A Year Ago Today Scott Olsen Fell and A Reign of Terror Began.

by JP Massar

One year ago to the day, in the wee hours of the morning of October 25th, 2011, armed thugs invaded the newly-named Oscar Grant Plaza in downtown Oakland. Bringing with them tear gas, batons and military style arms, they gassed, beat, dragged and kidnapped people who were doing nothing more or less threatening than sleeping in tents or sitting in the plaza keeping vigil. As one Occupier caught up in the gotterdammerung, Allie123, wrote

At around 4:30 AM the police came from everywhere… A line of police in full riot gear with huge guns pointed their weapons at us… the police tear gassed us… I heard huge explosions… I was the first person taken.

teargasphoto

The intent of this action was clear: to strike enough fear into the hearts and minds of the Occupiers that they would vanish into the mist, departing to points unknown, never to bother the good burghers of Oakland again. This was the first attempt at mass violence used by the state against Occupiers. True, there had been kettling and mass arrests in New York, and a few police pepper-spraying a few protesters apparently at random. But there had been as yet no concerted, centrally directed attempt to eradicate by both physical and psychological violence an Occupy site and by projection an entire local movement.

But it didn’t work.

Click and read the entire essay here.

Take back OGP!

On October 25 of last year, the Oakland Commune at Oscar Grant Plaza was raided with enough brutal force to gain international attention. Since then, continuous state repression and police brutality have sought to divide Oakland and keep its residents from reclaiming public space in a time of local, national and global austerity.

The Oakland Commune served as a socio/political refuge for Oakland residents. It was open and free to all and provided a space where people could traverse race and class divides in order to share food, discussion and visions of a more just world. During this time, it was reported that crime within the beat that contained Oscar Grant Plaza went down 19 percent, which highlights the social efficacy of the community when allowed to come together and care for itself.

This Thursday October 25, Occupy Oakland will take back Oscar Grant Plaza with the intention of reclaiming the commons and the right of the people to organize in City Centers. This is a call out to all those who either experienced or were intrigued by the power of the Oakland Commune to come and contribute to the evening’s planned discussions on racism, patriarchy, state repression, and bridges to building a mass movement. A pot luck, community forum and general assembly are scheduled to begin at 4:00pm, followed by a march at 7:00pm. Films will be shown in the evening.

Come gather with us in the commons!

This is a test…this is only a test.

by Bill Luoma

        *thanks latfmanarchists and whosoever lit the cop car onfire

I was sleeping at home
at 3am on October 25
when the alert came in.
Very heavy police presence. 
20 chp in parking lot nearby. 
Seems as if raid is imminent. 
Will update.
Raid confirmed. 
Get here immediately. 
Lines of riot cops marching toward camp.
Oakland eviction raid any minute! 
Pls call 
& wake up friends 
& get down to 14th & bdwy to help defend!
I'm not really popping a boner right now.

The emergency broadcast system 
made duck quacks 
on october 25th at 4am.
Sasha is sleeping.
Charles and Juliana are there.
Police are here.
Gave dispersal orders.
Please come!
If they get arrested
I will call in sick 
take care of Sasha
& pick them up.
Those straight white manarchists 
really need an accountability process right now.

The emergency broadcast system 
went beep at five-thirty am on october 25th.
I'm watching punkboyinsf on the livestream.
Raid went down at 5am. 
Both oscar grant plaza & snowpark. 
90+ arrests. Folks taken to 6th & wash, 
overflow to santa rita jail.
Ohai, work.
From the west oakland BART 
I can see helicopters over the plaza 
and other unidentifiable raptors 
confused and in need of fuel.

I put the emergency broadcast system
on vibrate at 11am on october 25 at work.
I'm on a project with Jorge Regula
trying to write a method
to determine if an android device
has a connection to the ad-hoc network.
I've got on my yellow shirt. 
Reconvene at Oklnd Main Library 
(14th&Madison) 4PM today! 
Spread the word! 
Fwd this to your contact list. 
Not all are receiving these txt alerts.

