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SEATTLE - SOMETHING GREATER YET TO COME
By David Bacon
SEATTLE, WA (12/1/99) -- Those who marched or stood or sat in the
streets of Seattle this week made history, and they knew it. And
like the great marches against the Vietnam war, or the first sitins
in the South in the late 50s, it was not always easy to see just
what history was being made, especially for those closest to the
events of the time.
Tear gas, rubber bullets and police sweeps, the object of incessant
media coverage, are the outward signs of impending change -- that
the guardians of the social order have grown afraid. And there's
always a little history in that.
Poeina, a young woman sitting in the intersection at the corner
of Seventh and Stewart, waiting nervously for the cops to cuff her
and take her away in her first arrest, knew the basic achievement
she and her friends had already won: "I know we got people to listen,
and that we changed their minds." It was a statement of hope, like
the chant that rose Tuesday from streets filled with thousands of
demonstrators as the police moved in - "The whole world is watching!"
The Seattle protests put trade on the roadmap of public debate,
making WTO a universally recognized set of initials in a matter
of hours -- what it took a year of debate over NAFTA to accomplish.
But perhaps the greatest impact of Seattle will be on the people
who were there. Just as anti-war demonstrations and civil rights
sitins of decades ago were focal points, from which people fanned
out across the country, spreading the gospel of their movement,
Seattle is also a beginning of something greater yet to come. What
will the people who filled its downtown streets take with them back
into this city's rainy neighborhoods, or to similar communities
in towns and cities across the country?
A certain understanding of the world was forged in the streets
here -- a realization based, to begin with, on who was there. Environmentalists
came protesting the impending destruction of laws protecting clean
air and water. Animal rights activists came to protect sea turtles.
Trade unionists came fighting for jobs, and protesting child labor.
Fair trade campaigners arrived ready to debate corporate domination
of the process by which trade rules are decided.
Even the generational culture of the protestors started to spill
over, from one group into another. Environmental activists in their
20s came with the tactics from the battles in the forests of northern
California and the Pacific northwest. They carried giant puppets,
dressed themselves in costumes rather than carrying signs, and laid
down in busy intersections at the height of morning rush hour.
In groups of 20 and 30, they chained their arms together, slipping
metal sleeves over hands and chains to make it hard for the police
to cut them apart. Two years ago, this tactic was answered by Humboldt
County sheriffs, who swabbed pepper spray directly into the eyes
of protestors at Pacific Lumber Company. Even for veterans of civil
disobedience, the chains are a tactic that demands determination
and commitment to face down the fear of violent response.
As police rushed in to make arrests and cut them apart, a young
woman stood to the side, crying out in tears to the helmeted and
shielded officers - "I'm your daughter!"
Later the same day, tens of thousands of union members marched
into downtown to join the protest. Having shut down all the ports
along the Pacific Coast from Alaska to San Diego, union members
chanted and waved picketsigns as their ranks filled the streets
as far as the eye could see. Each union's members marched together,
each with its own color jacket or t-shirt, each carrying banners
and hundreds of signs printed for the occasion.
Many of the morning's young protestors were visibly impressed by
the strength of the numbers and organization. For Annie Decker,
"the power and size of it made me feel joyful. I was proud that
we were together, bringing the WTO into the public eye."
In the midst of the teargas, it was not hard to see that this culture
of protest is starting to spread, whether through union jackets
on protestors in the redwood forests, or giant puppets on union
picketlines in Oakland. But under the culture is the germ of an
idea - the linkage.
For unionists, the depradations of a global trading system has
pitted workers in many countries against each other, in a race to
the bottom in wages and workers' rights. Environmental activists
see a system which values profit-making over laws protecting health
and the environment. Rather than creating an atomized assembly --
each group pursing its own interests in isolation -- protestors
came ready to see what they had in common.
Decker, an organizer and observer at an intersection filled with
sitting bodies, called her own realization liberating. "We don't
have to just express an opinion on one issue," she said. "Trade
and the power of corporations are affecting us in so many areas
that we can all make connections, and see the common element behind
the problems we share."
President Clinton may regret planning a summit of the powerful
which has become overshadowed by street protest. But in the long
run, he will regret this realization more. It is an indictment,
not of a particular company, or even a single country, but of a
whole economic order which is uniting its enemies in opposition
to it.
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david bacon - labornet email david bacon
internet: dbacon@igc.apc.org 1631 channing way
phone: 510.549.0291 berkeley, ca 94703
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last updated: December 29, 2004
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