Showing posts with label Youth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Youth. Show all posts

Monday, February 13, 2012

UCR Occupied in Defense of Education

http://la.indymedia.org/news/2012/01/251135.php
http://la.indymedia.org/news/2012/01/251135.php


by Rockero Monday, Jan. 23, 2012 at 12:11 AM 
rockero420@yahoo.com
Thursday, January 19, 2012
RIVERSIDE (CA) - Thousands of students, workers, and community members gathered to participate in the governance of the UC system. When their participation was limited and ultimately shut off, they took direct action to ensure their voices were heard. For this, they were confronted by police from numerous agencies. Police violence broke out, and three arrests were made.
Preparations for the event have been going on for months, and have included on-campus general assemblies and discussions of occupation. The camp began Tuesday night and immediately drew support from students and campers from Occupy Riverside and Occupy LA. By Wednesday, a food table was set up, as was an outreach table and a people's library. Students and faculty held many teach-ins and teach-outs to raise the consciousness of students.

But the action really began Thursday morning, when groups of students and unions members spoke to the regents during the public comment section of the meeting.

Here are a few of their speeches:







Once the regents made it clear that they would not listen to our concerns, we decided to continue the meeting, but under our own auspices, that we might expand the conversation.



Sixteen people sat on the ground in a circle and expressed their demands for administrative pay freezes, rehiring of laid off lecturers and staff, the adoption of proposed revenue solutions. They then shifted the meeting to a general assembly, to which all were invited, which entertained proposals for collective action around education issues. One of the regents got on stack to express disappointment that the meeting had been restored to the people. The rest were quietly evacuated.

Many police were brought in, but nobody was arrested. After a short while, we learned that the regents had adjourned to another room to continue the supposedly-public meeting without us. At about the same time we heard reports that our comrades were being confronted by riot police downstairs. We decided to go join them.

Here began a series of attempts to meet with the regents as they exited from the building. We split into groups in order to cover the multiple exits. The first confrontation was on the stairwell at the back of the Highlander Union Building.

Others ensued on the stairs at the front of the building near Chicanx Student Programs, and at the back loading dock. At the front stairs, dispersal orders were given numerous times but never enforced. Cops ordered usd to stop moving forward even though we were not advancing whatsoever.

Regents began sneaking out the back one-by-one so we set up people's roadblocks to control the traffic. Passengers in parking enforcement vehicles were severely delayed, while a student regent acted as a liaison with the regents, asking them to meet with us. While we waited, we brought a tent from the encampment and occupied the street with a dance party. Eventually, however, riot cops break through the crowd and escorted the trucks out.

The focus became the back loading dock once again, where a row of riot cops had maintained a constant presence. Police pushed protesters with batons, and fired projectiles containing metal pellets and ink paint, striking three comrades from Occupy LA in the legs. It was at this point that two of the arrests were made. One was of Kenneth Ehrlich, who UCR's website lists as a lecturer in the art department. He is charged with felony assault with a deadly weapon and his bail was set for $25,000. He has since been freed on bond.

The shooting had people pretty frightened, but calm prevailed and there the situation devolved into the next in the series of standoffs. It too eventually dissipated, and the final one of the day also involved an arrest. A comrade from Occupy Riverside was charged with misdemeanor batter on a police officer and felony obstructing or resisting. He was bailed out the next day.

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UCR occupied

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Student speaker

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Student speaker

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Student speaker

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Human chain

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Human chain

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Outside

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UCR Occupied

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First skirmish - on back stairs

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Second skirmish - on front stairs

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Large gathering in front of Hub

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Blocking parking enforcement escape trucks

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That barricade went up quick!

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Book block

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Dance party with tent to occupy street

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Large crowd at Hub loading dock

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Injured by baton

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Injured by projectiles

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Turn cuts around or we'll shut this shit down

Monday, March 21, 2011

Inland Empire Solidarity with Libya and Wisconsin

http://la.indymedia.org/news/2011/03/244835.php

Inland Empire Solidarity with Libya and Wisconsin

by Rockero Sunday, Mar. 13, 2011 at 8:05 PM
rockero420@yahoo.com
Saturday, March 12, 2011

POMONA, California - With shouts of "Down with dictatorship!" and "The union's under attack! What do we do? Stand up, fight back!" a group composed primarily of local youth sent a strong statement of solidarity with the people of the Middle East and North Africa, as well as with union workers in Wisconsin and elsewhere at the corner of Mission and Garey.

