organizer with Havaar, an Iranian group that now works with the Global 
Justice Working Group, for more on this subject.
“There are people in Iran organizing against the same things. They 
have a government pushing neoliberal policies,” she explained. Nasrabadi
 also criticized the tendency of some on the left to reflexively back 
Iran’s leaders since they are in opposition to the West, even as the 
regime violently cracked down on dissent. “There is a third way: global 
solidarity,” that isn’t morally compromised, Nasrabadi said.
I then asked Nasrabadi what the connection was between Iran, the US and the Occupy movement. Answers abound to that question.
But she had a simple answer that helps explain the importance of the 
Global Justice Working Group: “If bombs fall, it would derail thinking 
about class.”
Tom Morello and the Guitarmy/Union Square/
-- Julianne Escobedo Shepherd
Under unexpectedly sunny skies, thousands converged upon Union 
Square yesterday afternoon, their numbers growing as the Tom 
Morello-led “Guitarmy,” flanked by their acoustic axes, marched in from 
Bryant Park. One of the only spots with a city permit, the Square was 
the destination for the day’s live music, but it also served as a 
safe space for those protesters unwilling or unable to risk arrest. 
As such: the undocumented faction came out in droves, and it became a 
symbolic place where unions and Occupy joined forces with immigrant’s 
rights movements. People carried signs reading, “Amnesty Para Todos,” 
“Trabajando y Educación Para Todos,” “Stop the Raids” and, 
most crucially, “No a la guerra, ni a la militarización de la 
frontera.” It’s important not to forget the bigger picture: the border 
debates are an extension of our country’s war-obsession, and solve 
no problems.
But the overall spirit at Union Square was one of joy and 
enthusiasm and united strength. A large stage was set up to accommodate 
the performers and speakers and the message was clear: through 
art, activism can glean both power and relief. At around 4 PM, the 
show started with the beloved Tom Morello, aka the Nightwatchman, 
aka guitarist in Rage Against the Machine (which we recently learned is 
Paul Ryan’s favorite band, and who we hope will act on the knowledge by writing a song about him).
Because of the abundance of artists and speakers on the line-up, each
 act only got to perform two songs, and Morello used his time most 
effectively. Playing after a speaker announced, “We’re here to announce 
that another world is not only possible, but on her way,” Morello 
brought his around 20-person Guitarmy onstage to a fired-up crowd ready 
to party for justice. He kicked off his set with a singalong of his song
 “World Wide Rebel Songs,” which pays homage to union classics, and got 
thousands of protesters singing the chorus (and freaking out when he 
played the harmonica, because the proles, apparently, love a harmonica).
Then he noted that, were Woody Guthrie alive, he’d be 100, and that 
if he were still with us, he’d be headlining the event. Morello’s next 
song? “This Land is Your Land,” which resulted in another joyous 
singalong and pogo session. His parting words: “Take it easy, but take 
it.” Morello’s performance was followed by a speech by Emily Park, who 
announced herself as an undocumented student at CUNY. “DREAMers like me 
are the future of later,” she said, and advocated the New York DREAM Act
 that’s currently underway at the state level. Then Joyce Lyon, of the 
Domestic Workers union, reminded us that, “The thousands of you standing
 here are the engines that make the economy run,” whether documented or 
not.
Their speech was followed by a performance by an awesome 
multinational Latin jazz band representing Local 802, the musician’s 
union, during which the drummer protested the elimination of 31 
multicultural categories at the Grammys. (Including the award for best 
Latin jazz album and best Native American album, among others.) The band
 was followed by performances by rap trio Das Racist (full disclosure: 
the group is this reporter’s family), noise-pop musician Dan Deacon, and
 rapper Immortal Technique, all of whom celebrated the energy and 
presence of the thousands in the crowd. And while the focus was 
certainly on the arts, the most salient point of the rally was made by a
 speaker later in the day, who reminded us that the Supreme Court is on 
the cusp of legalizing Arizona’s immigration law, SB 1070, and that it 
was up to us to stand against similar racist laws like it. “This is not 
an immigration issue,” she said.
“This is a people issue.” The crowd was
 penned in by barricades, guarded by ever-more police as the protest 
geared up to march downtown, but her message was more powerful than the 
city’s ominous message. Immigration is a people issue, and this was a 
joyous, inspiring peoples’ protest.
Marching from Union Square After the Rally: 5:30 pm
-- Sarah Seltzer
Artists for Occupy and immigrant rights groups kicked off the long 
march from Union Square to Wall Street down Broadway. Despite the 
barricades and unnecessarily huge numbers of cops on both sides of the 
street, marchers headed downtown undaunted. Among their numbers were 
groups like the Teamsters, the Transit Workers Union, and student and 
community organizations.
Groups let out chants like "we are students, not statistics!" the 
very May Day-appropriate "black, Latin, Asian, white! Workers of the 
world unite!" As we entered the shopping district they playfully shouted
 "out of the shops, and into the streets!" But there was a more mellow 
feeling than at marches past. One woman cheering for the protesters 
pointed up at the newly-blue sky and grinned as if to say, "see? even 
the weather's on your side!" Marchers ran into friends, hugged each 
other and chatted. The solidarity all the unions and their official 
signage showed for immigrants was remarkable--groups that once seemed to
 have been divided by the one percent were making a huge effort to stand
 up for each other. And the atmosphere was one of festive righteous 
anger: one protester walked by a Jesus costume carrying a massive cross,
 and another in a Captain American costume waved at us to applause from a
 window above.
As the very vanguard of the march, led by taxicabs festooned in 
banners, crossed Houston Street a huge cry went up and echoed back, 
turning Broadway into a canyon of noise for block after block after 
block.
