Saturday, November 12, 2011

Anarcho-Tyranny, “Occupy”-Style: Oakland Police Beg Criminals to Please Cooperate; NYC Mayor Bloomberg is Upset with Them; Occupiers Nationwide Deny

Any Connection Between Their Camps and the Rampant, Escalating Violence There
 

AP caption makes it seem as though the police are the source of all the violence, and are victimizing the poor outlaws: “Occupy Oakland protesters carry away a man who was hit by a tear gas canister shot by police, near the Oakland City Hall, Oct. 25, 2011 in Calif.” (Kimihiro Hoshino/AFP/Getty Images)
 

By Nicholas Stix

Several days ago, New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg was on TV talking about how upset he is with the Occupy outlaws, whom he had announced two weeks earlier had already cost the city $3.6 million in police overtime, which Bloomberg said would have to come out of city services. That means city services to law-abiding citizens, since the criminal class never suffers service cuts.

When someone in the illegal Occupy Wall Street camp commits a felony, say rape, Bloomberg said the other outlaws encircle “and chastise him, before releasing him into the city, where he does God knows what to God knows whom.”

I responded by yelling at my TV, “Then do your job, and arrest them all and clear out the park!”

For crying out loud, the man is talking about rapists!

The owners of Zuccotti Park had pleaded with Bloomberg and the NYPD weeks before to evict the criminals, but Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly responded instead by pressuring the owners, on behalf of the criminals, into backing down!

Is Bloomberg afraid of negative coverage from the criminals’ MSM allies? Or is this simply more of his contempt for the taxpayers showing?
 

Deaths at Occupy Camps Bring Pressure for Shutdown
By Terry Collins
Associated Press
Oakland, California
November 12, 2011

Oakland police handed out eviction notices at an anti-Wall Street encampment and officials elsewhere urged an end to similar gatherings as pressures against Occupy protest sites mounted in the wake of three deaths in different cities, including two by gunfire.

Police first pleaded with and then ordered Occupy Oakland protesters to leave their encampment at the City Hall plaza where a man was shot and killed Thursday.

Officers acting at the direction of Mayor Jean Quan distributed fliers to protesters late Friday afternoon warning that the camp violates the law and must be disbanded immediately. The notices warned campers they would face arrest if tents and other materials were not removed, although the warnings did not say by when.

The city issued similar written warnings before officers raided the encampment before dawn on Oct. 25 with tear gas and bean bags projectiles [sic] before arresting 85 people. A day later, Quan allowed protesters to reclaim the disbanded site and the camp has grown substantially since then.

Earlier, the Oakland Police Officer's Association issued an open letter saying the camp is pulling officers away from crime-plagued neighborhoods.

"With last night's homicide, in broad daylight, in the middle of rush hour, Frank Ogawa Plaza is no longer safe," the letter said. "Please leave peacefully, with your heads held high, so we can get police officers back to work fighting crime in Oakland neighborhoods."

City Council President Larry Reid said outside City Hall on Friday that the shooting was further proof the tents must come down. He was confronted by a protester who said he wouldn't be in office much longer.

"You didn't elect me," Reid snapped back. "You probably ain't even registered to vote!"

The Oakland shooting occurred the same day a 35-year-old military veteran apparently shot himself to death in a tent at a Burlington, Vt., Occupy encampment.

In Vermont, police said a preliminary investigation showed the veteran fatally shot himself in the head in a tent in City Hall Park.

The death of the Chittenden County man raised questions about whether the protest would be allowed to continue, said Burlington police Deputy Chief Andi Higbee.

"Our responsibility is to keep the public safe. When there is a discharge of a firearm in a public place like this it's good cause to be concerned, greatly concerned," Higbee said.

On Friday, a man believed to be in his 40s was found dead inside a tent at the Occupy Salt Lake City encampment, from what police said was a combination of drug use and carbon monoxide.

