Police attack SFSU occupation
The police broke into the business administration building through a window and proceeded to clear it with guns drawn, endangering the safety of all the activists. Officers forced open doors from the inside and violently shoved aside students picketing the entrances on the outside, throwing some to the ground. In all, 28 students were cited and released, on charges ranging from traffic citations, to failure to disperse, to trespass.
Clearly, the SFSU administration decided to both ignore the grievances of students and collude with police to violently remove them.
The occupation of the building began early Wednesday morning. About 20 students barricaded themselves inside, declaring an end to "business as usual" and presenting a list of demands. Hundreds of students came out to hold pickets at each of the building's entrances throughout the day.
At the high point of the action, over 300 students formed a human chain that circled the building. Cash-strapped students found ways to donate blankets, food and drinks to both the occupiers and those picketing outside. Members of the community, faculty and staff came out to show support, and protest organizers from City College of San Francisco, University of California Berkeley and University of California Santa Cruz came to campus to participate in the solidarity actions.
Back at UC Berkeley, just over two weeks after 40 students occupied Wheeler Hall on the UC Berkeley campus, the building has been occupied again, this time by a larger group of students proclaiming an "open university."
The occupation began on December 7 at around 2:30 p.m. when students took over the main auditorium in Wheeler and the entrance lobby, decorating both with banners and signs declaring the building to be liberated space. An extensive schedule of teach-ins, study sessions and other events have been planned, and on Friday night, Boots Riley of The Coup is scheduled to perform.
As a result of the drastic cuts to basic services throughout the UC system, the semester at UC Berkeley has been cut short by a week. This final week has been renamed a "reading/review/recitation week"--or more commonly, a "dead week."
The protesters at Wheeler have called for students and workers to reclaim the week as a "live week" in a show of defiance to the administration, and as tangible proof that our universities can be run in the interests of all, and not just those of corporate fat cats and self-serving administrators.
The SFSU occupation took place in the midst of registration for spring classes, as more and more class sections have been cut and fees are increasing. The idea that galvanized the very frustrated student population is the idea that if they take our classes, we'll take their buildings.
"I came out because I support my friends who are a part of this," said student Keri-Ann Oddman. "I'm probably going to get dropped from financial aid, and I'm basically done with it. It's either action now, or they're going to walk all over us."
When some of the occupiers were released from detention, they spoke out. "Today, we saw an increased excitement and involvement in student activism," said senior Aaron Salazar. "And that is what gave a lot of us our endurance to carry on. From here, we need to take those people that showed up and plug them into organizations, so that this energy can grow and materialize into a victory for workers around the state."
Freshman Napaquetzalli Martinez added: "The most inspiring part of the occupation was that it was part of the larger working-class struggle, not only about the cuts at our school."
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THE OCCUPATION was an important indicator of the campus mood as organizers move toward a day of strikes and protests to defend public education, set for next March 4, and to involve not the UC and CSU system campuses, but teachers, parents and students in pre-K through 12th grade education. At SFSU, mini-General Assemblies were held at each entry point to the occupied building, where ideas for March 4 were discussed.
The administration at SFSU has demonstrated that it has no desire to engage with students about even the most basic demands, such as restoring a several-thousand-dollar budget for the Ethnic Studies Student Resource and Empowerment Center. The shameful fact is that many of these administrators enjoyed big raises on top of their large salaries and perk-packages over the past few years, even as classes have been cut, faculty and workers laid off, and fees hiked.
One important criticism of the occupation has come from faculty and students involved in the campus movement--the action was organized in secret by a small group of activists, and intentionally excluding other leading campus activists. The result was that the number of occupiers was small, and outside support had to be put together hastily. This only made it easier for the police to break up the occupation.
Secondly, the occupation was organized on the same day as a planned SFSU General Assembly--and actually caused its cancellation. Dozens of students, faculty and staff had been planning for the general assembly as the next step in building a democratic, united movement on campus.
Building the General Assembly is still an urgent task--the next one will take place on Wednesday, December 16 (postponed from the previous week). A united, democratic effort is the best hope of building for mobilizing students, faculty and staff to strike and shut down SFSU's campus on March 4--and of moving beyond to get the budget cuts taken back.
Nick Kardahji contributed to this article.



UCB Chancellor's house attack: militant's statement and mainstre
By Doe, Jon at Dec 13, 2009 09:54 AM
Mainstream media and governor calling the students "terrorists": http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/12/12/BASN1B3D59.DTL&tsp=1#ixzz0ZVNpoIUb
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8 UCB STUDENT PROTESTOR'S Facing Multiple Felonies:talking point
By Doe, Jon at Dec 13, 2009 09:45 AM
STUDENT PROTEST AT BIRGENEAU'S HOUSE: three talking points to keep in mind:
1.) The Chancellor chose to initiate this escalation. Breaking a tacit agreement, the police were sent into Wheeler early Friday morning without warning to mass arrest peaceful students. Some are still in jail, and will remain. This rightly infuriated many students, who felt betrayed by the administration. It was this fury that was directed toward the individual who made the decision: the Chancellor. It became clear that even the most peaceful and orderly of protests would be met with repression. Had the arrests not taken place, neither would what occurred at the Chancellor's residence.
