“Close your eyes (and think of Oakland)”

The following is an email regarding Occupy Oakland released by City Hall in response to a request by the Bay Area News Group. Thousands of these emails have been released and we will be republishing some here. Emphasis added.

Marleen Lee (@MarleenLee) is an organizer of the anti-Occupy Oakland group “Stand for Oakland.” This email was originally posted here, pages 129-131.

UPDATE: Just to clarify, the posting of this email is not an endorsement of the stupid and offensive remarks it contains. On the contrary, it is meant to expose the opponents of Occupy Oakland as the clueless reactionaries that they are.

—– Forwarded Message —
From: Marleen Sacks

Dear Oakland Officials:

Below is an email received from the Montclair discussion group regarding the numerous illegal activities occurring directly outside City Hall in the “Occupy Oakland” encampment. It does not appear that there has been any effort by City police to address the illegal encampment, nor the illegal activities going on within the camp. When will the laws of this City be enforced? Has OPD been given a directive not to interfere with this protest because members of Oakland government sympathisize with their cause, and/or do not want to alienate voters by cracking down on the protest? If this is the case, please be aware that the City will then be required not to crack down on neo-Nazi protests, Tea Party protests, Impeach City Official protests, or other protests that City officials may not be as sympathetic toward. This is because Frank Ogawa Plaza is a public forum for free speech, and the City must remain “viewpoint neutral” on its enforcement of laws and speech.

As this email demonstrates, many Oakland citizens are not happy about the City’s lack of equal enforcement of the law, and we want our laws enforced. You are already losing votes – just not from the sort of people inclined to break the laws, urinate and have sex in public etc.

Marleen L. Sacks

Hi

Just an update on “Occupy Oakland”. They had an information/organization meeting at 7:30 pm tonight. I sat in for part of it.

I thought you might be interested in knowing what’s going on…and who was there.

The air was perfumed with pot.

About 300 people in attendance at the amphitheater

They warned about preventing the spread of tuberculosis throughout “The Camp” [what they're calling it]

They also asked for donations of (Ladies, close your eyes.) condoms and — (Close them tighter.) —- dental dams.

They are actively and publicly working on building “text trees”, phone trees, and email trees to build a large mobile communication network.

Friday night they have a vigil for Troy Davis (The cop killer executed earlier this month.)

They’re expecting 1,500 for a “Labor march” this Saturday.

Danny Glover is to speak before them on Saturday afternoon

David Hilliard (sp?) Chief of Staff of the Black Panthers, speaks on Monday.

Berkeley Liberation Radio 104.1 FM will be airing live coverage beginning next Tuesday.

One of the take-aways I have from this is that they are surprisingly organized. I’m not sure opposition has anything like text, phone, or email trees. The “tree” approach makes communication a bit more intimate than broad cast approaches.

Many (most?) of the “occupiers” appear to be living so close to the edge…that getting arrested would be an improvement in their condition–and an expansion of their social network.

“Occupy Hollister” starts on Thursday 10/13.

¿Por Qué Occupy?

¿Por Qué Occupy?  is a project that serves as a strategy for Spanish speaking people to further open up discussion around the Occupy Movement. Being that the vast majority of Spanish speaking people reside within the Americas and Europe, this project is intended to work within that context. It is also working within the context that the Occupy Movement, while still very much in its infancy, has now transformed itself into an international movement. To many, the Occupy Movement is currently seen as a great opportunity for bridging long existing social and political movements further together and for building solidarity amongst them.

The Occupy Movement is seen as functioning as a open source, anyone and everyone that is a part of the 99% has the capability and right to occupy Occupy. This open source trait so central to the movement allows for individuals, groups, and communities alike to actively link together the web that is at the root of so many global, state, and local injustices, to protest, and to change the situations while engaging in an ever-changing organic transformation within the movement itself.

This project falls within that process, in hopes to educate, enrichen dialogue, and perhaps even further prompt the participation of Spanish speaking communities within the movement. This project aims to build and strengthen these potential bridges. And so it is asked, Why Occupy? Why support the movement, and/or why become a part of it? All are invited to participate, to interpret the question as they wish within the aforementioned contexts, to reflect, and to hopefully contribute to the discussion.

For more info, contact: porqueoccupy@gmail.com

Occupy Oakland solidarity with Syria and Greece

This statement was passed today at the Occupy Oakland GA.

UPDATE: Arabic translation is added for the Syria statement.