The discovery led police to order all protesters to leave the park where they have camped for weeks. The man has not been identified.

Group organizers said many of the roughly 150 protesters plan to go to jail rather than abandon the encampment.

"We don't even know if this is a tragedy or just natural," protest organizer Jesse Fruhwirth said. "They're scapegoating Occupy."

Salt Lake City police Chief Chris Burbank said officers have made 91 arrests at the camp, roughly the same number seen in the area during all of the last year.

A preliminary investigation into the Oakland shooting suggested it resulted from a fight between two groups of men at or near the encampment, police Chief Howard Jordan said. Investigators do not know if the men in the fight were associated with Occupy Oakland, he said.

Protesters said there was no connection between the shooting and the camp.

The coroner's office said it was using fingerprints to identify the victim and that a positive identification was not likely to be released before Monday.

Protesters have been girding for another police raid as several City Council members have said the Oakland camp must go. After police cleared the camp last month, Quan changed course and allowed protesters to return.

Tensions were also high at the 300-tent encampment in Portland, Ore., which has become a hub for the city's homeless people and addicts.

Mayor Sam Adams ordered the camp shut down by midnight Saturday, saying the tipping point came this week with the arrest of a camper on suspicion of setting off a Molotov cocktail outside an office building, as well as two non-fatal drug overdoses at the camp.


 
AP: “A body is removed from a tent in the Occupy Salt Lake camp in Pioneer Park, Friday Nov. 11, 2011 in Salt Lake City. The Occupy Salt Lake group has been in Pioneer Park for weeks, protesting what they say is corporate greed, in solidarity with the larger Occupy Wall Street protests in New York and elsewhere. Police say the body of a man in his 40s was found Friday morning in a tent. A cause of death was not available, but authorities say it did not immediately appear to be foul play.” (AP Photo/The Salt Lake Tribune, Al Hartmann)
 

"I cannot wait for someone to die," he said. "I cannot wait for someone to use the camp as camouflage to inflict bodily harm on others."

Many at the camp said they would resist any effort to remove them.

"There will be a variety of tactics used," said organizer Adriane DeJerk, 26. "No social movement has ever been successful while being completely peaceful."

Police said some elements inside the camp may be building shields and makeshift weapons, including nails hammered into wood, while trying to gather gas masks.

"If there are anarchists, if there are weapons, if there is an intention to engage in violence and confrontation, that obviously raises our concerns," Portland police Lt. Robert King said.
 
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Associated Press writers Dave Gram in Burlington, Vt., Nigel Duara in Portland, Ore., Josh Loftin and Brian Skoloff in Salt Lake City and Sudhin Thanawala and Marcus Wohlsen in San Francisco contributed to this report.

1 comment:

  1. Nick, you know very well that

    1. - Shootings in Oakland are not exactly rare, for reasons you should be familiar with.

    2. - Any population of thousands, over a period of more than a month, will experience the statistically normal number of deaths, suicides, petty crime, etc. Every small town has a police blotter; that, by itself, is no argument against allowing the existence of small towns (or of outdoor concerts).

    The core of Occupy, and much of its membership, is (rather incoherently) opposing the rampant corruption of our country. This is not your father's America. Our institutions are now deeply corrupt, the middle class is being done away with by deliberate political decisions, and Wall Streeters and DC lobbyists and burrocrats (the two groups are interchangeable; many of their members are the very same individuals) have stolen or malfeased away billions, even trillions, while real income for the 99% slides further down the drain - well, I suppose you know the score about the looting of America and its future. The days of kings, queens, lords, dukes, and earls tyrannizing over a vast peasant class are returning, and to a good number of people this horrifying transformation is palpable.

    (A personal example. Look at this story and read the comments. Why don't you "get a job" with NBC? Obviously, you are lazier and dumber than the hard-working Miss Clinton, you low-life loser.)

    What are we supposed to do? Write a letter to our Congresspersons? Vote for Herman Cain?

    ReplyDelete