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Breaking: this morning in New York City November 15, 2011

Posted by rogerhollander in Economic Crisis, Occupy Wall Street Movement.
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1 comment so far
 

http://org2.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=GMCKLXGl9aqkD3ySxJ61ySJlhNpdTAd5Last night, I watched lower Manhattan turn into a
militarized lockdown. The park known as Liberty Square was apparently cleared by
force, though I arrived 20 minutes after the police barricades encircled a
two-block radius, kicked out all media and prevented all foot traffic on public
sidewalks surrounding the park.

This was expected. The emergency text message
went out at 1:00 AM and read, “URGENT: Hundreds of police mobilizing around
Zuccotti.
Eviction in progress!” prompting a mass mobilization of
people like me, part-time protesters who signed up to converge on the park for
the looming police raid on the physical heart of the Occupy movement.

The police were prepared for this flood of
bodies. Many subway stops were shut down, as was the Brooklyn Bridge.

My go bag had been packed for weeks, waiting for just this moment. I laced up my
boots, and spent an agonizing 20 minutes on the subway from Brooklyn.

Upon arrival in lower Manhattan, I struggled for
about two hours to get to a position where I could see into the park, to no
avail. From a block away, I saw massive piles of what used to be supplies dumped
into waiting trucks. People’s major concerns were two-fold: first, the health
and safety of the occupiers locked in the camp; and second, the 5,000 books of
the Occupy Wall Street library. What a picture it would be (maybe it
exists) of police in riot gear gathering boxes of donated books and loading them
into garbage trucks. A perfect metaphor for what appears to be the intention of
last night’s raid: destroying the body of knowledge that had been collected by a
movement just two months old, which was built by collective effort, literally
from the ground up.

After four hours of wandering in groups and alone on
the dark, empty streets of lower Manhattan, Foley Square, a park rich with the
history of labor struggles in New York City, became the rallying point. After a
short discussion with the handful of police on hand, Foley Square was determined
to be a safe zone – for the time being.

Here I sit, watching the pulse of the Occupy Wall
Street movement strengthen. Stories of arrests are being exchanged over a
breakfast of apples and muffins. A sleepless crowd is beginning to be reinforced
by New Yorkers from around the city as the morning news streams images of a camp
turned back into a barren, soulless corporate park known as Zuccotti. But the
drums are back. The spirit and the idea of the Occupy movement has only been
strengthened. Today is the end of the beginning, and what has been built
cannot be disbanded. Now, we stand at the beginning of the next phase, looking
into the eyes of the people who created a new consciousness and a new
politics.

Today is November 15, 2011, a beautiful day tainted
only by the physical harm of those who left their blood and sweat on the cement
of Liberty Park.

Please support Truthout as we cover this
revolutionary history in the making. We’re skating on the edge and we need you
there with us. Can you make a donation so we can continue this vital
coverage?

 

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Mayor Bloomberg vs Artists: The Battle for the Soul of New York City April 30, 2010

Posted by rogerhollander in Art, Literature and Culture, New York.
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Washington Square Art
Published on Friday, April 30, 2010 by CommonDreams.orgby Brendan Smith

Last week a bubbly woman from Ohio stopped by our table in Union Square. “This is why I love coming to New York!” she explained as she flipped through our silkscreens. “Everywhere else I go, it’s the same imported crap in the stores. But out here, I can meet local artists making art with their own hands.”

Well, not for long…

Mayor Bloomberg’s legal henchmen have unilaterally issued an administrative ruling effectively barring most art from New York’s City’s parks. Under the false guise of “public safety” and “congestion” they’ve crafted a complex set of rules banning 80-90% of artists from even displaying their work in Columbus Circle, Union Square Park and any other public park in Manhattan. The rules range from permitting only four artists to set up in Columbus Circle to barring artists from coming within fifty feet of a monument or five feet from a garbage can.

The effect of the de-facto art ban, according to the Associated Press, is to “dramatically alter a colorful part of the cityscape that has for decades served as an outdoor gallery popular among tourists in a city known worldwide for its arts.”

Bloomberg deems us a “public nuisance” because we do not fit neatly into plan for New York as an uninterrupted commercial venture where public space is rented, bought and sold. As Robert Lederman, president of the 2000 member group ARTIST, points out:

If preventing congestion in public parks was a genuine concern…why are there daily corporate promotions in NYC parks by companies like Disney, Nike, Best Buy and JP Morgan Chase and a thousand others that involve huge displays, giant trucks, powerlines and other dangerous infrastructure?

Bloomberg’s rationale for the new rules is that artists are blocking walkways and creating a safety hazard. But the administration allows — indeed, encourages — commercial vendors to set up at these same locations, as long as they are paying rent to the city. In Battery Park, for example, artists are to be chased out but eight hot dog vendors will be allowed to stay in the most high congestion areas. Bloomberg isn’t worried about congestion; these rules are part of his larger plan to privatize and “monetize” our city’s parks.

New York Law School’s City Law journal wondered this week if Bloomberg and his Parks Department are privately “feeling hypocritical about their proposal”, since last year the administration “successfully defended in court its decision to install a commercial restaurant in Union Square’s pavilion.” Bloomberg argued that Unions Square is a “traditionally commercial area.”

My partner and I have been selling on the streets of New York City for nearly a decade and not once have we seen Mayor Bloomberg in a city park — although we’ve often seen his political minions blocking walkways to campaign during election time.

While he’s been dreaming of higher office and courting Wall Street, we’ve quietly joined musicians, farmers, social justice activists, gardeners and others in an effort to breathe life back into public spaces and revive a local, sustainable cultural economy in Manhattan. We choose to display and sell our work in city parks rather than in cloistered Chelsea galleries or Soho boutiques. We see ourselves as part of a long tradition of New York artists embedding ourselves in local community efforts to make the world a better and more beautiful place.

Bloomberg, who chooses to spend many of his weekends golfing at his Bahama resort, might find our work of little value, but average New Yorkers tell us every day that they treasure this flowering of grassroots culture in their parks. Just last week a 100 random NYC park-goers were stopped and asked if street artists enhanced or detracted from their park experience. Ninety-four of them stated that artists enhance New Yorkers’ park experience.

Our cracker-jack first amendment lawyers tell us we have a decent chance of beating Bloomberg in court — as we did against Giuliani in 1996 when a federal appeals court ruled that artists are protected by the First Amendment. And just this week the ACLU called on Bloomberg to withdraw his proposal. According to NYCLU Legal Director Arthur Eisenberg:

Parks have historically been recognized as vitally important for social, artistic and political expression. The Parks Department should make every effort to accommodate our city’s artists, poets and authors. It must withdraw its proposal until it can publicly demonstrate it is meeting its First Amendment obligations.

But at the end of the day this battle is about far more than artists’ first amendment rights. This is a battle for the cultural soul of New York City — and every New Yorker has a stake in the outcome. As Lederman warns, Bloomberg and the Parks Commissioner see themselves as real estate agents “trying to get the highest price per square foot for all of our public parks. If the people of NYC don’t wake up to this soon, there will be no more truly public places left in America’s greatest city.”

Brendan Smith and his partner Nicola Armster have sold their green art on the streets of New York City for more than a decade.  Read their Green Art Manifesto at www.nicolaandthenewfoundlander.com

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