Protest art as revolutionary practice.
Occupiers trash Whole Foods & banks, occupy building, fight police & set fires to barricades — Oakland, CA
Anti-Wall Street protesters in Oakland have vandalized a Whole Foods store and shattered windows at two downtown banks.
Windows were shattered at a Bank of America branch, where someone also spraypainted “Class War” and “Shut it Down,” near Lake Merritt and a Chase bank at 20th and Webster streets.
Police officers on Wednesday afternoon stood outside the Chase bank, where vandals also defaced the ATM machines, spraypainting them black.
PHOTOS: Occupy protests around the nation
“For the Commune,” one graffiti message reads.
“Withdraw Only,” another reads.
Sheila Dvorak, 29, was visiting Oakland from upstate New York and geared up for a peaceful march Wednesday evening to the Port of Oakland to voice her concerns about healthcare.
She stood somewhat stunned near the shattered Chase bank windows.
“I think the root of the movement is peaceful,” said Dvorak, who marched across the Brooklyn Bridge with Occupy Wall Street last month. “I would ask whoever broke these windows to remember that. It’s the only way we’ll get what we want.”
“This doesn’t feel right,” she added. “It’s not what I expected.”
As she spoke, someone posted another sign on the busted window: “We are better than this.”
An axe-wielding vandal broke several windows at the Oakland Whole Foods Market, said company spokeswoman Jennifer Marples. In addition, the word “strike” was spray on an outside window, and the building was splashed with paint.
The company closed the store down at about 3:30 p.m., and security guards escorted workers to their cars, she said.
“Nobody was hurt,” she said. “Everyone, customers and team members, were all safe and sound. “Security is still there and will be there throughout the evening.”Police estimated the number of marchers at about 1,000, while organizers said the number was closer to double that.
——————-
In signing off from our day-long coverage of the General Strike Day in Oakland yesterday, we noted the “younger and more aggressive crowds” heading into the streets just before 10 p.m. And, perhaps predictably — though not with the blessing of the largely peaceful and non-destructive Occupy movement — the situation turned ridiculous and anarchic in the late-night hours, around 11 p.m., when a small faction occupied a vacant building at 16th and Broadway, hoisted an “Occupy Everything” banner onto its windows, and set fire to a large pile of trash in the street outside, sending flames fifteen feet in the air, as the Chron reports. Though riot police kept their distance, fearing more bad press, they moved right on in with the tear gas and flash bombs after one cop was hit in his face mask with a bottle.
As Oakland North reports, the OPD put out a press release at 10:30 p.m. identifying a “small group of anarchists” working their way through the crowd, and stating, “OPD is focused on preventing illegal activity while affording the majority their rights to assemble and march.”
In one photo, one such demonstrator/anarchist holds a sign that says “Occupy the Building - No Surrender.”
In the end, with about 500 people in the street and what police saw as a public safety hazard (the large fire, and anarchists breaking up cinder blocks into smaller chunks to use as projectiles), they moved in and ordered everyone to disperse. Many didn’t, and after a long standoff with police, about a dozen people were arrested at 1:30 a.m. near San Pablo and 16th Street. Cops noted that they had been attacked with thrown hammers, rocks, bottles, and metal pipes. “This begged action,” says Sgt. Chris Bolton, chief of staff to interim Chief Howard Jordan. “We [reacted] to the situation provided to us.”
http://sfist.com/2011/11/03/oakland_protests_devolve_into_late-.php#photo-5
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2011/11/occupy-oakland-protesters-vandalize-grocery-store-banks.html
destroying buildings is not violence - creating institutions of gentrification is.
why why why is anarchy always equated with this sort of “violence”
it becomes “anarchic” when it becomes “violent”
rhetorical question btw
also fuck whole foods burn that shit down
Oakland, California: A group of youths liberated the building at 1333 Broadway, a former homeless services building closed due to budget cuts, following the general strike on Nov. 2. Overnight, riot police attacked the building occupation and carried out mass arrests.
IMF riots in Athens – a brief presentation of the work of Yiannis Biliris
What makes photography a strange invention is that its primary raw materials are light and time.
– John Berger
It is a peculiar exercise to add a foreword to any photographic work but in the case of Athenian photographer Yiannis Biliris, the exercise is a mostly unnecessary one, too: his photographs are vivid enough to speak for themselves. Yet seeing them for the first time, I felt that a wonderful Greek word, καθάρια (kathária) could perhaps best encapsulate their spirit: somewhere between clear and fine, the word has a characteristically airy feeling to it, one then inextricably linked in my mind to the blazing Athenian light. He might talk of a ‘distortion of reality’, yet his is a distortion of the reality served by the media: for those of us who met on the streets time and time again, these photographs are an invaluable documentation of what has been happening around us. Biliris’ photographs capture the raw photographic material of light in crystal-clear form and through this present us with perfect stills of galloping times. – AV
General strike: 100,000 people march against austerity budget in Athens as rebellion sweeps Greece, October 19, 2011.
Violence Erupts As Strike Grips Greece
“Public sector pay cuts, pension cuts and mass layoffs are being demanded by international lenders in exchange for more bailout funds.
George Papandreou, the Greek prime minister who trails badly in opinion polls, has appealed for support from Greeks before parliament votes later on Wednesday on the latest measures which include tax hikes, wage cuts and public sector layoffs.
The latest strike by Greek workers has shut down government departments, businesses and public services, as well as shops and bakeries, while flights and public transport were cancelled or disrupted.
“Who are they trying to fool? They won’t save us. With these measures the poor become poorer and the rich richer. Well I say: ‘No, thank you. I don’t want your rescue’,” said 50-year public sector worker Akis Papadopoulos.”
More from Al Jazeera here.
Athens Clashes LIVE: RT at Greece massive protest showdown (by RussiaToday)
‘In the streets of Greece, arguably the biggest protest in years is now descending into violence. People are venting their anger against a new package of austerity measures the country is likley to adopt as soon as Thursday.’
Picture of the Day. Bogota, Colombia. Riot police after being attacked with paint bombs by protesting students and teachers in a march for the defense of public education. Photo Credit: Guillermo Legaria/AFP/Getty Via.
View more Picture of the Day posts. Submit a photo.
#Chile - Violence erupts in the streets of Santiago as Chilean workers stage a 48-hour strike demanding reforms..