It was pretty quiet this afternoon around Marine & Aviation Pier 57, where nearly 2000 people were arrested and detained this week while they were exercising freedoms they imagined might be protected by the American legal system, or, in some cases, just because they happened to be near the police at the wrong moment. The only activity visible today was that of workmen collecting the countless port-a-sans which had been set up inside each of the filthy metal holding pens inside. We didn’t get too close.
Category: NYC
lackeys showing their masters that they’re in full control
The nation which is being told that everything went smoothly in New York this week can’t be shown enough evidence to the contrary. Another friend and indefatigable activist colleague of ours had a lot to say about on Gotham Gazette yesterday.
I knew they were taking their time and dragging this out as long as possible. I still believed we were being processed and my cellmates were being released. Every 20-40 minutes four names were called on my floor and people were led out. My name is called. I will be out soon. I am led up a flight of stairs into a different cell. A few guys who were first led out are sitting there. They didnt move along in the system at all. The police seemed to be playing a shell game. Keep us calm and cooperative by making it seem as we are being released when we really werent. We call the Lawyers Guild and learn there is only one judge on the bench now and few if any are being released. The word is that we are going to be held until the convention is over Thursday night.
Jon is safe at home now, but like the multitudes who witnessed the assaults by Republican guards on New York streets this week, whether they were zip-cuffed or not, I’m certain he remains an enemy of the fascism which is succeeding in making victims – and activists – of us all.
we’re all inside a police net now
Sandy Katz, a former ACT UP comrade who served as aide to Manhattan Borough President Ruth Messenger, has sent his friends this account of his own experience with our new domestic order. On Tuesday afternoon he accidently became caught up in the enormous police action which saw 1200 people arrested for the offense of being on the streets of New York. In his own description, written after he was released 23 hours later, never having been arraigned and never having seen a judge or a lawyer, he says he ended up being handed a desk appearance ticket; he has to be back in court in three and a half weeks, “i am charged with disorderly conduct for consorting with an unauthorized gathering of people.”
its over now. i hate being locked up. i didnt choose to be arrested, as i have done several times in my life. back in the day the new york police routinely warned peaceful demonstrators to move before placing them under arrest. that was back before dissent was a threat to national security, when it was understood as the freedom to disagree.
Click on the link below this line for the entire story.
the Hearst Tower Project
completing the Hearst Building
It’s probably the most interesting building now going up in New York. That may not be much of a recommendation these days, but seriously, Sir Norman Foster’s solution for completing a 75 year-old skyscraper is well worth a detour even as it’s still going up.
I’ve been lucky to be able to visit 7th Avenue and 56-57th Street and watch this column grow all summer.
If you look at the familiar tower of the Empire State Building it rises in a similar fashion, set back from a base the width of a city block, even if in its case the same elegant style is continued throughout its height.
The Hearst Building was never completed after rising only six stories. Today it may finally making up for its deprived youth. Be sure to check out its interesting history on the link above.
memorializing internment on a pier


Welcome citizens! (wire and flesh, inside the holding pen on Pier 57)
I’m sure we haven’t heard the end of the story of Guantanamo-on-the-Hudson, but in the meantime here’s a small footnote to the account of what thousands experienced there this week.
The September newsletter from our wonderful New York State General Assembly representative, Dick Gottfried, arrived in our mailbox yesterday. One of the smaller stories is headlined, “What Future for Pier 57?” Until this week “Pier 57” was the name of the large Hudson River dock the NYPD had recently fitted-out to serve as a detention center for its political prisoners.
Gottfried’s Community Update must certainly have gone to the press before the mass arrests of this week and probably even before his staff or the general public knew the details of the police department’s plans for political protest, yet the short text which appears under the headline manages to send shivers down my spine (I’ll explain below):
Pier 57, at West 15th Street, which was most recently a bus depot, is in the process of getting redeveloped as part of the Hudson River Park
But the NYPD has now tasted blood, and it seems to have other plans for the waterfront real estate, according to an article in the New York Post excerpted in the New York Press and appearing here via Bloggy:
The most disturbing bit of information concerning the West Side holding pen, however, was buried in the Post’s account. Just a brief mention:
“Cops fear some protesters might hang around after the convention to disrupt other events, like the U.S. Open, so the pen will remain open indefinitely.”
The U.S. Open? Other events? Like what, the 3rd Ave. Street Fair? The grand opening celebration at a new Payless Shoe Source in Queens?
In other words, a year-round internment camp is now part of the ongoing West Side development project. Does the Olympic Committee know about this?
