Occupy Portland

hoodratz47

Active member
im all about free speach. but fucking A.. there is no banks in Portland.

and of course the shit heads have started fucking shit up that has nothing to do with the messege.

and the portland marithon is being ran this weekend. shit show will ensue.

First things first: I did not attend the Occupy Portland protest on purpose; I was in Old Town for my own reasons. Like many who stayed away, I have always been leery of large masses of people shouting for one side or another, whether at stadiums or in street marches, even if the side they’re on is my own.

The reason is less the suffocating claustrophobia of such crowds—though this is also true—but rather something akin to a scene described in Milan Kundera’s The Unbearable Lightness of Being: When a Czechoslovakian political refugee declines to participate in a political march against the Russian occupation of her country, it is out of a feeling that “behind all occupations and invasions lurks a more basic, pervasive evil and that the image of that evil was a parade of people marching by with raised fists and shouting identical syllables in unison.” Which is to say I have always found myself more in tune with the dogged, often lonely, unsung work of community organizers, advocates and longtime volunteers, however rare such dedication may be. It is not that symbolic manifestations have no power, but that such symbols often spin out of the control of even the best intentioned.

Still, it was hard to see any “basic, pervasive evil” in the peaceable, affable crowds that marched yesterday into and out of downtown’s Pioneer Courthouse Square, from their 2:30 pm starting point at Waterfront Park. Though a long array of shopworn protest slogans were chanted, it was hardly a group in militarized lockstep but rather a broad cross-section of the disenchanted and the disenfranchised, young and old and in between: paired mothers and daughters were a not-uncommon sight, alongside elderly couples, wide-eyed college kids and the inevitable raft of the deeply radicalized. For the most part it just looked like “the people,” in the old optimistic sense of the phrase. A protester attending told me, “I know it’s mostly liberals here, but I can’t help but think that a lot of conservatives see the same problems we do.”

By simple back of envelope calculation (an average of 8-10 people passing by per second, for a total of 24 minutes), I arrived at a figure of between 11,000 and 14,500 people in attendance, which for a town the size of Portland is a figure that is very difficult to ignore. At times it seemed there would be no end to the marchers, that the streets would be forever filled in Seussian lemniscate.

occupy1.jpg


Upon arrival at the square, people did just what the protest’s title implied: they occupied the square. Except at the square’s very center, whatever was said on the inadequate P.A. was hopelessly garbled and diffused by the mass of bodies. The solidarity was thus less about specific message (who could hear?) than in simple shared presence, the optimism in discovering that so large a group cares about what one cares about. Those at the edges of the square milled around somewhat confused about their purpose, while in the middle of Broadway Avenue, someone who’d brought a much more effective sound system had started an impromptu street dance party by the Nordstrom store.

Police presence was benign, though ever increasing: officers smiled and waved at the occasional (very uncommon) heckle, mostly serving to block streets from cars and to support Tri-Met employees trying desperately to keep everyone off the MAX tracks as trains rolled in. “Please be careful,” said a man in a yellow vest. “Please be careful. I don’t want anyone to get hurt.”

occupy3.jpg


Of course, there was also something of the carnivalesque in the air: A young man sitting on a brick wall somewhat treacherously held a sign reading “Tear Down the Wall,” above a woman in bunny ears with a sign (the day’s winner, in my books) that read “Screw Us and We Multiply.” A number of protesters wore Guy Fawkes/“V” saboteur masks popularized in the political sphere by Anonymous, though I couldn’t help but think that every time they bought one they were giving money to Time Warner. People with cameras trained their lenses on other people with cameras. A man with vocal cords ravaged by cigarettes into gravel told a friend, “I’m pissed off because we have no voice.”

Some responses of the assembled when asked why, in fact, they were there:

• From a slightly shy young woman at the edge of the square, dressed in scarf and beanie: “I was thinking about that in the shower this morning, and honestly I think it’s kind of vague, what this movement is. It’s just a kind of roiling dissatisfaction. I’d be interested to hear what other people’s responses would be.”

• From a gregarious older man with close-cropped hair: “I’m an old guy who’s genuinely ashamed of what’s happened to my society on my adult watch since 1980. The project of improving democracy and putting us on a sustainable course has failed. Oligarchy, a few people of wealth and power controlling society even more so than in 1980, has us totally on the wrong course. It’s awful."

• From an older woman taking a break on the square’s bricks: “I’m just fed up with the way that things are being portrayed in the media. Corporate media, which includes NPR, has us all thinking that austerity is the only solution and it’s just not true. Social security and Medicare should not be privatized. I think when things get privatized that’s when there’s fraud and corruption."

• From a conservative-looking young man in a North Face vest: “Because the top 1 percent owns close to a third of the wealth, and I don’t think that’s right.”

• From a young man with stretched ears: “I don’t want to talk to you.”

• From a young man with sharpied slogans on every part of his shirt, much like a signed cast: “No. Thank you, but no.”

I left just as the march reached the square where many would remain overnight, in harmless occupation; city officials had already decided to overturn the park’s camping ban, promising a relatively friction-free stay. Still, a team of six horse police moved toward the square, and behind them, a pack of eight police motorcycles filled the next road to the north of the marchers. The looming clouds had already buffed most of the day’s patina into dull glaze, the wind was lazily shifting directions, and just as I turned away from the march, it began gently to rain.
 
im pretty sure the Porland Police are not that bad..

well minus the tasing shooting rapes.. and the time a cop thought he had a bean bag load in his shot gunn and instead shot a guy with buckshot.

besides that.. they are cool in my book
 
Yeah the Oakland police and the LAPD are pretty legit too...

Besides the one time that an Oakland Policeman shot a guy who was down and handcuffed at point blank...

....or that whole LAPD Rodney King thing.

Besides that...

...wait.
 
i think we see eye to eye..

jus t on my personal experience.. the Portland police have not gave me much hassle

 
"what's happened to society since 1980" is just LOL. If he's talking about the wealth of the people, the gap between the rich and poor started growing in the 60's and 70's. If he's talking about social change, well I'd hate to be any kind of minority before the 80's. I'm feeling the dissatisfaction with the government, but I feel like a lot of those people are misguided.
 
at least there trying to do something.

We have to make the people in power feel accountable for their actions. Most of the messages I've heard from the 'occupy' posts have been pretty dead on. Of course their are some crazy people but for the most part i think its just people who are fed up with not being represented in the government, corporations having too much pull over officials, and some people making way to much money and not paying their fair share.
 
My main issue is that most of them seem to see the problem as having the wrong people in office, not having the right checks and balances, or needing to rework the system. The fact is that the government has never been interested in representing the people's desires. A revolution was fought over taxes, not 20 years later, George Washington himself led an army to end a tax revolt. That tradition carries on to this day in the form of prohibition that denies logic, reason, and empirical evidence (one of many examples).
 
i have a house which i will dontate to the collective... just make sure to take your shoes off.

and this occupy thing.. the hipsters. are to hip to care.
 
pull my boat up to waterfront park anchor.. loud as fuck music playing drinking 8Abv beer. till i puke piss my self...
 
Didn't care if you were kidding or not. It's dumb either way. I'll be with the ON3P boys all night, most likely.
 
Portland is always 1 step behind Seattle

anyway, these protests are hilarious. Went to catch a bus at Westlake the other day and the chants these bitches come up with are so weak. Do they even know what the fuck they are against? Or for? Or wut?
 
um no... sorry i cannot hear you over my awesome beer and the mexicans pumping my gas.

fuck seattle.. it just wishes it was San Fran. where portland is the chill stoner on the couch eating something good jamming to tunes
 
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