.::Direct Action for Direct Democracy: Shut Down the Republican National Convention::.

This is the page for information about POG's part in blockading Sector 1 at the 2008 Republican National Convention in Saint Paul. Below is the original call and below that are updates (past and present) and informational events leading up to the event itself. Check back regularly for new updates and informational events.

The Call:

Monday, September 1, will be a day of civil disobedience and direct action to shut down the opening of the Republican National Convention (RNC) in Minneapolis-Saint Paul. Pittsburgh Organizing Group (POG) will join these actions in opposition to a two-party system incapable of meeting basic human needs that is bankrupting and decimating our communities through a culture of war and fear.

The RNC Welcoming Committee (RNC-WC), a Minneapolis-Saint Paul-based group, has been publicly organizing to shut down the RNC through a three-tiered strategy of blockades. Dividing downtown St. Paul into seven sectors, the RNC-WC is asking groups to adopt an intersection or sector. POG has decided to coordinate blockades for Sector 1 and shut down the intersection at 7th and Wall St. We invite you to join us in Sector 1 on that day.

Why Shut Down the RNC?

Many rightfully point out that this convention is a spectacle since the result is already a certainty. This is a coronation, not a decision-making event which outsiders can influence. If we shut it down, they could always meet a week later in a secluded location. However, this is exactly why and what we're protesting.

The current system doesn't survive because of a decision made by a party or politician. It doesn't survive because parties calling themselves "The Republicans" or "The Democrats" say they represent the people. It survives because of corporate control of the means of mass communications that limit the scope of the political discourse. It survives because people give the system "legitimacy" through their participation (with activities such as voting) and refusal to demand more. It survives because it prevents the rise of-and has successfully delegitimized-alternative means of decision-making in the popular imagination. In the end, people have few choices on a limited set of questions that never get at the root of where power rests. This is not enough. Our goal isn't to push a more centrist or even a more liberal candidate. It isn't to strengthen government power in the hopes that can curtail corporate power. Nor is it putting into power a new brand of left-wing elites. Our aspirations are to change the fundamental structures of society to decentralize power and decision-making so all those impacted by a decision have a say in its outcome, to change the economic question from "what is profitable?" to "what is necessary, desirable, and sustainable?" and to expand the concept of liberty and the pursuit of happiness from simply "freedom from" to include "freedom to."

Conventions, elections, and debates are events that promote the false idea that people are freely participating and freely choosing who best represents them. They mask who has power and obscure the reasons why certain people have power. In this way, the RNC and DNC represent the idea that it is legitimate for John McCain and Barack Obama to be the only realistic choices to head a vast hierarchy ruling over the lives of hundreds of millions of people and affecting the lives of billions.

The positive result of shutting down the Republicans' convention, much like shutting down a trade agreement summit, does not primarily reside in the decisions that were delayed or the meeting that couldn't take place. It is in the loss of legitimacy the institution suffers as it becomes controversial and alternatives demonstrate popular support. It breaks a cycle of propaganda that has lulled people into believing "the way things are" is natural, desirable or inevitable. It reaches out to the half of the population that chooses not to participate in electoral politics to say, "There are people searching for something different and we need your voice." It reaches out to the other half that does participate to say, "We know why you vote. We know that who rules us can be life or death within this system. But we also know that our future rests in figuring out how to break out of the trap of accepting bad rulers for fear of getting worse rulers."

The change we can believe in lies in direct, participatory democracy, built on strong social movements that oppose interconnected oppressions and expand individual and collective freedom at the expense of the forces, government and corporate, curtailing it. We believe that in this desire for true freedom and true democracy, we have much in common with the people of Minneapolis and St. Paul and very little in common with the John McCains and Barack Obamas of the world.

