Category
🎥
Short filmTranscript
00:00:00This is Justin Samuels, and this film is The Many Faces of Occupy Wall Street.
00:00:06Many Faces of Occupy Wall Street is a compilation of many of my videos on Occupy,
00:00:11and in this film, I'm showing both positive and negative aspects of Occupy Wall Street.
00:00:17People who were happy with the movement, or say the movement changed in positive ways,
00:00:21and people who had many complaints about the movement,
00:00:24including problems such as rapes or sexual assaults in the camps, or things like that.
00:00:30For more information on these things, you can check out a variety of sources.
00:00:34Early in the fall, when I wrote more positive coverage on Occupy Wall Street,
00:00:39you can check out my articles on op-ed-news.com.
00:00:43You can also check out my e-book, Occupy Wall Street, A Leftist Anarchist's Cult,
00:00:48for the major problems in Occupy Wall Street.
00:00:51That e-book is available for sale on Amazon.com.
00:00:54For more further information on Occupy Wall Street,
00:00:57you can check out a variety of other sources on the web.
00:01:00The Huffington Post, Breitbart.com.
00:01:03Lisa Ranahan, among others, has done excellent work on covering Occupy Wall Street.
00:01:07And you can also check out The Daily Caller, it has some pretty good articles too.
00:01:12For more of these things that are featured on Occupy Wall Street.
00:01:16The sexual assault case that Nan Terry speaks about,
00:01:20that is referenced in the Huffington Post.
00:01:23Basically, I think that Occupy Wall Street had,
00:01:28I've been pretty critical of it recently, but it's had some good effects too.
00:01:33The one good effect that Occupy Wall Street has had is,
00:01:36I think the changes it's had on the media, because
00:01:39for a long time, the major networks in the New York Times were the official sources.
00:01:45And other newspapers too, were the official sources of news.
00:01:49And if they decided not to cover things, they didn't get covered.
00:01:53And Occupy Wall Street changed that,
00:01:57on both the left and on the right throughout the political spectrum.
00:02:00When people wanted to find out what was going on at Occupy Wall Street,
00:02:03they didn't necessarily turn to the big newspapers or to the networks.
00:02:07They found out a lot of interesting information from blogs,
00:02:11from e-books sold on Amazon, from YouTube, from Vimeo, from other sources.
00:02:17And many of these new media outlets have continued to thrive post-Occupy Wall Street,
00:02:22and they still cover things in the activist world, not limited to Occupy Wall Street.
00:02:28So I think that's the most positive change that Occupy Wall Street has had,
00:02:33in terms of it's led people to other media sources, and I think it's great.
00:02:38My biggest criticism of Occupy Wall Street is that I think it's failed its most vulnerable members.
00:02:44It's sort of glorified homelessness, we hate money, we hate money, we hate money,
00:02:48but if you've got no money, the only way to fix your situation is to get money,
00:02:52to get a job, go to school, get an education.
00:02:55These are things that will fix your homelessness.
00:02:57Ultimately, the only things that will fix your homelessness.
00:03:00And Occupy Wall Street, some in Occupy Wall Street, not everybody,
00:03:04were so anti-everything, anti-capitalist, anti-everything,
00:03:08that they basically throw away everything.
00:03:14They consider themselves anarchists, they basically want to throw away all structure and all authority,
00:03:17but if you throw away everything, you even throw away food production,
00:03:21such as agriculture, you throw away food transportation, refrigerators and electricity,
00:03:25you're left with nothing, and unfortunately some people have taken it to the extreme,
00:03:29and have been in some very unsafe circumstances, basically living homeless,
00:03:35in New York City and other large cities.
00:03:37And that's extremely unfortunate, it doesn't have to be that way.
00:03:40To those people, I just urge them to rejoin the rest of society.
00:03:44But anyway, I really hope you enjoyed this film,
00:03:47and I hope you check out those other sources of information on Occupy Wall Street,
00:03:52including my book, Occupy Wall Street, The Leftist Anarchist Cult.
