Occupy
Wall Street Plans May 1 Global Disruption of Status Quo
Occupy
Wall Street demonstrators, whose anti-greed message spread worldwide
during an eight-week encampment in Lower Manhattan last year, plan
marches across the globe today calling attention to what they say are
abuses of power and wealth.
1
May, 2012
Organizers
say they hope the coordinated events will mark a spring resurgence of
the movement after a quiet winter. Calls for a general strike with no
work, no school, no banking and no shopping have sprung up on
websites in Toronto, Barcelona, London, Kuala Lumpur and Sydney,
among hundreds of cities in North America, Europe and Asia.
In
New York, Occupy Wall Street will join scores of labor organizations
observing May 1, traditionally recognized as International Workers’
Day. They plan marches from Union Square to Lower Manhattan and a
“pop-up occupation” of Bryant Park on Sixth Avenue, across the
street from Bank of America’s Corp.’s 55-story tower.
“We
call upon people to refrain from shopping, walk out of class, take
the day off of work and other creative forms of resistance disrupting
the status quo,” organizers said in an April 26 e-mail.
Occupy
groups across the U.S. have protested economic disparity, decrying
high foreclosure and unemployment rates that hurt average Americans
while bankers and financial executives received bonuses and
taxpayer-funded bailouts. In the past six months, similar groups,
using social media and other tools, have sprung up in Europe, Asia
and Latin America.
Pooling
Resources
The
Occupy movement in New York has relied on demonstrations and marches
around the city since Nov. 15, when police ousted hundreds of
protesters from their headquarters in Zuccotti Park near Wall Street,
where they had camped since Sept. 17.
Banks
have pooled resources and cooperated to gather intelligence after
learning of plans to picket 99 institutions and companies, followed
by what organizers have described as an 8 p.m. “radical
after-party” in an undetermined Financial District location.
“If
the banks anticipate outrage from everyday citizens, it’s revealing
of their own guilt,” said Shane Patrick, a member of the Occupy
Wall Street press team. “If they hadn’t been participating in
maneuvers that sent the economy into the ditch, we wouldn’t even be
having this conversation.”
Police
Prepared
New
York police can handle picketers, according to Paul Browne, the
department’s chief spokesman.
“We’re
experienced at accommodating lawful protests and responding
appropriately to anyone who engages in unlawful activity, and we’re
prepared to do both,” he said in an interview.
About
2,100 Occupy Wall Street protesters in New York have been arrested
since the demonstrations began, said Bill Dobbs, a member of the
group’s media-relations team.
In
U.S. District Court in Manhattan yesterday, four City Council members
accused JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), Brookfield Office Properties
Inc., Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly,
of suppressing free speech and using excessive force against
protesters. The mayor is the founder and majority owner of Bloomberg
News parent Bloomberg LP.
Organizers
describe the May Day events as a coming together of the Occupy
movement, with activists also calling for more open immigration laws,
expanded labor rights and cheaper financing for higher education.
Financial institutions remain a primary target of the protests.
Bigger
Banks
“Four
years after the financial crisis, not a single of the too-big-to-fail
banks is smaller; in fact, they all continue to grow in size and
risk,” the group’s press office said in an April 26 e-mail.
Five
banks -- JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citigroup Inc. (C), Wells Fargo &
Co. (WFC), and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) together held $8.5
trillion in assets at the end of 2011, equal to 56 percent of the
U.S. economy, compared with 43 percent in 2006, according to central
bankers at the Federal Reserve.
Occupy
Wall Street began planning for May Day in January, meeting in
churches and union halls with a decision-making system that avoids a
single leader. Instead, participants rely on group “break-out”
sessions in which clusters discuss such tasks as crowd-building,
logistics and communications.
About
150 attended an April 25 meeting at the Greenwich Village
headquarters of the Amalgamated Clothing & Textile Workers Union,
making last-minute preparations for how to deploy legal and medical
help; site selection for picketing; purchasing, production and
distribution of protest signs; and how to talk to reporters.
Blockades
Planned
The
meeting convened inside the union hall basement, where attendees
arranged chairs in a circle as three facilitators asked each of the
assembled to identify themselves by first name and gender -- he, she
or they. Most appeared under age 30, though gray-haired baby boomers
also participated. One of the older attendees pulled a ski mask over
his head to protest the presence of a photographer from Tokyo.
Today,
beginning at 8 a.m. in Bryant Park, scheduled events include
teach-ins, art performances and a staging area for “direct action
and civil disobedience,” such as bank blockades.
Tom
Morello of the Grammy Award-winning rock band Rage Against the
Machine along with 1,000 other guitar-playing musicians will
accompany a march to Union Square at 2 p.m., according to the
maydaynyc.org website. That will be followed by a “unity rally”
at Union Square at 4 p.m.; a march from there to Wall Street at 5:30
p.m.; and a walk to a staging area for “evening actions,” which
organizers at the April 25 meeting said would be the so-called
after-party.
Golden
Gate
Occupy-related
events are planned in 115 cities throughout the U.S., from college
towns such as Amherst, Massachusetts, and Ann Arbor, Michigan, to Los
Angeles, Houston, Chicago and Philadelphia.
In
San Francisco, a group calling itself the Golden Gate Bridge Labor
Coalition abandoned a plan to close the span while carrying on with a
day of picketing to support bridge, ferry and bus workers seeking
reduced health-care benefit costs, according to its website.
Protesters still plan a rally at 7 a.m. at the toll plaza, without
blocking the bridge, the group said in a statement.
Across
the bay in Oakland, protesters said they intend morning marches on
banks and the Chamber of Commerce, followed by an afternoon rally and
a march downtown.
“We’re
looking forward to vigorously asserting our constitutional right to
protest and giving a loud outcry about Wall Street and greed,”
Dobbs said. “We’re hoping this will make a splash. We hope it
will bring a lot of more people into the Occupy movement.”
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