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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Occupy Dallas: Thanks for Your Witness blog from @ericfolkerth

Just a short blog today to publicly thank the folks at Occupy Dallas for organizing a march in support of the Dallas Police, and to offer some brief reflections on it.

As you may have heard, 23 members of Occupy Dallas were arrested Tuesday, in front of a downtown Chase Bank location for blocking customer access to the bank. They were charge with disorderly conduct, and held overnight.

I recognize that not everyone will be supportive of that kind of direct action, and might question that tactic. But one of the long and proud traditions of American civil dissent is non-violent protest that ends in arrest.
As some will recall, I've marched with Occupy Dallas several times now. (A previous reflection here)

Tuesday, I visited the camp for about an hour, just as people were returning from the arrest scene, just to listen to folks and help them process what had happened.

While I was not there at the Chase Bank, by all accounts it was peaceful and non-violent. Those involved accepted the fact that their actions might lead to their arrest, and they spent the night in jail. And as I was leaving the camp to go to my home Tuesday night, some of the Occupy "brothers and sisters" were preparing to walk back over to the Lew Sterrett jail, to sleep outside, holding vigil there, in honor of their colleagues in jail that night.

Occupy Dallas March to Support Police Protesters speak out against budget cuts to police


View more videos at: http://nbcdfw.com.
Occupy Dallas is back in action Thursday, three days after nearly two dozen of its members were arrested. The group blocked the entrance to a Chase bank downtown Monday, so police took them to jail and charged them with criminal trespass.
Thursday at noon, protesters will leave their camp behind City Hall and march to the Dallas police headquarters on Lamar. Despite being arrested by Dallas police, members of Occupy Dallas are showing their support for police, protesting budget cuts to the police department.
"The police men put their lives on the line for us every day and they're getting paid a fifth of what the politicians that sit in office that are corrupt," said protester Jared Schiffner.