[POL] Protests turn ugly on convention's last day

skyko

Veteran Member
http://www.nj.com/newsflash/politic...tics-0/109110895063480.xml&storylist=politics

Protests turn ugly on convention's last day
The Associated Press
7/29/2004, 4:19 p.m. ET


BOSTON (AP) — After four days of relative calm, protests turned ugly outside the site of the Democratic National Convention as demonstrators burned a two-faced effigy depicting President Bush on one side and Sen. John Kerry on the other.

The roughly 400 protesters who marched through the city arrived outside the fenced-in demonstration area near the FleetCenter, where a shoving match erupted as the throng pressed up against police officers who struck back at them with batons to keep the crowd at bay.

Several protesters were dragged from the crowd and handcuffed by police. Others screamed at the officers to let them go.

Police Superintendent Robert Dunford said two men were arrested, one because police were told he had a bottle of an unknown accelerant, the other for allegedly assaulting a police officer.

"These anarchist kids are not who you think they are," said Charles Shaw, 34, a Green Party activist from Chicago who helped organize Thursday's march.

Taking note of the gear that police officers were carrying — batons, pepper spray and body armor — Shaw said, "You know what I've got, man? I've got a pair of shorts and a T-shirt. I can't attack that."

Police quickly barricaded the streets near the FleetCenter as the enormous contingent of state and local officers quickly calmed the situation. Fifty to 60 officers with helmets and riot shields marched toward where the confrontation was taking place but did not enter the fray.

Dunford said he got punched as he ran to the aid of his officers. "I tried to pull my officers from the crowd and I got sucker punched from behind," he said.

Ben, 19, a protester from Florida who did not give his last name, said he saw one of the people detained. He said the protester was dressed as a pirate and wearing a papier-mache hook on his arm. Police try to take it away, thinking it was a weapon, he said.

"They grabbed it, he pushed back. They slammed him on the ground," Ben said.

Witnesses said the incident touched off the pushing and shoving between police and demonstrators.

"People get angry and they don't know how to get rid of their anger so they end up fighting cops," said protester Garrett Stark, 21, of Rochester, N.Y.

The main entrance to the convention arena, which faces the protest area, was briefly closed just as Democratic delegates were beginning to arrive for the final day of the convention.

Two small explosions were heard a few blocks from the arena. A bomb squad had arrived in the area a few minutes earlier and told bystanders to move away. The source of the explosions was not immediately clear, but police were seen taking away debris in plastic bags, including one with wires in it.

After four problem-free days, police had prepared for a surge in spontaneous street protests.

The Boston-area Bl(A)ck Tea Society, an ad hoc group of self-described anarchists and anti-authority activists that formed a year ago to stage protests at the convention, called for "decentralized direct action" Thursday.

The group does not advocate violence but encourages demonstrators to hold street protests regardless of whether they have secured permits from the city.

Bl(A)ck Tea members joined with anti-war groups in a march that began in Copley Square shortly after noon and quickly grew into the largest demonstration since thousands of anti-war and anti-abortion protesters greeted delegates on Sunday as they arrived in the city.

The crowd, estimated at around 400 people, looped through the city's Financial District before heading toward the FleetCenter. They were accompanied by about 100 police officers wearing helmets and carrying shields. Seven protesters with hoods tied themselves to a police barricade.

When they arrived outside the fenced-in demonstration zone, the protesters set fire to a two-faced effigy — one side showing Bush, the other Kerry. As it burned, the protesters stomped on the puppet, while others burned copies of Bush's biography.

Boston Police Commissioner Kathleen O'Toole had ordered police tactical teams out in force Thursday. Superintendent James Claiborne said the precautions were well founded.

"I think the cost of not being prepared is watching the city burn down," Claiborne said. "We wouldn't want to see Newbury Street with half the windows knocked out. You know you wouldn't want to see riots in the street and people being hurt."