POG's Role in the RNC-WC Strategy

Over the past year, the RNC Welcoming Committee has worked with people from all over the country to create a strategy for shutting down the RNC. The result was a three-tiered strategy of blockades, the division of St. Paul into seven sectors and a plan for blockading known as the "3S Strategy" (Swarm, Seize, Stay). With this in mind, the RNC-WC has called for groups to adopt sectors and to block intersections. POG has decided to adopt Sector 1 and organize a congestion blockade at 7th and Wall. As articulated by the RNC-WC, adopting doesn't mean POG is blocking all the intersections in our sector, nor are we assuming responsibility for recruiting and ensuring other groups do so, it simply means we're making ourselves available as a point of contact for groups interested in operating in Sector 1. In this way, we will provide an open avenue for participation, and help disseminate information and coordination.

We will announce a Sector 1 launching point, place and time later this summer. In conjunction with the RNC-WC, we will organize a Sector 1 spokescouncil meeting the weekend before the actions. On Sept. 1 participants will collectively swarm the sector, seize key intersections and hold them for as long as possible.

We hope this call will provide an inclusive way for others to participate in the action and help build the success of the mobilization. We see a public gathering point as important for groups to utilize for their planned actions and it provides an easy way for smaller groups and individuals to plug into the actions. Through clear articulation of our underlying motivations and goals we hope to dialogue with other groups and the general public about why and what we're protesting.

At the 7th and Wall congestion blockade, we will collectively resist any attempts to dislodge the blockade through our numbers and determination. Though we hope to avoid it, participants should understand this action has the risk of arrest and the possibility of police violence. In addition to the normal police arsenal of weapons, the Twin Cities have recently passed new protest laws restricting the rights to assemble. A chart of the new policies is available here.

We are working on how to facilitate an initial gathering point for groups operating in Sector 1 and will post updates on our website. Regardless of assembly restrictions it's important not to let other sectors down. Groups should be prepared for the possible necessity of reaching their intersection alone. Plan accordingly.

To Get Involved with Sector 1 "Direct Action for Direct Democracy."

If your affinity group or organization is interested in publicly endorsing this call, participating in the blockade of 7th and Wall, or blockading another intersection in Sector 1, contact us at rnc@organizepittsburgh.org to coordinate.

As we've already mentioned, not all the information is available yet. We will be releasing another call closer to the action. Check our website at www.organizepittsburgh.org/rnc to keep up with updates and get information on our plans and the situation in Sector 1.

For the official call to action and other info see www.rncwelcomingcommittee.org.


Past Updates and Events

Blockade the RNC: Update #2 from Sector 1
Current Sector Assessment and Call for Participation

Note: This is the second in a series of weekly updates from Sector 1. For our previous update, which included a “how to guide” chalk full of basic information on the mobilization and getting involved please see: www.organizepittsburgh.org/rnc. For our full call to action, and those of fellow sector adopters, see www.nornc.org/sectorcalls.

This week's updates:

Assessing where things are at:

The stage is set, the action framework is in place, and the sectors are almost all claimed. Now is the time for individuals and groups (of all sizes) who know they’ll be taking part in the actions to get in touch. Realistically, we estimate Sector 1’s capacity is currently 20% of what is needed.

Intra-Sector Communication and Decision-Making

Before the actions:

As was mentioned in last week's update, we are working to quickly broaden communication between sector participants as more groups get involved. We want participants to have real “buy-in” with the ability to participate in two-way discussions and decision-making. The actions must be able to succeed with or without any one particular group. Our role as a sector adopter, as articulated by the RNC-WC, means we basically serve as an initial contact to plug groups into the sector framework, linking groups up, and helping to set up sector logistics. We just put in place a way for participating groups to communicate directly and anticipate this will be the last weekly update that is solely a product of POG.

On the streets:

There is now a rough framework for how communications, between groups and with the larger comms network, will work when we’re on the streets. While the actual structure is for participating groups only and some specifics are still being worked out, we can say decisions are being decided with the following principles in mind:

  • Simplicity - No sense complicating things, especially when we want maximum numbers focused on the actions.
  • Redundancy - Understanding that individual groups and intersections may be arrested or go out of contact and that more than one way of communicating will be necessary.
  • Accuracy - Because folks need to know information is reliable if they’re going to act on it.
  • Speed - Because folks need regular updates of what’s happening elsewhere and need to be able to let others know.

Affinity groups that are considering joining Sector 1 should have someone in their group willing to act as a communications person.