Just the facts
said the emergency broadcast system
on October 25 at 8th and Washington.
Bobo is Dereck and Kitten is Kenower.
Bobo is in the middle and Kitten is framing 
paint bombs, flash bangs and shotguns.
All painted cops are very unhappy.
Standoff at 14th and broadway. 
500+ Police have used tear gas several times this evening.
Scott Olsen 'has been shot' in the head 
with a 'non-lethal device'
and 'does not appear to die.'
Water Fountains @ Snow Park nr bathrm; 
nr Lake Chalet 14th & Lakeside; 
+open faucet on Alice btw 13th &14th 
@ side o brick bldg. 
Bring bottles!
What's going on oaxaca? 
Go ahead. Don't afraid.

The emergency broadcast system
prefigured a kind of washing & drinking 
at 10pm on october 25.
If you were gassed tonight 
undress and hose off outside. 
Don't bring the gas powder in the house with you. 
Chance of long term health effects.
Oh fuck, where's yopa when you need him?
Don't use that fucking hippie soap!

The emergency broadcast system
made a mistake at 10am on october 26.
Plz disregard previous msg. 
The action was mistakenly sent out as happening today. 
No Labor Picket @ Jail today. 
Back 2 R Streets @ 6pm Tonight!
What did I tell you about that fucking hippie soap?

The emergency broadcast system 
made old peculiar at 5pm on october 26.
GA tonight at 6pm at 14th and Broadway. 
If access to intersection is impossible 
we will reconverge at Oakland Public Library 
(14th and Madison).
I'm at home watching Sasha. 
I'm watching the global revolution livestream.
I'm watching the people say Oakland General Strike set for Nov 2! 
More cowbell please.

It's friday october 28 at 11am
and the emergency broadcast system
wants me to know.
Strike committee meeting tonight at 5pm at Oscar Grant Plaza. 
General Assembly at 6 pm.
Strike committee meeting tonight at 5pm at Oscar Grant Plaza. 
General Assembly at 6 pm.
I'm planning a very special kind of kittens action.

For the next few days
the emergency broadcast system
reminds me about the police 
who've been really good
at excercising their 2nd amendment rights
in the face of my 1st.
Support needed for 2 more 
arraignments today at 2pm. 
Wiley Manuel Courthouse. 
7th and Washington. 
Dept. 112.
Speakout against police violence at 6. 
Rubber bullets make big boo-boos on Bobo's body.

The day before the strike
the emergency broadcast system
gave out tactical info.
Tomorrow use twitter hashtag #OOstrike. 

Continuation of prev message. 
Please only use #OOstrike for tactical information. 
We want this to be a clear channel for information.
Marches for port leave at 4 and 5 sharp. 
I'll use twitter hashtag #OOstrike
when I find the port-o-pottie.

The emergency broadcast system
started tweeting at 8:30
on the morning of the general strike.
Marches on banks leaving after 9 am and 12 pm convergences. 
Anticapitalist march at 2 pm.
Someone masked up touches my shoulder
and seems to smile. ohai. 
I can't tell who it is 
but I say o, hey, like I do. 
Fuck you if you like commas.

The emergency broadcast system
distributed safe words
on the day of the general strike.
Legal hotline for today is 415.285.1011. 
Please write on body in indelible ink 
if you are doing direct action.
Does that include <<Death to Capitalism>> 
? or <<Long Live The Oakland Commune>>
? Either way it doesn't seem to matter 
as the cops are nowhere to be found.

The emergency broadcast system
made statements on the evening 
of the general strike.
ILWU reports shift change now at 8.  
To hold the picket 
please stay at port.
Please standby.
We are still waiting for confirmation 
that port is totally shut down, 
and then we can leave. 
Love builds up.
Nothing happens.

One thing is needed
said the emergency broadcast system
at 1:58am on the night of the general strike:
Support.
Plaza under attack by police. 
I've stopped dancing in front of the travelers aid building.
The banner doesn't say <<Occupy verything>>.
I'm seeing a lot of mutual aid from medics.
No one uses twitter hashtag #OOStrike.
12

Who is the Occupy Oakland Media Collective?

