Don't Die Wondering: Anonymous
Don't Die Wondering: Anonymous
Anonymous
October 8, 2012
Contents
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1. Breaking the Silence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. October 19th . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3. Spread the Talk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
4. October 22nd : The Management of Revolt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
5. First Eviction of Occupy Atlanta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
6. Second Eviction of Occupy Atlanta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
7. Police Violence is Never an Accident . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
8. November 21st and On: Going it Alone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Fuck the Police: Atlanta’s Cop Problem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
9. Union City aka “Where da gasoline at?” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
10. From Oakland to Atlanta: Fuck the Police . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
11. End of the Active Struggle; Trayvon Martin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Just as quickly as it came… . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Forward? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Timeline of events + overview: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
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Introduction
The winter of 2011–12 saw a number of clashes with the police in Atlanta. Almost
a year later, I’m comfortable enough to sit down to write about them. There were
many other things going on around the country and even right here at home that
made the following events possible, and I couldn’t feasibly account for all of them
here with my limited perspective. The anti-police actions in themselves were not
very significant, if gauged by the limiting discourse of “effective direct action” or
“community organizing.” The cops still murder people, many people still have terrible
ideas of how to respond. They were important, however, because they created a sense
that something was occurring out of the ordinary. The excitement, the hope, and the
anxiety created a whirlwind of emotions felt by dozens of people that evaporated as
our sense of collective rebellion faded into nostalgia.
It’s incredible how quickly things can change. It was less than a year ago but every-
thing is different now. We experienced conflict together in a 7-month long cycle of
active struggle against the police. I was beginning to feel like we were creating a
space in the anarchist scene for people like me. Although we had no experience, and
were making so many mistakes, we had come together to create a force in Atlanta.
Despite how much things have changed, I know that the potential is always there.
Before the assassination of Troy Davis – alleged cop-killer – in September of 2011, ba-
sically nothing occurred. That’s not completely true. There were anti-austerity cam-
paigns at a few universities. There was a solidarity network with a list of wins and all
of the go-to anarchist projects and initiatives. However important all of those things
may be, without the willingness to act-out, no amount of infrastructure, prepara-
tion, organization or consciousness is enough. Revolt itself is a communicable social
reality that draws in people and groups – not the other way around.
Nothing could have consciously created the #Occupy movement, but there are pre-
requisites that must be met before any explosion of activity can occur. To be blunt, if
you don’t have skills or a network of collaborators, it’s unlikely that shit will happen
in your town even if there is ample reason for it to. We can’t create social movements
or prolonged ruptures from thin air – at best we can prepare ourselves and others
for when they occur. But by refusing to wait, we can create the context for the next
big thing.
The cycle of struggle written about in this piece ended between the Union City
smash-up and the Trayvon Martin break away march. Anarchists failed to see that
momentum was not going to grow again after the second eviction of Occupy Atlanta
on November 5th . If the November 21st march, which immediately followed the Oc-
cupy eviction when it was still possible to mobilize with dozens of those people, had
turned into a riot what would have happened in Union City? It’s important to avoid
escalating too quickly to avoid marginalizing ourselves in a growing movement. But
once things begin stagnating, much less shrinking, it can prove to be more strategic
to just go all out, pushing the struggle to its absolute limit, rather than trying to
preserve it forever, which is always just a slow way of dying. This may end what-
ever momentum still exists and piss people off at the time, but if things are ending
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anyway, why not risk it all to set off a potential chain reaction that will either spin
things in a new direction or at least set the bar high for next time.
Because of our lack of experience, the waning participation in the #Occupy move-
ment, and interpersonal conflicts, we were unable to hold open the small space of
revolt that appeared last winter. Our unwillingness to compromise on the discourse
about the police – preferring vengeance to “justice” and attack to “accountability”
– foregrounded our limited successes as well as our relative isolation. Without our
participation in this cycle of struggle, the same Nothing that has plagued this city
for years would have further preserved the popular discourse of victimization that
leaves us so weak. Although we have burned many bridges, anarchists in Atlanta
have carved out a space for ourselves in this city where there was none before. I
know that the relationships built in the winter of 2011–2012, and the actions taken
against the police, can be the preface for years of attack, rebellion, and hopefully
insurrection and revolt for years to come.
