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Occupied former Cross-Cultural Center @ UC Davis

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Students Occupy Former Cross Cultural Center at UC Davis « occupy california

Students Occupy Former Cross Cultural Center at UC Davis

by G via Occupy California

Students at UC Davis have occupied the former Cross Cultural Center, the center having moved to a new $22 million building.

They have declared their solidarity with UCR, Egypt, the hotel occupation in San Francisco and Occupy Oakland – especially with their upcoming moving day on January 28th.

Pictures will be posted soon, here is the communiqué:

The spaces we live in are broken: occupation is our defense.

As capital spirals further into crisis, we are constantly confronted with the watchword of austerity. We are meant to imagine a vast, empty vault where our sad but inevitable futures lie. But we are not so naïve. Just as Wall Street functions on perpetually revolving credit markets where cash is merely a blip, so also does our state government. High tuition increases have been made necessary not by shrinking savings, but by a perpetually expanding bond market, organized by the UC Regents, enforced through increasing tuition and growing student loan debt. Growth has become a caricature of itself, as the future is sold on baseless expanding credit from capitalist to capitalist. Our future is broken. We are the crisis. Our occupations are the expressions of that crisis.

But on the university campuses, where militarization is increasing daily, we have more immediate needs. Our relationship with the administration and police is not one of trust and openness; the arrogance and nonchalance with which they regularly inflict violence against us is just as regularly followed by a thoroughly dissembling, inadequate, and cowardly condemnation of that violence. One hand attacks—one hand denies. Our universities and our public spaces are today ultra-militarized zones, where students and workers are monitored and subjugated under the pretense of “health and safety.” Officer Kemper from UC Irvine drew his gun at the Regents’ meeting at UCSF. Berkeley UCPD participated in violently clearing the Oakland Communards from Oscar Grant Plaza just weeks before they would come to UC Davis for the events of November 18th. On the day of the first Oakland General Strike, UCOP office in Oakland was lent out to OPD to “monitor” protests. Under the pretext of mutual aid, squads of armed and armored riot cops move from one campus, one public space, one city, to the next. The circulation of cops throughout the state shows that the mobile, militarized force of repression knows no boundaries: it will protect capital, government, and the status quo, wherever they are threatened. In a university whose motto is fiat lux, the administration crushes dissent and veils its intentions with lies. It has the same intentions as Mayor Quan or the Military in Egypt: to crush resistance, by any means necessary.

To continue our resistance, our immediate need is to create a safe space of togetherness, care, and freedom. When we occupied Mrak, the same officers who would later be involved in pepper spraying us watched over us as we slept. As we gathered to discuss, plan, and act to protect our right to education, the Orwellian “Freedom of Expression Team” and the “University Communications Team” loomed nearby, texting the pigs and administration on their stupid androids, smiling at us in their fake, overfed way, scooting near like unpopular highschool kids trying to overhear the weekends’ party plans. Later, these same concerned FOEs, would stand by on the quad and do nothing, grinning like idiots, as students pepper-sprayed at point blank range called for medics. It is clear to us that public space has become a euphemism for militarized, ordered, monitored space. Occupation opens a common space which is not the extension of private property to group property, but the active exclusion of all that reinforces private property. We must exclude the police and the administration, and their “Freedom of Expression Team” lackeys as well, in order to create the openness and togetherness which is impossible in their presence.

The UC Chancellor, President, Regents—who prattle on endlessly about diversity while the university closes its doors to brown students, who hail marginal utility while “the economy” closes its fist around the poor, who dream up ways to boost the university’s standing on some imaginary scale of “excellence” while slurs, swastikas, nooses, and Klan masks appear endlessly on our campus, who meet protests with violence and truth with lies—they have already proven their incapacity to imagine a future different than the present. We occupy because we will not wait for the broken future they have planned for us, because we do not trust our “elected officials” or administrators to make decisions that address problems beyond their own narrow interests. This action is not the beginning of a discussion; this is the end of the discussion. We cannot negotiate for our needs, we will not negotiate for our needs, we will meet our needs.

via Students Occupy Former Cross Cultural Center at UC Davis « occupy california.

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The Occupation of The Cathedral Hill Hotel

The Occupation of The Cathedral Hill Hotel
by Dina Boyer via indybay
Tuesday Jan 24th, 2012 9:58 AM

Pics and write-up about The Occupation of The Cathedral Hill Hotel.

While driving home from my part time job, I turned on the scanner. I had known Occupy Housing was going to hold a protest in the evening, so I was hoping I would be able to cover it even though I was driving to SF from Redwood City during a Friday evening commute. I identified-with with this protest because I am now also homeless in San Francisco! Traffic was heavy, and I was initially driving towards Justin Hermann Plaza, but scanner chatter indicated the hot-spot was at Geary and Van Ness. So I pointed my car in that direction. All the while scanner chatter was getting very interesting. Officers were starting to communicate, “Please be advised our officers are under attack, and getting hit with bricks. Also be advised protesters are using grappling hooks to remove barricades.” The target apparently was The Cathedral Hill Hotel. I made it to the locale, but missed some of the action. Protesters were marching down Van Ness, and I was able to park and started following them. Minutes later they turned back to The Cathedral Hill Hotel and they had gained entrance to the abandoned and closed hotel. This hotel once featured over 300 rooms plus suites and a fitness room. The hotel had its own parking garage. I admit I was nervous documenting the occupation, but I took it step by step, and ended up capturing an historical marker. The homeless were taking what they have been denied “Decent safe housing and or shelter”, but I knew the police would take the place back by the morning because it is currently being turned into and or used by Sutter Health as a high end health related facility. I stayed and roamed the halls of this Hotel and noticed that most of the rooms appeared habitable and safe from pests or vermin. Water was running, electricity was on, and the fire alarm system was active. People could live there! I would also like to state before the protesters got through that building and did their thing, the hotel and the rooms were already a mess. Stuff was laying everywhere. It’s like someone had ransacked the place. I hung around for a while shooting video, and taking pictures and chatting with some of the protesters. I admit I was excited to see them get away with this occupation. But I knew the police were coming. I have police scanners, and heard the chatter. SFPD was prepping squads to take-back the The Cathedral Hill hotel. When I heard on the scanner that SFPD was waiting blocks away I left the area. However history had been made and The Cathedral Hill Hotel had been OCCUPIED!
Videos on Youtube about my experience
Gaining entrance to The Cathedral Hill Hotel
Inside The Cathedral Hill Hotel
Inside The Cathedral Hill Hotel

