Occupy City Hall - June 30th - July 1st

Occupy City Hall - June 30th - July 1st

Occupy City Hall // Wednesday morning // 6:14am // After a volatile evening of demonstrations, protesters eagerly awaited a budget decision vote from the City Council at midnight. Hours later, the budget passed, and Occupy’s demands were not met. There was feeling of confusion throughout the camp - with no one sure what to do next. Preparing for the worst, protesters constructed several large barriers on Centre and Chambers Street. -
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Then, around 3am, in an effort to unify the camp - organizers called a meeting to discuss the next move. Three topics were discussed in a diplomatic group setting - concluding with a y/n community vote. -
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1. Do we want to continue to occupy City Hall Park? 2. Do we want to leave the barriers up? 3. If so, do we want to defend the barriers? -
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The results were: 1. Yes, we will remain in City Hall Park. 2. Yes, we will leave the barriers up. 3. No, we will not stand behind them, but rather defend the perimeter of the park. -
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Moments after the conclusion of the meeting, demonstrators began suiting up with masks, goggles, umbrellas, and makeshift shields. Lining the perimeter of the park three rows deep, hundreds stood, arms locked, prepared to hold the space. -
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For hours, demonstrators held the line, waiting. At 6am, hundreds of police burst through the Centre Street barrier - sprinting toward the crowd - immediately arresting, shoving, or beating anyone still in the street. -
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Moments later, the unit rushed the reinforced sidewalk front line. Without warning or provocation, they began ripping through the defensive fencing, and beating demonstrators in the process. -
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After removing and disposing of the fencing, police yet again, stood face to face with a line of hundreds. For nearly 20 minutes, the confrontation continued as city crews cleaned up the barriers + construction supplies. Organizers walked the front line, preaching to police through megaphones - making sure they knew the camp had no plans to back down. Around 6:30, the police began returning to the precinct. As they backed down, demonstrators erupting in cheers, chanting, “this is what community looks like!”

Occupy City Hall - June 25th

Occupy City Hall // Day 3
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Since the start of the occupation on Tuesday, the crowd has quadrupled in size - expanding far beyond the small patch of grass where this all started. The park had become a 100% self sustaining community complete with charging stations, an art department, a full kitchen, roaming medics, voting sign ups, supply booths, and even a public library. Education is a huge part of this movement, with teach ins + group discussions surrounding race, the abolitionist movement, government, voting, and demonstration tactics, happening 24/7.
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With June 30th rapidly approaching, organizers continue to push their agenda to defund the NYPD by 1 billion, or roughly 1/6th of their overall yearly budget.

George Floyd Police Riots - Grand Army Plaza - June 4th

George Floyd Demonstrations // Day 7 // June 5th, 2020 // Grand Army Plaza

Contrary to some mainstream media outlets, the protests have been overwhelmingly peaceful over the past five days in New York. Protest organizers, and a generation of young activists, have stepped up to ensure peaceful demonstrations continue with the proper leadership and planning. With looting and riots still dominating the headlines days after demonstrations became orderly, activists are fighting to have their voice be heard above all the sensationalism.
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This weekend, thousands marched in 25+ protests across all five boroughs - reinforcing a message of peace and determination. Marches are already planned for next weekend nationwide. More coverage from this weekend to follow

George Floyd Police Riots - Lower Manhattan - June 2nd

George Floyd Demonstrations // Day 5 // June 2nd, 2020 // Lower Manhattan

After a night of violent protests on Monday, New York City changed its curfew from 11pm to 8pm. This was not received well by demonstrators who stood strong at 8pm in Manhattan, chanting “Fuck your curfew!” as a unit of 50-60 (estimate) NYPD bike cops with ballistic riot armor surrounded them on all sides.
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Marching inward, the police shoved resisting protesters to the ground with their bikes screaming, “Go home!!” The protest dispersed about 30 minutes later. Violence and looting ensued.