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Occupy Honolulu takes Thomas Square
Today, 11/05/11, The Occupy Honolulu movement held a day of action, and began their occupation of Thomas Square Park.
Today, 11/05/11, The Occupy Honolulu movement held a day of action, and began their occupation of Thomas Square Park, which is a 5 minute walk from the state capital, and one block away from a large police station. After a march to city hall with about 150 participants, and a rally there, Occupy Honolulu regrouped at Thomas Square Park where it was announced that this would be the location of the occupation.
Some time around 9 pm the police arrived for their first warning and we were told that park grounds were off limits but that the sidewalk was fine. It was unclear if we would be allowed to sleep on the sidewalk (as many homeless in Hawaii do), but to be standing on it was perfectly fine, so the officer in charge told us.
When the police returned, 7 Occupy Honolulu activists had committed to being arrested and refused to get off the grass and move to the sidewalk. After a long time, about 25 or 30 officers arrived to make arrests. The Occupiers read aloud The US Constitution siting their right to peaceably assemble, noting this right did not end at 10 pm. They also cited the "Law of the Broken Paddle" stemming from Hawaiian history, and the Hawaiian Constitution, which states that people have the right to lay by the side of the road and not be attacked, those doing the attacking will die, according to the law. Another person read aloud from the UN Declaration of Human Rights. While none of these documents prevented anyone being arrested, they did motivate support from fellow occupiers, as they chanted in "human mic" fashion, the words of resistance against the cops.
After the arrests began, the cops began lying to the demonstrator that they could not legally occupy the sidewalk, that they had looked up the tax code map and that people could not be on this stretch of pavement legally, that it was private property. One Occupy participant snapped at this moment and started a chant of "This is a public sidewalk!!!" after attempting briefly to argue with the same officer who had earlier in the evening told us we could stay on the sidewalk. The entire group angrily joined in, and we alerted the police they could not legally expel us and that we could call the ACLU and that it was all on film from various cam phones and video cameras.
The police backed down, but the 7 who engaged in civil disobedience were taken to the nearby police station. Last I heard, they had been released shortly after being brought there. I'm not sure though. The Occupation of Thomas Square Park will continue!!!
We hope this grows and that Hawaii can join with the global movement. Speaking for myself, I hope that the police duplicity opened the eyes of some tonight who were chanting to the police that they are "the 99%." They of course are not, as they are the goon squad of the 1%! No one is saying they are not human, but please people, look at their actions if you didn't already understand their function in a capitalist society as defenders of the interests of the ruling class.
Having said that, the actions of all involved should serve to radicalize the movement. We will see if this brings in more people to support the movement.
At another location tonight, we heard reports that a state department agent brought in for the APEC convention shot and killed a 22 year old Kailua man, giving the state their first kill in the coming clamp down. Tonight was round 1, but the connection between Wall Street, APEC, and the global austerity wave could not be clearer.
Some time around 9 pm the police arrived for their first warning and we were told that park grounds were off limits but that the sidewalk was fine. It was unclear if we would be allowed to sleep on the sidewalk (as many homeless in Hawaii do), but to be standing on it was perfectly fine, so the officer in charge told us.
When the police returned, 7 Occupy Honolulu activists had committed to being arrested and refused to get off the grass and move to the sidewalk. After a long time, about 25 or 30 officers arrived to make arrests. The Occupiers read aloud The US Constitution siting their right to peaceably assemble, noting this right did not end at 10 pm. They also cited the "Law of the Broken Paddle" stemming from Hawaiian history, and the Hawaiian Constitution, which states that people have the right to lay by the side of the road and not be attacked, those doing the attacking will die, according to the law. Another person read aloud from the UN Declaration of Human Rights. While none of these documents prevented anyone being arrested, they did motivate support from fellow occupiers, as they chanted in "human mic" fashion, the words of resistance against the cops.
After the arrests began, the cops began lying to the demonstrator that they could not legally occupy the sidewalk, that they had looked up the tax code map and that people could not be on this stretch of pavement legally, that it was private property. One Occupy participant snapped at this moment and started a chant of "This is a public sidewalk!!!" after attempting briefly to argue with the same officer who had earlier in the evening told us we could stay on the sidewalk. The entire group angrily joined in, and we alerted the police they could not legally expel us and that we could call the ACLU and that it was all on film from various cam phones and video cameras.
The police backed down, but the 7 who engaged in civil disobedience were taken to the nearby police station. Last I heard, they had been released shortly after being brought there. I'm not sure though. The Occupation of Thomas Square Park will continue!!!