I hope that this piece can be helpful for anarchists, anticapitalists, and other would-
be rebels in medium sized cities with almost no radical or combative history. Atlanta
is the 40th populated city in the U.S. with almost 2,000 police and law enforcement
officers. If a few dozen people can make it pop off here, it can happen where you live
too if you get organized.
The secret, as it were, is to really begin.
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As the cops approached, the march twisted up the side of the station toward the mini-police
precinct. Here, two people picked up a steel barricade and used it to block the entrance leading
down toward the trains. More people were joining the march and the energy was high. Several
hoodlums angrily screamed at the nearest officers who looked on at the procession confusedly.
“Cops, Pigs, Murderers!”
Heading north up Peachtree Street, someone kicked a newspaper box into the street. Someone
else started yelling at them for a second, but the march continued.
Eventually, we made it back to Woodruff Park – the site of the occupation – where discussions,
arguments, and excited chatter filled the air.
2. October 19th
Since the 17th , the “fuck the police march” was all that anybody seemed to be talking about. A
march was planned hastily for 2 days later, this time to the Vine City MARTA station – where the
shooting had occurred. The occupation, for all of its shortcomings, provided a space for non-stop
collaboration and scheming. That context cannot be understated. It’s doubtful that any of this
could have happened without the park. Sensing this, there was a collective feeling of urgency.
We weren’t sure how long this energy could hold up – or how long the occupation would last –
so we wanted to make the most out of it. In any case, it is obvious now that you have to strike
while the iron is hot, because you rarely get second-chances.
The night was strangely cold, which resulted in a smaller turnout than the previous march. Still,
40–50 people had rallied up at the corner of the camp to make the lengthy march to the Vine City
station where the shooting occurred. Excitement was high and the energy was contagious. The
small group took over the street with ease and style.
Drums and chants filled the street, along with what had essentially become a mobile dance
party. When we reached the Vine City station, the police were already waiting for us. We cursed
and yelled at them. Without hesitation, they pushed up against us, forcing our small group off of
the plaza and back onto the street.
This back-and-forth went on for some time until someone wearing a mask grabbed the atten-
tion of the officers by promising them that “shit’s gonna go down”. Empowered and excited, but
intimately aware of our limited capacity, we marched back up the street toward the occupation.
Along the way, we stopped for a brief speak-out where several new people expressed a feeling
of confidence and courage. Some of the people who spoke explained that they are beginning to
understand why the police are fucked.
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Murderers” and began chanting into the station. It was lunch time, so the entire plaza and station
was flooded with hundreds of commuters, who looked on happily and gladly accepted leaflets
for the action on the 22nd .
The few agitators dispersed once cops began to amass at the entrance of the station.
In the months to follow, rebels in Atlanta lacked the collective creative capacity to consider
combative and effective means of information distribution, especially in the face of media black-
outs. There is a profound poverty in unnoticed rebellion, and anarchists must continue to find
ways to avoid this to keep ourselves from being marginalized. Although small clashes with the
police can serve to increase our limited capacity – or destroy it completely – it is not possible to
spread insurrectional desires unless others hear about it. We shouldn’t pander to the media, but
propaganda is absolutely necessary for spreading narratives to justify revolt.
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the great things that they do. People in the crowd yelled that they should share the megaphone,
which they did. The first speaker, a young black man, explained that “some shit is gonna happen
if they don’t charge officer Waldo”. Frantically, one of the RCP professionals took the megaphone
back from the kid and urged the crowd that “the October 22nd Coalition does not believe in that
type of thing” – ostensibly referring to the threat of rioting.
The energy was sucked out from everyone and the crowd began to disperse. We had allowed
the managers to regain initiative of the event, thereby limiting the possibility of rebellion.
Anarchist intervention in social movements is a necessary maneuver in the social war, but we
shouldn’t pull any punches. How would the dynamic have shifted if we had come prepared with
agitational leaflets or if we had coordinated plans of our own? It’s often helpful for us to work
alongside other groups, but we should never accept the management – let alone pacification – of
our activity. That being said, we often have to find ways to make decisions with people we don’t
have affinity with either in meeting spaces or in large assemblies, but these decisions should
always play a merely supplementary role for the decisions we make in smaller, intimate, groups
with people we trust and care about.