What's next:

Over the next few updates we will release more information on an initial meeting point for our sector on September 1, concrete information on two pre-action spokescouncils in the Twin Cities, and tactical considerations.

The RNC is going down.

Feel free to contact us at rnc@organizepittsburgh.org with any Sector 1 questions, concerns, comments, thoughts, plans, schemes that make sense to be discussed over e-mail, or endorsements you might have.

Pittsburgh Organizing Group
Direct Action for Direct Democracy: Shut Down the Republican National Convention
pog@mutualaid.org
www.organizepittsburgh.org/

August 10: Shut Down the RNC! Informational Meet, Greet, and Potluck

Sunday, August 10 at 5:00pm
Thomas Merton Center, 5125 Penn Ave

Come hear about September 1 “Direct Action for Direct Democracy” at one ofthe largest, exciting, and inspiring protests in years

Strike fear into the blackened heart of Capital, and its insidiousretainer, the State—come to a potluck!

Join the Pittsburgh Organizing Group (POG) on August 10th for an evening of good eats and enthralling discussion.

This informational meeting will cover:
The Republican National Convention Welcoming Committee's (RNC-WC) proposed plans to shut down the convention
POG's role in the actions
The wide diversity of ways you can plug in and take part
A Question & Answer session with local organizers
Time afterwards for informal conversations

Bring... Yourself, some food to share, and excitement!

The Framework:
For the last two years, the RNC-WC has been preparing to give the Republicans the unwelcome reception they deserve, one that goes beyond our legitimate opposition to war and their litany of misdeeds and calls into question corporate capitalism and the two-party system itself. These protests strike at the root of the requirements for the true peace and justice we seek: direct democracy, mutual-aid, worker and community control, and true human freedom.

The proposed strategic framework, endorsed by 45 groups from around thecountry, divides the city of St. Paul into seven Sectors, surrounding the Xcel Energy Center, the site of the convention. The strategy is to Swarm, Seize, and Stay, constructing blockades of varying types and tactics at key intersections, throwing the whole media spectacle coronation of McCain into an event where thousands of people are rejecting the whole premise of one ruler holding power over our lives and the fates of millions around the world. For this day of resistance, we have volunteered to coordinate actions within Sector 1, while maintaining a blockade at 7th St. and Wall St.

Pittsburgh Organizing Group
Direct Action for Direct Democracy: Shut Down the Republican National Convention
pog@mutualaid.org
www.organizepittsburgh.org/

Blockade the RNC: Update #1 from Sector 1
"How to" Guide Released

An invitation to help blockade Sector 1 at the RNC

On September 1 thousands of activists will set out in a coordinated effort to shutdown the Republican National Convention. The RNC Welcoming Committee (RNC-WC) has divided downtown St. Paul into seven sectors in which the swarm, seize, stay strategy of blockades will be actualized. Groups are being asked to adopt a sector and/or to adopt a specific intersection in one of the sectors. Pittsburgh Organizing Group has adopted Sector 1 under the theme of "direct action for direct democracy." This means we're taking responsibility to serve as a contact point for information and coordination for the Sector. As a group we will also blockade the intersection at 7th and Wall Streets that day. We are asking you to participate in blockading Sector 1, as the success of the actions will depend on the active and involved participation and coordination of a multitude of groups. This "how to guide" aims to provide information on how individuals and groups (of varying sizes and tactical inclinations) can plug into the organizing and participate. We believe transparency and accountability engenders trust and so we hope, through regular updates and an inclusive organizing process, to maximize turnout and effectiveness. We are hoping the sector will include both publicly and non-publicly announced blockades, all of which will be coordinated and communicating for maximum effectiveness and in a spirit of mutual respect and solidarity.

