Showing posts with label rally. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rally. Show all posts

Sunday, May 20, 2012

HUMAN MICROPOEM @ Protest NATO Rally, Chicago

The 2012 NATO Summit is currently taking place in Chicago, and as I need not tell anyone, the city's and state response to dissent of any sort, by groups and people affiliated with the Occupy movement, longstanding peace and anti-war activists, veterans, union members, and others on the left and left-of-center who expressed a desire to assemble and march without confrontation, has been really over the top. From the militarization of the police forces surrounding the site of the summit, the McCormick Place Convention Center, near Soldier's Field, including restrictions on access to major roadways and north-south routes; to an early-morning raid on Zoe Sigman's home in Chicago's Bridgeport section, which resulted in the arrest of 3 people, with 2 others arrested on different charges today, though alternative reports suggest that the arrestees have been framed or the charges have been trumped up as a deterrence; to violent responses to marchers over the last few days, including a brutal showdown at McCormick Place this evening, the state reaction to Constitutionally-guaranteed dissent has been reactionary and violent.  I demurred for a moment, I must admit, but only for a moment, before deciding to participate in today's HUMAN MICROPOEM, performed by a loosely-affiliated group of poets and performers sponsored by and affiliated with the experimental Red Rover Series, who have supported the Occupy Chicago movement in its earlier Federal Reserve of Chicago encampment mode, commemorated Veterans Day with a march to the Vietnam Veteran's Memorial, and staged guerrilla readings at this year's Associated Writing Programs (AWP) conference in Chicago. More generally, "The Human Micropoem is a call and response choral form utilizing the human microphone at the occupy movements to amplify the speaker's words by those listening. The speaker says a line and then everyone who can hear repeats it."

I turned out to be the fourth of a quartet who convened as the HUMAN MICROPOEM from 11 am to a little after 12 pm, on the sidewalk at the southwest corner of Jackson & Columbus, just catercorner to the major March and Rally to Protest NATO in Grant Park (and directly across the street from the rump side of the Art Institute of Chicago), a legal, permitted rally at Petrillo Bandshell, in the park, to be followed by a march toward McCormick Place, with the Iraq Veteran's Against the War (IVAW) marching  in solidarity and culminating in IVAW members of IVAW conducting a closing ceremony in which they planned to return their medals to NATO.  We Human Micropoets performed original works, including declaiming from a collaborative poem by one of the poets, reading dictionary entries (cf. "revolution," "peace," "action," "silence," etc.), offering impromptu chants, and reciting poems by other, well-known writers (June Jordan, Czeslaw Milosz, Thomas Transtromer, Lorine Niedecker, and Siegfried Sassoon) writing anti-war, pro-peace poems.  We drew a decent number of onlookers and participants, who arrived on their way to the main rally in waves, leading poet and organizer Jen Karmin to astutely time the readings by the lights. Cagean, as she put it. (For longer poems, of course, this presents a little problem.) Well-wishers included a tyke heading towards the lake with his parents, and numerous ralliers who stopped to take pictures and record us, as well as others who wrote up the event. A reporter from AP Radio even took audio, while a young onlooker assured me he would post the video of us on his YouTube channel. (It's not there but when it is I'll add the link.)  After the event, several of us went and sat on the lawn under a cooling bower, and chatted and listened to the speakers at the rally, whose crowds grew larger by the hour.  I had schoolwork to attend to, so I couldn't attend any of the several marches that were to take place. I headed back north, and it wasn't until a few hours later, as I was walking to the train and passed flat screens in the open windows of bars on Clark Street in Wrigleyville, that I learned that there'd been a violent standoff between police and the marchers south of the rally ground, and that the medal-returning event had also ended with brutal state response. The ironies are too numerous to list.