00:03:56An e-book that gives more favorable coverage to Occupy Wall Street is
00:04:00Every Time I Check My Messages, Somebody Thinks I'm Dead by Daniel Levine.
00:04:06And again, check out Lee Spanahan's work on Breitbart.com.
00:04:11Check out some articles from the Huffington Post.
00:04:13Check out other articles on Occupy Wall Street from Breitbart.
00:04:17Check out Citizen Journalist by Nick Arama, he's done a lot of coverage on Occupy Wall Street.
00:04:22Mandy Nagy again, Breitbart.com has done excellent coverage.
00:04:27Just check out a variety of sources across the political spectrum on Occupy Wall Street,
00:04:31and you'll get a full picture of all the things that went on.
00:04:37...to higher education!
00:04:55Hey, look, if you're really worried about this, you can all come and work for us.
00:05:06My whole paycheck goes to Sally Mae!
00:05:13Thank you for finding your futures a way.
00:05:26I'm running my master's degree.
00:05:28Seeing my master's degree at work, I have an idea.
00:05:32I want to see Occupy and Organize together and have a gut strike!
00:05:47We really need to do this job so we can believe in capitalism.
00:05:57We actually care!
00:06:01We care!
00:06:12Strike! Strike! Strike!
00:06:18It's a celebration! It's a party!
00:06:32It's new production!
00:06:38You're wrong! You're all wrong!
00:06:41You are alone!
00:06:44And it's never going to change!
00:06:47It's never going to change!
00:06:50We are not alone!
00:07:01We are not alone!
00:07:04We are not alone!
00:07:07We are not alone!
00:07:10We are not alone!
00:07:13We are not alone!
00:07:19And today we'll actually start a program by maybe even telling you guys,
00:07:24sharing with you guys what the Panchen Lama means to the Tibetan people,
00:07:27who he is to the Tibetan people,
00:07:30by sharing the poems, the writings, the music,
00:07:35by Tibetans inside Tibet, by Tibetans in exile,
00:07:38who express their love, their devotion to the Panchen Lama,
00:07:43so that you can share a glimpse of what the Panchen Lama means to the Tibetan people,
00:07:49and what he could mean to the world.
00:07:52Hello!
00:08:00Maybe you can share a poem with us.
00:08:13I'm going to read out the lyrics of a song from Sunam Tashi,
00:08:18called Missing the Panchen Lama by Sunam Tashi.
00:08:21Sunam Tashi is a well-known Tibetan singer in Tibet.
00:08:24Here he sings in reverence to the Panchen Lama,
00:08:27and expresses his, as well as the Tibetan people's, devotion and love to the Panchen Lama.
00:08:32You're my root lama.
00:08:36Please return to the land of snows.
00:08:40Your Holiness Panchen Lama,
00:08:43who else could I offer this pure white scar to?
00:08:45Who else could I sing this heartfelt song for?
00:08:48Each drop of my tear.
00:08:50I think and think.
00:08:51I feel really sorry.
00:08:53You're my root.
00:08:56Please return to the land of snows.
00:09:00Your Holiness Panchen Lama,
00:09:02who else could I offer this pure white scar to?
00:09:04Who else could I sing this heartfelt song for?
00:09:07Each drop of my tear.
00:09:09I think and think.
00:09:10I feel really sad.
00:09:12That was an English translation to a song by Sunam Tashi,
00:09:21who is a well-known Tibetan singer, musician inside Tibet,
00:09:25who sang openly about his devotion to the Panchen Lama.
00:09:31Second, I would like to ask Lucy to come share a poem.
00:09:42So Tsering Woser is a Tibetan poet, a writer, and a blogger who lives in Beijing.
00:09:50She writes reports on the situation in Tibet
00:09:53and is a courageous voice amplifying the messages of the Tibetans living in Tibet,
00:10:00despite the constant harassment she receives from the Chinese government.
00:10:05According to Woser, this poem was written one day in October 2005,
00:10:09when she had finished reading The Search for the Panchen Lama by a female British journalist.