2.) The Chancellor is now speaking of violence, but this is notably not the violence that he himself unleashed on students by deploying the police to beat, smash, shoot, and arrest. The Chancellor was not beaten or clubbed. His fingers were not broken. He was not shot with any rubber bullets. Students activists have been subjected to all of this violence in recent weeks. The Chancellor, on the other hand, was in no danger whatsoever. And yet now, "violence" has become the word of the day. Many students have justifiably concluded that the only violence that matters in the eyes of the administration is that which affects administrators; violence against students simply does not count (even as it is perpetuated with trumped-up charges and bail amounts of $132,000).
3.) Of the eight persons arbitrarily arrested by the police in the aftermath of the concert, two are UC Berkeley students, two are UC Davis students, one is a visiting student from City University of New York, one is a journalist, and two are community members supporting the work of student activists. The student movement draws strength from its connections across various schools and with those from allied communities whose work for social justice is intimately connected with students who are working for a more just and equitable education system. Let's remember UC spokesman Dan Mogulof's outrageous claim on the night of November 20 that the vast majority of those involved in the first occupation of Wheeler were not students when in fact 41 out of 43 were. No one should be fooled by the administration's continued attempts to divide the movement by pitting campus against campus and students against community members.
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UC Berkeley's Chancellor house trashed by student protest: 8 fel
By Doe, Jon at Dec 13, 2009 09:42 AM
UC Police arrested 8 more people – many whom eyewitnesses say had not been engaging in any illegal activity - on the final night of a 5-day, 24-hour-a day “Live Week” open university, held by Cal students and faculty to protest and provide an alternative to the “dead week” at the end of the semester resulting from recent furloughs and budget cuts. The final event of the week, a free performance featuring Boots Riley, a hip hop artist from The Coup, had to be moved at the last minute after a morning police raid on Wheeler Hall, the primary site for "Live Week" activities.
PRESS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE DISTRIBUTION
Eight protest bystanders charged with multiple felonies
Contact:
UC Berkeley student, Marika Iyer: marikaiyer [at] gmail.com;
Other student Organizers of Live Week:
Laura Zelko, student organizer with Live Week: laura_z [at] berkeley.edu
Callie Maidhof, student organizer with Live Week: callie.maidhof [at] gmail.com
Some 200 students gathered for the concert at the UC Berkeley campus from UC Davis, SF State, UC Santa Cruz, and UCLA as well as Berkeley. Following the concert, which had been interrupted by police cars constantly circling the area, some of the attendees joined a night march that left campus for the residence of UC Berkeley Chancellor Robert Birgeneau. Some of the protesters carried torches to light up the path, they said. Some dragged newspaper boxes into the street.
"Regardless of what one thinks about the events of last night, the minor vandalism that occurred cannot be viewed outside the context of the physical violence inflicted by police on student activists and the broader assault on public education," said Callie Maidhof, a student organizer with "Live Week".
Many of the marchers were upset about the arrests that had been made earlier that day, when police stormed into a building where students had been holding Live Week events since Monday. Sixty-five people who had been sleeping off studying were loaded onto Alameda County Sheriff’s buses during the cold pre-dawn hours, some of them barefoot and wearing only their underwear. Most of the students were given misdemeanor trespassing charges and released by the afternoon.
Police swooped down on the activists in front of University House around 11:30 p.m., resulting in pandemonium as the students and other activists dispersed in all directions.
“When everyone is running, you don’t think that clearly. My friends and I were trying to leave because things were getting out of hand,” said Jobert Poblete, a Cal alumni who participated in the march.
Poblete was split up from his friends, who ran into the woods near Strawberry Creek. Police then swept up Carwil James, 34, according to a friend of Poblete who stood next to James when he was arrested
“Carwil hadn’t been doing anything at the time. Now he’s in jail on his birthday, and they just raised his bail from $50,000 to $132,000. There’s no way we can raise that much money. This is a travesty,” said Poblete.
David Morse, 41, an independent journalist, was filming the demonstration and police response when he was arrested, said witnesses.
“They were simply at the wrong place and the wrong time,” said a student who did not want to give their name and observed the chaos when police arrived at the chancellor’s house.
Eleven people arrested at student demonstrations in the past week remain in custody at Santa Rita Jail in Dublin.
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