I do hope to continue the Human Micropoeming over the summer in the New York/New Jersey area. Among the many things it has clarified for me are how important public, social performances of poetry can be; that any sort of text, not just a poem, can work under the correct conditions; and that certain poems, particular ones that can easily be broken down prosodically and syntactically, that have a looser rhythm and shorter lines, often work best.  June Jordan's poems were perfect in this regard, and their severity felt in perfect keeping with the gravity of what protesters have faced over the last few years. Nevertheless, performing Milosz's "Declaration," I had to catch myself several times not stopping at the sheer power of his language, which, even somewhat atomized, still bore so much beauty and force.  As always, a few photos:

At the Human Micropoem performance, Chicago Rally Against NATO Summit
A rally participant photographing Jen (article here)

At the Human Micropoem performance, Chicago Rally Against NATO Summit
Peace activists who joined the performance

At the Chicago Rally Against NATO Summit
Marchers heading toward the rally site

At the Chicago Rally Against NATO
Grant Park, near the Petrillo Bandshell (Chiscrapers in the background)

At the Chicago Rally Against NATO
Rally participants relaxing near us

At the Chicago Rally Against NATO
Peace activists

At the Chicago Rally Against NATO
People distributing newspapers and leaflets

Chicago Rally Against NATO Summit
Rally participants

At the Chicago Rally Against NATO
As the rally site began to fill up

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Million Hoodie March for Trayvon Martin

Tonight in Union Square, in New York City, Daniel Maree, a supporter of Trayvon Martin, the 17-year-old African American teenager who was murdered three weeks ago in cold blood by self-appointed neighborhood "watch captain" George Zimmerman, in Sanford, Florida, with apparent impunity, organized the Million Hoodie March, beginning at 6 pm, followed by a march through the nearby streets of Manhattan to the United Nations Building. Seeking justice for Martin and his family, and the prosecution of Zimmerman, who has not been charged with any crime despite a growing body of evidence, including aural witnesses, 911-call recordings, what sounds like a racial epithet uttered before Zimmerman pursued Martin, and Zimmerman's own history of violence, paranoia and overreaction, the rally and march also coincided with the United Nations' International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination. After an evening appointment, I headed over to Union Square, where the march had already begun.

I was not wearing a hoodie, but like so many who were present, like millions of people walking or driving around this country, I have been viewed with suspicion, including by the police, more than a few times in my 40+ years, no matter what I have had on, including a suit, in every city, town and suburb in which I have lived, from Saint Louis to Boston to Charlottesville to Chicago. I strongly support not only the demand for justice for Trayvon Martin and his family, but the related points Maree and others are making about racial profiling, presumption of guilt, a horrifically flawed justice system, and the lack of value placed on too many lives in this country.  It was clear from the immense, vocal energized crowd that quite a few others feel the same way. Many of those participating were young people perhaps not much older than Martin, but many were my age or older, and have witnessed such travesties of justice their entire lives. I don't know what the recent moves by the US Department of Justice concerning this case will have, but if this and similar marches push the Florida authorities to conduct a fuller investigation of the events leading up to and the moment and aftermath of Martin's death, and of Zimmerman's history, then they will be invaluable. We cannot bring Trayvon Martin back, but if we can prevent similar deaths, then every such action will be that much more worthwhile.

Here are a few photos (my apologies for their blurriness, but I snapped them with my iPhone and I have never been known for manual dexterity); I will post several videos I also recorded. If you haven't already done so and can, please sign the petition at Change.org, demanding the arrest of George Zimmerman. Maree would like for 1 million to sign it; so far 800,000 people have done so.

At the Million Hoody rally & march for Trayvon Martin
Approaching the Million Hoodie March for Trayvon Martin
At the Million Hoody rally & march for Trayvon Martin
A young man being interviewed about the rally as marchers pass by
At the Million Hoody rally & march for Trayvon Martin
On 14th St. in Manhattan
At the Million Hoody rally & march for Trayvon Martin
Photographer seeking a good angle on the march
At the Million Hoody rally & march for Trayvon Martin
"WE ARE ALL Trayvon Martin"
At the Million Hoody rally & march for Trayvon Martin
Marching westwards on 14th Street
At the Million Hoody rally & march for Trayvon Martin
The marchers on 6th Avenue
At the Million Hoody rally & march for Trayvon Martin
Along the march route
At the Million Hoody rally & march for Trayvon Martin
On 6th Avenue
At the Million Hoody rally & march for Trayvon Martin
Marchers stopped by a police bike cordon (the old Limelight at left)
At the Million Hoody rally & march for Trayvon Martin
Heading north (Empire State Bldg. visible at center)
At the Million Hoody rally & march for Trayvon Martin
Marchers shadowed by the police

