Saturday, December 10, 2011

Occupy Boston and the police state

The folks at Fox "News" were pleased as can be, gloating their faces off at the news that Occupy Boston was forced to evacuate their tents from Dewey Square. The restraining order against the city was lifted after their lawyers got to work on it. The protesters, unfazed, are talking about setting up camp elsewhere in Boston. I attended a rally last weekend in Copley Square--there was a march beginning at Dewey and ending at Copley which unfortunately drew only about 50 people. The whole crowd was probably under 200 people. The speakers were using mike check and some ineffectual bullhorns, and I couldn't help noticing that the anti-Assad demonstration at the far corner of the square had a very loud P.A. system and no police presence to speak of. I counted seven police motorcycles parked alongside the Copley Plaza Hotel. There were at least two dozen cops surrounding the Occupy demonstration. (I spoke to someone who told me that these police are all getting overtime pay--our tax dollars! And meanwhile, crime is rampant in other parts of the city.) No one at this demonstration so much as pushed or shoved.

I observed the police state in action as I stood near the Socialist Workers' table of literature. I had just given a woman some money as a donation in exchange for their very well written, intelligent newspaper. Suddenly not one but three cops were in her face, asking if they had a permit to display their literature. They said no. One cop replied, "You can't distribute literature here without a permit." The woman I was speaking to said (politely) "It's a public sidewalk. It is legal." She cited a court ruling. The cop sneered back at her: "I'm not going to discuss constitutional law with you. If you don't pack it up, you are all going in the wagon." Translation: The only law that matters is the law that I make right here and now because I carry a gun. They had no choice but to pack up their stuff. I saw a young man carrying a sign that read "The Boston police are protecting and serving the shit out of us." Later, the woman at the Socialist Workers' table gave a speech in which she described the incident I had witnessed. There were reporters from local news stations all over the place filming trivia. Not one of them filmed either the incident itself or the woman's speech.

America, the land of free speech (NOT!)

America, the land of freedom of assembly in a public place (NOT!)

Still think it can't happen here? It has.