Year-End Occupy Round-Up: API Edition
(Photo by Brian Nguyen/The Aggie, courtesy of boingboing.net)
There are occupations, and then there are preoccupations
with occupations.
Here in New York, a preoccupied, post-occupation holiday
meant a quieter-than-usual General Assembly on Christmas eve, the prelude to a
holiday of charity and prayers at Zuccotti Park (Liberty Square). December 26
was the movement’s rather anticlimactic 100-day anniversary, which for me
called to mind traditional Asian commemorations of births --
this fledgling, too, of uncertain duration.
I am certain, though, that it’s no flash in the pan. Since September
17, small somethings have changed: nights are colder and the tents folded up;
"99%" replaces talk of bootstraps and perfect meritocracy; and
taxation means the rich can pay more. We are post-encampment, unsure of what to
occupy, having control now of only our minds and speech [1].
And so it is that a culture of occupation, an occupying mode
is the crux of it, seeping into our very own Asian America. From protest and
commentary to quarrel, farce, and artistic tribute, Occupy ______ is in some
fashion here to stay.
Here’s a sampling of what it’s looked like so far:
- Hyphen’s
continuing OWS coverage [2] -- of South Asian militancy, Mayor Jean
Quan, college occupations, race on the premises, and more; - College photographer Brian Nguyen captures pepper-spraying [3] at UC
Davis; - Deceased Army soldier and NYC native Danny Chen supported by some [4] at Occupy Wall Street, seemingly unsupported by others [5];
- Folksy Hawaiian guitarist Makana sings occupation [6] for the Obamas (and
APEC); - Filipina activist Yvette Felarco gets “nudged” by cops
at Cal (UC Berkeley), an action described by Steven Colbert as “spearing a small Asian girl in the spleen” [7]; - Ayesha Kazmi explains her refusal to occupy at AmericanPaki [8] -- and Muslim American Hena
Ashraf responds [9] with her own account; - Japanese-American Stephanie Miyashiro is teargassed in
her wheelchair at Occupy Oakland, an irony that doesn't escape Jon Stewart [10]; - Occupy designer Kenji Liu dissects the meaning of names and places [11], from
Frank Ogawa to Oscar Grant; - A Bengali leftist gives us a blow-by-blow [12],
blog by blog, from Occupy Wall Street; - San Francisco Chinese explain [13] their involvement;
- API hip hop ensemble Payroll riffs [14] on East Coast occupy sites;
- Occupy Wall Street helps prevent a Bangladeshi’s deportation [15];
- Sikh American Sonny Singh considers [16] Wall
Street greed; - DIY video [17] profiles APIs at Occupy L.A.;
and - Yale students wonder why [18] APIs don’t
occupy New Haven.