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Scenes from a New York Protest: Color of Change Calls Out Fox News

Happy Bastille Day
C'est Bastille Day!
Earlier this week, I received a post from ColorOfChange.org, alerting me to a protest rally occurring today, at noon, across the street from Rupert Murdoch's home at 834 5th Avenue, in New York City.  The rally developed out a previous ColorOfChange petition drive, in which the progressive organization gathered signatures--over 110,000 in the final count from ColorOfChange supporters and allies--which it sent last week sent to Fox News head Roger Ailes. The petition urges Ailes to fire TV personality Eric Bolling, who has repeatedly made racist on-air comments, ranging from his statement that President Barack Obama was in Ireland "chugging forties" to his depiction of the president's meeting with Gabon's president, Ali Omar Bongo, replete with racially inflammatory imagery, that the president was inviting "hoods to the hizzouse."

Two weeks ago, ColorOfChange had run a full-page ad in the New York Daily News to raise public awareness about Murdoch's profiting from a cable and newspaper empire that has drawn viewers in part based on race-based fears and resentment.  I could spend several blog posts detailing these, but it should suffice to list just a few of the most egregious names in this regard: Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity, Steve Doocy, Gretchen Carlson, Bill O'Reilly, and Juan Williams, to name only a few.  These figures have driven a great deal of racist hysteria, profoundly shaped our public political and civil discourse over the last few years, severely harmed the work of progressive and even moderate liberal--and conservative!--interests, yet this approach has been good business for Fox News, which has helped blast print, cable and broadcast media ever rightward.

ColorOfChange noted that Ailes's response to the petitions was silence, so instead the organization decided to go straight to Rupert Murdoch, who, as we all know, is trying to hold together the unraveling threads of his empire over in the UK, as a steadily waxing hacking/wiretapping/bribery scandal engulfs his British newspaper chain and may potentially spread to his holdings in the US and Australia. ColorOfChange, knowing that a bit of theater is never a bad thing, thus invited supporters to attend a brief rally and join them as they delivered the petitions (boxes) to Murdoch's very, very post 5th Avenue apartment. 

I showed up just before noon, and the crowd was sparse, but by the time the rally got underway and ColorOfChange's Rashad Robinson spoke from a podium on the west side of the street, abutting the park, with Murdoch's apartment building on the east side, a sizable group had gathered. There were also, at least to my mind, a noteworthy number of journalists and representatives from foreign and local news organizations, including many of the New York-area TV stations and the British Telegraph, The New York Observer, and NDTV. As I said, a bit of theater does draw attention.  Ironically enough, as Robinson was speaking, a Fox News truck barreled past down 5th Avenue, which provoked an outcry from people in the crowd, and the large, clear placards ensured that all the tourists taking in New York on those double-decker buses also got a bit of activism amidst their sightseeing. The police, as well as numerous other law enforcement-looking individuals, some in plain clothes (FBI?) were also present, but the police were in general polite and accommodating.  Perhaps they even recalled some of the hateful crap Fox News Channel's pundits have spewed against their union brethren, their comrades who were injured in the 9/11 cleanup effort, and even survivors of those murdered on 9/11.

The highlight of the protest was the march to Murdoch's apartment building's front door. At first I thought, why isn't ColorOfChange going to Fox News's New York headquarters, but then I realized, why not the home. Not that there was any possiblity that the building's doorpeople, or security guards, or anyone else would allow anyone affiliated with ColorOfChange into the vestibule, but as I said, it made for good theater, and showed that in fact, sometimes you have to take things to the source. Murdoch's wife, Wendy Murdoch, was probably nowhere near the premises today--or even in the US, given that it's summer, the man's a multi-billionaire, and has homes all over the world--but actually seeing either of them was hardly the point.  What the action did do was further underline the burgeoning critiques of Murdoch's businesses and his business practices, which show a throughline of sleaziness, intimidation, propaganda, and, as the British scandals are showing ever more daily, what amounts to criminality. When you are hacking into the phones or computers of anyone, especially abducted children and victims of mass murder; paying police officers to access files or posing as individuals to do so; possibly blackmailing or intimidating government officials to pass policies favorable to you and your companies, to advance your bankrupt ideology, and to overlook your crimes, and so forth, you're talking about extremely unethical, and likely criminal behavior.  Free speech, a US right, is one thing, but indications suggest that units of News Corporation have gone much further.

