We were on the block where Nike,
Banana Republic and Planet Hollywood was. Close by protesters were
locked down in the middle of the street with Jill and beyond that was the
police line. Two blocks away police were busy gassing other protesters.
It really looked ominous and then the anarchists
all dressed in black with block hoods began banging on
the windows at Nike.
Many protesters asked them to stop and they retreated, at least for a while. I followed their retreat and spoke to one youth that violence and breaking windows was being counterproductive and it could possibly instigate an attack by police on the peaceful protesters that separated them from the police lines. I really didn't expect to change the outcome but I wanted him to think about things. I told him a story about a similar situation that I witnessed during a Viet Nam protest in New York City.
I was participating in a 5th Avenue Peace
Parade march, my first in New York where I lived. Everyone was peaceful
but one marcher who I observed swearing at motorists, spitting on their
cars, and tossing garbage cans into the street whenever he passed one.
I had on a suit for appearance sake. I
didn't want it to appear that the marchers were only
hippies and this guy was creating a very bad image for the protesters.
So I followed him for what seemed like an eternity before a police officer
came up to apprehend him. At that point I came closer and was just
behind his left shoulder when I got the
shock of my life which turned into a great awakening.
This guy pulls out a government ID and is released to go on his disruptive
way. "You never know who is benefiting from a situation like this,"
I told the young anarchist. (I attended many peace marches against the
Viet Nam War looking for similar
official provocateurs and was never disappointed.
It actually became a kind of hobby for me.)
About ten minutes later they regrouped and
finished breaking the windows.Its difficult making a point in the middle
of a war zone and massive police overreaction and tear gassing. After
the windows were broken a line of peaceful protesters formed in front of
the broken windows and protected the
buildings from being looted.
Before leaving Seattle we talked with
many police. I asked them why there wasn't even a handful of police
officers among the marchers that could have made a few selective arrests
on the dozen or so anarchists that were doing all the damage. Their
answer was that they had orders to maintain
their formations and that they didn't want to get hurt.
The Battle of Seattle was definitely worth witnessing.
May Peace Prevail on Earth!
Alan Moore / Member-Peace and Justice Commission/City
of Berkeley
Butterfly Gardeners Assoc. & Project Chrysalis/Director
and founder
Mendocino Coast Environmental Center
Global Renaissance Alliance in the San Francisco Bay
Area/Circle leader
1563 Solano Ave. #477
Berkeley, CA 94707
510-528-7730
Email: Alan Moore
Hey butterfly, good to hear from you. (I'm the corny one.) Thanks for your story about the V.Nam rally and the provoker. At the Nike corner, 6th and Pike, I stuck around until the teargas and concussion bombs started falling. The sitters had just gotten up and packed up their platform and we all walked down Pike St. slowly, while the bombs exploded among us. Though we could hardly breathe, nobody panicked. I was so proud of those young people - the nonviolent ones, and so angry at the window bashers. I got lots of pictures.
Later, I had arranged to meet friends
at a restaurant down on 1st St., and on my way there I saw a gang of young
black boys. There were two white fellows riding by on bikes and one
of the boys ran out and shoved a biker over - hard. Then he ran back
to his gang. I was nearby, still as a corn
cob, and yelled at them, "why did you do that?"
They stopped and looked at me - I walked up to them and asked again, "Why
did you do that? Don't you know something new is going on here?"
They started threatening me, drew near, and then attacked me. Many
hands ripped my costume off, a few blows,
and someone took my bag. They stopped and ran.
I gathered up my costume, (Minus lots of kernels) and took off after the
one who had my bag, yelling at pedestrians, "stop that boy." A few
pedestrians took a lunge at him as he ran by, the chase continued, for
a couple of blocks, me yelling all the way,
to where there were two policemen (not in riot gear,
but with a phone). One of the policemen made a concerted effort to
nab him and he got away but dropped my bag. Also, they called in
and some cars with sirens were soon on their way. Don't know if they
caught any of the gang. Probably not, they
ran and were probably soon looting the stores.