Recent articles have quoted Shake Anderson and others as a representatives of Occupy Oakland apologizing for past actions of the movement. This includes an article in the Oakland Tribune and another by Kevin Zeese, an activist in Washington, DC.

Anderson and the Occupy Oakland Media Collective claim to be on an “apology campaign” to defend  Occupy Oakland from the “Oakland Commune.”

First, the Oakland Commune is simply a nickname for the camp at Oscar Grant Plaza and the community that grew out of it, no more, no less. It is a term of endearment used by Occupy Oakland participants, not some separate shady organization.

More importantly, Anderson is a member of the “Occupy Oakland Media Collective” which publishes the HellaOccupyOakland.org web site, which is separate from OccupyOakland.org.

The Occupy Oakland Media Collective does not represent Occupy Oakland.

Far from it.

From January to March, the Occupy Oakland Media Collective–then known as the “OO Media” committee–met in secret while pretending to have a transparent committee open to all, eventually expelling members of the committee who did not agree with an article they published on their web site.  The article in question ridiculously and offensively accused an Arab-American activist in Occupy Oakland of being both a terrorist and a federal agent–based on “evidence” from a Department of Defense anti-terrorism document!–that was briefly published on hellaoccupyoakland.org.

The racist nature of this accusation was contradictory to everything the Occupy movement stands for. The Occupy Oakland General Assembly voted to distance itself from the group in March 2012.

That resolution is posted here:

1. Last Saturday, an offensive, irresponsible and dangerous article titled
“Occupational Awareness” was posted on the OO Media web site. Occupy
Oakland denounces the article. The article contains personal attacks on an
individual in Occupy Oakland that are untrue and unsubstantiated, and that
are extremely dangerous to him and to the movement.  The article appeals
and legitimates a fantasy of “terrorist threat” that has consistently been
used by the state to repress and silence protest, and to create false
“enemies,” and uses classic racist tactics of racial profiling to do so.
This article is not only a serious danger to the person attacked, it is a
danger to our movement and it  requires immediate action.

Rather than abide by this resolution, the Occupy Oakland Media Collective renounced the General Assembly–which passed this vote of over 140 people with 90% supporting–and decided to go its own way. They chose to leave Occupy Oakland rather than apologize for their offensive behavior and now have a highly restrictive membership policy which is an affront to the open-air organizing that took place in October and November of 2011 at Oscar Grant Plaza.

The Occupy Oakland Media Collective now claims to represent Occupy Oakland, speaking on behalf of the movement claiming that the tactics of the “Oakland Commune” turned people off. But these new “official” representatives played no serious role in organizing any of the mass actions. However,  they have done much to take credit for them and even, it seems, profit off of them.

Occupy Oakland does not have a position for or against vandalism and activists have varying attitudes toward this tactic. The Occupy Oakland Media Collective hopes to attract attention to themselves over this issue while doing nothing to clarify the distinction between a few broken windows compared to massive police repression, assault and arrests. The Occupy Oakland Media Collective  is playing directly into the hands of the opponents of the Occupy movement in the media, in City Hall and even vigilantes who call on Oaklanders to “beat the shit out of anarchists/vandals.”

The only true representative of the movement is the General Assembly. The General Assembly has spoken against the Occupy Oakland Media Collective. They do not represent Occupy Oakland, so please do not quote them as doing so.

The General Assembly no longer has large enough attendance to reach quorum–requiring at least 75 people–so it cannot speak for itself. The Occupy Oakland Media Collective, which is literally a handful of people, have attempted to fill the void. They can do what they wish, but claiming to be Occupy Oakland is utterly disingenuous.

Many of the activists who made up Occupy Oakland have continued organizing around school and library closures, prisoner solidarity, feminist marches, anti-police violence protests, labor solidarity and other actions while the Occupy Oakland Media Collective does what it only knows how–increase its web traffic by claiming to be something that it is not.

drone

Say no to drones in Alameda County!

