Showing posts with label IWW. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IWW. Show all posts

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Occupy the Ports - A Day without Goldman Sachs


http://la.indymedia.org/news/2011/12/250356.php

by Rockero Monday, Dec. 12, 2011 at 10:25 PM 
rockero420@yahoo.com
December 12, 2011
LONG BEACH, California - Heeding the call of Occupy Oakland, who called for a shutdown of west coast ports in response to the brutal eviction of occupy encampments nationwide, and in solidarity with expolited port workers and truckers, about 500 militant occupiers and their friends shut down Terminal J of the Port of Long Beach, the home of SSA Marine, an investment of the criminal enterprise Goldman Sachs and the main stakeholder of the US government.
Occupy the Ports - A...
Occupy Riverside spent better than the past week coordinating our participation, with meetings, tactics trainings, information gathering, food, art, and transportation preparations. We were a bit unnerved by the reports we were hearing from Occupy Long Beach, who told us that the cops were "going to great pains" to accomodate our protest, and that if anyone got arrested, it would be their own fault. We were worried that Long Beach was making deals that we hadn't and wouldn't agree to, essentially setting us in a trap. We were also concerned about the potential for becoming trapped or kettled in on the port's narrow piers.

We decided to arrive early just in case entry was blocked prior to the official five o'clock start time. We gathered at the site of our former encampment at midnight Sunday, shared resources such as bandannas, rain ponchos, and pepper spray antidote, and added final touches on our banners and signs. One soul burned sage, and a few shared sage words of inspiration.

We formed a ten-car caravan that met with comrades from other inland occupys at a Long Beach all-night chain restaurant for coffee and various victuals, and then headed to Harry Bridges Park, the propitiously named park that becase the staging area for our militant labor protest. A large contingent from Occupy Las Vegas had beat us there, and Occupy Pasadena, Occupy Long Beach, was also present. Soon enough, the buses from Occupy LA arrived. There were also large contingents from IWW chapters and other groups such as CodePink and the socialist parties, and some smaller groups from other unions, but the autonomous social body of Occupy was unmistakable as the primary visible force.

Black flags and syndicalist flags abounded, a many, many comrades wore bandannas over their faces and masks of other sorts, ready to form a black bloc if necessary.

At about 5, Michael Novick arrived and started distributing chant sheets and clarifying the morning's game plan. The corporate media rushed to make last-minute interviews before the 5:30 departure time. The crowd was brimming with energy, and even though the rain fell very steadily.

"Hey hey, Goldman Sachs, we want all our money back!"

"Whose port? Our port!"

"All day! All week! Occupy Long Beach!"

"Banks got bailed out! We got sold out!"

We marched along the waterfront through the park and entered the port.

"Jail them yes! Bail them no! Goldman Sachs has got to go!"

"¡Se ve, se siente! ¡El pueblo está presente!"

"We are the 99%!"

Some of the comrades grabbed a metal barricade from the cops and carried it with them. It was about a forty-minute walk, but eventually we did encounter police repression.

An advance party ignored the police line and continued about a hundered yards toward the dock. Some organizers attempted to convince us not to continue the march, and the crowd seemed pretty hesitant. Shortly the bolder group returned and convinced most of the rest of us to join them. We advanced further, but eventually faced off with another row of cops.

"The people united will never be divided!"

"Occupy Wall Street! Occupy Long Beach! Occupy everywhere! Never give it back!"

"What do we want? Justice! When do we want it? Now!"

It wasn't clear where the truckers were supposed to enter, or where the longshore workers' normal entrance was, so people didn't really know where to best make use of their presence. Shortly, however, we regrouped and resituated ourselves more strategically.

Once we did, the police issued their warning. "This is the Long Beach police department. You are trespassing on private property. You will be subject to arrest unless you move back to the pre-designated protest area." Our fears about OLB's negotiations with the police were confirmed.

The drums beat furiously.

"This is what a police state looks like!"

"One! We are the people! Two! We are united! Three! The occupation is not leaving!"

"Predesignated protest area!" someone mocked into a bullhorn.

We formed a picket, circling in front of the line of cops that was attempting to block us.

"Kick Wall Street off the waterfront!"

"Every where we go, people wanna know who we are! So we tell them: We are the ninety-nine! The mighty ninety-ninety-nine!"

The cops issues another warning ten minutes later. Shortly thereafter they began to shove us back with their clubs.



"We are peaceful! We are non-violent!"

They also attempted to grab members of the crowd on several occasions. Most of the times we were able to retrieve our comrades, but they managed to keep one of our brothers from the inland empire who has been active in Occupy San Bernardino Valley and who played a prominent role in Occupy Ontario's first action.

The drums beat a frenzied cadence.

"Let them go! Let him go! Let her go!"