§Protesters directing traffic

by D. Boyer Tuesday Jan 24th, 2012 9:59 AM
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http://www.dinaboyer.com/

§Gaining entrance to The Cathedral Hill Hotel

by D. Boyer Tuesday Jan 24th, 2012 9:59 AM
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http://www.dinaboyer.com/

§Security kicked out!

by D. Boyer Tuesday Jan 24th, 2012 9:59 AM
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http://www.dinaboyer.com/

§Occupied!

by D. Boyer Tuesday Jan 24th, 2012 9:59 AM
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http://www.dinaboyer.com/

§Occupy!

by D. Boyer Tuesday Jan 24th, 2012 9:59 AM
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http://www.dinaboyer.com/

§Rooms appeared habitable

by D. Boyer Tuesday Jan 24th, 2012 9:59 AM
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http://www.dinaboyer.com/

§Common area

by D. Boyer Tuesday Jan 24th, 2012 9:59 AM
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http://www.dinaboyer.com/

§Room

by D. Boyer Tuesday Jan 24th, 2012 9:59 AM
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http://www.dinaboyer.com/

§Mattresses and bed frames

by D. Boyer Tuesday Jan 24th, 2012 9:59 AM
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http://www.dinaboyer.com/

§View from the top

by D. Boyer Tuesday Jan 24th, 2012 9:59 AM
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http://www.dinaboyer.com/

§Occupy.

by D. Boyer Tuesday Jan 24th, 2012 9:59 AM
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Pinheirinho Occupation, Sao Paulo resisting eviction now : Indybay

Pinheirinho Occupation, Sao Paulo resisting eviction now

by Julinvictus

Sunday Jan 22nd, 2012 11:15 AM

The mega-operation of the police to vacate the Pinheirinho has started. Police helicopters are flying around and throwing leaflets urging residents to retreat without resistance. The residents are firm and organised to resist the eviction.

Leaflets from the residents read “A physical presence there is crucial at this time. The campaign of legal moes is very important, but the physical presence there is crucial at this time. Eviction can happen at any time. Tomorrow we want as many leaders and activists in this activity. We call on all organizations and movements to go out tomorrow to the city of San Jose Campos and collaborate in this act of resistance at Pinheirinho. This is our fight. 100% Pinheirinho!”

The Military Police Command is preparing a mega-operation with the riot police to comply with a court repossession. Favela Pinheirinho, one of the largest in the state of São Paulo, located in Sao Jose dos Campos. About 9,000 residents in danger of losing their homes are willing to resist any attempt to move out.

The repossession order was signed by Judge Marcia Loureiro, the 6th. Civil Court of Sao Jose dos Campos, in the midst of settlement negotiations already initiated by federal, state and municipal levels. There is a disagreement between the spheres of government in the hands of the Municipality of Sao Jose dos Campos, who refuses to sign the Occupation Program. The eviction would be the be the first step in the regularisation of the area.

The federal government has said it is willing to negotiate a settlement, but depends on the action of the City to amend the zoning of the area for Special Zone of Social Interest and prepare an urban project for the Occupation. It also depends on the judge Marcia Loureiro suspend the order of reinstatement.

Occupation leaders say that if the military police invade the Occupation, there will be strong resistance and serious risk of confrontation. Last week, residents came to occupy the Presidente Dutra Highway in protest against the threat of eviction. This week, the protest was in front of City Hall. Residents chained themselves to the fence of City Hall and there was confrontation with the Home Guard, who used batons to quell the demonstration.

Given the situation, residents are preparing for resistance, forming barricades and arming themselves with pieces of wood to defend the raid.

“If the military police to invade the area, the country runs the risk of witnessing a great tragedy, repeating stories like Carajas in 1996 and Occupation Real Dream in Goiânia in 2005, when dozens of people died in conflict with the police. ” The residents of Pinheirinho will not leave their homes and are willing to fight.

Pinheirinho was occupied eight years ago and belongs to the estate of Selecta S / A, owned by financial speculator Naji Nahas. Before being occupied, it was a land that was abandoned for 30 years, with over 1 million square meters. The estate of Selecta has a debt of more than $ 15 million in taxes to the municipality of Sao Jose dos Campos.

via Pinheirinho Occupation, Sao Paulo resisting eviction now : Indybay.

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Students Objecting To Ethnic Studies Book Ban In Arizona Forced To Clean School Toilets In Arizona