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OCCUPY L.A.: THE STORY -- 24 HOURS UNTIL EVICTION?

Brett Redmayne-Titley

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Nov. 27, 2011

I have two conflicting packing lists as I prepare to document, and, at the same time, show my support for the OCCUPY movement despite what appears to be the closing of one of the last OCCUPY camps. I also pack my three bottles of eye wash, several small towels, one hooded sweat shirt, and all my pairs of swim goggles. These are not just for me. I may have to help.

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I have two conflicting packing lists as I prepare to document, and, at the same time, show my support for the OCCUPY movement despite what appears to be the closing of one of the last OCCUPY camps. Los Angeles Mayor Villaraigosa and his police chief, Charlie Beck, have, throughout today (Sunday), stated on radio and TV news that their patience with the OCCUPY movement's experiment with the First Amendment is over in Los Angeles effective tomorrow ( Monday) at midnight. This is one of the last remaining, yet largest, OCCUPY protests against the status quo. Conflict is brewing. I will attend.

My journalistic preparations include three pads of paper, six pens, my digital recorder, my camera, three throw away cameras( insurance?), cold weather gear (sans sleeping bag and tent), four sandwiches and a left-over turkey leg, all nicely ordered in my very portable day pack.

As previously reported by Kate Linthicum of the Los Angeles Times, "When Occupy protesters set up camp on the City Hall lawn seven weeks ago, officials went out of their way to welcome them. The City Council passed a resolution in support of the demonstration, and council President Eric Garcetti invited protesters to "stay as long as you need to.' But the political tide inside City Hall has turned against those camped outside." The precedent set by other city councils must have been on their minds.

As I pack. I keep in mind the final tragic, police-filled evictions of the other OCCUPY gatherings in New York, Portland, Seattle, San Diego (my home town), etc., etc., and in our sister cities of Vancouver and Toronto. So, with the pragmatist of the boy scout, I also pack my three bottles of eye wash, several small towels, one hooded sweat shirt, and all my pairs of swim goggles. These are not just for me. I may have to help.

For solace, I include my newly acquired copy of Chalmers Johnson's, " Revolutionary Change." The parallels of our current times speak to this historically researched and well- reasoned book.

As I make these preparations, I am sincerely torn between my obligations as a journalist and those of a world citizen. As a journalist, I have been lazy. I have not yet immersed myself into this movement; merely content to pontificate from the fringe. To this end, I prepare my questions and lists of those I hope to interview. I want to be even-handed. I will try to interview the police -- from the brass to the guys in the masks holding the pepper spray (They have opinions too). I will also talk to the many folks who have been there for all of these monumental two months. Will they stay despite the deadline? Will they go? And I will ask both sides: What will YOU do at 12 a.m. Monday?

My activist side remembers that I have packed my swim goggles. This is the movement I prayed, begged, screamed, shouted, and made an ass of myself at parties and family gatherings for. Over the past 20+ years, I have seen the understanding of the necessity of this movement brewing so very, very, slowly. It is here.

But I have been lazy. I ponder and consider, knowing I must speak. I speak when I should act. The movement is here, it is necessary, and it will continue. I must be there. I will be there. Today.

In the next 24 hours, I will be reporting from OCCUPY L.A. A conflict is avoidable, but it will happen because the voices of reason are far too few. But the voices of the few are becoming louder and are indeed being heard. Today, I will offer to you articles directly from my observations and interviews with many of the people at OCCUPY L.A.

The historically accurate words of Chalmers Johnson will be on my mind as I prepare to get a few hours sleep before I leave for L.A. at 6 a.m.: "when the authority of the status holders [elite] rests only in their monopoly of force, and when there is no foreseeable prospect for a procedural change, revolution is at hand."

The next 24 hours will be an enlightening story. Indeed. (Part Two)

 

 

 

 

 

Submitters Bio:

 

A career traveler Brett grew up living in several third world counties.As an avid political reader and commentator his childhood experiences have given him a unique, worldly perspective on international and domestic issues. He currently lives in Leucadia, California

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