"Police represent the 1%"

"The whole world is watching!"

At one point, it seemed the cops were attempting to break through our line. About five or six of them burst forth into the center of our line, but we stuck together and they were unable to penetrate us. Luckily, we suspected they would attempt to split us with a maneuver like this, and the anarchists were quick to bring the barricade to the precise spot where it was needed to repel the attack.

"We're ninjas! Don't fuck with us!"

"¡Sí se puede!"

This continued for more than an hour, with the police pushing back a few feet at a time at first, then continuously.



Since we had accomplished our original goal of ending truck traffic and deterring much longshore worker attendance, we decided to fall back. As we did, we practiced some innovative chants.

"Police got the back of Goldman Sachs!"

"Move your feet! Tactical retreat!"

"Emma Goldman not Goldman Sachs!"

"Stay together! We'll fight forever!"

When we reached the intersection nearest to the parking lot, police closed in on both sides. A tent went up and people sat down. The cops threatened to use chemical weapons, painful projectiles, and angry dogs against us. They ordered us to disperse and threatened to arrest anyone who chose to remain. They said they would designate the legal dispersal route but failed to do so until challenged by a protester.

Even as people passed through the parking lot, the police remained in pursuit, in times appearing to want to block of the exit routes of dispersing protesters.

Once the parking lot was mostly clear, however, they refocused their presence at the entrance to the park where the action had begun that morning, giving us a bit of breathing room in the park to regroup. Different groups made plans to meet for food, debriefing, and planning next steps.

This is the most excited I have ever seen any group to take action. We created a feedback loop from our own energy that kept us pumped and motivated all morning long. In evaluative conversations, we shared the feeling of success from having reached a common objective. We prevented 200 trucks from entering the port, and according to a comrade in communication with the ILWU, also deterred about 50 longshore workers from entering as well. We rejoiced in the inspirational power that collective action has, making us eager to escalate tactics to ensure that the proposed May Day General Strike is as effective and powerful as possible.

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Harry Bridges Park in the tranquility of morning

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Solidarity from Riverside

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Occupy the Ports banner

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Occupy Riverside banner

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Occupy Long Beach banner

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No Banks! No Borders!

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The other "Occupy the Ports" banner

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Skirmish

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Shut it down!

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Singing the US national anthem.

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The cops even had their boat out.

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Tactical retreat!

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At the intersection

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Tent at intersection

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Intersection

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Back at Harry Bridges

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Downtown March for Workers' Rights

http://la.indymedia.org/news/2011/03/245248.php

Saturday, March 26, 2011

LOS ANGELES - Approximately 20,000 marchers demonstrated their support for unions and the right to collectively bargain.

Downtown March for W...

LOS ANGELES - Approximately 20,000 marchers demonstrated their support for unions and the right to collectively bargain.

If it has seemed like labor is weak lately, taking one on the chin in Wisconsin in particular, the tone of the downtown march was defiant, focused, and morally outraged.

The Teamsters, SEIU, UFCW, LiUNA, steelworkers, education workers, farmworkers, hotel workers, immigrants, wobblies, workers from many other sectors, organized and unorganized, all took the streets of Los Angeles for the day.

Their solid-colored union t-shirts created a visual rainbow of worker power as they proceeded from the convention center to Pershing Square.

Their enormous banners, mass-produced signs, trucks and buses, water bottles were proof that despite only representing only 11.9 percent of the workforce1, they are still able to organize money when necessary.

Several unions crossed paths with their exploiters along the march route, including the food and commercial workers (UFCW), who faced down one of the Ralph's that is refusing to negotiate a contract, and hotel workers from Luxe. Workers took advantage of the opportunity to decry their bosses' abuses and lack of cooperation. Workers under the thumb of both corporations are currently working without contracts.2, 3

The march brought out the normal activist crowd, but the unions brought out many faces that don't generally take to the streets in political action. I ran into people I know I'd never see at a peace march or immigrant rights rally.

But imagine if their unions turned them out for those causes as well!

School marching bands played, many chants frilled the air, and some youngsters brought back some of the old union hymns.

The recent swearing in of Governor Jerry Brown, a Democrat, coupled with California's being the home to more of the nation's union workers than any other state, virtually guarantee that no anti-union action as overt as Scott Walker's in Wisconsin will take place here.

But unions are right to be worried. Declining membership, being squeezed out of the private sector, and anti-union attitudes have all contributed to the labor movement's deterioration since the McCarthyist 50s, but particularly since the Reagan era. A blow like Wisconsin could never have been struck without the last 40 years of the slow debilitation of the unions after the incredible build-up of the workers' movement in the first half of the 20th century.

The corporations have been fighting a century long war of attrition, while we organizers have been either too-focused on the day-to-day, too-focused on the distant Revolution, or too willing to believe the myth of our own weakness.

