Tonight's activity has been intense and at moments, moving so rapidly it is hard to keep up.
Live streams from all over the U.S. and several other global sites:
http://occupystream.com/2 examples of people being denied the right to enter a banking establishment they are customers of and denied the right to close their accounts:
http://www.addictinginfo.org/2011/10/15/bank-of-america-refuses-to-allow-customers-to-close-their-accounts-at-occupy-santa-cruz-video/The second example involves the bank manager locking the protesters IN the building, still denying them the right to close their accounts, and then claiming they were trespassing and had them arrested:
http://www.addictinginfo.org/2011/10/15/occupy-wall-street-protesters-reportedly-arrested-for-closing-their-accounts-call-the-ceo/Video footage of police arresting a woman standing on the sidewalk outside the bank for seemingly inexplicable reasons:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TH3kiaJ1-c8&feature=player_embeddedWay to go fellas, takes 5 of you to "subdue" one woman not really putting up much of a struggle.
I believe in property rights, if the manager wished to bar them access, fine. They should leave peacefully and file a lawsuit for being denied access to their accounts. However, to lock them IN the building borders on unlawful detention, I'm not holding my breath on anything getting done about that.
Confrontations with police were piling up in American cities as police, under the guise of removal of "semi permanent structures" and other pretenses, moved in during early morning hours. I'm postulating for just one moment, that this is typical intimidation and frustration tactics. Protesters have tended to sleep in shifts during the times when this half of the world is dark and these moves came right in the middle of that period of time. While the majority of protesters were released after being rounded up and told they must move to some other location, prompting a middle-of-the-night march of some distance with camping equipment. This is meant to weaken morale and solidarity and is par for the course here in a country that purports to hold "the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances" as among its most foundational principles. With tensions running high, many protesters resist police pressure to be subdued, bound, or otherwise detained...which results in their actual arrest.
In many cases, and most hauntingly familiar in Chicago was the cry in unison, "The whole world is watching." This line was famously chanted in 1968 during the riots that accompanied the Democratic National Convention.
Also, on a brief personal note, I used to live literally half a block and across a street from Grant Park, the idea that Grant Park is "closed" past 11pm on a Saturday night is ludicrous. In fact, I would be willing to bet with protesters, police, and media attention there, LESS illegal activity is taking place in that park if a protest is happening than if not.
In New York, protestors swelled into Times Square, at times, often nose-to-nose with lines of police attempting to keep the streets open to traffic. After repeated orders to back up or face arrests, the crowds roared back at them, "YOU back up."
Yesterday, Rome saw some of the most violence as "black hats" (professional or vacation rioters, not peaceful demonstrators) moved in among a massive march across the city, looting and causing mayhem. Police unleashed tear gas into the crowds in quantities that at times seemed disproportionate to the actual number of trouble-makers and greatly disrupting the demonstrations.
Berlin, as well was a major flashpoint as a locked-arm sit-in style protest before the Reichstag building was broken up with tactics that bordered on disturbing and brutal.
http://a6.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/319158_226479340745486_100001502658355_612761_854835470_n.jpgI leave you with this thought:
“First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.”
- Mahatma Gandhi
Edit: A quick perusal of our 4 major U.S. media outlets front pages shows that three of them have the typical "there's parts of the United States that isn't New York?" mentality and the last has nothing about protests "above the fold", their lead is a report on GOP candidates' fundraising efforts. This is after nearly 4-5 hours of continuous confrontation and strife in dozens of cities across the country throughout the night and early morning.
GREAT WORK NEWS MEDIA, KEEP IT UP, WE'RE COUNTING ON YOU!!!!