I’m not the most regular blogger. I really do strive to post daily, it often doesn’t work out. Sometimes my schedule pinched. Other times, health issues get in the way (ever try to write with a toothache?). But then there are times when the news makes me so angry I can’t find civil words that might illuminate instead of inflame. This past week my tooth hurt, but it was really the latter.
As most know by now, the New York City Police organized and conducted a raid to evict the Occupy Wall Street protesters last week. They did it under cover of night using paramilitary tactics. There was excessive and unnecessary violence. I won’t go into that here. You can try one of the literally thousands of YouTube videos about the police brutality. It was an apparent coordinated national effort since 18 other cities conducted similar raids with similar tactics on the same day.
Yale University lecturer John Stoehr has written how the order for the police to clear the Occupy Wall Street crowd from Zucotti Park came from Brookfield Properties, a private company, despite a court order allowing the protesters. For Mayor Bloomberg private property rights trump any kind of public rights, even when the public’s right is backed by a court. Stoehr also observes how Brookfield Properties is also subsidized by the public coffers to the tune of $174.5 million. Apparently those private property rights include the right to the public’s money. It’s no wonder that JP Morgan Chase has felt the need to bribe donate to the Police Department.
The mayor and his police force’s concern with property rights doesn’t extend to everybody. Only the rich, the 1%, are entitled to property rights protection. Ordinary citizens are not. Consider the police department’s treatment of the property of a private library. Many have told the story of the police’s destruction of the Occupy Wall Street movement’s public library, but I’ll let the American Library Association tell it here:
The People’s Library, a library constructed by the New York Occupy Wall Street movement, was seized in the early morning hours of Nov. 15, by the New York Police Department during a planned raid to evict Occupy Wall Street protesters from Zuccotti Park. The library held a collection of more than 5,000 items and provided free access to books, magazines, newspapers and other materials. According to ALA members who visited the site, the library reflected many of ALA’s core intellectual freedom values and best practices—a balanced, cataloged collection, representing diverse points of view, that included children’s books and reference service often provided by professional librarians.
City officials assured library staff that library materials would be safely transported to a sanitation depot, but the majority of the collection is still missing and returned items were damaged, including laptops and other equipment. The likelihood of recovering all library materials is bleak, as witnesses reported that library materials were thrown into dumpsters by police and city sanitation workers.
Longstanding ALA policy states:
“The American Library Association deplores the destruction of libraries, library collections and property, and the disruption of the educational purpose by that act, whether it be done by individuals or groups of individuals and whether it be in the name of honest dissent, the desire to control or limit thought or ideas, or for any other purpose.”
American Library Association (ALA) President Molly Raphael released the following statement regarding the destruction of the People’s Library:
“The dissolution of a library is unacceptable. Libraries serve as the cornerstone of our democracy and must be safeguarded. An informed public constitutes the very foundation of a democracy, and libraries ensure that everyone has free access to information.
“The very existence of the People’s Library demonstrates that libraries are an organic part of all communities. Libraries serve the needs of community members and preserve the record of community history. In the case of the People’s Library, this included irreplaceable records and material related to the occupation movement and the temporary community that it represented.
“We support the librarians and volunteers of the Library Working Group as they re-establish the People’s Library.”
The American Library Association is the oldest and largest library association in the world, with more than 60,000 members. Its mission is to promote the highest quality library and information services and public access to information.
The police and Mayor Bloomberg had no right to destroy these books, magazines, and computers. They had no court orders to do it. They simply did it because they could. Because they can’t tolerate people learning and thinking for themselves. In doing so, Mayor Bloomberg and the entire police force have revealed that none of this is about property rights as conservatives and libertarians like to claim. It’s not about the “rule of law” – they ignored the courts. It’s not about protecting some “liberty” or “Western cultural tradition”. It makes no difference whether the police seize steal private books and destroy them in hiding, or they burn them in public. There’s a long history of governments and police forces that destroy books. None of it is democratic or supportive of freedom. It’s about enforcing special privilege for an elite and for destroying democracy. It is in service to oligarchy, not democracy or liberty.