We hope this grows and that Hawaii can join with the global movement. Speaking for myself, I hope that the police duplicity opened the eyes of some tonight who were chanting to the police that they are "the 99%." They of course are not, as they are the goon squad of the 1%! No one is saying they are not human, but please people, look at their actions if you didn't already understand their function in a capitalist society as defenders of the interests of the ruling class.
Having said that, the actions of all involved should serve to radicalize the movement. We will see if this brings in more people to support the movement.
At another location tonight, we heard reports that a state department agent brought in for the APEC convention shot and killed a 22 year old Kailua man, giving the state their first kill in the coming clamp down. Tonight was round 1, but the connection between Wall Street, APEC, and the global austerity wave could not be clearer.
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How is the shooting of the Kailua man related to the despicable and disrespectful actions of lawless activists?
Was this fine young man with your movement, or is the timing his shooting just convenient for your cause? Are you exploiting his death to create legitimacy for your preposterous actions.
The young man is dead, let's keep him and his family out of the ridiculous mess that you promote. One has nothing to do with the other.
"Civil" rights? Have some civility you jerk!
Was this fine young man with your movement, or is the timing his shooting just convenient for your cause? Are you exploiting his death to create legitimacy for your preposterous actions.
The young man is dead, let's keep him and his family out of the ridiculous mess that you promote. One has nothing to do with the other.
"Civil" rights? Have some civility you jerk!
Thanks for doing this, Occupy Honolulu folks. So glad to see it! Geev'em!
The Kailua man was shot by a Department of State agent who is said to be in town for APEC. You may not know that the Occupy Honolulu protests have to do with the global austerity generated by capitalism and its crises. APEC is part of that obviously, as their whole agenda is based on raising profitability for capitalists by "liberalizing" markets and institutions in the Pacific. You may not understand that historically such liberalizing has taken the form of structural adjustments which bleed the working class for the sake of the global ruling class. Look at a newspaper today and see if you can't find something about it.
If you can't see any connection between an arrogant Department of State agent here for APEC gunning down a man in cold blood, and the arrogance of the state in general as it mows down social infrastructure, than you lack what Oscar Wilde called imagination.
If you can't see any connection between an arrogant Department of State agent here for APEC gunning down a man in cold blood, and the arrogance of the state in general as it mows down social infrastructure, than you lack what Oscar Wilde called imagination.
With all due respect, and I have a great amount of it for the protestors, they should not make it easy for the system and bail out. Go to jail and they'll release you. If not then you can make your point from jail with help of good jail support. If you actually intend on continuing to occupy the area for any period of time, the bail money will add up, and if you aren't coming back then the movement won't get very far in Honolulu.
For more information:
http://www.nocompromise.org/issues/04suppo...
For more information:
http://www.san.beck.org/NAH4-Legal.html
The article from no compromise you posted is interesting, especially considering AR activists are often bailed out and money is raised for their bail constantly? Well how do I know this? First I was one of 8 people (not 7, that number is wrong) arrested in Honolulu on Saturday, second I got my experience as an activist working in the animal and earth liberation movements for 15 years working with various groups including ADL and Earth First! among others. Bail is almost ALWAYS provided. It's easy for you to sit behind a keyboard and complain about other people getting bailed out, the rest of us have jobs and school to get back to, not to mention an encampment to help run by a very small but dedicated group.
Earth and animal protestors have paid a lot of bail, but that doesn't mean it was the right thing to do tactically. Lots have not and have faired much better. With regards to school and work, if you think you are going to risk arrest than you have to plan for it. Animal protestors took time off from work, got people lined up to care for their animals, and risked arrest when they were off from school.
Again, lots of kudos for what you're doing. I'm just saying if you are going to continue to do what you're doing you will need to go to jail, and use that to your advantage.
And FTR, I never bailed, and the people I worked with did not bail, and that is why I worked with them. Democracy is not easy. Free speech is harder than that. And if you're going to be a protestor, well, that's even harder still, and certainly no cake walk. Not for everyone. If you can't handle it there are many different ways to work for social justice and it may be better if you found the way that's best for you.
Again, lots of kudos for what you're doing. I'm just saying if you are going to continue to do what you're doing you will need to go to jail, and use that to your advantage.
And FTR, I never bailed, and the people I worked with did not bail, and that is why I worked with them. Democracy is not easy. Free speech is harder than that. And if you're going to be a protestor, well, that's even harder still, and certainly no cake walk. Not for everyone. If you can't handle it there are many different ways to work for social justice and it may be better if you found the way that's best for you.
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