That you are also using racism and racial resentment, xenophobia and anti-immigrant testeria, sexism and misogyny, classism, etc. to advance your agenda, also deserves the harshest condemnation, but as I said, there is a throughline here, and ColorOfChange.com has been focusing on one aspect of it.  As the news each day has shown, the abyss News Corp. finds itself in is a deep one, and today's announcement that the FBI will be looking into the company's behavior is good news, though given the US government's abject failure to explore the mountain range of federal criminal action, from warantless spying to torture to destruction of government documents, and on and on, that occurred between 2001-2008, I wouldn't bet any money that anything will result, at least over here. That is, unless the British government takes serious action, in which case there might be no way out for US investigators as well. We shall see. At any rate, here are some photos and videos from earlier today.

Rashad Robinson of Color of Change
Rashad Robinson speaking about the protest rally and Fox News's racist behavior

Rashad Robinson speaking at Color of Change protest against Fox News's racism & Rubert Murdoch
Robinson speaking

People at the rally/protest, NYC
People at the rally

834 5th Ave.
Chez Murdoch

Before the rally
Before the rally, assembling for the cameras

A rally attendee being interviewed by NDTV
A rally attendee being interviewed by a reporter from NDTV

At the Color of Change protest, NYC
One of the ColorOfChange ralliers speaking with a reporter from Univision

Rashad Robinson in conversation with a fellow activist
Rashad Robinson (on right), speaking with one of the rally attendees after the event

Rashad Robinson of Color of Change
Robinson being interviewed after the event

Videos after the jump

Friday, September 04, 2009

MoveOn.Org Rally for Health Care Reform

Last night I participated in a small rally in Jersey City's Journal Square that MoveOn.org organized on behalf of health care reform, one of hundreds of such efforts across the country. The rally and accompanying candlelight vigil's aim was to sure that whatever bills President Barack Obama and the Democrats in Congress cobble together, the final version, which will be signed into law, include a robust public health insurance option. To that end we attendees, initially numbering about 40 or so and finally rising to about double that number, heard from a New York physician, a handful of people who'd experienced nightmares with the health care system, other healthcare advocates, and local MoveOn.org representatives who excerpts of Teddy Kennedy's speeches.

The gathering was heartening, especially by evening's end when people passing by decided to hang around, listen to the speakers, and sign up for future MoveOn.org activities, but I still am very worried about what the White House and the Congress are up to and what will come from their efforts. We've gotten all sorts of doubletalk from the White House, waffling in one direction or the other, after they'd already taken single-payer universal health insurance, which would surely drive down costs and provide health care for everyone, off the table before they even began.

The President, like a weathervane, has allowed the hot and toxic air emanating from the right and enabled by the mainstream corporate media, increasingly to set the terms of the discussion. Instead of laying out clear principles and selling them nonstop, with Democratic support, he has gone silent for long stretches, failed to actively and enthusiastically challenge the lies and misstatements about the bill, and refused to publicize and humanize the issue. One minute he is for the public option, the next he and his surrogates suggest he isn't (or--Rahm Emanuel--might not be). One minute he is admitting that he (Rahm Emanuel) cut a deal with Big Pharma, laying out the odious terms, the next minute he says he didn't do so.

Health care in the US is in crisis; doing nothing about it is not an option. But throwing together a crappy bill that does nothing to transform the current situation, just to have something to sign also isn't and cannot be an option.

The same has been true of the Congress, whose leaders, especially in the Senate, continue to be too pusillanimous despite now having close to an absolute majority to pass legislation. The three House bills include forms of public health insurance, as does Kennedy's HELP panel's bill, but the key Senate Finance bill, from Max Baucus (written by him and sextet of moderate and conservative Democrats and Republicans), is unclear. Baucus's original guidelines for a bill, from last year, sounded pretty progressive, but his just released sketch of a bill sounds like a disaster, with reduced subsidies for poor and working-class people and no public option.

