Victory in Oakland buoys Occupy movement
'Shut it down!' Oakland, Nov. 2.
photo: Bill Bowers
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By Larry Hales
Oakland, Calif.
Nov 9, 2011
The call by Occupy Oakland for a general strike on Nov. 2 came after police
from agencies across Alameda County brutally assaulted people trying to return
to their encampment on Oct. 25 at Frank Ogawa Plaza (renamed Oscar Grant Plaza)
after police had ousted them and ransacked their belongings.
Videos show what resembled a war zone as police attacked demonstrators with
pepper gas, “flash-bang” grenades and disabling projectiles. A
24-year-old Marine veteran, Scott Olsen, was severely injured when a projectile
launched by police hit him in the face. Dozens of people were arrested and
injured and more than 500 cops from 12 different police agencies were
involved.
The call for a general strike on Nov. 2 was a bold move.
The attempt to crack down on the occupation in Oakland was not an isolated
event. Similar actions by police have occurred in Washington state, Denver,
Atlanta and elsewhere.
Each time the state has stepped in, the movement has grown larger and
attracted more attention. Its primary target, as evidenced by Occupy Wall
Street, has been the banks and financial institutions and the wealthy. Each
attack has made it ever clearer that the fundamental function of the state
apparatus is to protect the interests of the ruling elite.
The Oakland General Strike came at this juncture.
Even four months earlier, it would have seemed impossible to launch a large
action in a week’s time. When the South Central Federation of Labor in
Wisconsin, which represented 45,000 workers, endorsed a call for a general
strike last winter in response to Gov. Scott Walker’s bill to curtail
collective bargaining, labor, progressives and revolutionaries held their
collective breath. A tremendous uprising was underway in Wisconsin, but labor
leaders did not heed the call.
But in Oakland, the occupation movement, spurred by the police attack and
the lies emanating from city politicians, wasted no time. The proposal for a
general strike, made by Marxist and cultural artist Boots Riley of the rap
group The Coup, was supported by more than 90 percent of the General Assembly
in Oakland. Support poured in from around the country. A national call was put
out by Bayan USA, Bail Out the People Movement, and other groups and
individuals.
Day of the strike
This writer was able to participate in the general strike
action. The call was ultimately supported by the Oakland Education Association,
California Nurses Association, members of International Longshore and Warehouse
Union Local 10, Service Employees Local 1021, United Auto Workers Local 2865,
United Brotherhood of Carpenters Local 713, who voted to go on strike, and the
marine division of the ILWU, the Inlandboatmen’s Union.
City workers were allowed to take the day off.
Starting at 9 a.m. people began amassing at Oscar Grant Plaza and from there
marched to downtown banks. They forced Wells Fargo, Bank of America and Chase
to close. Young people tied a banner that read “Death to
Capitalism” between two lamp poles.
No police were in sight. Though police agencies across Alameda County were
put on alert and fully mobilized, they were not a visual presence as young
people took streets, sealed off bank doors with caution tape, taped eviction
posters to their doors and banged on the windows while chanting.
The noise was deafening. It is estimated that at least 50,000 people took
part in numerous protests that wound through the streets of downtown Oakland.
The activists directed traffic and ultimately ended up at the port of Oakland
— the fifth-busiest port in the country. Earlier, a march explicitly
against capitalism included as many as 5,000 students, children, teachers and
homeless in a multinational crowd.
The march to the port began to assemble at 4 p.m. Several busloads of people
were also driven the two-plus miles to the port. Earlier in the day, the port
operated at 50 percent capacity, with at least one-third of the jobs unclaimed.
Because many high-skilled positions weren’t filled, whole crews were
idled.
Three groups of marchers left from downtown Oakland between 4:30 p.m. and 6
p.m. Still there was no visible police presence other than helicopters. It was
later revealed that there were plainclothes police in the crowd, but no
cruisers or uniform cops on motorcycles, bikes, horses or foot could be
seen.
As the march neared the docks, it became clear how large it was. Tens of
thousands were participating to stop the unloading and loading of ships by the
night shift.
No trucks were allowed to leave. Barricades were erected and protesters
blocked trucks with their bodies, asking the drivers for solidarity. In every
case the trucks turned back.
Protesters blocked every gate and waited until nightfall, when an arbitrator
was supposed to come and determine whether or not the workers could
“safely” cross the picket lines at each gate. The thousands who
marched on the port remained, sitting on cold concrete or standing, talking
politics, getting acquainted with one another. The mood was electric.
ILWU Local 10 has a history of dynamic action, going back to one of its
founders and leaders, Harry Bridges, who helped lead the San Francisco General
Strike of 1934 that ended with all the ports on the West Coast being unionized.
ILWU Local 10 has led solidarity actions against the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan, against apartheid in South Africa and in solidarity with the
Palestinian struggle. ILWU Local 21 is currently leading a valiant effort
against EGT grain terminal in Longview, Wash.
Demonstrators waited as the start of the shift was moved from 7 p.m. to 8
p.m. Finally, word of the shift being canceled was greeted by cheers. The
marching band that had participated in all the day’s actions continued to
play, energizing the crowd.
Marchers began leaving the port, stopping to talk to people at the
barricades. It was under an overpass, just off the docks, that the first police
cars were spotted: rows of them from Oakland, California Highway Patrol and
other agencies.
Some people remained to make sure no trucks left to deliver their cargo.
Later in the evening a group of a few hundred tried to take over a building and
were met with police violence. Again, a thick cloud of pepper gas wafted over
downtown as cops battled the protesters who had chosen a more confrontational
action.
The day was a success and has inspired other calls for general strikes
around the country.
Consciousness is indeed deepening. The crisis is not going away.
Now is a time for boldness and action. The Oakland General Strike proves
that much is possible and can be achieved.
This is a time when revolutionary ideology is needed more than ever. The
fundamental contradiction is between the oppressed and working class, on the
one hand, and the ruling wealthy class and their system, on the other. The only
way to end the increasing misery is to do away with this capitalist system and
build socialism.
Occupy Oakland strike committee shows support for longshore
workers
Oakland, Nov. 2.
photo: Bill Bowers
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Nov 9, 2011
The Occupy Oakland Strike Committee issued the following
statement on Oct. 29.
On Wednesday, Nov. 2, as part of the Oakland General Strike, we will march
on the Port of Oakland and shut it down. We will converge at 5 p.m. at 14th and
Broadway and march to the port to shut it down before the 7 p.m. night
shift.
We are doing this in order to blockade the flow of capital on the day of the
General Strike, as well as to show our commitment to solidarity with longshore
workers in their struggle against EGT in Longview, Wash. EGT is an
international grain exporter which is attempting to rupture longshore
jurisdiction. The driving force behind EGT is Bunge Ltd., a leading
agribusiness and food company which reported $2.4 billion in profit in 2010;
this company has strong ties to Wall Street. This is but one example of Wall
Street’s corporate attack on workers.
The Oakland General Strike will demonstrate the wide-reaching implications
of the Occupy Wall Street movement. The entire world is fed up with the huge
disparity of wealth caused by the present system. Now is the time that the
people are doing something about it. The Oakland General Strike is a warning
shot to the 1 percent — their wealth only exists because the 99 percent
creates it for them.