STATEMENT OF SOLIDARITY WITH THE PEOPLE OF SYRIA

Occupy Oakland stands in solidarity with the people of Homs and Hama,
and all the people of the cities of Syria who have been shot at,
shelled, terrorized and murdered for daring to peacefully protest their
government. We stand with all the peoples of Syria who are struggling
to free themselves from the oppressive dictatorship of Bashir
al-Assad and live without fear.

رسالة تضامن مع الشعب السوري

حركة إكيوپاي أوكلاند (Occupy Oakland) تقف متضامنة مع سكان حمص و حماة و كافة سكان المدن السورية الذين يتعرضون إلی جميع أنواع القصف و القتل و الإرهاب بسبب تظاهرهم السلمي ضدَ سياسات حكومتهم. نقف إلی جانب الشعب السوري في كفاحه للتخلّص من دكتاتورية نظام بشّار الأسد و كسر حواجز الخوف.

STATEMENT OF SOLIDARITY WITH THE PEOPLE OF GREECE

Occupy Oakland stands in solidarity with the ninety-nine percent in
Greece. We support your struggle against the austerity measures imposed
by one percenters both foreign and domestic; policies which will plunge
your country into a depression and lead to economic ruin. Truly,
European banks are being bailed out while an entire nation is being
sold out. From Oakland to Athens, those who suffer from economic
oppression cry out: “No Justice, No Peace!”

OCCUPY OAKLAND TO OCCUPIES AROUND THE WORLD

Occupy Oakland, still without a home, stands in solidarity with Occupy
Newark, Occupy Houston, Occupy Washington DC, Occupy Miami, Occupy
Pittsburgh, Occupy Maine and all other occupations across the world
that have recently been evicted or face eviction.
Occupy Oakland sends a “hella shout-out” to all Occupies across the
world which marched, passed solidarity statements and sent us letters of
support in the wake of J28. And to our brothers and sisters across the
Pond at Occupy London Stock Exchange, hella thanks for a “hella
video.” This all has brought tears of joy to our eyes and renewed
steel to our resistance.

Thank you!

Thanks to all of our Kickstarter funders, issues 3 & 4 of the print edition of the Occupied Oakland Tribune were fully funded! As per their Kickstarter reward, our funders are identified as requested below:

Abolish the death penalty

Agent 156

Allen Salyer

Compa Roxana

Crystal B

David Buuck

Hanna Hall

Ian Briggs

Jean Quan

Jenna Woloshyn

JP

Mariah Carle

Max Allstadt

Phil Gasper

Susan Johnson

True Justice Bike Repair

A response to the “Oakland Radicals”

SOURCE: IndyBay.org

A number of critiques of Occupy Oakland have appeared in the weeks since January 28, aka Move-In Day. Many have argued that Occupy Oakland is on the decline and have given various reasons for why that is the case.

One article that has recently lit up the Twitter-sphere (and Facebook-sphere) this morning is An Open Letter to the Broader Occupy Community Regarding Occupy Oakland From a Small Group of Oakland Radicals. The authors claim that they are, “a group of radical Oakland activists who have been involved with Occupy Oakland from the very first days.” Unlike other commentaries, by Chris Hedges for example, this one speaks with an air of authority and honesty. I am not familiar with the authors and cannot say much about their participation, but I believe that their description of Occupy Oakland (OO) sets up a straw man with little evidence to back it up and in fact ignores the healthy moves that have been made in the weeks since J28.

First, the authors argue that,

We are concerned that the inclusivity that began this movement and contributed to its rapid growth is dying in OO as a result of the dominant insurrectionist tendencies and the “vanguardist” maneuvering and manipulations of some of its proponents . . . We all collectively must take responsibility for this “hardening” and shrinking of the OO ranks, and we must recognize that in trying to re-make OO in an ideologically purist vision, we are destroying our ability to garner the wide base of support and goodwill that will be necessary to successfully resist corporate and state domination.

No evidence of this supposed ideological hardening is given. In fact, it is not even clear which ideology is supposed to be winning this war. The authors later state that they are not interested in having out a debate about anarchism or the Black Block (neither of which I would identify with) so it is left as a lingering critique to be interpreted by the reader. Is there something you don’t like about Occupy Oakland? Great, file it under “ideological purification,” whatever that means.

The assumption would appear to be that the entire J28 episode was only carried out in order to produce a conflict with the police. The authors write, “We strongly believe that the struggle in Oakland should not be used to produce what amounts to riot porn.” I heartily agree! So does everybody I know in OO, none of whom ever believed that the purpose of J28 was to have a confrontation with the police. Granted, this is now a widespread belief among many but it is simply not true. On the contrary, we went to ridiculous lengths to avoid a police confrontation. Snaking the entire march of 2,000 people through the quad of Laney College was only the most surreal example of this.