The shivers follow my thoughts, stimulated by reading historical accounts and seeing the physical evidence of countless memorial plaques, of improvised holding pens and interrogation rooms created by long-gone 20th-century authoritarian regimes.
If the old Marine & Aviation Pier 57 ever does become part of a park, I want to see an historical marker displayed prominently on the site. I only hope it won’t have to describe greater horrors than those already visited on our city this week.
[images from indymedia, by anonymous]
they’ve suspended habeas corpus . . .

protesters raise hands and shout cheers as police bus believed to be carrying arrested protesters leaves a temporary detention center yesterday, heading for another holding tank downtown
They’ve suspended habeas corpus, so this must be war.
I’m not just talking about the familiar smokescreen created by the “class war!” accusations Republicans lay on Democrats when they try to point out that the GOP is already fast at work at the singleminded task of piling up more and more power and plunder for themselves at the expense of the poor and the middle class. This is more like full civil war, brought to us by an immensely greedy protofascist hierarchy manipulating the stupidity of the pawns they so easily frighten, and demonizing those with the intelligence and the courage to resist. (actually, we’re going to need more of both those things, especially to avoid serious violence; we’re barely holding on right now)
War will always invite the suspension of liberty, and in the U.S. the assault usually begins with the elimination of the protections of habeas corpus.
This week in New York peaceful protesters, their legal observers, outside reporters, photographers, along with food delivery people, tourists and innocent bystanders were caught up by the web (we call it “freedom fencing,” and it’s bright orange) laid by an increasingly autocratic regime’s 50,000-strong augmented force of uniformed guards.
Many of the brave or merely unluckly people who were trapped, and immediately and effectively branded “enemies of the state,” languished, some of them still languishing, within filthy chain-link cages that were topped with razor wire, the “cells” improvised inside an abandoned bus garage on a Hudson River pier. (with hyperbole which may be counterproductive, many have been referring to it as “Guantanamo-on-the-Hudson”) Even their names go unreported to anyone outside, and while they are held they are without access to legal cousel, family, friends, even essential medications.
What’s it like inside? In fact, what’s it like in Manhattan this week? Here’s one of the best accounts I’ve read, by theoria posted on Daily Kos. I would add: If you haven’t gone through it yourself or at least been a witness to what’s going on here this week, you’ll find it hard to believe what you’ll read, but it should make your skin crawl nevertheless.
Apparently some or all of these detainees may now have been moved to the prison known during two centuries as “The Tombs,” a notorious criminal detention center located Downtown, closer to the courts. Not surprisingly, it’s almost impossible to get information anywhere. Did I say it’s like war? Some 1800 people have been arrested since last weekend and Newsday reports that from 500 to 700 remain in custody at this time, but the facts are hard to pin down.
Their mothers and families have been gathering at the downtown site, 100 Centre Street. We’re very lucky we still have independent judges not appointed for their subserviance to authoritarianism who can still make it hard for self-appointed guardians of [their own idea of] political and moral decency to throw away the keys altogether.
Many of those swept up by the police in the last week were taken in actions even the NYPD describes as “pre-emptive arrest,” (sound vaguely familiar?) a plan they hoped would ensure a protest-free environment for our Republican Mayor’s guests.
The liberties being defended by the protesters are now being further destroyed by the office of the Manhattan District Attorney’s outrageous violation of guidelines which require that no one be held beyond 24 hours before they are arraigned for a serious crime and that the rest must be released with desk appearance tickets. In fact there is every indication at this time that the police will not be releasing many of the people they have rounded up until the Convention is over and its celebrants have been spirited away to wherever it is they came from. Pre-emptive arrest followed by pre-emptive detainment.
Habeas corpus has been suspended indefinitely, and once again it’s in the name of security. Too many Americans have absolutely no problem with that. Any moment I expect to hear it officially justified in the name of the War on Terrorism.
But this city has received absolutely no credible warnings about terrorist plans that we have been told about, although it has had at least a year and a half worth of public announements that ordinary people were planning to come to New York for peaceful protest directed against, among other things, the monstrous and moronic policy that makes violence our only defense against violence. The terrorists stayed at home; we got busted, and our liberties were confiscated as well. If the police are massed in Herald Square, Harlem, Chelsea, the East Village and elsewhere this week, it’s not to tangle with Al Queda. The enemy is obviously us.
What cowardice has let it go this far?
Democracy Now! put this excerpt of its radio report on its site this morning:
Hundreds of people yesterday protested the conditions under which those arrested are being held before going to court saying the site was contaminated with oil and asbestos. Pier 57 is a three-story, block-long pier that has been converted to a holding pen.