Inland Empire Solida...

Needing to react to crises at home and abroad, young activists from throughout the Inland Empire decided to hold a demonstration just prior to Pomona's art walk, which draws hundreds, in order to maximize their impact. Gathering at about 5:30 in front of the library for a speech decrying the violence, the demonstrators marched to the corner, unfurling a banner reading "Solidarity with Wisconsin workers" and signs reading "Free Libya" and "From Madison to [the] Magreb, we're with the workers!" shouting "Hey hey! Ho ho! Qaddafi's got to go!"


They local youth were joined by students and professors from the Claremont Colleges, youth from San Bernardino, and representatives from Claremont's teacher's union.

"We're here today in support of our sisters and brothers in Libya, in Egypt, and everywhere else people are fighting back against autocracy, including in Wisconsin where the workers are having their voices silenced. We're tired of our government claiming to be democratic on one hand and then financing dictators all over the rest of the world who violate the rights of their own people!"

The protest featured the normal fare of chanting, but also included the singing of several songs of social justice, including "Solidarity Forever" and "We Shall Overcome."

As darkness fell, several announcements were made about upcoming actions, including a demonstration against the fascist element in Claremont scheduled for next Saturday. The neo-nazi National Socialist Movement, no doubt drawn to the Claremont area by the anti-immigrant group ridiculously titled "We the People, California's Crusader," which claims to be based in Claremont.

"We didn't have huge numbers," said one attendee, "but we succeeded in taking a stand and sending the message."

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Solidarity with Wisconsin Workers

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Protest

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Free Libya

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End Gaddafi's Dictatorship

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Where is Our Bailout? No More Money for RICH PSYCHOPATHS

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Pomona, Cairo, Wisconsin, we shall fight! We shall win!

March 2 Day of Action for Education in Riverside

http://la.indymedia.org/news/2011/03/244795.php

March 2 Day of Action for Education in Riverside

by Rockero Saturday, Mar. 12, 2011 at 1:29 PM
rockero420@yahoo.com
Wednesday, March 2, 2011

RIVERSIDE, California - Students from the Inland Empire's main universities and community colleges held rallies at their respective campuses in the morning before converging in Riverside's civic center for a demonstration with speakers and music. Demands included an end to tuition hikes and schools cuts, an end to social services cuts, and the passage of the DREAM Act.

March 2 Day of Actio...

By the time of the downtown convergence, the number of participants had dwindled to about 50 or 60, a far cry from the multitude of participants at last year's March 4 Day of Action for Public Education. "Maybe everyone who was here last year, the people who really cared because it impacted them directly, got priced out of education this year," speculated one marcher.


Nonetheless, students from UCR, Riverside Community College, San Bernardino Valley College, Mt. San Antonio College, Cal Poly Pomona, and their supporter gave passionate speeches in support of their cause.

At one point, an angry woman approached the crowd and demanded that the sound be cut off, despite the organizers having filed for the appropriate permits. She wore no uniform, produced no identification, and made no claim to any authority to shut down the rally other than claiming to work for the City of Riverside.

Student organizers adeptly handled the attempted repression by using a rotating grab-bag of tactics, including strategic ignoring, engaging her, sending her to talk to different people, and pretending to comply. It was genius.

Take a look at some of the action and at what the speakers said:

March 2 Day of Action for Education Riverside - 1



March 2 Day of Action for Education Riverside - 2



March 2 Day of Action for Education Riverside - 3



March 2 Day of Action for Education Riverside - 4



March 2 Day of Action for Education Riverside - 5



March 2 Day of Action for Education Riverside - 6



March 2 Day of Action for Education Riverside - 7



March 2 Day of Action for Education Riverside - 8



March 2 Day of Action for Education Riverside - 9
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Rally with chants

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Drummers

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Street protest

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Title for our education is not for sale!

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Chanting

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Robbing Our Hood

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Bill Hedrick, known to the immigrant community as "Sr. Bill"

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Free UCR!

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Band

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Uni(Versi)ty

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Metalhead with Chavez quote

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Save our health and human services

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Queer undocumented students are the UC and CSU systems!

