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From Staff Reports
Between 40 and 50 people gathered in Pack Square in downtown Asheville early on the frigid evening of Dec. 1 to protest police action in the May 1 arrest of 11 alleged vandals and gentrification of the community.
Some of the rally participants waved banners expressing negative sentiments toward police, including “Police are the absolute enemy” and “We still love the Asheville 11.”
The protesters chanted as they marched to the nearby Buncbome County jail and then over to Prictchard Park.
Focusing on the “criminalization of youth,” gentrification and the Asheville Police Department, the rally was announced via a series of fliers downtown.
Using a megaphone, an unidentified man asked the crowd, “Who is it that murders and imprisons poor people every day?”
“The pigs!” the protesters yelled.
The fliers did not identify a sponsor or spokesperson, but some of the
protesters spoke of the Asheville 11 Defense Committee, a group set up
to defend the alleged vandals, also known as the “Asheville 11.”
The 11 defendants’ next court date is Dec. 6.
In the aftermath, an anonymous posting on a website, anarchistnews.org,
said of the downtown Asheville protest, “The small crowd, fed up with an
abundance of pigs, yuppies, and Obama fans, made the busy Pack Square
echo with irregular drumbeats, foghorns, and chants that taunted nearby
pigs.
“The uniformed officers couldn’t help but nod their heads to the catchy
beats of ‘Smash the banks, burn the prisons!’ ‘Anarchy and communism!’
and ‘Cops! Pigs! Murderers!’
“Meanwhile, various parasites of the media encircled the small group as
they made their way to the county jail, drooling all over themselves in
hope of catching some chaos on film that would guarantee sensational
headlines. But the 50 or so people maintained an intelligent restraint
on their way to the intended location, taking the streets and disrupting
traffic once or twice on the short march.
“Upon arriving at the county jail, the group began making noise. Looking
up at the cells, silhouettes could be seen at the small rectangular
windows and when the crowd got louder, lights began to flick on and off
quickly on various parts of the building, which was met with foghorns
and cheering. This back and forth of noisy disturbance and flickering
lights went on for a few minutes, and although it is unclear if the
prisoners were waving sheets in front of lights, or were able to turn
them on and off, we would like to believe that there was some sort of
communication between their cells and us on the outside.
“Believing in this possibility made the entire crowd beam with delight,
and the debilitating force of repression withered away for just a
moment. The march then continued on to Pritchard Park, with police
tagging along the whole way, shivering and bored. Shop owners could be
seen locking their doors, and curious bystanders took pictures of the
anti-cop banners being held. The short event ended at the park without a
particular climax, aside from a few small and encouraging speeches
against the state that were given before the crown dispersed.
The anarchist posting continued, “While an event such as this lacks the
intensity of conflict that some of us would prefer, its intention was
not to enter into combat with police, but to regroup what our enemies
have torn apart in the last seven months. And with that goal in mind, it
was a triumph for us to be together, warmed by the presence of one
another on a cold night.
“The effects of May Day and the steep charges of the 11, as well as too
many others around the country, have reached far beyond those
individuals’ possible sentences; they have left Asheville and elsewhere
paralyzed with a residue of fear, they have been divisive and imposed
limitations on the way we fight together.
“For the people who have felt the emptiness of life after repression,
this uneventful march acted as a reminder that we are not alone, and we
will not stop fighting,” the anarchist website posting stated.
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