Occupy movement gathers in Chicago warehouse to protest NATO

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Occupy movement gathers in Chicago warehouse to protest NATO

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/...n-summmit-act-20120513,0,1328980.premiumvideo


By Ryan Haggerty Tribune reporter 1:31 p.m. CDT, May 12, 2012




Members of Occupy Chicago and people from across the country gathered in an aging warehouse just outside Chinatown today to discuss their opposition to next weekend's NATO summit and finish planning for the mass protests they will stage during the meetings of world leaders.

Today's gathering is the first day of a two-day "People's Summit" organized by Occupy Chicago and billed as an alternative to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's May 20-21 summit at McCormick Place.

The event began with several speakers addressing about 200 people in a loft-style room on the 7th floor of the warehouse on the west bank of the Chicago River at West Cermak Road, which has served as Occupy Chicago's headquarters for months.

Many of the speakers said members of Occupy and other protesters should take credit for President Barack Obama's decision in March to move the G-8 summit -- which had also been scheduled for next weekend in Chicago -- to the Camp David presidential retreat in Maryland. The White House said the G-8 financial meeting was moved because leaders wanted a more informal setting.

They also spoke out against military and economic policies backed by the U.S. and other western powers that they say hurt the working class and developing countries.

Kevin Rambo Jr., 19, said he traveled to Chicago from San Diego a few weeks ago to participate in May Day and NATO protests and "to be a part of sending the message that the global war machine has to end."

Rambo said he's been alternating between sleeping in a sleeping bag as part of a protest outside a city mental health clinic in Woodlawn that is slated to close and staying with relatives who live in the area.

"There's a revitalized activist community because of the Occupy movement, for the most part," he said, wearing an Occupy San Diego shirt in one of the warehouse's hallways. "Because of the growing number of people who are getting involved, I couldn't really not protest against NATO."

Although the room where various people spoke this morning was mostly full, it was clear that the event's organizers expected more people to attend. Other rooms streaming a live video feed of the speeches and filled with hundreds of chairs for overflow crowds were either empty or had only a handful of spectators.

The primary room was decorated with art and props from the Occupy movement, including life-size paintings of Obama and Mayor Rahm Emanuel wearing dark suits and holding handguns.

After the morning's speeches, attendees scattered throughout the massive brick building to attend workshops and seminars on various topics, from education to the criminal justice system.

Ashley Smith, who flew to Chicago this week from Burlington, Vt., said the NATO summit has brought together people from a wide variety of related causes.

"All the demands that we're making - for social justice, economic equality, against the wars and occupations - they're all linked by opposition to a system that's out of control," Smith said.
 

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www.chicagotribune.com/business/columnists/ct-biz-0513-phil-nato-20120512,0,7408984.column
chicagotribune.com

Chicago NATO summit asks a lot

Local unease is justified

Phil Rosenthal
7:38 AM CDT, May 12, 2012
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Given the unease of many in this city about the NATO summit, there is no more appropriate place to host it than McCormick Place, named for someone who wanted nothing to do with the alliance.
"The European countries have nothing in common, excepting the Roman occupation and the crusades. They have nothing at all in common with the United States," Col. Robert McCormick, the late longtime Tribune editor and publisher, argued on the radio just before the treaty took effect in 1949, a commentary the paper dutifully also printed under his byline.
McCormick's newspaper earlier warned in editorials that NATO would help "wreck America and permit Stalin and the Communists to take over here" and represent "the final sellout of the United States as an independent nation." One editorial said the pact inevitably would lead to war and backers "should be frank enough to say ? the alliance will be worth the million American lives it will probably cost."
These epistles may not exactly constitute a warm welcome for the world leaders converging on the lakefront convention center that bears the colonel's name. But they also should remind locals that our worst fears are rarely fully realized.
Then again, neither are our greatest aspirations.
Maybe the summit will do for Chicago everything organizers say it will. Producing an economic windfall of $128 million, raising the city's profile globally, and precipitating a surge in foreign investment and tourism would be just swell.
It's just a little hard for most of us to see, and it won't be easier for the multinational media practically quarantined at the convention center trying to cover the summit. Anyone who's ever attended the Chicago Auto Show can only shudder at the prospects of anyone holed up at McCormick Place trying to take stock of this city's world-class culinary scene.
"The reality of this is there are multiple layers of benefit and perception and misperception in this kind of thing," Heywood Sanders, a professor in the University of Texas at San Antonio's Department of Public Administration. "Functionally the NATO summit, in terms of attendance and economic impact, is like one trade show, and not a huge trade show, but one OK trade show. It's the equivalent of the plastics expo for all practical purposes.''
The financial benefits of hosting a NATO conference are as debatable as those ascribed to hosting a political convention. In this case, it's especially complicated because NATO displaced by two weeks the National Restaurant Association show, usually the busiest weekend of the year for Chicago hotels.
Not only is NATO not making up the difference in business, according to a Chicago hotel manager who did not want to be identified, but it also is potentially discouraging visits by other groups and leisure travelers. In other words, this person said, the first three weeks or so of May are usually counted upon to be strong, but the NATO meeting has cut that window in half this year.
City boosters have to hope Chicago looks businesslike to the world despite businesspeople in the Loop being encouraged to dress like anything but to avoid giving protesters someone to rail against. Chicago's vaunted "city that works" reputation must not take a hit when security needs snarl traffic, delay trains and tax strained public resources.
And, most important, demonstrators and police can't join the 1968 Democratic National Convention protests, the 1919 race riot and the 1886 Haymarket affair in the ugly annals of Chicago agitation.
That's a risky bet.
"If you're a local mayor like Rahm Emanuel, you're faced with very tough fiscal choices in the contemporary environment and there are lots of difficult, contentious issues to deal with," Sanders said. "It's very difficult to reform a police department or change the Chicago public school system or significantly alter the city's economic course. So this is a feel-good."
Other civic elite may get a shot in the arm, too. Yet most of us ?
"It's not for you, not for the typical local resident," Sanders said. "Commutes will be disrupted. Security, particularly around McCormick Place, may be intrusive or bothersome."
None of this should be a surprise. For the 2008 summit, Romania dispatched 23,000 police officers to Bucharest. A major part of 2009 NATO summit co-host Strasbourg, France, was sealed off, with locals allowed to enter with police escorts. Anarchists and demonstrators torched a hotel and a tourism office there.
Know anyone who saw the coverage and booked a vacation?
"Well, where was the NATO summit last time?" Sanders said. "Did that register on anybody's cranium?"
The dearth of people who know it was Lisbon, Portugal, in 2010, may not bode well for post-summit Chicago.
But it could be worse. At least Stalin and the Communists never took over here.
 