00:10:16If time could cover up a lie, is ten years enough?
00:10:23A child matures into a clever youth,
00:10:26but like a parrot mumbles by rote the phrases that will please his masters.
00:10:33The other child, where is he?
00:10:36The scarlet birthmark on his wrist recalls his previous life before,
00:10:42when for ten years he sat trust with tight handcuffs in some Beijing cell no ray of light could reach.
00:10:52What bruises mar him now, the child no one hears from.
00:10:57If there are nine levels to the darkness, at which one are they trapped, he and the other?
00:11:04If there are nine levels to the light, to which do they aspire, he and the other?
00:11:10Perhaps in each phase of darkness and of light, where one is trapped, the other aspires.
00:11:16Kun chok som, the world's turned upside down,
00:11:20that the pain of impermanence of samsara has struck home to the Panchen Lama.
00:11:35For those of you who are just joining us,
00:11:40we are here celebrating the birthday of Tibet's Panchen Lama,
00:11:45Tibet's 11th Panchen Lama, who is a very important religious leader,
00:11:49a spiritual leader of Tibet, who was kidnapped in 1995 when he was a six-year-old boy,
00:11:56and today he is turning 23 years old.
00:11:59This is the 17th birthday he is spending in captivity.
00:12:03This is the 17th birthday he is spending against his will.
00:12:13Can I ask, also what we are doing right now is sharing poems, sharing music,
00:12:18sharing lyrics from songs that Tibetans inside Tibet, as well as Tibetans in exile,
00:12:24have written in expression of their love and devotion to Tibet's Panchen Lama, the stolen child.
00:12:31Can I ask Namgyala to come up and share the lyrics to another song?
00:12:44Hello, everybody. My name is Namgya. Thank you all for joining us.
00:12:49I'm going to read the English translation of this song, Yi Re Kyo, by Kunga.
00:12:57Kunga, a widely popular Tibetan singer, was born on September 3, 1981, in eastern Tibet.
00:13:05Kunga is one of many Tibetan singers, including Yadong and Jamyangki,
00:13:11who have vowed never to sing in favor of the Chinese Communist Party.
00:13:16The following song, Yi Re Kyo, which means Heart Saddened by Kunga,
00:13:22calls for the return of the Dalai Lama to Tibet and sings in reverence to the Dalai Lama, Panchen Lama, and the Karmapa.
00:13:32Kunga refers to the Dalai Lama and the kidnapped Panchen Lama with concealed analogies,
00:13:39the Dalai Lama to the sun and the Panchen Lama to the moon.
00:13:44So here's the translation of the song.
00:13:47Sun sets behind the seven mountains. The white moon gets consumed by the clouds.
00:13:54And the stars have fallen amid rain and clouds. Heart saddens, unable to meet you three.
00:14:02Heart saddens, unable to meet you three.
00:14:06Oh, the sun, the moon, and the stars. The stars have fallen amid rain and clouds.
00:14:12Heart saddens, unable to meet you three. Heart saddens, unable to meet you three.
00:14:20At the center of the planet Earth, come eastern Tibet, echoes the reverent Lama's teaching.
00:14:28Now I'm left alone and unable to hear such teaching.
00:14:33Heart saddens, I'm unable to see my Lama.
00:14:38Heart saddens, I'm unable to see my Lama.
00:14:42Oh, my Lama, now I'm left alone and unable to hear your teaching.
00:14:48Heart saddens, I'm unable to see my Lama. Heart saddens, I'm unable to see my Lama.
00:14:56My dear father and mother, as in hair, close to departure, now your kindness yet to be repaid.
00:15:06My youthful heart saddens, my youthful heart saddens.
00:15:10Oh, father and mother, now your kindness yet to be repaid.
00:15:15My youthful heart saddens, my youthful heart saddens. Thank you.
00:15:20For those of us joining us, we are Tibetans in exile and our supporters here at Union Square
00:15:39to celebrate the 23rd birthday, the 23rd birthday of Tibet's pension Lama.