The economy is but one indication that the current system hangs by but a thread. The environment is another. It's time we realized our own potential, our own power, and took advantage of the perpetual crisis to make a lasting change through overcoming--or at least balancing out--the overconcentration of wealth and power in the hands of the few and redistributing them among the many.

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1. Bureau of Labor Statistics. "Union Members Summary." January 21, 2011. http://www.bls.gov/news.release/union2.nr0.htm

2. Hotel Workers Rising. "Luxe Hotel Workers Strike in Downtown Los Angeles." January 13, 2011. http://www.hotelworkersrising.org/update.php?city_id=257

3. Los Angeles County Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO. "March and Rally for Our Communites, Our Jobs." http://launionaflcio.org/pdf/110211-March-26-Flyer_Fed.pdf

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Capitalists love free labor

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Teamsters005

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Marching band

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Power

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SEIU

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SEIU

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UFCW

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ILWU, Steel workers

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UFW

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Democracy, no plutocracy

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UNITE HERE Luxe workers

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IWW call for general strike

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UFW

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Coming Soon: Anarchy!

http://la.indymedia.org/news/2009/08/229374.php

Coming Soon: Anarchy!
by Rockero Tuesday, Aug. 04, 2009 at 6:07 PM
rockero420@yahoo.com

Second Southern California Anarchist Conference and Feria Libertaria

Saturday and Sunday, August 1 and 2, 2009

LOS ANGELES - Over a span of two days, hundreds of people from across the region converged to participate in the Second1 Southern California Anarchist Conference and the Feria Libertaria, an anarchist cultural fair. Despite the serious topic being discussed, that of constructing a genuinely free and non-hierarchical society, the relaxed atmosphere at both of the events was a perfect companion for Southern California's informal summer vibe.

Saturday's conference was held at the Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research in South Central Los Angeles. After a short welcome from some of the organizers and a few announcements regarding schedule changes, a member of the library's staff gave us some background on the institution's history, as well as some of the current projects, such as the upcoming book drive for the children of the neighborhood.

With that, the workshops and panels began. In the library's reading room, Vlad lead a discussion on "piracy and hooliganism," which touched on recent news stories regarding Somali "pirates" and the riot that followed the Lakers championship victory and how they relate to anarchist theory and current anti-authoritarian struggles.

Out in the garden, Manny and Autumn discussed the Echo Park Time Bank, an institution that coordinates the exchange of services between individuals without using currency as the medium of exchange. This growing collective of individuals in the Echo Park area is an example of an alternative to the cash economy, which is becoming all-the-more important as the economic crises worsen and unemployment grows. And equally as important, since there is no exchange of money, the government is not able to tax the exchange. Even barter is taxable, but time exchanges, fortunately, are not. While a time bank cannot supplant the capitalist economy and offers no direct challenge to the oligarchies, its implementation is very useful for creating and strengthening community and localizing economies.

Inside the main room, a panel discussion became a group conversation about alternative educational models. Professor Sirena Pelarollo shed light on ongoing efforts to build local alternative autonomous educational initiatives. Excitement was felt by all as individuals, many of them teachers, professors, and students, shared their experiences with the authoritarian nature of the mainstream educational system. They also expressed a desire to share resources in hopes of establishing local non-hierarchical educational institutions. Representatives of the Institute for Anarchist Studies were also present to discuss the institute and the ways it can supports anarchist research and the importance of documenting our current struggles for scholars and activists of the future.

Upstairs, members of the Revolutionary Autonomous Communities (RAC) discussed their efforts to build a movement to resist capitalism and white supremacy through mutual aid, as exemplified by the food program, which distributes food to around 250 families weekly by involving the families and community members in the collection and distribution.

After a leisurely break, which provided a welcome respite for speakers and translators, the second workshop session began. In the main room, six panelists discussed the Los Angeles-area collectives of which they had been part, including the Los Angeles Anarchist Center, Windchime House, the Black Star Collective, the Long Beach Youth Federation, the Alternative Gathering Collective, Riot Grrl, and the Los Angeles Anarchist Black Cross Federation. They explained how their collectives were formed, and elaborated on what they were excited about, sharing ideas with workshop attendees for future projects that they found successful.

Upstairs, members of the Los Angeles branch of the Industrial Workers of the World discussed "the US labor movement and the anarchist tradition," and the Insane Dialectical Posse discussed class war as it relates to the economic crisis, proposing anti-capitalist alternatives. Alongside them, Gifford also spoke about labor's militant but hidden history in the United States.

Following the second round of discussions, Food not Bombs provided a delicious vegan meal including lentils and rice, fresh bread and fruit, and vegan burritos. As the representative of the Pittsburgh Organizing Group, which is coordinating resistance to the G20 summit in late September, was unavailable, conference attendees instead enjoyed a lengthy networking session, making new friends and developing affinities.

