Crossposted at Approximately 8,000 Words
Today I join Occupy Austin and members of Occupy San Antonio (in its newest incarnation as Occupy Bexar) travel to Addison, Texas with a wide coalition of unions and activist organizations at the Out of the Shadows Rally and March. This protest is a demand for transparency and accountability in the negotiations of the TransPacific Partnership (on Twitter, #TPP, hijacking the hashtag of the ‘Tea Party Patriots”).
This is the latest secret deal being cut by the 1% and world leaders. Over 30 legal professionals begged US Trade Representative Ron Kirk to make the process more transparent:
We write as legal academics from the US and current or potential future Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP) member countries to express our profound concern and disappointment at the lack of public participation, transparency and open government processes in the negotiation of the intellectual property chapter of the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP). We are particularly and specifically concerned that the United States Trade Representative (USTR) took the opportunity of its hosting of the latest round of negotiations in Dallas, Texas, to begin this week, to further restrict public involvement in the negotiations by eliminating the full-day stakeholder forums that have been hosted at other rounds. We call on the USTR and all TPP negotiating countries to reverse course and work instead to expand, rather than contract, the opportunities for public engagement in the formation of the TPP’s intellectual property chapter.
Kirk blew them off. The agreement would be wide-ranging in its influence, affecting environmental law, jobs, and more, but it is the intellectual property and copyright portions which are raising the most ire on the Internet among activists and Anonymous. Like the similar ACTA, they see TPP as another round in the retaliation from the 1% over the defeat of laws like SOPA & PIPA. If they can’t be forced through Congress, it seems they’ll be turned into global mandate instead. Activists are further angered by the obscure choice of meeting location which is seen as another way to avoid scrutiny.
The bus from San Antonio and Austin will arrive in the Dallas suburb this afternoon. where we meet at a park and march on the negotiation site. This event is permitted, but I’ve heard reports from those already on site that police seem nervous; we will see how they react if there are acts of civil disobedience.
Occupy Austin’s livestream will be active around 2pm Central Time (12pm FDL time). I will livetweet throughout the day, and update this blog when I am able.
1:45pm: The rally has swelled to about 300 or more while we went from lunch. Hearing from occupiers, activists and unions as we prepare to march.

5:00pm: I am riding back to Austin after a strange day of action. We marched at about 2pm. The teamsters assigned as parade marshals tried to keep us on the sidewalk, but as usual Occupy Austin were among the first off the sidewalk, leading the others into the streets. By the time police and the marshals reacted, our numbers were too strong and marched in the street until we were past the barricades closing the road around the hotel.

When we reached the hotel, further barricades kept us from the parking lot and hotel property. If we crossed them we were told we would be arrested. Then, 3 older women surged forward past the barricades and the crowd followed. A line of cops, greatly outnumbered, blocked our path.
Though heavy riot gear was present earlier in the week, none was in evidence now. The energy was building & it seemed as if the crowd would be ready any minute now to press the outnumbered police lines. Federal police in dark suits appeared in greater numbers.
Then, strangely, the same women who led us over the barricades turned right around and abruptly led almost the whole crowd away. We had barely been at the hotel for 20 minutes. Soon all that remained were occupiers from Austin, San Antonio, and Dallas along with a few bolder members of the union crowd.
Our numbers were suddenly reduced by hundreds. Police physically forcded us back. Determined to continue anyway we marched around the hotel, repeatedly encroaching on the property and being forced back. Finally we marched at the main entrance, waving signs and disrupting traffic. But we were tired, a little discouraged, and running out of time. Our main organizers were visibly frustrated; one took to his phone to discover the group had all returned to the park & dispersed.
We came back as a group and spent a little time relaxing at a local pub until it was time to board the bus for home.
Thanks for reading my liveblog. I will post a full wrap up of today’s events with more media on Monday.




8 Comments

Recommend, recommend, recommend!!!
Thank you so much, Kit, for participating in this action and for calling FDL attention to it. Of course I am biased but I have been aghast that my native land New Zealand is caught in this spider’s web thanks to its neoliberal leadership that seems to have completely drunk the coolaid on privatization and all the countries involved are now at deep peril.
Jane commented earlier how this huge thing was going to affect the US but it goes both ways and countries like NZ did have in place many stronger laws against predation (make no mistake – this is predatory, folks) including internet safety provisions, which now will have to be taken to unforeseen levels.
All this is proceeding with the utmost secrecy and to my mind is at least as important as the Chicago protests because it is simply one more way to feed the vampire squids we all very much want to go away. Janet Napolitano was even in Wellington hatching security plots the same night Obama was in Kabul – I said then he was deflecting attention and I very much believe that.
And a fourth time – recommend!
Thanks for the good work, Kit.
I think that violent acts, even if righteous, in protesting are counter-productive.
I believe that the police and 1% are hoping there is some outbreak, even if it is mild. That way they can attack and it becomes the righteous action on the news and the protesters are herded into the corner ever more tightly.
Thanks. On the bus many us are describing how important this is, and I can see the Japanese people tweeting heavily against it. Its nice to know we have global support.
You are often right, that the police look for an opportunity to highlight any violence which occurs. Occupy Austin has been formally commited to nonviolence since we began. Of course, we can’t control others behavior or that of provocateurs. This is a kid friendly march in intention so we will see how it goes.
Police Remove Activists from International Trade Party for Staging Fake Award Ceremony
lolol
What a heartening action, Kit. I’m not exactly sure what transparency might help, as Obama and Congress don’t even bother putting fig leafs over their deeds to screw ordinary people. Obama can fool most voters with flowery words over the hideous trade deals that harm the citizens in signatory nations even worse that Americans, if possible, as they ratchet more and more lucre to the 1%.
I wrote about it back in the day, and imo, it’s even worse than Jane Hamsher indicated. And please know that it’s Obama’s deal. Sick stuff.
If the link doesn’t work, I’ll go make a tiny url.
Hope your day’s been good. We Occupied Mancos earlier, and the response was heart-warmingly positive, and it grows weekly.
Thank you for your preliminary account, Kit – I look forward to Monday’s expansion. My first alert on this was at scoop.nz.co – hopefully they will also follow up. This morning I went to google, and indeed the entries are very sparse. However, I did find this account of proceedings inside the hotel, a tradesperson:
http://www.tradereform.org/2012/05/dispatch-from-the-tpp-12th-round-2/
This is an ‘insider’ account, but very interesting I thought.
My wrap up is now live:
http://my.firedoglake.com/kitoconnell/2012/05/14/tpp-secretdeals/
Thanks for that tip, juliania. Very interesting article. I found that photo of the sponsors at the end particularly illuminating.