00:15:45The pension Lama is one of the most important religious leaders of Tibet.
00:15:50Him, the pension Lama, and the Dalai Lama are one of the two most important religious leaders of Tibet.
00:15:56The pension Lama, Gendun Chukyi Nyima, he was six years old when he was recognized as Tibet's pension Lama, the reincarnation.
00:16:06At six years old in 1995, he was abducted by the Chinese government.
00:16:12At six years old, he was the youngest political prisoner.
00:16:16Him and his family were abducted by the Chinese government, and it has been years since anybody has heard anything from him
00:16:25or seen anything about him or known his whereabouts.
00:16:28And the Chinese government refuses to give that information over.
00:16:33Today is his 23rd birthday, 17th birthday in captivity, 17th birthday since his kidnap by the Chinese government.
00:16:48What we are doing here is asking everybody, asking our New York friends, our New York neighbors to join us in calling for his release.
00:17:00Alright, so do you see Occupy as changing things in this country?
00:17:06Yes.
00:17:09Alright, how long have you been in Occupy?
00:17:11Since September 17th.
00:17:16Have you been on a lot of direct actions?
00:17:19Not really.
00:17:20Okay, you just kind of hold down the fort?
00:17:22Yeah.
00:17:23Okay, did you stay in any of the squats?
00:17:25Yeah.
00:17:26How was that?
00:17:27Terrible.
00:17:30I hated it.
00:17:31Wow, is it true that people were like, biting and being raped and all that?
00:17:36Yep.
00:17:37Wow, anybody know?
00:17:38Nope.
00:17:39Okay, but you heard people tell you what happened to them, right?
00:17:43Yeah.
00:17:44And it was pretty bad.
00:17:46Yes, it was.
00:17:49Was it just girls being assaulted or guys too?
00:17:51Both.
00:17:52Both were being assaulted, wow.
00:17:54So it was a very unsafe condition, right?
00:17:58Yeah, basically.
00:17:59But we tried our best.
00:18:01You tried your best.
00:18:02Well, you did what you had to do.
00:18:03Well, I'm glad you're out of it.
00:18:04Are you now sleeping out on Wall Street or somewhere else?
00:18:07I'm sleeping out here on Wall Street.
00:18:09Well, actually, this is Wall Street and Broad Street.
00:18:16On the corner of Broad Street.
00:18:18Broad Street, okay.
00:18:20So, that's good though.
00:18:22I mean, like, everyone is back again.
00:18:24Because in the wintertime it was pretty cold and it seems like a lot of people went away.
00:18:27Yeah.
00:18:28But to me it looks like a lot of people are coming back now that it's warm and now Occupy is in the news again.
00:18:33So, all good, right?
00:18:36Yep, all good.
00:18:38Alright, one last question.
00:18:40Where do you think Occupy will be by the fall?
00:18:43By the fall?
00:18:44Yeah.
00:18:47Hopefully in a mass number that 500,000 people come.
00:18:54Alright.
00:18:56The police don't have enough police for 500,000 people.
00:19:02Yeah, New York City only has 40,000 police, so 500,000 people would be significant.
00:19:06And it would be like, hello, we're marching down here if you like it or not.
00:19:13You are not arresting all of us.
00:19:16That, yes.
00:19:18We'll march down every street, every corner, every alleyway, every inch of the sidewalk we just take up.
00:19:26Okay.
00:19:27And then people will turn around and say, wow, 500,000 people, 40,000 cops, who's going to win this one?
00:19:39And most likely they're going to have to call in the National Guard and assist help from all the neighboring states to spare any police officers that they can.
00:19:53Which, New Jersey doesn't do it because they hate New York City.
00:19:57New York State, the state of New York, won't do it.
00:20:03From Pennsylvania all the way up to Maine, won't even do it.
00:20:08Won't even help New York.
00:20:10Yes.
00:20:11Basically, New York is stuck by itself.
