Occupy Long Beach is being held at Lincoln Park, the oldest park in Long Beach, Calif. The park is small. A very short walk to City Hall makes it an ideal location for Occupy Long Beach protesters to meet up. It has also been a long time hangout for the city's homeless population due to its nearness to facilities that provide services for those who call the streets their home. At 10 p.m. when the park closes, homeless people leave finding a place to sleep.
Long Beach city police worked out an arrangement with the OLB people, allowing them to move tents and sleeping bags to sidewalks abutting Lincoln Park at 10 p.m. Some of the city's homeless residents resent this. An Occupy lady said the reason they are allowed to stay near the park overnight is because they are there for a purpose. The homeless, she surmises, are not.
In the past, there have been incidents at Lincoln Park involving homeless people, stabbings and deaths. Occupy Long Beach arrests include a homeless couple for allegedly making terroristic threats and two protesters were arrested for domestic violence. A few Occupy people were arrested for violating the 10 p.m. curfew. I was told by one of the protesters that the few who were ticketed for remaining after hours were drunk and belligerent.
Thus far, the protest has been peaceful. Matt, who joined Occupy Wall Street in Los Angeles on "day one" thinks the L.A. demonstration is more peaceful than in Long Beach. He claims only one person was arrested in L.A. for shooting heroin in a restroom.
When a large white bus stopped at the curb, I was told it was bringing people from L.A. to join Long Beach's protest. About five people got off the bus. Matt spoke to a young man from San Diego. The man said they are losing people in San Diego; protesters are drifting away. Matt said he had been arranging buses to take people from Los Angeles to San Diego and would do what he could to help.
When I spoke to Kelly about perceptions of those who join the Occupy movement, she told me she is 36-years-old and works 100 hours a week. She scoffed at the idea of being considered a spoiled college student wanting to take money from other people's pocket to put in her own.
Fifty some year-old, Claude, said he was homeless just for "this month". He agrees with the principles behind the Occupy Wall Street movement. Doug spent years living on the streets. He has been off them for four years. He too agrees with the concept and had much to say on the subject of wealthy corporations running the United States of America.
"Who exactly are the 1 percent?" I asked. "For instance, is Madonna considered a member of the wealthy elite?" The consensus of opinion was that she is not, but could be. That is, they did not know. Someone likened the 1 percent to evil. Those around me agreed that Madonna is not evil, she is for the people, that if one purchases her CD, they willingly giving her their money, unlike tax dollars paid going to wealthy corporations via tax breaks or bailouts.
Many news articles I have read about Occupy Wall Street say the protesters have no leader and have no clear idea why they are protesting. A bit of research shows that Adbusters called upon citizens to Occupy Wall Street beginning on September 17. They hope that by people coming together, having dialogues they would reach an agreement on a singular demand that needs to be met before the protesters disperse. Adbusters states, in part: "the American political establishment is currently unworthy of being called a democracy: we demand that Barack Obama ordain a Presidential Commission tasked with ending the influence money has over our representatives in Washington."
From my conversations with people like Kelly, Matt, Claude and Doug, that is exactly why they are taking time out of their lives to sit at Lincoln Park during the day and for some, sleeping on a nearby sidewalk overnight.
Long Beach city police worked out an arrangement with the OLB people, allowing them to move tents and sleeping bags to sidewalks abutting Lincoln Park at 10 p.m. Some of the city's homeless residents resent this. An Occupy lady said the reason they are allowed to stay near the park overnight is because they are there for a purpose. The homeless, she surmises, are not.
In the past, there have been incidents at Lincoln Park involving homeless people, stabbings and deaths. Occupy Long Beach arrests include a homeless couple for allegedly making terroristic threats and two protesters were arrested for domestic violence. A few Occupy people were arrested for violating the 10 p.m. curfew. I was told by one of the protesters that the few who were ticketed for remaining after hours were drunk and belligerent.
Thus far, the protest has been peaceful. Matt, who joined Occupy Wall Street in Los Angeles on "day one" thinks the L.A. demonstration is more peaceful than in Long Beach. He claims only one person was arrested in L.A. for shooting heroin in a restroom.
When a large white bus stopped at the curb, I was told it was bringing people from L.A. to join Long Beach's protest. About five people got off the bus. Matt spoke to a young man from San Diego. The man said they are losing people in San Diego; protesters are drifting away. Matt said he had been arranging buses to take people from Los Angeles to San Diego and would do what he could to help.
When I spoke to Kelly about perceptions of those who join the Occupy movement, she told me she is 36-years-old and works 100 hours a week. She scoffed at the idea of being considered a spoiled college student wanting to take money from other people's pocket to put in her own.
Fifty some year-old, Claude, said he was homeless just for "this month". He agrees with the principles behind the Occupy Wall Street movement. Doug spent years living on the streets. He has been off them for four years. He too agrees with the concept and had much to say on the subject of wealthy corporations running the United States of America.
"Who exactly are the 1 percent?" I asked. "For instance, is Madonna considered a member of the wealthy elite?" The consensus of opinion was that she is not, but could be. That is, they did not know. Someone likened the 1 percent to evil. Those around me agreed that Madonna is not evil, she is for the people, that if one purchases her CD, they willingly giving her their money, unlike tax dollars paid going to wealthy corporations via tax breaks or bailouts.
Many news articles I have read about Occupy Wall Street say the protesters have no leader and have no clear idea why they are protesting. A bit of research shows that Adbusters called upon citizens to Occupy Wall Street beginning on September 17. They hope that by people coming together, having dialogues they would reach an agreement on a singular demand that needs to be met before the protesters disperse. Adbusters states, in part: "the American political establishment is currently unworthy of being called a democracy: we demand that Barack Obama ordain a Presidential Commission tasked with ending the influence money has over our representatives in Washington."
From my conversations with people like Kelly, Matt, Claude and Doug, that is exactly why they are taking time out of their lives to sit at Lincoln Park during the day and for some, sleeping on a nearby sidewalk overnight.
Published by Alyce Rocco
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3 Comments
Post a CommentGood article.
The Press-Telegram reported: "The ongoing schedule agreement was reached through consultation between police and leaders of the now 11-day-old occupation of the park next to City Hall at 333 W. Ocean Blvd." They also reported about the arrests I mentioned in the article. The reason I went to the park was to speak to protesters and homeless to find out if the article was accurate. Actually that was how my original article began before I edited it down closer to 400 words which are standard for this site.
Jonathan Allen is quoted by the P-T as to "squabbles" over "territory". The people I spoke to agreed that some homeless do not like them being there, others join the protest. Perhaps if I left my article at 900+ words I could have come up with a better attention grabbing headline. I wish I had met up with you there, because you could have set the record straight, before I wrote this, because that was my whole point of going downtown to talk to participants themselves.
As someone who has been engaged in the Occupy Long beach movement since the beginning, I can tell you the "facts" about OLB in this article are completely erroneous.
- OLB people have never been allowed to have tents on the sidewalk or anywhere else as part of the protest
- We did not work out an agreement with police, as much as have a standoff that resulted in a draw.We don't stay in the park past 10pm, they don't hassle us protesting on the sidewalk all night.
- No Occupy protesters have been arrested for domestic violence. Two were arrested for an act of civil disobedience, that is, pitching a tent in the park and remaining there past the 10pm closing.
- It is not a matter of OLB vs the homeless, as your headline states. Us being there and including everyone in our community of protesters has attracted many homeless who normally don't frequent the park.
Are you just repeating gossip? Do you not feel any responsibility for what you write to be true?