How individuals, affinity groups, and organizations can participate within Sector 1

Adopt an intersection: This means your group is assuming responsibility for blockading the intersection and coordinating with others in the sector. Your group could have a particular theme and a public call, it could just publicly state its intention, or it could be a non-publicly announced plan. Note: Small groups that feel they have the interest but not the current capacity to take on an entire intersection are highly encouraged to start dialoguing with us about possibilities. We can link up small groups with similar and/or complimentary visions to be in touch with one another. Whether you have an intersection in mind, want to discuss possibilities, or just have general questions of how this would look and what it might entail, we encourage you to get in touch. Join us at 7th and Wall: Small affinity groups that don't feel they have the capacity to blockade an entire intersection are also invited to participate in POG's blockade of 7th and Wall. While POG is organizing the framework for this particular intersection we are aiming for an inclusive organizing process that incorporates other affinity groups. For out of town groups this will likely mean a representative of your group would serve as an information conduit and be more closely integrated into the planning process. Action support and individual participation: If you're an individual who wants to help make sure an intersection holds, taking part in an action's support role would be a great way to plug in. A small blockade with well-organized support is likely to last a lot longer, a lot more comfortably, than a much larger blockade with no support. Sector 1 is looking for medics, scouts, legal observers/people to document events, people willing to ferry around larger amounts of food and water, and people willing to go to blockades under threat or attack to help hold the line. Any individual interested in these types of roles should contact us as we can arrange for you to be paired with the most suitable group/intersection.

What the blockades will look and other issues

Tactics: It is not our role to determine for you what will work best. As a general principle, however, actions should a) be consistent with the announced strategy b) be pragmatic in prioritizing holding the space over other considerations as intersections will depend on other intersections' integrity c) not needlessly endanger or take away the decision-making agency of other intersections that have announced plans. Dress: Don't forget to dress for success. Check the weather and consider what will mesh well with your tactical choices. Multiple layers, light and breathable, protective, etc. Protection from police violence: Is there a risk of police violence? Yes. The steps you take to protect yourself are of course up to you and will likely vary depending on what your plan is. We do strongly recommend that at the least participants come prepared with eye protection (shatter-proof, non-fogging, non foam, swim goggles would do the trick) and something to cover your mouth. Inter-sector communication: A mobilization-wide communication system is in the works. We see this as critical to the success of the actions but also feel we're going to need a way for intersections in Sector 1 to communicate, which is something TBD. Messaging: Your actions on Sept. 1 will speak loudly! Of that there is no doubt. Blockades are notoriously hard to ignore, but who will determine what your actions say? We're not talking here about the perennial question of the efficacy of working with the corporate media so much as we are about urging people to see that an event in which we are looking to seize space opens up possibilities for talking about ourselves and our long term aspirations in ways we're not accustomed to. Untold numbers of people will likely be seeing pictures, videos, interviews, etc, from the ground that show militant actions in progress, so how can seize this moment to reach the disenfranchised? The cynical? The workers scrapping by? The union members looking for more freedom over their lives? How can we show the commonality of our actions with other struggles in our home towns and around the world? Sector 1 was adopted as "direct action for direct democracy" and it is our hope that groups will find a way to incorporate this broad theme somewhere into their messaging.

Intra-sector coordination, before the convergence and in the Twin Cities

As more groups sign on to Sector 1 we will work to quickly broaden communication between participants. On Sept. 1, Sector 1 must be able to actualize and succeed with or without any one group. We see our role therefore as serving as an initial contact to plug groups into the framework, linking groups up, and helping to set up other sector logistics. As more participants arrive in the Twin Cities coordination and discussion will shift to that locale. We are currently looking at facilitating, in conjunction with the RNC-WC, a Sector 1 spokes-council of participating groups on Saturday, August 30 and Sunday, August 31.

What's next:

In the next fews updates we will release more information on an initial meeting point for the sector on September 1, an assessment of where planning for the sector is at, and any additional sector calls. In short we believe in the movement and we believe in you. In these historic times we must rise to the occasion and create something amazing. We encourage you to talk it over with those you work with and get back to us at rnc@organizepittsburgh.org with any questions, concerns, comments, thoughts, plans, schemes that make sense to be discussed over Email or endorsements you might have. For our full call to action see www.organizepittsburgh.org/rnc For more info on the overall RNC organizing see www.nornc.org

Pittsburgh Organizing Group
Direct Action for Direct Democracy: Shut Down the Republican National Convention
pog@mutualaid.org
www.organizepittsburgh.org/