Here is a message that I sent out to a couple of the biotech listservs.I tore into the anarchists and got some furious replies back - from real anarchists.
To those who were in Seattle, you are now an "epicenter"
of activism in your area. It is your task to educate the people within
your realm of contact. Here is a sample letter-to-editor which you can
use, revise, whatever, to send to all the newspapers in your region.
Continue to educate yourself via
the purefood.org and wtowatch.org websites and when you
go to speak, take the purefood (OCA) petition and the no patents on life
petition and get signatures.
The Battle in Seattle
I was there all week, and I want people to
know that there were around 75,000 nonviolent protesters and maybe 100
violent anarchists. The anarchists stole the show, and we were very
unhappy about that, but in the end, because of sheer numbers, good organization
and persistence, our message
did get heard. We had our rallies in the
symphony hall and the churches andthey were packed every time, with overflow
crowds outside. We had marches every day, organized by different
groups, but coordinated among all the groups. And who were the people
in these rallies and marches? This was the
magic of the moment. There were labor unions, consumer
groups, environmentalists, farmers' groups, citizens' rights groups, students
and churches. Coalitions have been formed that are uniting people
from all over the world. Seattle was just the beginning.
It's the same old struggle: the rich
and powerful Vs the poor and weak; tyranny Vs democracy. It's another
turning of the wheel, but now it has risen to new levels. The multinational
corporations are beyond the control of any nation, and are now moving to
control the nations. The profit margin
is, of course, the motivating factor. All other
considerations are being swept aside; labor standards, citizens' rights,
farmers' issues, local and global ecologies; especially in poor countries.
Now, due to mergers, just a few corporations are controlling the world's
life support systems....seeds, agri-chemicals, pharmaceuticals. The
World Trade Organization (WTO) is their vehicle for expansion of power.
But in Seattle, the turtles and the teamsters held hands, chanting:
"Hey Hey, Ho Ho, WTO has Got to Go!" and the churches called for
a year of jubilee for the poor countries. I would be happy to speak
to any non-anarchistic group that wants to hear more about what happened
in Seattle and just WHY the WTO has Got to Go.
Message to anarchists: I was there, giving support to
the nonviolent protesters who were occupying one of the intersections,
waiting for the police to descend upon them. Meanwhile you were bashing
in the nearby windows. You stupid jerks! The bravery, heroism
and power was with the nonviolent protesters. Your behavior served
only to diminish what they were doing. The police were using all
of their nasty tools on the nonviolent ones, who's discipline and persistence
was terrific. The contrast between police and protester was dramatic,
but your actions gave the police an out -
and for many people - justification for their brutality.
Sitting there, waiting for the police to descend, refusing to engage in
violence, being arrested, that was courageous and beautiful. Kudos to you,
young people, you opened the door for all of us to regain a toehold on
democracy and pride in
America. Shame on you, anarchists, bragging about
how you concealed yourselves among the others and avoided arrest.
You are cowardly, and disgustingly stupid.
Jill
Davies ~~~ River Care ~~~~
"You can do
whatever you don't know you can't do."
"The mighty oak
was once a nut that held its ground"
"Hey Hey, Ho Ho, WTO has got to Go"
Testimony of Alan Moore at FDA Hearing on Bioengineered
Food Safety
12-13-99
I am here representing the position of the Butterfly Gardeners
Association, the Patch Adams Peace and Justice Center, the Mendocino Coast
Environmental Center, the Bay Area Citizen Circles of the Global Renaissance
Alliance, and a group that a recent Times Magazine article on the World
Trade Organization
meeting in Seattle called "butterfly defenders."
Our group includes David Brower, John McConnell, Julia Butterfly, Neile
Donald Walsch, Patch Adams, Dr Helen Caldicott, Wavy Gravy, Rabbi Michael
Lerner, Elisabet Sahtouris, Barbara Marx Hubbard, David Seaborg and over
two hundred organizations. I am
also representing those that can not speak for themselves,
the butterflies of the world and the children of the future. I am
a biologist and was a graduate student in molecular biology at the time
molecular engineering was in its infancy.