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Chicago police prepare for NATO Summit with riot gear and sound cannon

Chicago police prepare for NATO Summit with riot gear and sound cannon

Chicago police prepare for NATO Summit with riot gear and sound cannon

Published: 12 May, 2012, 00:04
Edited: 12 May, 2012, 14:19

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Scott Olson / Getty Images / AFP

TAGS:Arms, NATO, Protest, Politics, G20, USA, Police


Tens of thousands of demonstrators will descend on Chicago, Illinois this month to protest the annual conference of NATO nations, and police are preparing with the help of one million dollars? worth of weapons and riot gear.
<!--RTEditor:genereated--><!--RTEditor textarea-->Chicago?s law enforcement agencies have invested as much as $1 million on riot-control equipment, including at least one long-range acoustic device, or LRAD, and upgrades to shields that will be worn by the police, reports the UK?s guardian
Demonstrators and organizers alike have both described the plans for marches and rallies against the NATO Summit later this month as being peaceful in nature. Law enforcement wants to make sure that they keep the events non-violent, though, and will aim to do so with a major new arsenal of riot gear.
The LRAD, a sound cannon-like device that has been linked to causing permanent hearing loss, is being touted by the Chicago Police Department as a necessity for public safety.
"This is simply a risk management tool, as the public will receive clear information regarding public safety messages and any orders provided by police," Chicago police spokeswoman Melissa Stratton tells the Guardian, adding that it will be available "as a means to ensure a consistent message is delivered to large crowds that can be heard over ambient noise.?
Police officers are believed to have used LRADs the last time that several world leaders attended a major conference on American soil. Employing the machine against protesters during the 2009 meeting of the Group of 20 leaders in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania was believed by The New York Times to be the first instance the device was deployed on demonstrators in America. During that episode, police assaulted protesters by launching tear gas canisters and stun grenades into the crowd ? but only after crippling them with the sound cannon, of course.
"This is a device that has the capability to inflict permanent hearing loss on people," attorney Vic Walczak tells the Guardian. He represents Karen Piper, a university lecturer, who claims to have suffered irreversible hearing damage at the hands of a LRAD during the 2009 G20 protests. Walczak adds that the device is "more dangerous than a Taser" and that ?It should not be used outside the battlefield."
In recent months, the weapon has been reportedly dispatched with law enforcement agencies that have been deployed to monitor protests across the US waged in association with the Occupy Wall Street movement. Several offshoots of OWS, along with the National Nurses United group and thousands of protesters outside of Chicago, are expected to converge on Chicago for the protests this month.
The Guardian reports that the main action is slated to occur on Sunday, May 20. To additionally ready law enforcement officers, the US Federal Protective Service drafted plans to send armed agents into downtown Chicago to patrol the city and prepare for protests as early as the first of the month. Chicago?s mayor, former White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, told reporters that he was not made aware of that decision.
Emanuel was informed, however, that a planned protest scheduled to coincide with the conference ? one that the city issued a permit to ? may be larger than originally anticipated. As a result, Emanuel reportedly issued that the city revoke the permit, which had been authorized months earlier to National Nurses United.
Tom Morello, guitarist for Rage Against the Machine, tells Rolling Stone that he plans to participate in the protest, with or without the city?s authorization.
"Chicago is my hometown and the mayor is making me feel mighty unwelcome,? Morello says to the music magazine. ?I don't care what they say or do, I'm coming to rock out and speak my mind.?
 
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