Anarchists all over the country made mistakes about direct democracy and the general assem-
bly form – a mistake revolutionaries have been making for decades. It could be useful to attend
assemblies, but it is not useful to be governed by them.
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Park all day long. There was music and food and child care alongside workshops and know your
rights trainings. For many people who had met in the park, it was a beautiful thing to be around
each other again – we were all used to seeing each other all day and night, depending on each
other for food, comfort, and entertainment.
By nightfall, it was obvious that the police were once again going to evict us. The park closed
at 11pm but by 10:30pm, police were double-barricading the park and beginning to mass up on
all sides. Falling into old habits, some sought to dominate the form resistance would take. They
insisted that the nonviolent, passive resistance of the previous eviction was the superior way to
fight back, and that we had won the sympathy of thousands because of it.
Regardless, we responded, we had been evicted. It is not good enough to have the passive
support of a million invisible allies if you can’t meet your needs and desires in a material way,
immediately and collectively. If we want to stand alongside others in a meaningful fight against
capitalism, we argued, we would have to illustrate that collective resistance to repression was
happening in the present-tense.
Rather than engage in an endless argument about tactics, we decided to take a more active
stance against the eviction. As opposed to the last time, there were many masks in the crowd on
Nov. 5th . There was no visible black bloc, and no clear plan but we decided that when the cops
began to move in, we would march out of the park and attempt to generalize a conflict outside
of the occupation zone. This “plan” failed miserably.
An active minority began tearing apart the barricades and writing graffiti on nearby surfaces.
The march was going to circle up Auburn Avenue, on the north side of the park, and move toward
the university. This would take us out of the surveillance network that covered the downtown
area. From there, we had no idea what would happen. The march was stopped early when a cop on
a motorcycle sped into the crowd. Some stood with their bodies in front of the cop, blocking the
way through. The pig revved the engine on the motorcycle and ran into several demonstrators,
before being knocked off his bike. As debris was tossed at the officer, dozens of police rushed the
crowd.
Someone wearing a mask, dressed in black, was tackled to the ground and began screaming
for help. Newspaper boxes were dragged into the street, and the crowd pushed their bodies up
against the police, forcing them onto the sidewalk. In response, a massive snatch squad of police
formed, with cops in full riot gear behind them. The snatch squad lunged forward and grabbed
anyone off the street they could reach.
The night ended with about 20 arrests, but not without a fight. Many people were de-arrested
throughout the clash, and the area was covered in anti-police graffiti. The sound of screaming
and grating steel had given way to the sight of blood and a huge wall of armor. The entire mass of
over 200 people wound up kettled on Peachtree and Edgewood Avenue and was slowly allowed
to leave without further arrests.
The lights of the cop cars seemed to paralyze many this night. People marched slowly backward
facing the advancing line of cops, without actually doing anything to get away from them. Several
people booed at the graffiti writers and anyone who screamed at the police. The people who
dragged shit in the street were physically assaulted by other demonstrators. Attempts to lead a
march up a side street failed. Why is this? Why wasn’t a concerted effort made to collectively
decide on a better course of action? We didn’t know it at the time, but this was the last time
hundreds of people would flood the streets to showdown with the police and if there was ever
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going to be an anti-eviction riot, it was going to be right then. It’s important to know when a
movement is ending so that you give it one last swing for the fences.
Our inability to collective develop a fluid plan for intervention completely insured our inability
to incite riots or widespread confrontation with the police. We ran into this problem over and
over and over again.
The ability to rapidly communicate in high-stress situations is a skill that could greatly ad-
vantage rebels going forward. To circulate feelings, plans, information, and materials quickly
through a crowd without attracting too much unwanted attention can help us to spread police
thin while accomplishing other objectives as well. The basic unit for this type of organization
should be the affinity group. Anarchists in Atlanta can greatly increase offensive and defensive
capacity by remembering this.
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faces were new; many occupiers had been hardened and embittered by the last eviction and were
looking for revenge.