Our government has been far too lax in approving
and/or failing to regulate a whole array of socalled technological improvements
that are mainly focused on improving the health of big corporations rather
than the health and welfare of the American public. Such practices
has tainted our food, meat, poultry, and milk supply with antibiotics,
growth hormones, and a whole host of recombinant genetic materials whose
health effects and consequences were mainly ignored but are becoming increasinly
understood While we may have allowed you to pollute and poison our food
supply in the past, there is no
way to imagine that the American public will acquiesce
when these same technologies threaten butterflies.
When genetically altered crops such
as BT corn were shown recently in a Cornell study to kill monarch butterfly
caterpillars, it created a world-wide uproar that stopped the exportation
of these transgenic seeds to the European Union and other countries around
the world. It was a deep rooted
archetypical love of butterflies that raised the consciousness
of the world to realize the dangers that these multinationals corporations
were threatening us with. Even though bioengineered tinkering with
the world's food supply had been debated for years as a threat to human
health, it was not until this technology threatened butterflies that the
world took action. I have long said that we, as human beings, are in denial
of threats to our own health and well being, but will respond with more
passion when things
such as butterflies, dolphins, whales, and ancient forests
are threatened. There is a whole new nature oriented psychology that is
at work here.
One news report on the issue from a Department of Agriculture
scientist tried to downplay the threat by stating that Bt-corn alone could
not push the monarchs over the edge. What he failed to point out
was that other Monsanto innovations just might. Roundup ready crops
pose a direct threat in that
they target milkweed, the monarch's host plant, as well
as a whole spectrum of annual and perennial weeds for elimination.
Many of these weeds are host plants for other butterflies as well.
The impact from the combination of these two threats acting together to
push the monarch and other butterflies
on the endangered list was deliberately ignored and misrepresented.
Dr. Chip Taylor, head of the University of Kansas entomology
department and director of Monarch Watch, a group dedicated to the conservation
of the celebrated butterflies, was cited as saying the new corn and soybean
crops have the potential to ``raise hell with monarchs.'' Genetically
engineered
crops, which are revolutionizing agriculture in the Midwest,
could pose serious problems for monarch butterflies.
Dr. Len Wassenaar, an Environment Canada scientist in
Saskatchewan, was citing as agreeing the new transgenic crops, which are
being increasingly used from Nebraska to Pennsylvania, are something to
be very concerned about. The story says that the scientists believe the
new ``Round-up ready''
varieties of corn and soybeans, which have been engineered
to withstand applications of the herbicide Round-up, could drastically
reduce the amount of milkweed in farmers' fields. Milkweed, which is killed
by Round-up, is the host plant that monarch caterpillars live on.
Dr. Wassenaar was quoted as saying, ``They may eventually
allow farmers to completely eliminate milkweed from agricultural settings,''
adding that he and his colleagues have found about half the monarchs that
winter in Mexico originate in the Midwest of the United States, where milkweed
has long
proliferated in corn and agricultural fields. Dr. Taylor
was cited as saying that equally worrying is a new variety of corn that
has been genetically engineered to produce a toxin that is deadly to the
larvae of butterflies and moths, adding, ``If the toxin is in the pollen
the corn sheds, it would be avery significant biotoxin for anything that's
within the shadow of that corn.''
While we may have allowed these corporations
and regulatory agencies that were supposed to protect us to ride rough
shod over us in the past, this isno longer the case. If it takes
our love for butterflies to get us to come out of our cocoons and wake
up to this issue, so be it! The butterfly is the
symbol of transformation and what we are calling for
is the transformation of the system that puts profits before the health
of the American public and their environment.
May Peace Prevail on Earth!
Alan Moore / Member-Peace
and Justice Commission/City of Berkeley
Butterfly Gardeners Assoc. & Project Chrysalis/Director
and founder
Mendocino Coast Environmental Center
Global Renaissance Alliance in the San Francisco Bay
Area/Circle leader
1563 Solano Ave. #477
Berkeley, CA 94707
510-528-7730
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