Local Residents and Civil Rights Organizations Resist Sheriff’s Attempts to Deploy Drones Over Alameda County

Press conference to highlight concerns including invasion of privacy, militarization of police forces, restriction of free speech and political expression

At a press conference to be held on the steps of Oakland City Hall on Thursday, October 18, at 11:00 a.m., Alameda County residents and legal advocacy organizations will announce their efforts to resist the Sheriff’s announced plans to deploy aerial surveillance “drones” for undisclosed law enforcement purposes.

“Community members intend to pursue city and county legislation to prohibit the use of drones to spy on Alameda County residents,” stated Mary Madden, an Oakland resident. “The Sheriff’s idea is a threat to our privacy, and a deterrent to those of us who participate in community and political activities.”

The ACLU of Northern California has sent County Sheriff Ahern a public records request, asking for basic information about why drones are needed, how much they would cost to acquire, operate and maintain, and how the drones would be used.  “Drones should not be used for indiscriminate mass surveillance,” said Linda Lye, staff attorney with the ACLU-NC.  “Transparency is key.  Right now, we don’t know what, if any, safeguards the Sheriff intends to follow before deploying unmanned surveillance aircraft into our skies.”

Critical Resistance, a national organization that has helped organize against the use of gang injunctions in Oakland, has also condemned Sheriff Ahern’s plans for drones. “The idea of using military equipment in policing is one more step in the militarization of Bay Area police activities,” stated Rachel Herzing, of Critical Resistance. “Extending police powers to monitor and surveil local residents within communities that already have a high level of distrust of the police can only generate more tension and resentment toward police forces, while further criminalizing our families and neighbors.”

The Electronic Frontier Foundation originally sued the FAA under the Freedom of Information Act to get information on all public and private entities that have applied for drone authorizations and has since filed many public records requests to local law enforcement agencies to find out more about drone use. “Drones will give law enforcement an unprecedented ability to spy on Americans, and the law has not kept up with the technology,” said Trevor Timm, activist for EFF. “Before any law enforcement agency operates drones in American skies, we need binding privacy safeguards and transparency requirements that explain and control their use. Police should need a warrant to use drones for surveillance on any individual, and agencies need clear data use and retention standards that explain how and for what purpose surveillance footage and data are being used, with whom its being shared, and when it will be deleted.”

OaklandCommune5

What the Oakland Commune did

by Anonymous

Some seem to have willfully forgotten that the Oakland Commune banner flew over the camp at Frank Ogawa / Oscar Grant Plaza during it’s hey day. Lest this amnesia spread, let’s remember what the Oakland Commune did.

Before it was known as such, and before the first tents were pitched in front of City Hall, the Oakland Commune came together in Mosswood Park because the winds were changing, the spirit of Occupy Wall Street (inspired, at least in part, by what had taken place in the Bay Area not more than two years previous) was spreading to towns across the country, and it was time for Oakland to take part.

At the height of its popularity, the Oakland Commune fed over 1,000 a day at pretty much any hour with no exceptions made. Basic First Aid, mental and emotional support were also provided to anyone who asked, all of these being extended to those abandoned by city, state and national policies that go back at least as far as Reagan.

The Oakland Commune sought to shatter the illusion that we are a wholly united 99%, an idea that weakened the movement with each racist, misogynist and homophobic remark. Instead, it sought, though often admittedly failed, to provide safe spaces for women, queers and people of color. Where it did fail, it tried to rectify through mediation and facilitation.

As much as the Oakland Commune looked to Occupy to bring people together, it also looked to the decades of hard work that the people of Oakland have put into fighting foreclosures, imperial wars, racist police violence and austerity measures that unravel the few remaining public services in this cash-strapped town.

When the first camp fell, the Oakland Commune rallied while the Oakland Unified School District decide to shutter five schools in underserved neighborhoods and Oakland Police shot tear gas into a crowd of thousands, nearly killing Scott Olsen and firing rubber bullets at the people who came to his assistance.