From the start, the march rushed toward the police station that sits across from the park and
began banging on the glass windows and doors. The few cops inside stared out at us fearfully
and confused. Howls of laughter and clapping filled the air. Leaflets titled “Fuck the Police: At-
lanta’s Cop Problem” littered down on the crowd from within the march and we quickly moved
up Peachtree toward the Five Points MARTA station. This time the cops had headed us off. More
leaflets were strewn around and tossed in the faces of the officers. With black flags blowing in
the wind and angry screams bouncing off of the empty city walls, we continued up Peachtree.
At the Suntrust plaza, a few people mounted the big statue out front – someone even peed into
the fountain. Some people in masks jumped onto the bumper of an Escalade and pumped their
fists into the air. One man, who had earlier been urging the march to stay nonviolent, tossed a
stack of fliers at a cop car and flashed both middle fingers at the officer inside.
A few traffic cones were tossed into the street, but it was obvious that people still weren’t quite
prepared, materially or emotionally, to really go on the attack. Later, we would realize that this
was our last chance to really set shit off. We completely lacked the experience to come up with
a plan and the insight to know that this is when it really counted. Had anarchists come to this
march with a general agreement to set it off, with a route in mind, affinity groups could have
potentially made the most of the large, supportive, crowd and the total lack of police presence.
The march ended, after an hour of marching aimlessly, in an empty lot with no arrests, after a
scout reported that riot cops were stationed a few blocks up.
2,000 leaflets were distributed at the beginning of the march, and people were urged to read it,
pass it around, and toss them into the air throughout the march. This leaflet was referenced for
months. The leaflet detailed the particular events surrounding recent cop shootings in the city,
as well as the following polemic:
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month of officer-involved shootings. A rally was planned by the National Action Network who
personally invited some of us to the event – they insisted that they wanted “something to happen.”
Union City is a small suburb south of Atlanta known mostly for car dealerships. The “down-
town” area consists entirely of a few empty store-fronts, a post-office, City Hall, the “Justice
Center” and the city jail. The lawn of the city hall was filled with hundreds of demonstrators,
many from Union City, and many who had traveled down from Atlanta. People were pissed
about the shooting and wanted a response. All night long, speaker-after-speaker shot fiery refer-
ences to Malcolm X and the Black Panther Party. Nearly every speaker ended their speech with
the mantra “by any means necessary.” We couldn’t have been more overjoyed.
Immediately following the rally, a black bloc of about 35 and roughly 40 other demonstrators
began a break-away march behind the same “Cops, Pigs, Murderers” banner from the month
before.
As the march began slowly on the otherwise empty city street, the streets signs were ripped
up out of the grass and dragged into the street. Parking and traffic cones were tossed, and the
local youth laughed and clapped. For many in the march, “downtown” Union City had served
no purpose at all. The familiar sound of a shaking spray paint can perked our ears, and we all
laughed when someone painted a large “NO” over the sign in front of the “Justice Center.”
If people hadn’t known what they were getting into by now, it was undeniable after a few
people tossed a trashcan into the glass doors of the Justice Center. Immediately after the crash,
an officer ran after the vandals. Some people from inside the bloc threw sticks and curses at the
cop who stumbled into the grass and ran back, horrified, into the safety of the jail. A street sign
was tossed loudly at the front of the Justice Center.
Paint markers were passed around and people immediately got to work. The entire strip was
redecorated with graffiti. There were no cops in sight when someone throws a brick through the
front entrance to the city jail or when someone set an American flag on fire after tearing it off of
the post office. Although there would be much debate later about whether or not it’s appropriate
to enter “someone else’s community” to vandalize a city jail, many of us will never forget hearing
the local youth urgently asking us “where the gasoline at⁇”
Although the local would-be vandals/arsonists didn’t have the chance this time, maybe next
time they’ll be the ones who come prepared to throw down. The black bloc was hardly prepared
either. Many looked around anxiously for tools of destruction, forgetting to bring their own. We
are so accustomed to hit-and-run swarming that, in many ways, we lack the skills to make the
most of the moments when there are no police around. This march lasted almost 20 minutes
without any cops showing up. What if every other person had tucked a hammer into their belt
on the way there or even just brought some rocks? At another time, some people who were
in the march overheard someone excitedly recall watching the black bloc attack the jail from
his window inside the facility! Could we have done more to incite the inmates to riot inside?