Yesterday morning we received a call from one of the protesters being held at Pier 57 who had smuggled a phone inside. Detainees passed the phone to each other and described the conditions of the holding facility. Democracy Now! producer Mike Burke took the call and spoke with the detained protesters.
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has denied the city was operating what some called “Guantanamo-on-the-Hudson.” And defended the use of the of the pier garage saying “It’s not supposed to be Club Med.”
Last night, a judge ordered protesters who had been held for 24-hours released with desk appearance tickets if they were not charged with serious crimes. Before midnight, some protesters started emerging from 100 Centre St. around the block from our firehouse studio. Some 200 supporters greeted them with cheers and offered food and medical treatment. Despite the judge’s orders, a large number of protesters remain imprisoned.
for NUMBERS TO CALL, to help the prisoners, see this link
Barry just added a comment below, directing us to a short account from 100 Centre Street accompanied by some awesome pictures, again via Daily Kos. Don’t miss it.

outside 100 Central Booking this afternoon
[image at the top is from Yahoo! News, AP photo of Bebete Matthews; second image from theoria, via Daily Kos]
unions reject Bush and RNC

union members on the barricades this afternoon
Thousands of labor union members overwhelmed the “Free Speech Zone” below Madison Square Garden this afternoon, crowding into pens running down to 23rd Street. It was clear they wanted nothing to do with George W. Bush or the Republican Party, even if he and it were the occasion of an extraordinary rally called for the middle of a work week only days before Labor Day itself.
I walked over to see and hear (feel) what it was like. I can share a few images here in this small gallery. They weren’t captured easily however, since in the midst of that great crowd I almost lost it. My eyes repeatedly watered with an emotion I can’t quite account for, unless it has something to do with the long, painful history of labor and its movement, a history always rejected by much of America and now almost completely lost even to many of its fortunate heirs. Bush is restoring our memory.
approaching martial law in Chelsea

just another evening in Chelsea this week
The media has generally been reporting that, except for the immediate blocks abutting Madison Square Garden, the heavy security blanket covering New York in the last week or two rests lightly on the city’s neighborhoods. If asked, residents of Chelsea would describe it otherwise. The words, “martial law” come to mind.
I know it may seem that I’m preoccupied with the police presence in my neighborhood this week, I’d like to think that the current state of Chelsea actually represents New York City as a whole (as is pretty much the case usually) more than most people want to admit, but especially as a really frightening foretaste of what may well be in store permanently for our polity, including that of the entire nation.
For the visuals, see this gallery of half a dozen images taken within the last 24 hours.
fortress on 8th Avenue
It was disturbingly quiet early this afternoon on 8th Avenue. It’s Republican week in New York, and while the broad northbound artery is usually one of the busiest in the city, at least 11 blocks of it are totally closed to vehicle traffic from late last Friday night until midnight this Thursday.
Even pedestrians are unable to go above 30th Street unless they live or work in those blocks and are carrying photo identification. The only solution is a long detour to 9th Avenue on the west or 6th on the east, and then a resumption of the route north.
The avenue belonged to the police. I had only gone out to pick up something for lunch, but I counted 61 officers between 23rd and 24th Streets (even before I saw a few dozen more headed up toward midtown on bicycles). I don’t think one of them managed to look anything but bored. It’s a terrible indictment of an entire class of civil servants, but I don’t believe cities are their thing.
Now I was drawn north, probably by the magnet of the empty street and the site of the temporary cross-avenue pedestrian press bridge visible way up on 33rd Street.
The designated block-long pen of the designated protest area, or “Free Speech Zone,” looked almost empty; inside the total enclosure of the police barricade there were probably less than a hundred Postal Service workers harangueing their Republican targets insulated within Madison Square Garden two blocks north:
It’s probably not a surprise that there are so few protesters in the “approved” area today, since August 31 has been designated a day of non-violent civil disobedience and direct action. That sort of thing doesn’t work very well if the venue is more or less sponsored by the target.
[Note: see links on the previous post to check for news on today’s protests]
“WELCOME.” I turned back at 30th Street, one block below the southern extremity of the Garden. This image shows the increasingly forbidding barricades and walls* found as you go north (if anyone not authorized actually could go north these days):
Past a few virtually empty shops running down from the southwest corner on this deserted avenue and only about eight feet from the metal barricades of the pen shown in the first photograph, I spotted this entrepreneurial tavern owner’s sign, “Happy Hour, 12 – 6.” Somebody wasn’t going to miss a business opportunity even in the midst of this blockade; I hope our publican is able to attract a larger trade during the remainder of the Convention. The suited gentleman with the cigar, perched on a stool in front of the door, was only part of the small crowd bemused by the energy of the people in the blue t-shirts:
* On The Daily Show tonight Rob Corddry referred to the barriers as “concrete liberty hurdles” and Ed Helms later explained, “Not even the appearance of martial law will stop [the Republican delegates].”
who does the War Against Terror protect?