The biggest protests surrounding the convention were on Sunday. About 2,000 anti-war activists and a separate group of 1,000 abortion opponents crossed paths briefly as they marched to the FleetCenter as convention delegates were just arriving in town. But those demonstrations remained mostly peaceful.
 

bigwavedave

Deceased
Protests get rowdier on last day

http://www.nynewsday.com/news/natio...0,2455061.story?coll=nyc-nationhome-headlines

BY JOSHUA ROBIN
STAFF CORRESPONDENT

July 29, 2004, 7:45 PM EDT


BOSTON -- Protesters and police clashed a block from the Democratic National Convention Thursday, bringing an air of confrontation in the waning hours of the unexpectedly calm four-day event.

Three people were arrested during an hour-long standoff Thursday afternoon between protesters seeking to get closer to the convention arena, the FleetCenter, and police in riot gear pushing them back towards a pen for protests.

The demonstrators, who say they find no real difference between either major presidential nominee, never numbered more than about 300, far fewer than are expected at the Republican National Convention in New York City next month.

Nonetheless, their determination to avoid the fenced-off pen made for several tense moments as they tangled with authorities armed with long batons.

"That protest zone is a cage, we don't need to be assigned a space," said Lana Habash, 36, a doctor, standing amid a rowdy group of fellow protesters banging drums and shouting "This is what democracy looks like!"

A few moments earlier, demonstrators set fire to two masks bearing the images of Sen. John Kerry and President Bush, as well as what witnesses say were two American flags.

Robert Dunford, the Boston Police superintendent, told reporters that one demonstrator was arrested for possessing a hoax device after officers saw him with what appeared to be a Molotov cocktail that they later determined was fake.

The second arrest, for assault on a public employee, came when the protester pushed officers who had encircled him, Dunford said.

The third arrest was for disorderly conduct. Police did not release further details.

An organizer with one anti-authoritarian group that organized the protest, the Bl(A)ck Tea Society, faulted the police for instigating the crowd. "They should know better than to go in the middle of a crowd," said Elly Guillette.

Protesters and delegates said the march and demonstration reflects only a fraction of what New York City can expect particularly on Aug. 29, the day before the Republican National Convention starts, when up to 250,000 demonstrators will march past Madison Square Garden and rally on the West Side Highway.

"It's gonna be a convergence of all of us people saying no to war," said Benny Zable, 58, an Australian anti-war activist at Thursday's rally who was wearing a gas mask. "More opponents to the Bush administration will be showing up there."

Thursday's unrest came at the end of a boisterous march by anarchists and anti-war and pro-Palestinian demonstrators through several Boston neighborhoods.

The police presence markedly increased as the crowd, many of whom dressed in pirate garb, approached the FleetCenter. Angering the crowd, the officers stopped the group as it approached a row of black fencing that has been raised in front of the arena.
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http://www.strike-the-root.com/4/drake/drake1.html

Voting Is an Act of Violence

by Brian Drake

I am a faithful Morning Edition and All Things Considered listener, tuning in on KUHF in Houston. I respectfully submit for your consideration a piece of commentary:

With all the hoopla surrounding the Democratic National Convention, now seems like an appropriate time to share my admittedly unorthodox political views, if you want to describe them as such. In November, I will not vote for John Kerry; I will not vote for George Bush; I will not vote for Michael Badnarik, the Libertarian candidate; I will not vote for Ralph Nader; nor will I vote for any other politician.

The reason? I regard voting as an act of violence.

Regardless of one's preferred candidate, the act of casting a vote legitimizes an inherently evil institution. Yes, I regard the State as an evil institution. Over the top? Perhaps. But that is my position.

I think it's important to remember what the State is, and what the State is not. As for the former, the State is nothing more than institutionalized violence. What other institution in society can get away with stealing your money or taking you into custody for a "crime" that probably has no victims? The war on some drugs, which is essentially a war on commerce, provides examples of crimes against the State.

As for what the State is not, many people regard the political system as a vehicle for bringing about positive change in society. I acknowledge that political action can and does create pockets of prosperity, but they are illusory. They are based on coercion, not persuasion or cooperation. As such, these remedies have no place in a free society. The State cannot solve the problems that confront us; the State can only coerce us into compliance.

Some people bemoan that less than 50% of eligible voters participate in presidential elections. This fact encourages me. It suggests that I am not the only one opposed to political action. In politics, I've found, even when you win, you lose.

July 30, 2004
 
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