With everyone talking about Wall Street, it seems like a good moment to talk about the Occupy Wall Street movement, which happened 10 years ago this year! I spent weeks there, and it was incredibly instructive both in State violence in the US and how movements fall apart 🧵
First, quick refresher. In 2011, securities traders nearly burned down the global economy. The response of the US gov to the crisis was the "too big to fail" bailouts. This pissed off a lot of ppl who felt they were being rewarded for predatory behavior while the poor suffered
I lived in Brooklyn and was interested in protests generally (always have been!). So when Adbusters (love that org) and some other groups announced a protest in Zuccoti Park, I went down to check it out and brought along a case of water to donate
Not expecting much, went down w a "I guess we will see" attitude.. But it was extremely apparent, even then that this would be different. Protesters were occupying Zuccotti park and the air was electric. The anger in the US was palpable, and it translated into the movement
In the beginning, it was kids. Typical street fighter/activist types. And it was beautiful. So I went back. Before long, marchers took over the Brooklyn Bridge. Paddywagons rolled up. I remember people saying "they can't arrest us all". I remember thinking, "pretty sure they can"
Turns out they could arrest almost everyone. hahaha. Luckily someone pulled me out of a kettle the police were using to detain onlookers. But the arrests didn't stop the movement- the contrary- protests started springing up in dozens of movements around the US,and later the globe
At Zuccoti, we were all organized into "working groups" in an attempt at a leaderless horizontal power structure. In practice it didn't really work out that way (more on that in a bit). I was assigned to a group that did graphic design for the camp (pictured here bottom left)
In the beginning, we had support from the biggest unions in NYC and THAT made us untouchables. In NYC unions still have power. At one point police tried to raid the camp. Organizers sent out text bombs and union workers descended on the camp like guardian angels. Police retreated
But as I spent more time at the protests I started to get frustrated with infighting. Working groups competed for influence as well as decision making over what to do with crowd-sourced donations pouring in. It was a power competition for some personalities (def not all)
Meanwhile, due to police aggression, the protests were becoming increasingly anti-police, and the Financial District wasn't happy that the movement dragged on. A few things made me start to lose hope tho, particularly due to bad actors from within the movement itself
Some working groups were frustrated and felt the camp was being led by a few personalities. One group calling itself "OWS tactics" if I remember correctly, even wanted to use donation money to go to Egypt to "instruct" protesters there- a ridiculous idea reeking of privilege
My gf at the time was a writer and ended up in a photography working group. She was the only girl. She didn't stay long despite making some great contacts because she felt her role in the group was mostly to be hit on by cocky photogs. So it goes. Around this same time...
We were slowly bleeding Union support. I dont know what happened behind the scenes, but part of it was bad optics. There were accusations of sexual harrasment and even a case of assault in the camp. Meanwhile, fighting over the money and influence intensified
We were becoming increasingly fractured and isolated from other civil groups in NYC. I largely quit engaging w the politics. I left my working group but still participated in actions and marches. I believed in the movement even if I thought some participants were problematic
Fast forward a few weeks. As part of its defense system, the camp had mass-texts, a huge twitter account and a lot of ways to call for help if they were attacked again. I recieved a text around 11 at night, that riot police were surrounding Zuccoti. My gf and I went immediately
We arrived on the last train before authorities shut down the subway. I had no cell service. All was suspended in lower Manhattan. The streets were chaos. Police were beating people as they made systematic sweeps with their organized lines through the Financial District
I remember throwing myself into a group of police who were beating a teenage girl in an attempt to knock them away from her. It didn't work and I took a baton to the face before someone in the crowd pulled me away from certain arrest. When the tear gas finally cleared...
There was no more camp. The lessons I drew were this: there is zero doubt that the failure of the movement was multi-fold, from infiltration, to personalities trying to use the moment to seize clout, to problematic actors, to a lack of long-term strategy, even to bad tactics
These are lessons that protest movements must learn to avoid in the future. But the experience also sparked hope in me. Despite all the problems, OWS resonated globally. It showed that the idea we are defined by a financial system that seems rigged against us resonates
So, I was a baby as far as violent response to protests go. But the real lesson is this: there is nothing entrenched power fears more than a united citizenry bent on achieving change. They will always try to divide and conquer. And today seems like an extension of that idea
I will leave the final thought, however with señor Orwell

"When I see a policeman with a club beating a man on the ground, I don't have to ask whose side I'm on.”

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More from @InvisiblesMuros

27 Jan
Was curious so I made a map of every place I've gone for work in Colombia- the rule was I had to have slept there overnight, not just passed through

Gotta get to the Southeast!!

google.com/mymaps/?cid=mp…
Also gotta get to Arauca
First I was trying to draw land routes I have taken, but the map just looked like a massive crayon children's drawing of a blob
Read 5 tweets
22 Oct 20
Quick photo thread on Colombian protests over the last week with some fun details that didn't make it into the articles

Did I mention there was a protest dog?
There was also

Left: an angel

and right: a Giant Iguana
Some elders from the indigenous communities represented in the marches
Read 7 tweets
21 Oct 20
Today's thread for national strikes in Bogotà #PARONacional21o

I'm at Parque Nacional where student and union groups are gathering for a march downtown. This is just one of four rally points. The Minga, meanwhile are organizing their own march. This is shaping up to be big Image
Drummers warming up the crowd. People pouring in. Duque choosing to ignore the Minga, many of whom travelled for as much as ten days seems to have energized protests here
Holy moly. Without a doubt biggest concentrated protest I've seen since last November, and this is just one part...

We re marching south to Plaza Bolivar to meet 3 other manefestations ImageImageImageImage
Read 12 tweets
21 Oct 20
Latest: I travelled with indigenous protests in Colombia for four days to the capital Bogotá. This is what they want, why they're on the streets and an explainer on why their homelands have become so deadly. For the @newhumanitarian

thenewhumanitarian.org/news/2020/10/2…
Help on the images from @abigailgeiger and @NoTranquilo

1000's of Indigenous came to Bogotá to demand solutions for killings in their communities, unkept promises, and decades of neglect that have resulted in their regions becoming the deadliest areas of Colombia ImageImageImage
A lot of these issues are deeply tied to the 2017 Peace Deal, which some critics say is failing due to an administration that wants to dismantle the accord. You can find more here

Special thanks to @pauladdobias and @McGully2 for some beautiful editing thenewhumanitarian.org/analysis/2020/…
Read 4 tweets
29 Aug 20
A thread for people who say "Racism isn't a problem in the US justice system"

A personal story of systemic discrimination: A long time ago I sold marijuana in New York City. A LOT of it. Like when I say a lot, I mean LOT. Probably supplied half of Bushwick. I was young and dumb
But most importantly, I was white. Now, I lived right across the street from the projects (Bushwick and Flushing) in BK. For four years I was selling about 20lbs of marijuana a week (back when it was more illegal). I regularly walked down the street with a felony on my person
BK cops regularly ran sting operations on kids in the projects who sold dimebags for pocket money- $10 bags of crappy weed. They ran surveillance as well. I regularly saw them cuffing teens for having about 20$ of weed

Sometimes I saw this while carrying 10lbs in a backpack
Read 13 tweets
31 Jul 20
Jake is spot-on here: absurd accusations from Grayzone have gotten journos and local activists added to kill lists before (receipts below). It's a shame that they can never respond to credible criticism with anything but hysterical claims
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Max's article in Mintpress that claimed a BBC journalist was CIA. The article led to thousands of death threats and forced the journalist to flee the country

archive.ph/2018.09.26-221…
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