00:20:13New York City's stuck, stranded in the middle of the ocean by itself with no backup.
00:20:19With no backup.
00:20:20So step on the National Guard and then we can have a fair day.
00:20:24Okay.
00:20:25That'll be very interesting to see.
00:20:29So we have to wait and see.
00:20:32You're welcome.
00:20:33This is the infamous Nan Terry in front of Bank of America.
00:20:36How are you doing, Nan?
00:20:37I am blessed.
00:20:39Very busy.
00:20:40Extremely, extremely blessed.
00:20:42Been taking care of business, like always.
00:20:46And keep up, following up with the movement online and also my working groups.
00:20:52I send out people to basically follow up and do what they need to do in my head.
00:20:57Basically while taking care of other things.
00:21:00Okay.
00:21:01Can you tell us more about your working group Strong Women Rules?
00:21:03What do they do?
00:21:04Strong Women Rules working group, we deal with women that got raped when we were at the park.
00:21:10Right now we have several trials that have been taking place with justice for the victims.
00:21:19For those basically that have been victimized by the rapist.
00:21:23We have a couple trials.
00:21:25One of the trials coming up is in May.
00:21:27It's a tiny trial.
00:21:28I'm so excited.
00:21:29I can't wait to see it.
00:21:31We just had another trial just finish.
00:21:33And we're also going to go after David Parker.
00:21:36Dave Parker, who actually raped, besides Lauren, with different care.
00:21:41But other people, also other women who was actually at the park.
00:21:45Okay, that's good.
00:21:46So I'm hoping, I'm sure the courts will do the right thing and convict these men for the crimes they've done.
00:21:51They will.
00:21:52They will, yes.
00:21:54I'm just wondering, Strong Women Rules is doing good work.
00:21:57Why was there such opposition against you and Occupy?
00:22:01Great question.
00:22:03Because I tell the truth.
00:22:05I don't sell my soul to the devil, if you want to call it that way.
00:22:09I'm straight to the point.
00:22:10I don't have time for BS.
00:22:12I can smell a BS from miles away.
00:22:14They couldn't manipulate me.
00:22:16They couldn't brainwash me.
00:22:18And they tried to silence me in any way possible.
00:22:21From bribe me, to silence me, to basically try to destroy my reputation.
00:22:26But in reality, those who really know me, they know exactly what I have done.
00:22:31And they know my work.
00:22:33And no matter what, other people might, who doesn't know me, might not, you know, fully listen to their answers.
00:22:39I would suggest people to actually get to know me, than just go by what they said.
00:22:46I basically did not put up.
00:22:48I saw what was coming.
00:22:49And I've been calling out exactly what was coming.
00:22:52I told people, you know, that sounds fishy.
00:22:54I listened to my inner gods.
00:22:56And my inner gods never, never, never failed me.
00:23:00And whenever there was something like, for example, a spoke concert, that sounds fishy, I would ask questions.
00:23:06If that question was not satisfying to me, I would continue to ask questions.
00:23:09If I had to raise my voice.
00:23:11And several times they tried to basically silence me when I was trying to do that.
00:23:15I would not, you know, remain silent.
00:23:17Because, like I said, I am for the real 99%.
00:23:20Not the fake 99%.
00:23:22But the one, the true 99%.
00:23:24Those people who actually, that are struggling, that are basically can't pay their bills.
00:23:29Or that lost their homes, that lost everything.
00:23:32Because of the economy, because of the greed.
00:23:34I am for those people.
00:23:35Like I have said before, I am for them.
00:23:37I would die for the 99%.
00:23:38I stand with the 99%.
00:23:39And I do sleep among the 99%.
00:23:42Besides helping the victims, the rape victims, we help them provide shelters.
00:23:48We help them bring them back to society.
00:23:51Occupy Wall Street had never, never, ever could do something like that.
00:23:55Because really, those people right now who claim to be occupiers, who occupy Wall Street, they don't care for the 99%.
00:24:02If you want, honestly want the truth, at night time, go to Union Square.