"This is some serious shit," an onlooker said, shaking his head with a
 smile, at the throngs weaving back all the way to Union Square.
Occupied Lower Manhattan, evening
--Sarah Jaffe
The financial district was occupied all evening--occupied by the 
NYPD, who were out in riot gear, brandishing batons, lining up on side 
streets and marching two by two down to rallying points for tired but 
fired-up occupiers from the final march.
As the march--with crowd estimates of 30,000 or so--wound down, 
hundreds or even thousands wound up in the space at 55 Water Street, 
where they held a People's Assembly as night fell. The crowd was 
peaceful, but the space closed at 10 and so of course the NYPD moved in,
 calling for dispersal and threatening arrests. City Councilmembers 
Ydanis Rodriguez and Jumaane Williams were on hand with several members 
of the clergy, observing and gathering evidence. The two councilmembers 
are part of a lawsuit filed this week against the NYPD.
I followed a breakout march up side streets, and while at first it 
was disorganized, a crew of experienced Occupiers, including many from 
the Plus Brigades (a newer working group that specifically works on 
clowning and other positive reactions in order to defuse tense 
situations with police) took lead of the march, walking arm in arm, 
dancing, and singing. The tension faded from the air as they marched, 
for a while, without police interference, singing "This is what 
democracy looks like."
When we came to Wall Street, though, we ran into a barricade--it 
seems that the worst thing Occupiers can do is attempt to set foot on 
the actual street their movement is named for. The march turned up 
William and then down Pine, and as the crew paused to debate where to go
 next, reports of police violence down on Pearl Street--where we'd just 
been--came in over Twitter from reporters John and Molly Knefel and Ryan
 Devereaux. We sat on the steps of a JP Morgan Chase building on Pine, 
and as some discussed tactics and plans for the rest of the night, 
stragglers came up William, visibly shaken by what they'd seen. "Police 
were just grabbing people, throwing them to the ground," one marcher 
said.
And then the police arrived, bearing batons and riot cuffs. They 
cleared the steps mostly without incident, though as has come to be 
usual there was tension and a faceoff for a while before most of the 
crowd dispersed back down Pine--where a line of police reinforced a line
 of barricades once again, keeping the crowd from getting anywhere near 
Wall Street.
Many of the Occupiers wound up where Occupy began, back in Zuccotti 
Park, where only one side was barricaded off and about 100 people were 
sitting, chatting in small groups, discussing, once again, what would 
come next--for the evening, for the movement, for everyone involved. A 
week of action is planned for later in May, and Brooklyn College is 
holding a rally today, May 2nd, to build on momentum from May Day.
Oakland/Bay Area:
-- Joshua Holland
The Bay Area celebrated May Day with a series of strikes and protests
 throughout the day, as 19 local labor unions joined thousands of 
Occupiers and immigrant rights activists.
The Inlandboatmen's Union staged a half-day strike, shutting down 
ferry service from Sausalito to San Francisco. The ferry workers are in a
 dispute with management over health-care costs, and have been working 
without a contract for over a year. Early in the morning, they were 
joined by Occupy protesters in a picket line at the Larkspur Ferry 
Terminal. Bus and bridge workers had promised to honor the picket.
About 200 people participated in a peaceful but boisterous 
immigrants' rights march in San Francisco's Mission District in the 
morning. Several separate demonstrations wound their way through 
downtown Oakland, trailed by a heavy police presence. At one point, tear
 gas was deployed to disperse a crowd, according to protesters who were 
on the scene.
In the afternoon, a large contingent of Occupy San Francisco 
activists -- as many as 1,500 -- marched from the Financial District to 
set up residence in a vacant building from which they had been evicted 
weeks earlier.  The building, formerly a shelter, is owned by the 
Archdiocese of San Francisco.
Police staged around the corner during the afternoon, but at around 
4:30, approximately 200 officers clad in riot gear moved in, erecting 
barricades around the building. A tense standoff ensued, during which 
time a man on the roof of the building threw several objects -- a brick 
and some metal pipes -- at police, striking and injuring another 
protester, who was taken away by ambulance. A San Francisco police 
spokesman later said that the man had been apprehended and charged with 
aggravated assault.
After several hours facing down protesters, police again pulled back,
 and as of press time, protesters had flooded back into the building en 
masse.
The largest action of the day took place in Oakland during the 
evening, as an estimated 3,000 people took to the streets around City 
Hall. The protest was largely uneventful until after nightfall when, in a
 scene that has come to be all-too-familiar, Oakland police ended up 
dispersing occupiers with tear gas and "flash-bang" grenades. As of 
press time, arrests were ongoing.
Sarah Jaffe is an associate editor at AlterNet, a rabblerouser and frequent Twitterer. You can follow her at @seasonothebitch.
Sarah
 Seltzer is an associate editor at AlterNet and a freelance writer based
 in New York City. Her work has been published at the Nation, the 
Christian Science Monitor, Jezebel and the Washington Post. Follow her 
on Twitter at 
@fellowette and find her work at 
sarahmseltzer.com.
Julianne
 Escobedo Shepherd is an associate editor at AlterNet and a 
Brooklyn-based freelance writer and editor. Formerly the executive 
editor of The FADER, her work has appeared in VIBE, SPIN, New York Times
 and various other magazines and websites.
Alex Kane is AlterNet's New York-based World editor, and a staff reporter for 
Mondoweiss. Follow him on 
Twitter @alexbkane.
Joshua Holland is an editor and senior writer at AlterNet. He is the author of 
The
 15 Biggest Lies About the Economy: And Everything else the Right 
Doesn't Want You to Know About Taxes, Jobs and Corporate America. Drop him an 
email or follow him on 
Twitter.
 
 
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