Today's walkout/protest for students was the most high spirited
and most energized protest I've ever been to. 1500/2000 students
walked out of school today in Portland, to show Oregon and the
world that the student movement does have a voice and a loud one
as well.
At 7:50 AM, several members of students for social justice and I
passed out hundreds of fliers about the protest, as we had been
doing all week. Word was getting around quickly at Wilson high
school, and soon everyone was debating whether or not they were
walking out. In our daily bulletin it read something along the
lines of, "Students will not be excused by walking out, you are
still skipping school, and you will fail any tests missed." A
desperate threat, but not the worst of that day. The majority of
seniors and juniors had previously announced that they had
planned to walk out. Ironically, in English class we were
discussing Malcolm X's radical approach to the movement just
before the walkout. At 10:55 as students were glaring at the
clocks anticipating walking out, the school administration
pulled a daring move. They had conveniently planned a fire drill
five minutes before the walk-out to throw it off. As confused
students spilled out to the court yard, it only worked to our
advantage. Hundreds of students joined hands to form a giant
peace sign, standing in the circle of dirt left from last years
senior prank of making a giant peace sign with flowers. Students
were directed to the bus stops, and many drove, some even walked
downtown. Three buses were crammed full of kids leaving
Hillsdale.
As we arrived to the elephant at North
Park Blocks, over a thousand high school students were already
lining the sidewalks giving peace signs to cars passing by. As
more and more students flooded in, we began doing speeches atop
a trash can. Students talked about the costs of war, and I
mentioned the corporate influence on the war as well as the
growing student movement. We began the march shortly afterwards,
and it seemed as if the police were giving us a break by not
dividing the march every stop sign. Students chanted "No War,"
"Not Our President, Not our War," "Peace Now," and my favorite
"The students united will never be defeated." We convened again
at the South Park blocks where it began to rain. The number of
police grew from about 8 cops to over 25. M cleverly told the
crowd to repeat after him, as we had no sound devices. He
discussed the human casualties of war followed by an influential
chant.
The march was then guided to city hall where the energy of the
crowd heightened. Speeches were made about how money is being
taken away from schools to directly fund the war. We demanded
that all recruiters leave from public high schools, and that
more money should go to fund teachers and education. Some
students scaled a city hall wall and stood up on a side of the
building. The chants got louder and the energy seemed to
escalate even more when Tom Potter came outside. We asked him
"Tom Potter, what are you doing to end the war?" to which he
replied "We support you!" He talked quietly accompanied by his
representatives on a megaphone. He seemed to support what we
were doing but didn't stay to answer what he was doing about
recruiters in our schools.
After many enthusiastic chants, we realized that Wells Fargo was
right next door. Wells Fargo uses money citizens put in their
bank to invest in war profiteering and perpetuating businesses.
We demanded that their administrator come down and explain
himself, but no one ever came down. We remained at Wells Fargo
as M did a speech about the corporations funding the war.
Students began chanting Pioneer Square, and pretty soon the
entire group started marching there. Police tried to divide us
at every single cross street. It began as simply blocking us off
when the light turned red, but pretty soon the police were not
letting us march on the sidewalks altogether. I asked a cop,
"Why are you doing this, you are just trying to incite something
and make arrests, you are being unruly." The police officer just
laughed at me. I said "this is just empowering the students to
take the streets you know." To which he replied "Ha, you can't
take the streets." Five minutes later we were blocking three
lanes of traffic marching down towards Pioneer Square. The
police seemed stunned that we would pull it off. They had weak
strategy, and were poorly organized that day. The crowd began to
explode with cheers. The feeling of power and justice took over
the crowd. We went into the square chanting more anti-war
protest chants. We learned that three people were ticketed for
being in the street and we all pooled together to cover their
ticket.
With the feeling of empowerment still motivating us, we marched
down Yamhill St, arm in arm, blocking traffic. Many media
channels showed up at this point to document us. We walked to
the waterfront where we made a human peace sign for the news
helicopter overhead. Are next destination was PSU, where we
could have an open discussion about uniting the student
movement. As we walked on the sidewalks, M was arrested for
absolutely no reason. A cop had made an attempt to arrest me
sometime earlier for my connection to the protest when I was
simply on the sidewalk as well. Students chanted "Let him go!"
but instead of letting him go, the cops just shoved protesters
with their bikes. An officer was waving around a can of pepper
spray as two other students were arrested. There was no
explanation as to why these students were being arrested, in my
opinion, the police were just sore about being outwitted and
overpowered.
The march ended at PSU, where people read poetry and explained
their opinion of the war. Altogether, it was the most effective,
energized, and downright the best protest I've ever been to! The
student movement is alive and loud in Portland, it's just taken
us four years to organize it.
We will be planning another walk out sometime soon. But in the
meantime, solidarity to you all!
"The spread of evil is the symptom of a
vacuum. whenever evil wins, it is only by default: by the
moral failure of those who evade the fact that there can be
no compromise on basic principles."
Ayn Rand