Although the black bloc distributed markers and leaflets, we should always remember to shoot
for the stars and to come materially prepared to let our musings become reality.
Although the news would paint the night as a series of random acts of violence, this night was,
for many of us, just another event within a months-long conflict with the police. We had been
building the nerves, relationships, and skills for just this type of thing.
The actions in Union City became extreme points of contention within Occupy Atlanta. The
local newspaper, the Atlanta Journal Constitution, ran an article featuring a quote from the media-
identified leader of Occupy Atlanta denouncing the “violence.” The quote blamed the actions on a
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small group of opportunistic, white, male, anarchists. In addition, a local radio host and sometime
participant in Occupy offered a $500 reward for information on the masked demonstrators.
In response anarchists attempted to get Occupy Atlanta to refuse to work with those who
gave information to police or the media. This led to an 8 hour long General Assembly, in which
anarchists continued to try to go through the consensus process of the GA. The night ended in
frustration, and many anarchists ended their participation in Occupy Atlanta.
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abandoned the march. Behind the bloc was a small contingent from Occupy Gwinnett (a suburb
in the metro area) who were mask-less and overjoyed by the intensity of the march.
We hurriedly snaked between the narrowest streets we can find. More debris and barricades
were dragged into the streets which bought us only a little bit of time. One motorcycle cop who
drove around a barricade had his visor spray painted. Some people dragged a mattress into the
street.
We cut through some neighborhoods and worked our way back outside of the downtown
area where there are less cameras, more alleyways, and less overhead visibility for helicopters. It
must have only been 3 or 4 people initially but soon everyone was scattering, running into every
direction. We hopped fences, dove through yards and bushes and crawled into dog houses. Black
clothes littered the streets.
The night ended with 3 arrests for “moving in and out of traffic” – essentially, a jaywalking
charge. The next day we held a successful fundraiser party and were able to bail all of our friends
out in no time. I never imagined that a group so small could invoke such a great police response
so quickly. The cops must have outnumbered the marchers four to one, yet almost everyone got
away.
It’s amazing what you can do with just a few people, but celebratory and playful destruction
is always better than self-serious military clashes. How can we avoid the theater of the “loyal
opposition” who commit themselves to a specialized resistance when nobody else is joining in?
Although there is nothing wrong with commitment, we should be honest about the effects mil-
itancy has on our momentum. Does seriousness increase our capacity or hinder it? Of course,
anarchists shouldn’t limit ourselves to representational politics and populism. We are not simply
committed to fulfilling the desires of “the people” as they already exist, but of creating situations
and worlds where new, currently unimaginable, desires are possible. We are committed to the
destruction of the existing social order. Because this is the case, we have to remember that “the
force of insurrection is social, not military” and to judge our maneuvers accordingly. The night
was an interesting one, but Occupy was over and large turnout for any event has been hard to
come by ever since.
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move it to the Capitol. They hold press conferences announcing that it is happening there and
that it is simply a rally, not a march. They, of course, get to decide who speaks and who doesn’t.
We were unsure of the implications of this until we showed up.
We expecting maybe 1,000 people and were totally shocked to see more like 5,000. I can’t speak
for everyone, but I felt totally unprepared. We showed up together as a black bloc and managed
to catch the attention of the police immediately. While some people seemed to understand our
intentions, others seemed confused. Few in the bloc were prepared to explain ourselves to a
few questioning members of the crowd, but those of us who did seemed to have the sympathy of
those nearby. The leaflet written for the event was never printed. It’s worth mentioning that some
people felt anxious and uncomfortable as a mostly-white bloc at a mostly-black event. White par-
ticipants in the bloc felt like the other attendees must have thought we were white supremacists.
I personally did not experience this sensation and thought that a crowd of thousands would be
able to directly confront a “white supremacist” group with more than just a few awkward glances.
In any case, it’s worth considering the limits of the black bloc as a representational form in the
stage of “extraparliamentary” politics.