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Education is a human right no matter where you were born

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Attempted repression

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Speaker from crowd
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Speaker from a radical Filipina organization--the only speaker who tied the budget problem to the capitalist system!

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Means and Ways, not Meanies and Gueyes

Monday, February 28, 2011

People's Poetry Benefit for Jeremy Marks

http://la.indymedia.org/news/2011/02/244613.php

People's Poetry Benefit for Jeremy Marks
by Rockero Sunday, Feb. 27, 2011 at 11:49 PM
rockero420@yahoo.com
Saturday, February 26, 2011

NORTH HOLLYWOOD - For the sixth consecutive year, the Community Rights Campaign, an initiative of the Labor/Community Strategy Center, held a night of youth expression of poetic resistance at the NoHo Actor's Studio. A standing-room audience, predominantly made up of youth of color, took part in the evening's poetry recital and open mic, which doubled as a fundraiser for the legal defense of Jeremy Marks, an 18-year-old arrested by Los Angeles Schools Police Department and charged with attempting lynching for filming an act of brutality by a member of the department against a fellow student.

People's Poetry Bene...
marks.jpg, image/jpeg, 613x402

The Community Rights Campaign has focused on organizing high school students at Locke, Roosevelt, Cleveland, and Westchester high schools against truancy tickets, which channels them into the criminal "justice" system, in favor of a police review board to receive and investigate complaints about police, and against the budget cuts which are gutting public education, in addition to generally fomenting a culture of resistance among Los Angeles' disempowered youth.

In typical Strategy Center style, a lively round of chants and drumming energized the crowd prior to a welcome from two of the youth organizers. They introduced the campaign and gave an overview of Marks' case.

The first set of performers shared works based on their own experiences of criminalization at schools. They were followed by an a capella rendition of Lauryn Hill's "I Get Out."

The second set consisted of young performers articulating their experiences with being stereotyped as "gang members" only to find that that stigma has been officialized through membership in a police gang database.

Prior to the last set, a youth organizer shared a rundown of the campaign's advances this year. "So far this year, we've stopped the expansion of municipal code 45.04, which would've given LASPD the right to ticket students on campus. Through our work, we've been able to end the collaboration between LASPD doing seeps at Roosevelt. We've also--through our work at Roosevelt--we were able to get sixteen tickets dropped in court this past Wednesday. This past Wednesday! We wouldn't have been able to do that without the support of the principals, teachers, parents, community members all working together to get that done."

The last scheduled group of poets recited compositions relating their personal and community struggles to the larger context of systematic oppression and resistance thereto.

Following the third round, the emcee introduced Rochelle Pitman, Jeremy Marks' mother, who gave a few words of thanks.

She was followed by a series of performers, many of them collaboratives, who approached the open microphone.

Following the performance, attendees were welcomed into the back room where food was served and community-building conversations were held. While there, Jeremy Marks' grandmother, Alice Pitman, addressed the group and explained how her family's tragedy has been a consciousness-raising experience for her and her hope that the struggle for change will bring about justice for those yet to tread the path of Los Angeles' public high schools.

"If this child hadn't been to jail, first of all, we wouldn't all be in this--in this center tonight, this gathering, to be informed of what's going on." She continued, "I didn't understand, 'Well, why is this happening?' [...] I sat in court for seven months and I didn't understand. Now I'm understanding what's going on now. We're together on this now. And this one incident will help millions of children, millions of children. Thank you very much."

Monday, January 31, 2011

Pomona Youth Rally for Immigrant Rights

http://la.indymedia.org/news/2011/01/244189.php

Pomona Youth Rally for Immigrant Rights
by Rockero Monday, Jan. 31, 2011 at 1:31 AM
rockero420@yahoo.com
Friday, January 28, 2011

POMONA, California - A youthful group of about fifty gathered in downtown Pomona to march, rally, and otherwise lift their voices about the need for immigration reform, social justice, and popular participation in decisionmaking processes. The march was organized and executed exclusively by the youth, who, while accepting the solidarity of more established movement activists, were also taking very seriously their responsibility to lead the movement.

Pomona Youth Rally f...