00:24:06Watch them laying down, you know, lay down for themselves.
00:24:10The poor 99%.
00:24:11The homeless.
00:24:12Those people who was part of, actually part of the movement that make them open what it was.
00:24:15Yes.
00:24:16Watch them on the street how they are laying down in a, in a, in a, whatever they are laying down.
00:24:21Cardboard, whatever they use to lay down.
00:24:23If 99% was for the true 99%.
00:24:25One other thing I can say, let's get a building.
00:24:28Accounting refused to do that.
00:24:30Accounting come with all kind of excuses so they can squander their money.
00:24:33They waste their money on stupidity.
00:24:35They're wasting their money on, um, what, what that damn group called, the group that basically saying they're doing action, direct action.
00:24:42Direct action is a joke.
00:24:44Because direct action, all they do is splurge and cause people to go to, go to jail for nothing.
00:24:48One of the, one of the things people do not understand, when you go to jail, you might think, oh, it's nothing, you know, it's a little fine here and there.
00:24:53But down the road, that will come, that could come down and haunt you.
00:24:57You know why?
00:24:58Because if you do decide to start a business or get a job or whatever it is.
00:25:02When they're doing the background, background check.
00:25:05They'll find out about your criminal record.
00:25:06Exactly, exactly.
00:25:07And then, people don't understand, cooperation, big companies nowadays.
00:25:11In order to have a business, you gotta go to the government.
00:25:14So they have to have what they call a tax ID, a business tax ID.
00:25:17So a company will look at that, they will look at the business and they will look at you.
00:25:21They'll pick the next person that don't have a record, that deal with, um, disobedience, civil disobedience.
00:25:26That's true.
00:25:27And the other thing is, depending on what the person got convicted for.
00:25:30If you're a convicted felon, um, a company like a bank, for example, cannot hire you.
00:25:35They're not committed to.
00:25:36Exactly.
00:25:37By the government.
00:25:38Exactly.
00:25:39With the market right now, nowadays, it's really hard and more harder for any felon to get jobs.
00:25:44And if those felons who manage to get jobs, they're either blessed, number one.
00:25:48Or they have to struggle or they have some kind of connection.
00:25:51It's really, really hard.
00:25:52So then people need to really start thinking and start basically let people push them, the anarchists.
00:25:57Those who basically, who have apartments, who have money, who have mom and dad that can take care of them.
00:26:03They need to really look at themselves.
00:26:05Yeah, the movement is wonderful.
00:26:07We have a movement.
00:26:08Great.
00:26:09But when you look at different movements during the years, like in the hippie days, in the 60s, in the 40s.
00:26:15When you got all those movements that was right, that we had.
00:26:17And then what happened?
00:26:18It's dead.
00:26:19It's gone.
00:26:20Going back to living their life.
00:26:21But nowadays, we have the technology.
00:26:23We got more restrictive rules and regulations and laws and stronger government.
00:26:27And that will affect you.
00:26:29I think it's kind of ironic that anarchists, who do have money because they're being supported by their parents,
00:26:34were in such opposition to Occupy doing something for people to get jobs.
00:26:38Because homeless people need money, they need income.
00:26:40They were saying, oh, we don't want people to be wage slaves.
00:26:44But we all need money.
00:26:46You can't go to the grocery store for free.
00:26:48Your clothes, someone had to pay for them.
00:26:52Being able to communicate with people that you love, like your family, your friends.
00:26:55Someone has to pay you a cell phone bill, your internet connection.
00:26:58You don't need money.
00:26:59It's all come down to laziness.
00:27:00They want somebody to take care of them.
00:27:02Why, you know, they're saying, yeah, we're part of the 99%.
00:27:04But, you know, they're not only lazy, but they're hypocrite.
00:27:07Because if you really want to be part of 99%, live like one.
00:27:10I have lived for more than 99%.
00:27:12So have I.
00:27:13So people who know me, they know that I only slept in the churches with them.
00:27:18I helped them.
