March 27, 2003, NYC, 17 days after the beginning of the war in Iraq,


March 27, 2003, NYC, 17 days after the beginning of the war in Iraq, I participated in a mass civil disobedience called a "die-in" in downtown Manhattan. On that morning 215 anti-war activists were arrested after blocking traffic on 5th Avenue near the Rockefeller Center, We were protesting the cooperation between U.S. media and the government

Here's what I blogged at the time:
I hadn't planned on being arrested yesterday but I was arrested anyways. The police calmly arrested 200 people and quickly cleared the street. I spent the next 16 hours in the Tombs (4 hours with plastic handcuffs on) with some of the most dedicated and beautiful kids I've met since Rainbow.

At 4 this morning I staggered out of the Tombs to the dark and deserted streets of Lower Manhattan. Greeting me with hot coffee and donuts was our jail support group, a great group of activists who had stayed up all night in front of the Tombs awaiting our release with cheer. I was given a button to wear that made the whole uncomfortable 16 hour ordeal worthwhile. It said simply, "I Was Arrested For Peace"


Hundreds 'Die-In' At NYC Protest
(CBS) Hundreds of chanting demonstrators lined Manhattan's Fifth Avenue on Thursday, and dozens lay down in the street in a "die-in" to protest the war.

Officers, some in riot gear and on horseback, clamped plastic handcuffs onto about 150 protesters who refused to get up and half-carried them into police vehicles.

Anti-war groups also called for other civil disobedience in the city to protest media and corporate "profiteering from the war."

The "die-in" started just before 8:30 a.m. when protesters knocked over police barricades and lay down on one of the city's busiest avenues, CBS News reports.

As helicopters hovered overhead, the protesters — some beating drums or chanting "Hey-hey, ho-ho, Bush's war has to go!" — jammed police pens near St. Patrick's Cathedral and the Saks Fifth Avenue store.

Organizers of the loose coalition, which calls itself M27, said the "die-in" was intended to symbolize Iraqi war victims. A single lane of Fifth Avenue was reopened to traffic after about a half-hour.

Later, a small group staged a mock funeral march, and some protesters took up a "no business as usual" theme, including a dozen who blocked an entrance to Tiffany's. But most protesters left the area promptly, and there was little disruption around midtown by late morning.

Organizers said the civil disobedience was aimed at getting their message out.

"Nothing else gets attention," said protester Johannah Westmacott. "It's not news when people voice their opinions."

Russ Forster, a filmmaker from Chicago, said, "People are willing to risk life and limb, sitting in the middle of Fifth Avenue. I think that's a pretty strong statement."

The demonstration attracted several counterprotesters, including a man with a red, white and blue bandanna under a hardhat who argued toe-to-toe with a young protester with a pony tail and sideburns.

One counterprotester held a sign that read: "Traitors, have you forgotten Sept. 11?"

"Whether you're for or against it, we need to pull together," said Rachel Harary, 20. "Put on your flag and get them home."

Some protest signs were directed at the media. One protester held a sign showing a picture of parrots and the words, "Don't Parrot the Right-wing Propaganda."

Another, 44-year-old teacher Lee Whiting, held up a sign that said, "Embedded? or In Bed?" Embedded, she said, means "journalists are presenting almost exclusively the military view of this war."

Police and security officers placed a web of barricades at the adjacent Rockefeller Center, home of the GE Building, NBC and The Associated Press, to prevent the protesters from staging their "die-in" there.

On Wednesday, a similar but smaller protest had halted Fifth Avenue traffic for blocks.

The demonstrations are costing the city millions of dollars in police overtime, drawing resources away from crime-fighting and anti-terrorism operations, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said Wednesday.

"This is more than protest, more than free speech," Kelly said. "We're talking about violating the law."

The traffic-blocking technique was used in recent protests in San Francisco, which led to thousands of arrests and complaints that police used excessive force.

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