The tragic events of last year were no impediment to youth organizing in Pomona. Rather, they sought to begin the new year with a fresh and invigorating spirit of unity and hope. They also planned to showcase their artistic talents and unite social and artistic movements. By planning a concert just after the rally, they were able to bring people into the movement that otherwise might not have participated, and also exposed young activists to the innovative arts movement centered around downtown Pomona.


The afternoon's events began with a march from the corner of Mission and Garey up Pomona's main artery. Participants flaunted banners reading "Undocumented and Unafraid" and "Con o sin papeles, Pomona se organiza," as well as numerous posters bearing the stenciled image of a blindfolded person with the words "Take your blindfold off and fight!"



Returning to Mission via the transit station, students spoke.

Here are some of their words:

¡Sí se puede!

"We came together as a community to stop playing defense. As a community, we need to get on the offensive. We need to become vocal, and active members in our community. So our intention tonight--you have a couple of clipboards walking around--please sign your name. In a matter of two, three weeks, we'll be contacting you people; the next step will be to create a meeting, create a movement, create solidarity. Not just with immigrant rights, but against the war, LGBT rights, against checkpoints, e-verify, immigration reform. We're part of a lot of movements. We want to become a vocal voice in Pomona. We want the city council members to hear us, to know our face, to know who we represent. The undocumented and documented community represent Pomona. And we're not leaving!" Roll call. "This is what movements are made of, out of families. This is what we need to make vocal to the city councils, to the so-called legislators making racist laws. That our communities have families, kids, working hard to support families. We're tired of this shit! We're not gonna take this anymore! That's why, as a community, we need to stand up, become active participants in our lives, in our communities, and in our streets."

"Today we're in the streets, but tomorrow--well, not tomorrow, but maybe Wednesday, or whenever the city council meets over there, we're gonna take this, and we're gonna take it into the city council. A lot of people say, 'Well, you know, we march through the streets, we parade the streets, and we don't act in our--our civil engagement. We don't vote. We don't go to our city council.' Well that has to change in Pomona, and that is gonna change in Pomona. So this is about accountability. We wanna stop checkpoints. We wanna stop 287(g). We want Pomona to become a sanctuary city. It begins with every single one of us actually saying that we're gonna engage in the civil process, that we're gonna take responsibility for what goes on in our community."

"Hi you guys, I'm Lizbeth. I'm showing support all the way from La Puente, and my mom's showing support too. Thank you guys. This past year has been a very painful year for all of our communities. We're either being targetted by policies and legislation that are driven by fear, or personal interest. This is a time where we do not have the luxury of living at peace. Our families are being separated. Our youth is being denied an education. All the while we are sustaining this country with our cheap labor and exploitation. Our communities have endured a lot of pain and unfortunately, it will continue. But only if we allow it! We are here because we care about Pomona and because we need to be active participants of what happens in our communities."

"We are gathered here as a community to support each other in our quest for social justice and equality for our undocumented people: students, families, workers, it's time to stand up for our community and put a stop in criminalizing our people by dividing families, wasting money and resources on deportations instead of education."

"My name is Rene, along with Norman, Javier, and IDEAS Mt. SAC--they're part of this, too--Chuy, and everybody else that came out here, I wanna thank you guys all, like, deeply from the bottom of my heart for coming out here and supporting. My question to you guys is, how do you take the blindfold off people? I don't know if you guys saw the stencil right there. How do you do that? How are we gonna make other people realize that change needs to occur? We need to come up with tactics, we need to meet, we need unity, and this is what this rally is about. Growing up, I had a lot of friends, and one of my best friends--she's a girl. But we were like really cool, and then she would tell me all these things that she wanted to accomplish, and she wasn't able to. And it kinda hit me when I realized that people in this world have dreams, and they can't accomplish them over some silly things. I mean, that's how my blindfold was taken off. That's how I realized, personally, that people live here and struggle, and it's every day. Like, they constantly deal with it. And it's a problem. And it's coming to a boiling point where something needs to be done. And this is what the point of this rally is for: to unify and to create community amongst each other."

They then opened up the megaphone for other speakers, and several members of the community stepped forward to speak as well.

Shortly after the speeches, the marchers were welcomed to a free show, also held by the march organizers, at a nearby independent business.

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013 by Rockero Monday, Jan. 31, 2011 at 1:31 AM
rockero420@yahoo.com

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