AS I WENT WALKING TODAY
I was hoping for a leisurely stroll to the Greenmarket in Union Square this afternoon, but seconds after I left the front door of the building I realized this wasn’t going to be the usual hunter/gathering experience.
Late this morning the guys returning one of our heavy air conditioners from the repair shop called from their truck to tell us the police weren’t allowing them to stop their van in front of our building. Eventually they found a parking place four blocks away and managed to wheel the unit here on a handtruck.
As I found when I stepped into 23rd Street myself later in the day, what they had described was only part of the story. Dozens of police scooters were lined up on the sidewalk only yards from our front door (only by some weird coincidence, I’m sure, exactly in front of the national headquarters of the Communist Party). Just as I had registered the presence of this unusual sidewalk furniture, with the roar of much larger engines a formation of eight motorcyle cops swept down the street toward 8th Avenue.
Then I noticed for the first time the flashing lights visible on all kinds of stationary or moving police and rescue vehicles, all within sight of where I stood.
The street itself was lined with traffic cones where normally vehicles would be parked on both sides, and the center two lanes were also deliniated by lines of cones. Vehicles were prohibited in that area. Regular traffic, including the large articulated buses, was barely crawling along in a single lane in each direction on what had been designed as a six-lane crosstown thoroughfare.
When I walked down 7th Avenue, where “stopping” was also proscribed for the entire week, according to the posted signs, I saw a number of delivery guys sweating in the heat while they hauled goods by hand or handtruck from wherever they had been able to park their vehicles.
At every single intersection I passed as I headed downtown I spotted between four and six city cops. I feigned naivety and asked one open-faced patrolman the question I knew from experience would not get a real answer: Is there some event going on today? He said no, but volunteered, “this is just a security lock zone.”
Ok.
20th Street, the residential street occupied by the headquarters of the Police Department’s 10th Precinct, the building itself only about the size of two townhouses and hardly the only feature of the block, was closed to traffic altogether. There were checkpoints at either end of the block.
As I started to step across 19th street a large unmarked black Chevrolet rushed by, its siren doing the familiar New York police or ambulance vehicle “pop pop” employed for anything less than an emergency mission.
When I got to Union Square at first I couldn’t see the usual mass of farmers’ trucks and stands, there were so many emergency vehicles ringing the Park. I scolded myself for not checking online to see whether the Monday market had been cancelled for our Republican emergency, but then I realized everything was there as usual inside the ring of “security.” The entire Park area was swarming with police; there were easily more than a hundred in plain sight.
I hurried through my shopping, taking no pleasure in the business, and, anxious to avoid more depressing encounters with armed aliens, made the unusual decision to return home by Subway rather than on foot.
Big mistake. At first I was too bummed out by what I had been seeing in the street to notice the police presence underground. I was also sweating from the heat and humidity and concerned with avoiding what looked like an imminent thunderstorm, But when I transferred from the L at 8th Avenue I was shocked to see police everywhere. Since I had the time while I waited for the E train, I was able to see that there was precisely one cop on the platform for every two cars, and that these guards seemd to be charged with, among other duties, ducking their heads into each car while the doors remained open in the station. The pattern was repeated at the station on 23rd Street, where I was delighted to be able to exit for home.
It’s now late in the evening, six hours after I wrote the paragraphs above. I still haven’t run across any terrorists (at least of the private variety), but I just got off the number 1 train at the 23rd Street station down the block from our apartment and I immediately counted 23 police at the street level of the intersection. When I got home our doorman told me that one of my neighbors had just told him there were 30, so it seems I’m not the only one noticing these pod people spread around the city.
I’m convinced that what we’re seeing is only the beginning. This kind of governmental response to imagined or real civil threats is both cynical and ineffective, the proper application of the adjectives depending on which alarmists and which planners they are attached to, but the thing will feed on itself; in a climate of fear fed by ignorance we’re already seeing that there is no effective way to object to increasing the government’s control over our daily lives and our liberties when it invokes the spectre of terror.
What are they protecting, our security or their own? How much longer do they expect us to believe this is all about our safety and not their power? I’m afraid that in the case of too many of us the answer may be “forever.”
For more on the neighborhood, look to the second half of this post on Bloggy.