Are Baucus's newest set of guidelines a sop for his health care industry funders, a ploy to placate the GOP and Democratic fiscal whiners who were silent when George W. Bush dynamited the deficit open with tax cuts and war spending, a skeleton to be fleshed out with the House's more liberal plans in conference, or something else?

None of this came up at the rally. In fact the faith that people there appeared to have that the President and the Congress would do the right thing was strong, by my observation. I hate to be more cynical, but as in 1992, on the big issues this administration has represented one disappointment after another. I am hoping--and will do my part to ensure that--this extremely important effort will not turn out to be yet one more to be added to the list.
Participants in health care reform rally
Participants in the MoveOn.org health care reform rally and vigil
Candlelight vigil, Journal Square
Participants at the rally and vigil
Candlelight vigil for public health care reform
Participants at the rally and vigil
Participant in the candlelight vigil and rally
A participant with a flyer
Channel 9 newsman Mike Gilliam
Our local newsperson, Mike Gilliam of Channel 9 News; he aired a very sympathetic and thoughtful piece on the rally

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

The Day After

"I'm rocking with Obama but I'm not a politician...."
--Jay-Z, "Jockin Jay-Z"

I was so elated and disoriented this morning (I went to bed at about 3 am, after relaying between the TV post-election chatfests on CNN and MSNBC and all of my favorite political websites) that I wasn't sure I would be able to get through the day, but I couldn't cancel student meetings or my class and didn't want to miss my colleagues Eula Biss's and John Bresland's reading/screening or a program event, so I headed up to the university determined to make it through until 5 pm. I must say that I wasn't fully there, and as I type this entry, I still am not. Obama's election still doesn't fully feel real, but I know that last night's results are not a mirage, and that the country--63 million Americans and counting--decisively rejected George W. Bush's and Dick Cheney's continuous disaster of an administration that has dominated the last 8 years, and took a huge leap into the future by electing Obama and Biden. Further proof of this were the vote tallies that increased the Democrats' margin in the Senate and in the House.

About five years ago, at the Evanston home of two very distinguished university colleagues, I met Barack Obama in person. He was running for the US Senate seat that he will now forgo to assume the presidency. I remember telling C after I left the event how struck I was by Obama's charm, brilliance, poise, political acumen, and vision. He spoke without notes about his aims for the position, and while he was articulating mostly standard liberal positions, he did so in a way that felt fresh and persuasive. I realized that night that Obama was going to win the Senate seat, even though he faced a field of around 6 or 7 other Democrats in the primary, and then 1 of 5 or so Republicans. He saw that he had and has that elusive it that cannot be acquired or taught. I also felt that his sense of timing was uncanny; Peter Fitzgerald's open seat was a likely Democratic pickup at the very moment when the state was turning against Bush and the war, and Illinois had already shown the nation that it was willing to make history by electing a Black candidate doing so in exemplary fashion when Carol Moseley-Braun was elected in 1992. Obama demonstrated these gifts at the Democratic convention, before a national audience, and after he won his Senate seat in a landslide, I figured he'd eventually run for the presidency, but not for a decade or more. But he realized that the clock was ticking, and launched his campaign in 2007, and the rest, as we can now say, is history.

I've met and known a few politicians and political figures in my time (one of our most recent Republican Undersecretaries of Indian Affairs is my high school classmate), but few have impressed me immediately in the way that Obama did several years ago. All of those struggles, those battles, for centuries, from the 17th century through the Abolition movement through the Civil Rights struggle and Black Power movements, the words and deeds of history's well-known and unknown fighters, were going to take symbolic and material form in someone, and yesterday, they did so in him. Certainly I've had my moments of disenchantment with his politics and fence-straddling, as I made clear when he capitulated on the FISA bill, but I remain convinced that he is an extraordinary figure. What the next four years and after will spell I cannot say, but I do know that he has the skills and talents to match the very best presidents we've had, and it'll be up to all of us, those who supported him and those who didn't, to ensure that he achieves all that he's--and we're--capable of.