The rally dragged on and on. The shooting became nothing more than an abstract jumping-off
point for all of the predictable Democratic Party talking points. They managed to touch on every-
thing from Gun Control to Abortion Rights. They constantly urged the crowd to get registered
so that they could vote. Needless to say, we felt demoralized and many of us left early.
About an hour later, we began receiving frantic phone calls. A few people stayed afterward
and were on a break-away march. They said people seemed down and that we should meet up
with the march.
We shed the black clothing and tied t-shirts around our faces.
When we showed up, the march was wild as fuck. People had returned to the Capitol and were
screaming at the cops and blocking traffic. It was probably only 60 or 70 folks, but they looked
excited to see us when we showed up even though we didn’t really recognize any of them. I
remember exchanging a few nods and some quick hugs with some especially excited people.
“We got ‘dis shit tonight as long as we got each other’s backs,” someone said to me when I
walked up.
“Hell yeah! We fuckin’ got this!” I yelled back and he laughed.
A young woman, no more than five feet tall, stood defiantly in front of a police car popping
her collar and telling them to go fuck themselves. Our participation, as anarchists and “revolu-
tionaries,” was embarrassingly small – no more than a dozen.
We were all laughing. I fucking love this shit. This is the social element that was missing from
the January 28th march. We had confidence and everyone had each other’s back. *(It seems like
people were more likely to join in when we were in plain clothes and masks rather than moving
as a black bloc. This is worth considering: is it worth sacrificing some individual anonymity
if it means more people will participate in street fighting or riots? Might it even be the case
that the larger a crowd is, the less precautions individuals in the crowd need to take to remain
anonymous? How do we account for cameras in this scenario?)
Leisurely, we strolled up the street behind someone chanting “We ready, we ready, we ready
for y’all!” Effortlessly, someone jogged up to a ParkAtlanta meter and smashed the screen with
a black flag nailed to a large wooden dowel. Someone else, without a shirt tied around their face,
kicked a newspaper stand into the street, and several others dragged them into the intersection.
A capitol cop kind of jogged up from behind the march and began chastising us: “Hey you! Pick
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that box up this minute!” People yelled back at him and picked up the pace a little bit. The march
turned a corner and found itself on an empty street with a large number of police cruisers parked
outside a government building. The lone cop following the march quickly turned and ran when
someone jogged up to the nearest squad car and smashed out its front window with a wooden
dowel.
“Ohhhhh‼‼” the crowd all yelled at once. Someone else ran up behind them with a hammer.
They took out the windows of another squad car, and someone after them jumped up onto the
car and stomped in the windshield.
While some people dragged barricades into the streets, others continued smashing the win-
dows out of every police vehicle and luxury car on the street for 2 blocks.
Dozens of people scattered into multiple directions after the 2nd or 3rd cop car and several other
people speed up across the bridge above Underground Atlanta. The whole thing, starting with
the ParkAtlanta meter, must have only lasted 10 minutes, maybe less. Regardless, there were no
police and no arrests. The local Copwatchers were detained for a bit but were subsequently let
go.
There was absolutely no news coverage about the break-away march the next day, or ever,
and this is most likely because the culprits were able to casually walk off into the night. Like
everything else about the last few months, there were no pictures, which is both good and bad.
Hopefully everyone we met that night that we may never see again has a crazy as fuck story
that they will tell everyone they meet. If George Zimmerman gets off, hopefully they remember
what they saw that night. If so, we can only hope they remember the ending: “Everyone got away
with it.”
Forward?
Two months ago, another anti-police march/dance party was attacked by the police. The police
body-slammed people onto the concrete, and cracked a few ribs. The smashed windows of the
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Bank of America remained boarded up for two weeks, reminding us of the screams of our friends.
The next day, a noise demo was interrupted by dozens of cops ready with zip ties. A week later,
a passive march organized by Occupy Atlanta was kettled, and snatch squads arrested two off of
the sidewalk.
In early August, a grand jury in Seattle subpoenaed anarchists from all around the Pacific-
Northwest. Since May Day, street actions all across the country have been met with heavy police
repression. The arrests in Chicago have had consequences for rebels all across the country. The
cameras and hype about Occupy are long gone and the State is using the opportunity to crack
down on existing pockets of antagonism.