The authors do make a handful of somewhat concrete criticisms of undemocratic maneuvers taken by a group of insurrectionists with a shady agenda. Let’s review them one at a time:

“Two non-sanctioned press conferences”

I am in the OO Media Committee and have been involved in several OO press conferences. I have no idea what a “non-sanctioned press conference” is supposed to be or who is supposed to sanction it. All of the press conferences I am aware of have been called by the Media Committee or the group that is planning the action that the press conference is discussing. The first press conference referred to here (I assume) was the one that notoriously called for the airport to be shut down in retaliation if the police attacked us on J28. That statement was a mistake, in the opinion of myself and many others. But the conference was organized by the Move-In Day Committee–with some participation of the Media Committee–and there was nothing “non-sanctioned” about it. These folks have heard an earful from many people about this threat and I assure you that the person who made this statement to the press will never live it down for the rest of our natural lives. Nobody is talking any longer about shutting down the airport or making any similar threats in the future.

Press conference post-J28 against police repression

The second press conference occurred the Wednesday after J28 and highlighted police repression precisely at the moment the media was endlessly replaying the clip of a flag burning outside City Hall. I personally proposed this press conference to the Media Committee and did much–though not all, of course–of the organizing for it. Not only is it completely unclear how this could not be “sanctioned”–or by whom–it is, in fact, one of the achievements in Occupy Oakland for which I am the most proud.

“The secretive and exclusionary planning of the strategy for J28 in which community voices were systematically excluded from the inner workings”

This was a part of the original proposal that passed the General Assembly. The idea was always to keep the location a secret–in order to avoid a police confrontation! Perhaps that was a mistake, or perhaps we should have secretly begun a squat well in advance of the announced action. But this issue was widely discussed and agreed upon in a contentious General Assembly discussion. After the extremely close vote, a handful of people undemocratically attempted to alter the plan so that the location would not be a secret. One of those people, I am told, is an author of this very article from the “Oakland Radicals!” But anybody who wanted to participate in the organizing itself was more than welcome to attend the Move-In Day meetings, which planned a series of events for the entire weekend in the hopes of a successful occupation, not a police confrontation.

“The hijacking of the General Assembly during the second Port Shut Down”

After shutting down the evening shift of the Port of Oakland on December 12, an emergency General Assembly was called to plan the shuttering of the Port for the next morning. In a hasty and messy series of declarations, this GA was called off and many people felt alienated. That feeling is understandable. However, while I was not involved in any of those decisions, I believe the real issue is that there should never have been an emergency GA in the first place. The original GA vote to call for the West Coast Port Shut Down stated that we would extend the blockade if there was police repression. There was police repression, therefore we were required to extend the blockade. The possibility of having a new GA vote against this standing decision would have been an embarrassing fiasco when we had already committed ourselves to doing so.

A member of the facilitation committee ultimately took the blame for the poor handling of this emergency GA, came to the next Labor/WCPSD Committee meeting and personally apologized for this whole mess. So much for an unaccountable shadow group destroying Occupy Oakland.

“[I]deological purification behavior often now takes place at the GAs and in groups like the Move-In Committee, where dissenting voices are booed and jeered”

I have been to few if any GAs or committee meetings at any time in Occupy Oakland where there was not booing or jeering or heckling among some of the most militant activists, largely directed at each other, even at the height of the movement. It may be rude but it is hardly a purification process and this argument feels much more like a useful way to score points than an analysis of the decline of Occupy Oakland.

A small group of quiet dissidents even attended the GA on February 5 carrying signs that said, “Please Rethink Vandalism.” They were not disruptive–any more than carrying a sign at a public meeting that criticizes that meeting can avoid being disruptive–and I cannot tell that they were bothered in any way. About halfway through they simply left, not having been ideologically purged from what I can tell.

This is not to say that OO is facing no challenges. On the contrary, everybody I have talked to is aware that we need to work to rebuild the confidence of the public since January 28. One such action occurs tomorrow, the Make Love Not War rally for Valentine’s Day where we literally plan to walk around Oakland and pass out candy. I have heard people who are sympathetic with Black Bloc-tactics say that we need this action to be “non-violent”–while struggling to speak those words aloud–because it is so obvious that we need to rebuild support. There is also the February 20 National Occupy Day in Support of Prisoners, aka Occupy San Quentin. This action will aim to not only broaden the set of issues we organize around but also include a broader group of people who previously have not been included. These are precisely the sort of actions we should be doing and have nothing to do with “insurrectionism.”

