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San Francisco | Globalization & CapitalismSF Rides Against the G8
In solidarity with tens of thousands of activists in Germany confronting the repressive power of the state at the meeting of G8 governments, environmental and global justice activists in San Francisco gather to ride through the streets demanding an end to the G8's ravaging of the planet, and calling for political, social, and economic justice for all people. ANTI-G8-CLIMATE CHANGE SOLIDARITY MASS BIKE RIDE;
SAN FRANCISCO BACKS THE G8 BLOCKADES! Painted yellow flags flapping in the evening sun read "V8, not G8," "No G8, No Climate Change," "Climate Justice," "Rising Tide," "Bay Rising; Not Capitalism, Not Rising Bay," and Flood the Streets Before the Ocean Does." The resurgent European global justice and anti-capitalist movements successfull battle with the G8 were being celebrated in San Francisco along with other cities across the planet. Towards a hundred bicyclist participated through the evening's solidarity anti-G8 and anti-climate change ride in a winding ride through the street and neighborhoods of San Francisco. Rising Tide, a radical international anti-climate change network, had called for a day of action, and cites around the US and the planet responded. The local Bay Rising Affinity Group call read in part: "Use pedal power to challenge oil addiction, to show solidarity with anti-G8 mass mobilizations in Germany and resist the polluting economic and political system of the G8. This global system is at the root of our ecological and social problems; climate chaos, lack of heath care, housing and education, war and empire, more prisons, the rich getting richer, low wages and lousy jobs, pollution, and attacks on immigrant, worker and civil rights. As the megalomaniac G8 leaders meet in police-state Germany, behind fences, cops and soldiers, intent on leading us further towards catastrophic and irreversible climate chaos, we must shout, scream and roar 'no more'." Occasional chants of "fight warming, not wars," Fuck the G8" and "we all live in a police state" to the tune of the Beatles "yellow submarine" as a heavy presence of police in cars, on bikes and on motorcycles, Highway Patrol and Sheriffs following the ride, harassing a few band a motorcade of block away for much of the ride. People ignored their provocations as the mobile pedal powered festival snaked through the city. Neighbors and tourists stopped watched, took photos or waved. Leaflets were passed out. City busses honked support. We ended the ride with a bike drawn soundsystem at at Dolores Park, the heart of the city and across the street from the house where Alexander Berkman and Emma Goldman contributed to "The Blast" newspaper on the verge of the worldwide revolutions of the early 1900's. At the beginning of the ride Bay Area anti-capitalist activists calling from Germany described the mass blockades of all roads leading to the G8 with ten of thousands with bikes playing a key role. Their short sentences over a cell phone were repeated, yelled out to the assembled bike mass. A widely circulated letter from the same activist reported on the massive G8 blockades: Because today's planned march to the fence had been banned, blockading the gates had been taken up again. Five hundred campers stayed at Gate 1 last night and 1200 at Gate 2. In the early morning hours, thousands returned to the gates from the nearby camps. It's a two-hour walk in the hot sun with limited water supplies. We head over to Gate I on the west side of the fence surrounding Bad Heiligendamm. Again, we bike over gentle hills, passing through wheat fields and by farmhouses with thatched or red-orange brick tile roofs. The towns en route - Reddelich and Steffenshagen – are home to 300 residents each. The entire way there consists of narrow country roads, often made of cobbled stones. Arriving at the blockade, we see a young woman being pulled through the police lines by three cops. She has just been pepper-sprayed and is screaming in agony and cannot stand. The police drag her over to a nearby tree, where two medics dowse her face with water and a few photojournalists lean in for a close up. Three, no four, green water cannons target the crowd with highly pressurized water that emits a low mechanical hum as it is released from the turrets. In front of the behemoth cannons, lines of cops. Methodically, the cannons and cops push everyone back. Spray. Push. Pause. Spray. Push. Pause. Slowly, the police retake the hill and the road leading to the gate, which yesterday the blockaders had occupied. Then comes a police announcement: "Gatherings of more than two are not allowed in Zone 2. This is an order to disperse." Numbers begin to dwindle seriously. Should we stay or should we go? To the left, among a cluster of trees, two squads of heavily protected police await orders. To the right, more cops and eight mounted police horses at the edge of the meadow. It looks as though they're surrounding us. Water cannons again douse the crowd. People run. They wind up in the field shivering uncontrollably, their teeth chattering loudly. Affinity groups organize as medics quickly arrive and provide blankets for warmth. A man stumbles past with a terrible gash on his head. A friend tends to him. "The battle is lost. The battle is lost," says a hippy in a tie-dye looking up the hill toward the towering vehicles. Streams of people flow through the fields away from the fence. The violence has been heavy at Gate 1. Yesterday, police attacked blockaders with clubs and pepper spray. Today, it is with water cannons. "It was less violent today than yesterday," says a young German woman. A protest medic sums up the day's casualties: a broken arm, one broken shin, many concussions and broken eardrums, and someone who lost an eye. But as hundreds retreat, the hardcore make barricades, some five feet high and six feet long, of logs and brush along the road leading to the gate. A small cadre of black-blockers and some militant clowns are making a stand. Had the past two days emphasis on non-escalation reached its conclusion, or was this a tactic meant only to delay the advancing cops? Before a coherent picture can emerge, squads of cops move in, re-take the road, and dismantle the barriers. We retreat farther back. As we walk our bikes, we come across the woman who had been pepper-sprayed earlier. She's putting her shoes on over a pair of mismatched socks. Her knee is heavily bandaged and her face is red from the burning. As she hops up to join the line of blockaders taking up a new position down the road, she says: "Its important to give everything you can." Undoubtedly, she'll be back tomorrow, at the gates, like the thousands of others heading returning to the camps to get some sleep, water, and food before coming back for another day of blockading. Blockade Photos/Video: http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/06/372723.html http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/06/372740.html http://g8-tv.org/index.php?play_id=1729&clipId=1734 |
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