Anarchists around the country meaningfully participated in the Occupy movement in a ton of
different ways, some good and some bad. We used the momentum as an opportunity to initiate
a dialogue about power and capitalism, but have we maintained contacts with the people we ran
into last fall? We are less marginal then we have been in a decade, and new networks of rebellion
have popped up in places they hadn’t existed in previously – including here in Atlanta – but are
we effectively capitalizing on this popularity? This summer has seen a profound proliferation of
nocturnal attacks and solidarity actions, and this may be the first time in North America that
so many cities have had consistent black bloc marches. Noise demonstrations have become an
important ritual for anti-prison activists in cities big and small. In short, anarchist culture has
developed in exciting ways. We are thrilled to participate. But is this enough? Are we trapping
ourselves in another self-referential milieu “concerned only with its sad existence?”
The context has shifted drastically, but have our tactics and strategies? Now that people are
looking for new forms of resistance, it makes sense for us to create new points of entry rather
then turning inward. Furthermore, it makes sense for us to come out with more public and bold
economic disruptions rather than trapping ourselves in a cycle of low-level vandalism. How can
we balance this with the need to meet each other’s emotional and material needs? The police are
cracking down on us everywhere. How can we sustain combative momentum without becoming
more marginalized and disconnected, let alone more specialized and irrelevant? How can we use
instances of repression to our advantage without reinforcing narratives that victimize us? How
can we recreate the tension that existed in the build-up to Occupy so that something else, something
better, can kick off?
Is it possible that anarchists in cities with smaller scenes, like Atlanta, are ineffectively trying
to reproduce the uprisings we have seen in cities like Oakland and Seattle? There must be dozens
of cities across the country with just a few dozen active anarchists. How can we, as medium-
to-large cities, publicly attack power in ways that make us stronger rather than weaker? How
can we avoid the lure of “social justice activism” while retaining contact with others in society
who may want to attack as well? Can we find forms of public resistance to power that are easily
reproducible, combative, and that materially provide for our needs and desires in a lasting way?
We need to find ways to independently circulate information and propaganda in creative, exciting,
and antagonistic ways. We need to begin figuring out how to develop an autonomous material
force.
There are always new obstacles – and sometimes, they feel like impenetrable limits – so we
need to be consistent and honest about our capacity. With that said, we should never forget that
sometimes the entire world is turned upside down by a few profound gestures and risks. In the
summer of 2011 no one was anticipating a North American resistance as large as we’ve seen.
Let’s continue to be critical of ourselves and our shortcomings, but let’s not forget that the State
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follows the contours of our momentum and that where there is crackdown, there is the potential
for more and more exciting ruptures, openings, and revolt.
17
November 5:
Second eviction ends in a clash with police. One demonstrator was run over by a police officer on a
motorcycle, and the crowd subsequently drove the police back onto the sidewalks (some people were
able to land some punches). By and large, radicals were unable to coordinate action in small groups
and were kettled, while several people were snatched off the sidewalk.
November 6:
Another eviction of Occupy Atlanta. Black bloc tears apart barricades and drops a banner reading
“Police Violence is Never an Accident”
November 15:
Anarchists and other radicals march to City Hall with a large banner that reads “Oakland – Wall
Street – Chapel Hill – Atlanta: Our Passion for Freedom is Stronger Than Their Prisons” centered
around a large circle-A.
November 17:
Police in East Point, Atlanta kill 54 year-old Dwight Person in an illegal no-knock warrant. The
family claims that the police officer kicked the door in an immediately opened fire on Person. Real-
izing that it was the wrong house, the police then dragged his limp body onto the porch and allowed
him to bleed to death in front of the family. The warrant was doctored retroactively to fit the address
of the home.
November 21:
Anti-police march on the anniversary of the Kathryn Johnston shooting. Demonstrators express
rage over the recent police killing of Dwight Person in a situation almost identical to the Kathryn
Johnston of a few years ago: a no-knock warrant to the wrong house involving police kicking in the
door with guns blazing. Thousands of leaflets were passed out and tossed into the air titled “Fuck the
Police: Atlanta’s Cop Problem”.
