cisler on Wed, 1 Dec 1999 18:03:33 +0100 (CET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> Seattle Nov. 30 |
Seattle, Washington, November 30, 1999 Just a quick message after my first day in Seattle, where thousands of World Trade Organization delegates from 135 member countries, many more from countries with observer status, carried on their first meetings as thousands of people assembled and marched, a few looked for something more (direct, violent, media-worthy), and hundreds of police and members of the press played the parts we have all come to expect in these kinds of events. I was staying with a friend from community networking activities. He and his children were taking part in the labor march, which began a few miles from his house at a large stadium in downtown Seattle. His young daughter carried her sign "Kids say NO to WTO." His son had his camcorder, a lot of tape, and batteries with a very long life. We took a public bus and went to a park on Denny when hundreds of Falun Gong practitioners were silently standing, holding large banners, and soliciting support for their struggle with the PRC government in Beijing. A small environmental rally next to the park was not waking up the few hundred who came early to listen and then march to join the larger labor march. Many other groups are using this event to publicize their own agenda, many of which do not have much to do with trade. A Khmer minority in Vietnam held up banners protesting treatment by the Hanoi government, and Lao students were parading for democracy. The labor rally drew thousands of union members and others in the morning. The stands were not totally full, but they were thousands of exuberant machinists, longshoremen, ferry boat workers, and people from the building trades, the teamsters, and even airline pilots who came to listen to dozens of labor leaders exhort the crowd to opposing the WTO and doing a bit of education about environmental issues, child labor conditions, and labor organizing trends in other countries. Besides strong speakers from the steelworkers, there were organizers from Mexico, Malaysia, El Salvador, Canada, and South Africa who had a few minutes before the mike. Unfortunately, this went on for hours. The weather was decent as the morning grew shorter, and people began to move out on their own to begin the march. This proceeded slowly downtown. Volunteer marshals lined the roads to direct marchers down the right streets. A few people lined the sidewalks near the businesses that were closed for the event. Everything seemed benign and low key, in spite of the podium-thumping speeches back at the stadium. Once downtown, another group diverted some of the labor marchers in an attempt to move them in closer proximity to the police. By word of mouth we learned that early morning participants of an "illegal march" had skirmished with the police after some members began breaking store windows with hammers and crowbars. They had come prepared for a much different kind of event than the labor march. There was no traffic downtown except for some law enforcement vehicles. Most businesses were closed. A Mexican/Italian restaurant was very busy, and a few convenience stores were open. Others had owners or workers outside to protect the sites from vandalism. By early afternoon the march ended, but thousands were milling around, singing, sitting in front of the rows of police in riot gear, and media people with cameras looked desperate for compelling footage. Some parade organizers were trying to keep things calm ("Peace and love, brothers!") while others also chose language and phrases from the 60's and yelled at the "pigs." Tear gas was used in some cases, usually to get groups to move, but all the movements by the crowd and the police were slow and deliberate. What struck me was the awareness by all parties that their actions could be on television by that evening. For some that was the goal. For the cops, it was to stay off television. In late afternoon there were more confrontations, and it has nothing directly to do with the WTO or the issues that attracted thousands to town. I came to the intersection of Third and Pine. A film of gas obscured the advancing police, and a young man stood as blood ran down his head. He said he felt fine, but head wounds bleed profusely. A friend called, not for medical aid, but "Get a newspaper cameraman over here!" The concern was with media documenting the casualty, not (just yet) the treatment of the wound. Rumors flew around, and people would look for newspaper stands, a radio, or a television in a restaurant to find out what they were experiencing in the streets. It reminded me of people who first turn on the weather channel rather than look outside to see what the weather is. People, even those in the thick of the events, depend on mediated experiences to make them feel grounded. I also felt that various factions came to convince, not to learn or be swayed. Politicians might see street demonstrations and be swayed to change a stance, but the core activists present in Seattle (and probably the trade delegates too) probably are having very different reactions to the day's events. I saw delegates who mingled in the streets, and others who seemed fearful of the chaotic conditions. Delegates have an ID pin to display to guards and police at checkpoints, hotel entrances, and the conference halls. The International Forum on Globalization, a San Francisco non-profit headed by Jerry Mander, had conducted a two day teach-in over the weekend, and on the evening of November 30 had scheduled a debate on economic globalization and the WTO. Tickets were sold out, but I figured that many would not show up because of the mess downtown. By dark, it was rumored that a curfew had been imposed and that the National Guard were coming in. A lot of people were staying in hotels in the area, and this presented a real challenge. A light rain fell, and all the taxis and bus service had ceased. Few restaurants or bars were open. In the midst of this, hundreds gathered outside of Town Hall, waiting to be admitted, hoping to pick up a ticket, or a few that wanted to sell theirs. I was lucky to get one. The hall held a few hundred people willing to pay $10 to $20 to listen for a few hours. It was a good experience that I wished all the marchers had been exposed to. The crowd was definitely anti-WTO (as are Mander and his NGO) but for the most part they let the speakers proceed with only a few outbursts from the audience that were quickly shushed by the rest of us. In favor were David Aaron, Dept. of Commerce; Jagdish Bhagwati, Columbia University; and R. Scott Miller, Proctor & Gamble. Opposed were John Cavanagh, Institute for Policy Studies; Ralph Nader, Public Citizen; and Vandana Shiva, Research Foundation for Science, Technology and Ecology. On the way home, we heard stories of police forcefully pepper spraying demonstrators, and how the television stations played this clip over and over and over. As usual, the video coverage was not nuanced. One longshoreman, a long time activist, said he was most impressed with the solidarity between very diverse groups of young radicals, older labor members, and conservationists. He watched as a CBS newswoman interviewed a steelworker, and asked him how they felt about these kids who were dressed funny and had piercings. The steelworker replied that his nephew had an earring. What difference did that make? The young were there supporting the same things as he was. CBSwoman looked crestfallen, unable to provoke the man into agreeing with her superficial assessment. On Wednesday, Clinton will arrive. Castro says he is not coming, and Jose Bove seems to attracting most of the attention, although Michael Moore, director-general of the WTO, is getting pretty good press. At 7 a.m. there is a volunteer cleanup of the downtown, and dozens of other events are taking place outside the official meetings. I'll try to post in 24 hours. Steve Cisler cisler@pobox.com # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net