00:27:19I give them everything they want.
00:27:20I go out of my way to make sure they got what they needed.
00:27:23So those people who are saying that, oh, yeah, you know, I'm an honor key.
00:27:27I got my parents.
00:27:28I'm a trust fund baby.
00:27:30Let's do this.
00:27:31Let's do that.
00:27:32Yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:27:33And, you know, it's hypocrite.
00:27:34It's really hypocrite.
00:27:35You really need to understand how somebody feels walking that person's shoes.
00:27:40That's all I have to say.
00:27:41Okay, good.
00:27:42Well, thank you very much, Nan.
00:27:43And this was a splendid interview.
00:27:46And I'm sure everybody would like to hear your side of the story.
00:27:50It was wonderful.
00:27:51We all enjoyed it.
00:27:52It was a pleasure talking to you.
00:27:53They can follow me on Twitter, StormontWolves1 on Twitter.
00:27:57Or they can send us an e-mail, StormontWolvesWorkingGroup,
00:28:00at either yahoo or gmail.com.
00:28:02All right?
00:28:03Okay, everybody.
00:28:04You know how to contact Nan for more information.
00:28:06And we're out.
00:28:08Live now.
00:28:09What do you think about the move to Union Square?
00:28:11I think it was a good idea at the time.
00:28:14At the time, I thought it was a good idea, and I still think that it was a good idea.
00:28:18And right now, I'm just sorry that there was not more support from the people that control the website.
00:28:24But Union Square does activism, outreach, conversations.
00:28:32We used to do an open mic here all the time.
00:28:35Union Square is a good place to have conversations about all kinds of things.
00:28:39It's a good place to be.
00:28:40Okay.
00:28:41And in terms of any future financing coming in,
00:28:47do you think occupiers are being taken care of?
00:28:49Are things going well in that end?
00:28:51I don't think that occupiers should be taken care of like pets.
00:28:53But I do think that if you're showing video footage of an occupation
00:28:59and you're doing reporting on an occupation, an actual encampment,
00:29:04and then money comes in,
00:29:06if you're taking that money, it's your responsibility to get that money
00:29:09from that occupation that you're letting everybody know about.
00:29:13Okay, so that occupation should be funded towards any money that's being raised.
00:29:17Those people, because they're occupying, obviously deserve the money
00:29:19because they're doing all the work occupying, right?
00:29:21Not so much deserve the money, but it's like, not to use the corporate language,
00:29:25but if money was communication,
00:29:27then the people that are donating are trying to communicate their support,
00:29:31and we're not getting those communications.
00:29:33Even the letters of support that we get, we never got to see them.
00:29:37The actual people that were camped out never got to see letters from anyone in America.
00:29:45I got to see them because I went into a room somewhere,
00:29:48and I looked around, and under a pile of tarps and slogan flyers,
00:29:54I saw some letters.
00:29:56But no one ever handed those out or made copies of those.
00:29:59I don't know if I'm really getting across the idea that's in my head,
00:30:02but the point is that there's a middleman between America and the actual Occupy Wall Street encampment,
00:30:09and those middlemen need to get out of the way.
00:30:11One last question. Do you know who those middlemen are?
00:30:20On my website, there's a video of the first General Assembly at Zuccotti Park.
00:30:27Yes.
00:30:30So, I know the people who think that they created the General Assembly,
00:30:36and I know the people who think that they're the ones that created Occupy Wall Street.
00:30:42And that info is on your website?
00:30:44Well, there's a video of somebody doing it.
00:30:48On the video is the first General Assembly, and I asked the two facilitators,
00:30:54I was like, who are you, who are you affiliated with, and why are you standing up there?
00:31:00And they laughed, like they had some sort of innate authority.
00:31:04And I was like, why didn't you ask for volunteers to facilitate?
00:31:09I can facilitate a meeting, other people can facilitate a meeting.
00:31:12Let's just say that the people that are good at socializing, those guys, the socializing people.