I was at Grant Park (though not in the ticketed section) and was able to participate in the mass celebration, which I described to colleagues today as something akin to all of Chicago's sports teams winning at the same time, though everyone was on her or his best behavior, polite, brimming with smiles and teary eyes, laughing, saying hello and apologizing for accidental bumps, breaking into spontaneous songs and dances and cheers, almost a kind of Kantian ethical dreamworld filled not with Prussian burghers but Midwesterners of every age, color, race and ethnicity, physical status, and so on.

The official tallies claim that only 200,000 people were there, but I think far more were on the streets (Michigan Avenue, the various side streets all the way down to Congress Parkway, and west well to State) surrounding the park. Out of the thousands who went to the park, I missed some colleagues who were there, but ran into a handful of students, all as excited as I was, on the El, on the street, and at the park's edges. I'm going to post a few pictures below, and will post a video from my other camera, from which I haven't yet downloaded lots of pictures, but it was as festive an experience as I've ever had.

‡‡‡

One thing that has tempered my ongoing elation is the news that all of the major state-based anti-gay ballot measures passed last night. In Florida (same-sex marriage ban), in Arizona (same-sex marriage ban), in Arkansas (gay adoption), and most notoriously in California, voters approved measures that would restrict or remove rights and equality for LGBTQ people. California's Proposition 8, the anti-same sex marriage amendment, did pass by a vote of 52.5% vs. 47.5%, and as CNN's exit polling suggests which should be taken with qualifications, black voters overwhelming claimed to have supported it:
Prop 8 Exit Polling
This was very disappointing news, though not exactly surprising. Although some of the most pro-LGBTQ figures in our society are Black leaders (public intellectuals, politicians, business people, etc.), and many Black people are very accepting of LGBTQ friends and family members, an issue like this California same-sex marriage ban, presented in the abstract, especially without a sustained chorus of prominent Black and other POC gay and non-gay people advocating against it, was likely to receive a homophobic backlash, and the Obama turnout had a converse effect, it appears. My first question was, what effect will this have on same-sex couples who have already married? Do those marriages stand or once this new amendment takes effect will they invalidated, even though they would be recognized in two other states (Massachusetts and Connecticut)? Can another Supreme Court ruling or a legislative act trump this referendum amendment to California's constitution?

One thing I told C is that from this day forward, one thing that all Black LGBTQ people, our Black non-LGBTQ and non-Black queer and non-queer allies must do is make a much greater effort to educate those segments of our fellow folks who still hold fast to heterosexism and homophobia. I have said and will say again that Black people are no more homophobic than any other group. At the same time, we as Black communities do have pockets of homophobia that we must address. However you feel about marriage or same-sex marriage, it is inconceivable that we should be taking away rights and legalizing civil discrimination against any of us. Black people over these hundreds of years in America have fought too hard, sweat and bled and died to secure equality, and we should absolutely not be helping in any way to further discrimination, which affects all of us, including those of us who are Black and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer, who want to and demand to be treated equally and fairly, by other Black people and by everyone else. So as I said, we need to redouble our efforts from today forward, however we can, to address this issue in our community, even as we strive to address homophobia in the broader American society.

Please do read blogger Pam Spaulding's great take on things here at Pam's House Blend.

I am also glad that civil rights groups are immediately challenging the Proposition 8 results in the courts. As I told colleagues today, I take consolation in the fact that yesterday's vote, particularly among the young, points to a better future in so many ways. We will have a female president sooner rather than later, as well as political and social leaders from all backgrounds, and the politics of demonization and discrimination, which the vile right wing and cowards on the left have utilized as a mechanism of power and dominance, are losing their salience. So while yesterday brought a very saddening note, I have tremendous hope for the future, our American future.

‡‡‡

Those photos:


A band on Michigan Ave.
A band on Michigan Avenue
T-shirt vendors
T-shirt vendors
An artist
Artist and instantaneous art
On Michigan Avenue
On Michigan Avenue, from the steps of the Art Institute of Chicago
On Michigan Avenue
The crowd proceeding up Michigan towards Grant Park
On the steps of the Art Institute
From the steps of the Art Institute of Chicago, looking south down Michigan