The Oakland Commune fretted over whether the port-a-potties could be serviced before, during and after the November 2nd General Strike. That same day, and also on December 12th, the Oakland Commune came together to shut down the Port of Oakland in protest of Goldman Sachs stranglehold on the city (a stranglehold that the City Council itself would attempt to loosen with a vote to end the debt swap months later).

When the camps were gone, the Oakland Commune dissolved in body and spread to new spaces.

The Oakland Commune traveled with a thousand others to San Quentin to support one of the most successful and least reported successes of Occupy Oakland’s tenure, Occupy for Prisoners, and joined the farmers, professional and otherwise, to Take Back the Tract. The Commune supported the sit-in that occupied one of the aforementioned shuttered schools and helped open the Biblioteca Popular (now run by the community it serves).

The Oakland Commune continues on not only in the form of raucous street parties, but in the form of campaigns against fare hikes that threaten the most precarious of communities, assemblies of workers and the unemployed, in solidarity marches with the victims of police violence from Oakland to Montreal to Anaheim to Lonmin.

For all of these actions to which it lent support, the Oakland Commune sought no credit or claim.

While Occupy Oakland wouldn’t have existed without the Oakland Commune, the Oakland Commune continues on in a new forms. So while a few seem to be fighting hard for the name and brand of Occupy, the Oakland Commune continues to fight for a life worth living.

Are The Oakland Police Going Down At Last? At Long Last?

Three developments in these last few days have given pause to those who believe the Oakland Police will remain, as they have for so many decades, untouchable.

Judge Thelton Henderson

The Oakland Police Department has a sordid history going back at least to the 1960′s when unremitting police brutality spurred on the formation of the Black Panther Party, one of whose principal goals was the protection of African-American neighborhoods from the police.

For decades officers have ruled the streets of Oakland much as an occupying army (1), willfully ignorant of the Bill of Rights, impervious to the political attacks on their power that wax and wane as City administrations come and go, and able to shrug off multiple assaults by civil rights attorneys — which end up costing the taxpayers, but not Oakland’s Police Department, millions of dollars a year in civil rights settlements.

Even when forced to sign onto agreements (‘negotiated settlements’) in 2003 and then 2005 which promised drastic reforms in their policies and procedures, they have been able to effectively ignore those court-approved and monitored settlements through into the current decade. The latest but certainly not the only manifestation of this was their handling of Occupy Oakland, in direct violation of both settlement agreements.

What has suddenly happened?

Click here to read the entire essay, finding out what has happened

Photo is of Federal Judge Thelton Henderson, who is presiding over the case that might finally take OPD down.

“They Don’t Give A F*** About People.” So We’re Drawing a Line in the Sidewalk.

By JP Massar

When your house is invaded by insects, everyone knows it’s time to call the exterminator.

When your house is invaded by ghosts, everyone of movie-going age in 1984 knew it was time to call Ghostbusters.

But when your house is invaded by banksters? The Federal government is of no use. Calling Jaime Dimon produces a recording of hysterical laughter. Prayers have not been shown to have any efficacy in stopping the sheriff from tossing your kids out onto the street. Lawyers cost the money you don’t have and usually can’t do much anyway. And even if they want to seek help, people are often ashamed.

What to do?

zaki foreclosure action BofA

It’s not for the faint of heart, but those who are angry enough to be willing to fight back on the edge of the law have one last resort — calling Occupy and friends.

“Unruly mobs” of Occupy activists and other home defender groups such as ACCE have formed all across the country, pledging to draw a line in the sidewalk to not allow foreclosures, auctions and evictions by invasive banksters to take place — not without a fight anyway. From Minnesota to Atlanta, from Eugene to Brooklyn, from Detroit to Los Angeles and Anaheim, From San Francisco, Oakland, Sacramento and Stockton to Maine, auctions have been disrupted, evictions prevented, people organized, and sufficient publicity generated to force banksters into modifying loans they once claimed were impossible to rework and unevict people they thought they had removed.