Looking
at the police response to the Occupy Wall Street movement,
Bull Connor would be proud.
What went barely
reported recently was that the United Nations has taken
an interest in how the United States has dealt with the
Occupy folks. Specifically, Frank
LaRue, the UN special Rapporteur for the protection
of free expression, believes that the law enforcement crackdowns
against Occupy protesters are a violation of their constitutional
and human rights.
Meanwhile, the
Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression of the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights, noting the assault by police
and arrest of journalists in some cities, urged authorities
to protect journalists at these protests.
Why
are the local authorities breaking up these peaceful protests
- in which people are exercising their right to free speech
–often through the use of violence, mass arrests, tear gas,
smoke grenades, pepper spray, bean-bag rounds and brute
force? And why are they beating and detaining reporters,
or judges
and city council members for that matter?
It all reminds
me of Bull Connor, that infamous bull horn-toting, civil
rights-era Commissioner of Public Safety in Birmingham,
also known as “Bombingham,” Alabama. Summoned from central
casting, the dyed-in-the-wool white supremacist drew attention
to himself when he sprayed water hoses and sicced dogs on
peaceful public demonstrators, including children. Those
water hoses tore the bark off trees.
And the press
caught all of it on tape.
Connor made a
fool of himself, and his actions and those of his henchmen
were broadcasted before a national and international audience.
It put the U.S. to shame, and placed the spotlight on the
Jim Crow South in particular. The moral bankruptcy of segregation
was evident in the heavy handed tactics employed by the
Bull Connors of America.
Then there was
the riot by the Chicago police at the 1968 Democratic Convention.
And on May 4, 1970, the Ohio National Guard killed four
and injured nine unarmed protesters at Kent State University
who opposed Nixon’s invasion of Cambodia.
This nation, the
land of the free, has always known what to do to keep people
in line, especially in order to protect capital. Armed
thugs, whether dressed in blue uniforms or not, were used
by people in power for union busting and strike breaking.
The 1 percent never could have succeeded without the complicity
and active participation of some members of the 99 percent,
including the cops who provide the muscle. Those working
class police officers, who certainly will never become rich,
should side with the very popular movements that would improve
their own condition. After all, as is the case with Wisconsin
Governor Scott Walker,
union busting includes police unions, too.
The NYPD brass
who walked around pepper spraying Occupy protesters, and
the UC
Davis police who summarily sprayed peaceful student
demonstrators, behaved in the time-tested, repugnant tradition
of Bull Connor. These days, the key issue is not Jim Crow
segregation or the war in Vietnam. Rather, as Naomi
Wolf poignantly noted in the Guardian, the Occupy
agenda is getting money out of politics, reforming the banks,
and stopping politicians from passing legislation affecting
Delaware corporations in which they are investors. In other
words, they want to cut American capitalism at the knees,
eliminate the fraud on Wall Street, and drain the swamp
of legalized corruption and bribery that is Washington.
They want to get rid of the fundamental inequities of a
system to which Americans have become far too accustomed.
This is the best tradition of Martin Luther King’s “radical
revolution of values,” what he envisioned as “the shift
from a ‘thing-oriented’ society to a ‘person-oriented’ society.”
Needless to say,
there are those who will do what they must to prevent this
from happening.
Cities throughout
the nation appear to be acting in concert with an anti-Occupy
Wall Street strategy. It is no coincidence that simultaneously,
police forces throughout the country are violently disbanding
Occupy tent cities. The Department
of Homeland Security held conference calls with numerous
city governments on how to crack down on the protesters.
The writing is on the wall.
The police response
to the Occupy Movement flies in the face of the reputed
tenets of American constitutional democracy, and contravenes
the precepts of international human rights law. But hey,
this is America. And in America, capitalism trumps democracy.
And we can’t allow
capitalism to become a dirty word, now can we?
BlackCommentator.com
Executive
Editor, David A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights
advocate based in Philadelphia,
is
a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Pennsylvania Law School.
and a contributor to The Huffington
Post, the Grio,
The Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune
News Service, In
These Times and Philadelphia
Independent Media Center.
He also blogs at davidalove.com,
NewsOne,
Daily
Kos, and Open Salon.
Click here
to contact Mr. Love.
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