So my sense is that everybody is clear that we do not want to participate in endless police battles. In fact, we are actively pursuing a course to re-establish Occupy Oakland. In the past two weeks, we have also had immigrant workers from Pacific Steel come to our GA asking for our support in their struggle, and an official with SEIU Local 1021 even declared that he wanted a “marriage” with Occupy Oakland.

All is not lost. We were delegitimized by the police attacks on us on J28–which happened well before any property destruction, ALL of which occurred at City Hall after the mass arrests–and seek to relegitimize ourselves in the eyes of the public. None of this involves “insurrectionary” tactics of any kind but precisely the sort of patient planning that the authors of the “Oakland Radicals” article say we need.

At the same time, none of us have ever organized anything like Occupy Oakland before and Move-In Day was entirely new form of action. Everybody is comfortable with marching up and down Market Street holding signs opposing a war that we all know–or should know–is inevitable. We are now carrying out mass actions that actually have an impact politically and economically and are therefore in new territory for everybody. Had we retreated from the Kaiser Center quicker on J28 and taken another building, we might all now be heroes. Such is the significance of small tactical decisions which have absolutely no significance in symbolic protests.

Anybody who wants to participate in any of the above actions or help us plan more in the future will find Occupy Oakland a welcoming community to organize with. We may heckle each other from time to time, but that is only because we take our decisions and our actions extremely seriously.

Occupy Oakland Holds Forum On Police Violence

Occupy Oakland hosts a forum on police conduct tonight at the Grand Lake Theater at 6:15 p.m.

Police officers charge towards protesters on January 28 at 10th and Oak. Photo credit: Clavo

People who live and work in Oakland need no reminder that the Oakland Police Department is corrupt. The power of the police has been abused for too long. Those in charge of the checks and balances of that power are also abusing their roles. Even the Citizens Police Review Board (CPRB) is failing on their job to keep the department in check.

The board was slated to host a forum to discuss OPD and its treatment of Occupy Oakland after months of harassment and wrongful arrests. That forum, originally scheduled for this evening, was delayed after the board announced they needed more time to gather evidence. The delay was announced after OPD unlawfully arrested more than 400 people on January 28.

When the CPRB announced the delay Occupy Oakland supporters quickly put a plan in place to hold a community forum to discuss the pressing issue of police brutality. Occupy Oakland, like everyone else in the community, knows the time to wait is over and the time to take action is now. Either the community can wait for those overseeing OPD to do the right thing or we can fix it ourselves by working together.

The forum is an opportunity to bring ideas and solutions to the table. OPD violence against Occupy Oakland is out of control, but it is also out of control in East Oakland, West Oakland and in every other neighborhood where there is a cop on a power trip. Occupy Oakland’s forum tonight isn’t a start to the conversation, or a finishing point. It’s a continuation of a discussion that must find a resolution soon. City officials and review boards have shown they cannot come up with the resolution. The people must find one now.

Those who cannot attend the forum may view it on livestream via @OakFoSho or Bella Eiko on ustream .

video courtesy of Clavo

Riot Cops At Anti-Repression Rally

Sending in riot cops for a permit violation seems to prove the point of the Anti-Repression Rally. Oakland Police Department brought in dozens of riot cops to confiscate sound equipment after deeming it a “nuisance” around Noon at Oscar Grant Plaza. Daily Kos has a story about Oakland’s insanity.

As a small group of “Stand Up For Oakland” protesters looked on, cops entered the plaza with batons drawn and riot helmet shields down. The counter protest was allowed sound since they filed for a permit. Officers instructed the Anti-Repression Rally to stop using sound, which they did. Even though the speakers were turned off, police still confiscated the equipment.

While Mayor Jean Quan and other city officials blame Occupy Oakland for “wasting resources,” it is the City making the decision to send riot cops to deal with a sound permit issue in the plaza. This is what repression looks like.

Interview with Alyssa Eisenberg

Alyssa Eisenberg, aka @alyssa011968, was one of 400 people arrested outside the YMCA on the evening of January 28 as part of the Occupy Oakland Move-In Day action. She gave the following interview with the Occupied Oakland Tribune about her experience in the movement.

OOT: Why did you first get involved in Occupy Oakland?

 AE: I had been waiting for something like the Occupy movement to come around for a long time, before Obama as elected but especially after. When I was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis several years ago, I would get sick and miss work and fall behind on my bills. Then I would work out a repayment plan with the credit card companies but right before it went into effect they would sell my debt to another agency and then I would owe the same amount all over again. For years, I had to fight with these companies and they became so lawless due to the regulatory agencies being too weak to do anything.