December 9:
Atlanta noise demonstration follows letter-writing party. This was the first noise demo in Atlanta
and was attended, primarily, by black bloc-ers. The two police/guards who showed up were driven
away. Inmates pounded their windows and flicked their lights on and off to the beat of the drums
outside.
December 14:
Ariston “Asteroid” Waiters, a 19 year old father of a 5 month old baby, is gunned down by Union
City police officer Luther “Machine-Gun” Lewis on his way home. Asteroid is shot twice in the back.
Witnesses say he was running from police, but the police claim he was wrestling the officer. Witnesses
were forced to offer testimony in the presence of “Machine-Gun,” who ripped up their statements in
front of them.
December 19:
Dawntrae Ta’Shawn Williams was shot and killed by Gwinnett County Police (Gwinnett County is
a suburb just north-east of the city). Dawntrae was 15 years old, and is said to have been threatening
his family with a machete. If nothing else, this teaches us that if we call the police, there is a chance
someone we love may be killed.
December 25:
Jacquelyn “Jameela” Barnette is shot to death in her apartment by Atlanta police on Christmas
morning. Jameela was the subject of an FBI investigation a few years ago for her involvement in
radical Islam. This is the 5th police murder in 3 months.
December 28:
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Following the murder of a 19 year old in Union City, just south of Atlanta, the NAACP and National
Action Network coordinated a series of protests. AT the end of the rally, local residents and a black
bloc started an anti-police march. The black bloc tore up street signs, smashed out windows, and left
graffiti all around Union City.The Occupy Atlanta camp was divided over this action. An eight-hour
general assembly occurred a few days after the march. Several people insist that they are willing to
snitch to the police if they find out who was responsible. Anarchist participation in Occupy Atlanta
ends.
December 31/New Year’s Eve:
Anti-prison noise demonstration of ~50 people bringsnoise to the Atlanta detention center. Inmates
slam their windows, flash their lights, and make heart-shapes with their hands.
January 7:
The first Atlanta anarchist general assembly meets to announce actions, initiatives, and to report-
back on local anarchist activity. The assembly is not a decision-making body or a formal structure.
Over 60 people attended the assembly, and conversations continue around a large fire for hours.
January 28:
A march titled “From Oakland to Atlanta-Fuck the Police” is called in solidarity with move-in day
in Oakland. Only about 40 people attend, but nearly all are en bloc. The bloc takes the street in a
tight box with reinforced banners on the outside, and marches in the streets for hours trying to avoid
huge amounts of police. Hooded ones still manage to smash out a window, and leave a large circle-a
on the window of a police precinct.
February 12th Pre-Valentine’s Day Noise Demo:
Following the arrest of several demonstrators at a Chase bank, ~30 people gathered at the DeKalb
Co. jail where one final arrestee was being held. Much of the demo was in black bloc, but young
children and older adults were also present. The noise demonstration set off a prolonged disturbance
inside of the jail. General Population in three different buildings flipped over mattresses, jumped on
tables, and chanted “No Justice, No Peace, Fuck the Police!” In an attempt to end the madness, the
jail abruptly let the arrestee out.
February 14th Valentine’s Day Noise Demo
March 12th Chase 14 Noise Demo:
At another Chase action, 14 people were arrested. A rowdy noise demonstration descended on
DeKalb County jail once again. This was the largest noise demonstration during this period, and it
featured a brass section, a spotlight, drums, pots and pans, and a handful of masked demonstrators
with a megaphone. This time, people attempted to kick over some sort of transformer, and someone
else beat it with some stick. Dozens of squad cars filled the streets after the street lights were knocked
out. There were no arrests but demonstrators were told that if they come back, they will be charged
with felony inciting a riot “for what happened last time.”
March 29:
The “Million Hoodie” rally from Trayvon Martin in Atlanta attracted roughly 5,000 people. A
break away march following the rally ended when several squad cars had their windows smashed
out and their windshields stomped in. No arrests.
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The Anarchist Library
Anti-Copyright
Anonymous
Don’t Die Wondering
Atlanta Against the Police Winter 2011–2012
October 8, 2012
thelitost.wordpress.com
theanarchistlibrary.org