cisler on Thu, 2 Dec 1999 19:37:35 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Seattle Dec. 1 |
Seattle, December 1 Sender: owner-nettime-l@bbs.thing.net Precedence: bulk The groups that are still in the streets have been successful in attracting the sustained attention of visually-oriented media. What they hunger for is not the quiet, reasonable ambiance of the myriad meetings now underway. The cameras need movement, and the tape recorders need shouts and the sound of concussion grenades going off. So they are out on the streets accompanying the folks who were emboldened by their success in forcing the cancellation of meetings, of preventing the Secretary of State from reaching her destination, of causing the police to mis-calculate. Law enforcement had been training for much of the year, but they underestimated the potential for violence. Some people I spoke with believed that organized labor had made a deal with the Clinton Administration to keep all their faithful in the stadium all morning on Nov. 30, while the police handled the early marchers from PGA, various anarchist conclaves, and some younger people who were clearly out for confrontation. The newspapers indicate the police are being criticized for being too lenient and too harsh. During the second day it seemed there were more police from other jurisdictions, and they seemed armed with more plastic restraining devices, and the SWAT (special weapons and tactics) teams bristled with all sorts of armaments: shiny aluminum tubes about the size of a fine Habanos cigar, fat concussion grenades, the ever popular tear gas and dispensers of pepper spray. I don't know how popular pepper spray is outside of North America. Many places have banned people from carrying it, but quite a few women own a small canister in spite of the law. I spoke with a young woman from British Columbia who used to have it. She tested it, and it blew back in her face. It is EXTREMELY painful. It is being used more freely by the government in the street battles here. Live television footage focused on police running from one citizen/demonstrator to another and spraying them, even if they were just standing in a doorway. Police have been seizing cell phones from the sit-in protestors, and they have been preventing bicycle messengers from approaching hot areas. In effect, they have been trying to degrade the communications flow of the organized protesters. Another difference on December 1 was the presence of National Guard troops. They were in cammies and carried smooth natural wood batons about one meter long. This is in contrast to the Darth Vader school of street military couture which favors black everything: boots, shin guards, pants, poncho, helmet, dark face shield, with brushed aluminum accents on the various projectiles carried around the warrior's mid-section. I did notice that all police have very legible ID numbers on their helmets and last names on their badges. I had no credentials but wanted to go to meetings on TRIPS (trade-related aspects of intellectual property rights) and electronic commerce. These were supposed to be open meetings in the Madison hotel, the nexus for a lot of NGO activity. I had written to Jamie Love who works for Ralph Nader, and he said, "Just come on down." However, security was very tight. I brandished my printout from the www.agitprop.org/artandrevolution web calendar, which showed the meeting was to be held at 10 a.m. It took some social engineering to get in the door, which probably would not have worked if I had been young and dressed for street action. I gave up my driver's license in order to get a temporary badge from the credentials table. I signed a form where I promised to turn in the badge within 60 minutes of the end of the meeting or lose privileges for any further meetings. The badges were not to be used for any OTHER meetings in the same building. Most of the NGOs had placed propaganda and position statement on several large tables. Doing a quick scan for more interesting titles I grabbed enough to fill my pack. Some of the publications were lavish. World Vision and the World Council of Churches must have paid a couple of dollars each for their books. Most were modest two color newsletters. >From 10-12 the TRIPS meeting run by Medecins san Frontieres (sorry, I can't figure out how to add the accents on this particular computer), Jamie Love of the Consumer Project on Technology (CPT), Health Action International, and Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy. Webcasting and archiving online by tappedinto.com of Nashville, Tennessee. Most of the discourse was carried by Love, Carlos Correa, U. of Buenos Aires, Rep. Sherrod Brown, a democratic congressman from Ohio, Richard Wilder of the World Intellectual Property Organization, and folks from M.sans F. There was a long discussion about access to drugs (the legal, expensive kind) by countries that cannot afford the expensive licenses and dosage costs being tolerated in more developed countries. This includes drugs for AIDS, meningitis, and more basic drugs. Countries like Thailand and South Africa are being pressured into doing away with compulsory license requirement for large drug firms that want to do business in those countries (Thailand yielded to U.S. pressure; South Africa has not). It was a rather narrow and arcane discussion for some of us new to the topic, but it made me realize that decisions about intellectual property can lead to a better life or the death of those who can't afford certain medical treatment. We also touched on intellectual property and databases, but people were more interested in biopiracy, the practice of taking local resources for use in a commercial drug (without adequate compensation to the country or people in who's land the raw materials were discovered.) Ralph Nader talked about patents and the need to change the length of patents. As technology changes more rapidly the live of patents are being extended instead of shortened. The morning meeting attracted about 90 people in a room for 50. The afternoon was very different. The meeting was not well-publicized and only 8 of us met to discuss Internet issues. Trades, tariffs, ICANN, digital signatures, and U.S. business process patents. Most people knew nothing about ICANN or the other issues. Love gave good explanations of the current controversies, and I thought that in a couple of years the WTO would be re-named the W.E-T.O because of the increase in electronic trade. Most countries and many regions in industrialized nations are not ready for the effects of e-commerce. Its mounting effects will overlay on top of all the other contentious issues that are being chewed on here in Seattle. The complex issue of jurisdiction in cyberspace is a topic few people are thinking about, but it is critical to begin doing so, given the importance many people place on traditional sovereign governments what they can tax or regulate. In the late afternoon I turned in my badge, stepped through the phalanx of cops and went out on the street. More police, few demonstrators, but much more maneuvering of troops and a much more aggressive attitude in dealing with the public. After a short time at an indigenous environmental group meeting, I began walking north on Broadway. A helicopter was about 300 meters overhead, beaming a strong light on the street about one kilometer ahead of me. I was tired and just wanted to catch a bus home. On the bus stops I saw posters for "Defiance Festival, 7 p.m. Denny & Broadway. December 1). That's where I was headed. At the intersection a good deal of paper trash had been burned but was extinguished before the fire department arrived. Two SWAT vehicles were moving to a side street as about 300 demonstrators gathered. In the crafts stores, taquerias, and fine restaurants people went on consuming, as the chants grew louder and the small crowd slowly moved down Broadway. Traffic was snarled, and some drivers were not amused. A couple of demonstrators passed out paper napkins from a restaurant (in case of tear gas). Nice gesture but not very effective. A hundred or so people looked on as the activists moved toward town. I walked about 5 kilometers home because the bus service was blocked where I was, and the curfew prevented me from crossing to another area. Thursday: Food and farming. # 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