As the lunch hour ended, we were pleased to welcome a member of the Tongva nation. "To acknowledge where we're at, and being that this is Tongva land, we want to pay respects, but not just pay respects, but we wanted to actually create some space and we have somebody here from the Tongva nation that's going to share and we ask you to pay respects." Angie Dorame Behrns discussed what it was like growing up as an indigenous woman in Los Angeles, and talked about her struggle to the sacred springs of Kuruvungna, which are located on the campus of University High School on the West Side. She then answered questions, and invited us all to the Gathering at Kuruvungna. Kuruvungna is Tongva for "Place where we are in the sun." During the question-and-answer session, the speaker discussed her outrage at the exhumation of indigenous remains. "Trying to save our culture, what we say is, 'Keep the remains where they were interred. Leave them there. Don't dig them up.' Nobody goes to the Chinese gravesites, or Japanese graves. They don't dig them up. They don't dig them up! They're protected. But we, the indigenous people? Unh-unh. We're not protected. The developers can go dig them up, as long as they have a Native American monitoring, they can dig up Playa Vista, one of the biggest burial sites in America!"2 The speaker ended by reciting a poem.

In the last round of workshops, Sherman Austin discussed how to make use of the independent media, including radio, the internet, and cell phones to resist police brutality and other forms of oppression. He discussed the various aspects of raise the fist, and also guided us through how to create and operate an emergency response alert network through the website.

In the main room, Alex Sánchez's brother Oscar and other members of the community discussed the situation of the indicted anti-gang activist, as well as repression in general against activists, while upstairs, members of the coordinating committee of next week's Clitfest, Women's Creative Collective for Change, and Anarcha-LA (an anarcha-feminist group who also provided childcare for the younger participants) discussed feminism and issues affecting the female-identified and non-gender-conforming communities. Meanwhile, there was an impromptu APOC caucus in the reading room.

For the final event of the day, comrades from the Black Rider Liberation Party read aloud their guide to survival in the new "Obama" millenium, which was published in the latest issue of Anti-Racist Action's Turning the Tide. They then took questions from the audience.

Following the presentation, a general assembly was convoked. Organizers asked people to gather in the center of the room and to share their reactions, criticisms, questions, with everyone present. We ended with a call for announcement for future events and actions.

The next day, despite a few contretemps, last-minute cancelations, and schedule changes, many people arrived to the UCLA downtown labor center across from MacArthur Park to enjoy the music, art, food, and literature that was shared. As they arrived, they were able to see, many for the first time, RAC's food program in action. Inside, vendors of radical reading material, some traveling great distances, came to sell their wares, and many local organizations shared information and did outreach. Local youth walked in to see what was going on, and artists led stencil-making workshops. Organizers urged attendees to patronize local vendors, and later in the day, Food not Bombs arrived with large quantities of free food.

In comparison with last year's first annual Los Angeles anarchist bookfair, the turnout at each of the weekend's events was markedly lower. However, the scheduling of the conference (longer workshop sessions with longer breaks in between and block of time for networking) allowed for a increased dialogue, and increased quality thereof. And the feria libertaria allowed for the integration of the cultural arts as a visibly present aspect of our freedom-loving movement, and was judged by the organizers as an overall success.

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1. The first Southern California Anarchist Conference was held two years ago and was raided by police, who permanently shut down the space of a solidary community and media organization. See Southern California Anarchist Show Shut Down by Police, 19-12-2007.

2. For more information about the remains at Playa Vista, see these articles: Bates, Karen Grigsby. "At Playa Vista, a Controversy over Indian Remains," NPR. May 1, 2007. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=9940767 and Madigan, Nick. "Developer Unearths Burial Ground and Stirs Up Anger Among Indians." Los Angeles Times, 2004-06-02. http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/02/us/developer-unearths-burial-ground-and-stirs-up-anger-among-indians.html?pagewanted=all

Library staff

by Rockero Tuesday, Aug. 04, 2009 at 6:07 PM
rockero420@yahoo.com

Library staff...

At the conference, 1/aug/09


Angie Behrns

by Rockero Tuesday, Aug. 04, 2009 at 6:07 PM
rockero420@yahoo.com


At the conference, 1/aug/09

Fresher Flesh

by Rockero Tuesday, Aug. 04, 2009 at 6:07 PM
rockero420@yahoo.com

QuickTime movie at 96.4 mebibytes

At the Feria.

(Didn't catch the group's name. But they rocked the house!)

by Rockero Tuesday, Aug. 04, 2009 at 6:07 PM
rockero420@yahoo.com

(Didn't catch the gr...

At the feria