Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta -Estados Unidos.. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta -Estados Unidos.. Mostrar todas las entradas

1.10.11

Occupy Wall Street: Friday Afternoon


On Friday afternoon, the crowd density at Occupy Wall Street had thickened quite a bit from earlier in the week. Many of the new attendees were journalists. I counted close to thirty media types as I canvassed Zuccotti Park, watching TV vans and cameramen and reporters taking notes on their notebooks and BlackBerries. I saw NY1, CNN, Slate, a concatenation of outlets I had not seen when I hit the park on Tuesday.
“Cough drops!” barked a man with several lozenges in his hand. “Get your cough drops! So when CNN talks with you, you’ll have a clear head for your ideas.”

I hit Zuccotti Park in the late afternoon: just before a march upon NYPD headquarters. I estimated the crowd at a few thousand. More poured into the park, some lured by the prospect of a rumored Radiohead appearance at 4PM.
While the park’s perimeter remained open to pedestrian traffic and the cops remained fairly calm (perhaps due to the heightened media), I wondered it the increased media attention would cause more people to come, testing the limits of occupation. I also wondered what plans the NYPD had in store. Cops clad in riot gear? By now, a hackneyed effort to intimidate. Yet across the street from the park, I noticed a badly dressed undercover cop, wearing sunglasses and very much on his own, feebly pretending to be an activist with brand new crutches and a limp that didn’t match the way he was clutching his aluminum.


When attending a large-scale event, it is often my practice to stand in one spot and listen to the surrounding people. The protesters were fully aware that they were putting on a show. Many greenhorns — some considering themselves journalists — had come to gawk. Their intent was to document. They wondered why these people were still sticking after two weeks. Some of the bona-fide journalists appeared to be mystified about why they had been assigned this story.

If these slogans and sentiments on cardboard and posterboard appear flip and cliched, what then is the best method to get a message across? In recent days, there has been a modest debate about whether the protesters should dress up and improve their aesthetic.

But from what I have seen in my visits to the park, it isn’t just scruffy kids wearing tie-dye tees. There are many lingering into the park from their day jobs, wearing dress shirts and backpacks. I suppose your sartorial flair depends on the degree to which you’re participating and how long you stick around. (For my own part, I was wearing a red George Orwell shirt.)

21.9.11

This is only the beginning

The Occupy Wall Street movement is a result of the frustration of a commoditized society, in which the mere existence of an individual carries a price tag. The protesters might differ in race, gender, occupation and the reasons why they are camping at the Wall Street, but the one string uniting them is the opposition to the principle upon which the contemporary society is build upon: profits above people. It is a people’s resistance to the philosophy of the domination of market forces upon the will of the people.

David Graeber, an anthropologist who took part in the demonstration on Sunday said “If you look at who showed up in Egypt and Spain, it was mostly young people, and most of them were people who had gone through the educational system, who were deeply in debt, and who found it completely impossible to get jobs. The system has completely failed them. If there’s going to be any kind of society worth living in, we’re going to have to create it ourselves.”

The American public seems to have finally begun to wake up from the deep slumber of their social consciousness caused by a society of ruthless consumerism and a regime that has institutionalised indiscriminate greed. This is the moment that the people of America and the rest of the world has been looking forward to: the moment when the foundations of this ‘all-pervasive’ system will begin to crumble. That moment has arrived!!


All Day.. All Week.. Occupy Wall Street

Finally the American public has waken up to the global call for revolution. Right now, there are more than 9000 Americans gathered at the Wall Street with one common agenda “Occupy Wall Street”. Inspired by the massive public protests in Cairo’s Tahrir Square and Madrid’s Puerta del Sol Square, thousands have slept outside Wall Street for the past two nights starting from 17th September. One of the protesters says “This system of permanent growth is neither sustainable nor reasonable. This system is about to collapse on its own way. We are here to make it happen a little bit faster.”

Wall Street, 18 september 2011

All day..., All week..., occupy Wall Street

Occupy Wall Street Sept 17: Protester speaks out

"This is what our freedom has become"

Nueva York, en solidaridad

Policía de Nueva York reprime a indignados de Wall Street

Policía de Nueva York reprime a indignados de Wall Street

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