We crowd-surfed a tent!
Veterans For Peace Issue Statement on Scott Olsen
The Scott Olsen incident blows my mind. Through my involvement in the Occupy Boston movement I’ve learned to not to be surprised when law enforcement crosses a line, but this was even farther than anything I could have expected. I thought the Boston Police attacking Veterans For Peace in Dewey Square a couple of weeks ago was as bad as it could have gotten, but launching projectiles at unarmed civilians is just wrong. There has to be another way.
~OBV
OCTOBER 26, 2011 - Official VFP Statement Regarding Occupy Incident in Oakland

Veteran For Peace member, Scott Olsen, a Marine Corps veteran twice deployed to Iraq, is in hospital now in stable but serious condition with a fractured skull, struck by a police projectile fired into a crowd in downtown Oakland, California in the early morning hours of today. Other people were injured in the assault and many were arrested after Oakland police in riot gear were ordered to evict people encamped in the ongoing “Occupy Oakland” movement. Olsen is also a member of Iraq Veterans Against the War.
VFP members are involved with dozens of these local “occupy movement” encampments and we support them fully. In Boston, for example, our members, wearing VFP shirts and carrying VFP flags, stood between a line of police and the encampment, urging police to “join the 99%” and not evict the protesters. In that case, several of our members were banged and bruised when the police decided instead to carry out their eviction orders.
In Oakland, last night, a similar thing happened, according to VFP Chapter 69 member and Navy veteran, Joshua Sheperd, who said he went to downtown Oakland “to see if, as a VFP member, I could help still the anger…to be between the police and the protesters…it seemed unconscionable to me that the police use the cover of darkness like that to do what they were doing.” Fortunately, he was not injured in the police assault that left Olsen with a fractured skull
As with virtually every example of the occupy movement across the country, those encamped were conducting themselves peacefully beforehand, protesting current economic, social and environmental conditions in the U.S. brought about by decades of corporate control, a criminal financial industry and wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that are driving the U.S. global empire into bankruptcy. These “occupy movement” participants are telling us something we need very desperately to hear. They should be listened to, not arrested and brutalized.
Police in the majority of cities are acting with restraint and humanity towards the encampments, but Veterans For Peace will not be deterred by police who choose to use brutal tactics. In fact, as happens with repression everywhere, more people join the cause. We do believe that the rank and file police officers are part of the 99%, the overwhelming majority of Americans who are suffering at the hands of an intolerable system. Layoffs and cutbacks in city after city prove that we must join together to demand justice for all.
We send our very best to Scott Olsen and his family and wish him a speedy recovery to health.
We shall not be moved.
Occupy Boston on WBZ
On Sunday night, October 23, 2011, two volunteer participants of Occupy Boston appeared on the radio show “Jay Talkin’” with host, Bradley Jay. The show was kind enough to allow us record audio from their sound board.
Statement in Support of Occupy Boston by The Sudbury Democratic Town Committee
Statement in Support of Occupy Boston
The Sudbury Democratic Town Committee
P.O. Box 252
Sudbury, Massachusetts 01776
October 20, 2011
The Sudbury Democratic Town Committee expresses its appreciation and
gratitude and support for the people who have started and who continue the Occupy Wall Street and Occupy Boston movements, and similar ones in city after city
across our country.
At a time of seeming political paralysis and cynicism, these people have raised the issue of economic and social fairness in an astonishingly resonant manner.
By their actions, they have given hope to many who have felt ground down and
discouraged. Movements like this do not happen often, but when they do, they can be formative moments in our nation’s political history.
This movement has zeroed in on the fundamental problem confronting our
country today|the concentration of wealth and power in the hands of a miniscule
fraction at the expense of the rest of us|the 99%. It’s a movement against greed.
It’s a movement against arrogance. It’s a movement of people looking for the chance to live productive lives and for a government that can act in our common
interest rather than as a toy of the extremely wealthy. It’s a movement for our shared humanity.
We stand with the members of Occupy Boston. We urge everyone to join us in
supporting them with our voices, with our money, and with our presence.
Someone Who Sees Us As We Are
I love this post:
http://www.bilerico.com/2011/10/occupy_boston_tents_of_hope.php#more
Veterans For Peace describe 10/11/2011 Raid by Boston Police
October 15, 2011
Here are two more videos from Monday night, hours before the police raid on our North camp of the Rose Kennedy Greenway. The two people here couldn’t be more different and that’s what I’m so proud of about the Occupy movement. Everyone is in this.
October 14, 2011
One of the most wonderful developments of the Occupy movement, in my estimation, is the emergence of The Protest Chaplains. These people of faith have set up a spirituality tent at #OccupyBoston where anyone can go and find peace and/or exercise their faith in a safe space.
Here is a description of their mission, in their own words. This really moves me:
“What is your position? Why are you doing this? What is the point? Aren’t you just causing trouble? These are the same questions that Christ faced during His ministry. And He often frustrated the questioners by confusing them further, with parables or His own questions. Then He went back to being a teacher and exemplar, just as much in what He did as what Hesaid.
We’re following Christ in this way, as are many of the Occupation. The point isn’t to demand something, get it, and then go home. The point is to show people the Way to live that gives us life, joy, and allows us to flourish as who we all are: the children of God. And that Way is lived, as Jesus shows us over and over again.
He turns no one away, and neither does the Occupation. He fed everyone, and so does the Occupation. He proclaimed love and non-violence, and so does the Occupation. He healed the sick, spoke with everyone, heard their stories, shared their lives, and stood in defiance against those who hid behind the law in order to harm and exclude. So does the Occupation.”
I had the chance to talk with two of the Protest Chaplains last Monday night, hours before our North Camp was raided by police:
October 13, 2011, 9:30pm
On October 10, 2011 at 9:30pm at North Camp, the 2nd encampment of the #OccupyBoston movement situated on the Rose Kennedy Greenway, a sister General Assembly was held to discuss plans for an assumed raid by the police. Earlier in the afternoon, the Occupy Boston protestors were joined by thousands of students on a march through the city to the Charlestown bridge. At the bridge the march was turned back. It is estimated that approximately 3500-4000 people marched on this day.
