Violence and the #occupy movement
By Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite Posted at 10:32 PM ET, 10/30/2011
Washington Post
A protester carries a sign referring to Scott Olsen, who was seriously injured at an Occupy event in Oakland, Calif., at Jamison Park in Portland, Ore., early Sunday, Oct. 30, 2011. A large group or protesters marched from the downtown Occupy Portland camp in an attempt to occupy the park when police moved in with riot gear and horses to make approximately 30 arrests.
(AP Photo/Don Ryan) (Don Ryan – AP)
Marine Lance Cpl. Scott Olsen, blood flowing down the side of his head, is now the face of the #occupy movement. Olsen, a veteran of two tours in Iraq, was severely injured, apparently hit in the head with a tear-gas canister when the Oakland, CA police department used the gas to clear out the #occupyoakland encampment. “We are all Scott Olsen” declares the #occupywallstreet Website.
“We are all Scott Olsen” is a reference to the famous Facebook group,“We are all Khalid Said” that was dedicated to a young Egyptian man who died, beaten to death, after having been arrested by the Egyptian police. This Facebook group brought attention to his death and helped lead up to the Jan. 25th Egyptian revolution.
We definitely need to condemn police brutality against peacefully protesting demonstrators in the U.S.; there are reports of escalating force used by police in Denver, Colo. this weekend. Faith leaders are uniting to condemn violence by police in a petition from the groupFaithful America. The petition says, “As people of faith, we condemn all violence and repression targeting the Occupy Wall Street movement. In communities across America, occupiers are providing a peaceful witness against corporate greed and economic injustice. We call on local authorities to respect their freedom of expression.”
We must not lose sight of the fact, as the Faithful America petition highlights, that there is an original violence that created the #occupy protests in the United States; this is the “corporate greed and economic injustice” of Wall Street. This is not the murderous regime of Hosni Mubarak, certainly. But it is violence nonetheless.
In this Oct. 27, 2011, photo, Occupy Coachella Valley protestors, in support of the Occupy Wall Street movement, hold a candlelight vigil in Palm Desert, Calif., for injured Occupy Oakland protestor and Iraq war veteran Scott Olsen, 24, who suffered a fractured skull during a confrontation between protestors and Oakland area law enforcement on Tuesday.
(Crystal Chatham – AP)
In the United States what we are up against is “institutionalized violence,” as Mary Potter Engel and I describe it in Lift Every Voice: Constructing Christian Theologies from the Underside . Institutionalized violence is the violence of systems that create and sustain economic and social injustice on a wide scale. What we are struggling against in the U.S. is the deliberate creation, especially over the last thirty years, of an economic system that is squeezing out the middle and lower classes, the 99%, and creating a small group of megarich, the 1 percent.