I was diagnosed at 31, just after I finally finished college, and I had such a hard time dealing with Pacificare. They could not deny my prescription but they would make me jump through so many hoops to get it approved and re-approved every few months that I would either have to miss work to deal with Pacificare or be off the medication for a while. If you’re too sick to fight, they’re just going to let you die. In my opinion, they push disabled people out of the workplace by making you fight for everything.

I thought if we had a Democratic President and a Democratic House and Senate then something would change but it never happened. Not that I thought Obama was a real progressive but when he just gave away the public option for the healthcare plan I saw that our politicians are completely beholden to the top 1% and they don’t represent people like me. We’re basically on our own against these huge unregulated corporations.

I first heard about Occupy Oakland through the Daily Kos and I got involved because we need to see change. Like any organization, it may not be perfect but it is our best opportunity. I was there on the first day and did a podcast with some interviews. What kept me coming around was the diversity of people and their creativity. It was more based on compassion than how greedy you are. If it was up to Occupy Oakland, you wouldn’t have to fight an insurance company for medication. People wouldn’t have to struggle because healthcare would be provided for free instead of for a profit.

I loved the way everybody had different jobs in the camp, there were people on security and the kitchen, everybody was in a committee but they did whatever they felt they could do. People worked, it’s just that they didn’t hate their jobs. It was nothing like working everyday until 5pm in a job you hate.

OOT: What was your experience like getting arrested on Move-In Day?

AE: Outside the YMCA, the police just announced that we were under arrest. I had no idea what was going on because there was no dispersal order and we had no idea why we were being arrested. Somebody later told me a police officer pointed at me and said, “Look who’s here.” They knew who I was because I am always talking about Occupy Oakland on Twitter. Another cop was asking me questions when an officer came by and said, “Oh, you have my favorite.” I was worried they might do something to me – they don’t like me because I always take pictures of them around the Plaza.

By the time I got in the bus, I was leaned over because my cuffs were so tight that it hurt to stand up straight. Another woman’s hands were turning blue because her cuffs were so tight that she was crying. Another woman peed on herself because she was stuck on the bus for so long. While I hated it there, I got off lucky compared to some other people.

We finally got to Santa Rita around midnight but after a few hours of staying there, I began to ask about my medication. A guard told me, “We don’t give meds to people who are cited and released, only to people who have to stay.” They finally took us to get booked around 12 noon the next day but they just moved us all into another cell. Finally, a nurse came down after the National Lawyer’s Guild called the jail and she asked, “Are you having an emergency? You don’t look like you’re about to die.” The guards eventually said that I would only get one of my medications anyway and that I would be forced to stay longer if I took it. This was already at 4pm and I had already missed two doses.

What they don’t realize is that I’m not just sick, I’m disabled, and without my medicine I can’t even think straight. When I was finally released, I signed a form that I couldn’t even read because I went so long without the medication.

OOT: How have the police pursued you?

AE: Around the Plaza, cops started saying, “Hi, Alyssa,” even if I never met them before. Another time, one of them bumped into me and whispered something into my ear, it was very inappropriate and awkward, I didn’t understand why he was doing it. One time a cop chased me out into the street while I was taking his picture and I was almost hit by a car.

Before Occupy Oakland I was no fan of the police, I’ve been far from an angel throughout my life, but I didn’t realize they were so sadistic. I had no idea they would brutalize people for doing absolutely nothing.

OOT: How did you get involved in Haiti solidarity work?

AE: After the earthquake, the Daily Kos was raising money for Haiti and then kept it going so peope could support them. So I got involved but I felt like I needed to learn the history of the country if I really wanted to help the out. The more I learned the more I realized that you couldn’t turn away. It’s not only about understanding US policy toward Haiti but realizing it is the only country that had a successful slave revolt. The human rights movement really started in Haiti.

Eventually, I realized that I had to look more closely at the different NGOs and figure out which ones were really grassroots. There are charities like the Red Cross, Catholic Relief Services and most of them I don’t trust because the US doesn’t give the money to Haiti but to these NGOs, who sometimes end up having more money than the Hatian department dealing with that same issue. That’s how Bill Clinton helped destroy trade tariffs, so we could dump rice there, put farmers out of business and make them work in sweatshops.

OOT: What’s next for Occupy Oakland?

AE: That’s a good question. I think we’ll continue to have small actions that reach out to the community, not to do anything for anybody else but to open up access and work with people to help themselves. Having been poor, I used to be insulted when people would say they would show me how or teach me how to do something. I was like, ‘I’m poor not stupid.’

Also, we went to jail for doing nothing so I think it is time they arrest some of these bankers. We can work on foreclosures and maybe even try to occupy another building where we can stay without a constant raid.