Friday / Weekend Open Lines


The big news Thursday saw massive protest in New York City from the Occupy Wall Street group in a call for a national day of action.   The protest march was legal, as they did secure a permit for the march, however the sheer number of people proved a tough job for the police force.  The day started at 7am in Zuccotti Park, the same park that was closed Tuesday and evicted the protesters camping out.  The protest started Thursday morning with several hundred people in the park, then they marched to Wall Street where they were blocked from the area by police.  Streets and sidewalks were closed and police only allowing people through that had ID’s showing you lived in the closed area or a corporate ID that showed you worked in the offices there. 

The group stayed in the area for a while, gathering numbers, then marched back down Broadway street to the Zuccotti park.  It was initially barricaded off not allowing anyone in, but eventually officers opened the barricades and allowed people to gather in the park.  The crowd continued to grow as protesters that occupied the subway system started to join around lunch time in the park.  A few clashes with police occurred, with 2 police taken to the hospital, and one protestor knocked to the ground with broken teeth and a fractured skull. 

At 3pm, college students in the area organized in a mass student walkout joined the movement, held a meeting despite the large crowd then at Union Square to make updates to everyone.  The group then marched to Foley Square an planned gathering there at 5pm where numerous unions amassed in a plan convergence.  So by 5:30pm in Foley Square the marchers from the morning, the students, and the unions combined to what is estimated to be 10,000 people.  Confirmed unions represented included Verizon workers, and the UAW.  There was a stage setup with a large PA system and speakers took the stage to address the crowd. 

The stage was setup by an organization UnitedNY that actually blocked some press from entering the area.  Around 6pm the group then started their march towards the Brooklyn bridge with the intent of crossing it.  The pedestrian lanes on the bridge will only allow 5 or so people wide at the most, so it remains to be seen how exactly 10,000 people will cross the bridge.  it’s possible the protestors will try and cross the bridge on the roadway, if that happens there could be mass arrests similar to a previous incident where protestors crossed the bridge on the street and arrested around 700 people.   Towards 7pm, the protestors had filled the pedestiran lanes across the bridge, and an official police report estimated approximately 32,000 protestors in the area.

What do you think of the protests?

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