00:31:18The socializing people kind of took over from everybody else.
00:31:21Occupy Wall Street is not anti-capitalist.
00:31:23It's just the anti-capitalists that are so good at socializing together and controlling the message.
00:31:29Oh, so a bunch of anti-capitalists or anarchists, whatever they call themselves, took over from everybody else.
00:31:35Not so much took over, but just created something that looked legitimate.
00:31:39And, you know, the media manipulators, the people that can manipulate the media, the people that can manipulate the message.
00:31:45As usual.
00:31:47The same thing that happens in the macrocosm happens in the microcosm.
00:31:51Okay.
00:31:53Alright, thank you, Sage.
00:31:55No problem.
00:31:57Alright, Zach, how do you think Occupy has helped the country?
00:32:00Or do you think Occupy has done anything for the regular person?
00:32:03I believe Occupy Wall Street has helped bring attention to a lot of corruption within our country.
00:32:11And a lot of problems that we're facing with.
00:32:14That it's shed light on another side of America that's kind of twisted and corrupted.
00:32:20And I think it's helping the country realize that.
00:32:24And helping the world realize that.
00:32:26So they're coming down on our country, asking them to stop messing with us so much.
00:32:32Alright, do you think Occupy has helped you? And if so, how?
00:32:36Occupy has helped me a lot become more self-sufficient on the streets.
00:32:40And surviving within the community.
00:32:45Like the support system.
00:32:47It's like always having people there for you.
00:32:50Like if I don't have an extra pair of socks, where do I go?
00:32:52I go to Occupy Wall Street and somebody has an extra pair of socks.
00:32:56Or if I'm starving, I go to Occupy Wall Street and somebody's got something to put in my stomach.
00:33:02Or if I'm lonely, I go to Occupy Wall Street.
00:33:05There's people here, support systems, friends.
00:33:08So Occupy has been a big support system, not only emotionally but physically.
00:33:12Like physical needs, like food, clothes, etc.
00:33:16Yeah, everything. They've helped me out a lot.
00:33:22I think Occupy Wall Street has turned it into a good thing.
00:33:26Instead of a bad thing, the way the media portrays us.
00:33:29I think the best thing about Occupy Wall Street is, despite whatever problems we may or may not have,
00:33:34the support system is probably really important.
00:33:37And I guess the social network without money.
00:33:41Because normally in a big city like this you have to go out to the restaurant or the bar to spend a lot of money.
00:33:45But Occupyers can socialize with each other for free.
00:33:50Yeah, a lot of people have to spend a lot of money to show off in front of people.
00:33:54And that's the only way they can gain friends or companionship.
00:33:59Because it's lonely when you have all that money and nobody to share it with.
00:34:04And then you have to go out there and impress people and act like something that you're not.
00:34:10Instead of being yourself and just being a natural person.
00:34:13And just enjoying nature, enjoying the greater things in life that money can't buy.
00:34:19Alright, thank you Zach.
00:34:23Hi Felix.
00:34:24Hi.
00:34:26So, has Occupy Wall Street changed your life at all?
00:34:30Well, it has changed my life so much that I couldn't even go back to my old life.
00:34:39Like, there was a professor yesterday saying, I want to go back to my old life, but I can't yet.
00:34:45In my opinion, the way I think of it is, I have changed so much.
00:34:51There's no option for me but to keep doing what I'm doing until things are the way we're hoping to be.
00:35:00Because, more than anything, me myself has changed over these last six months.
00:35:06I improved out of everything I've done.
00:35:12And I did not plan this out in my head.
00:35:18Yes.
00:35:19Okay, and where do you think Occupy will go in the future?
00:35:24Well, not in my reading at all.
00:35:28But, I will tell you that, whatever direction we're taking, which is expanding,
00:35:41we already have two locations in New York.
00:35:43We have here, in inner square, and we have down Wall Street.
00:35:47We're trying to hold on to New York down there too.
00:35:50It seems like we're actually trying to make satellite locations all over the city,
00:35:58so we can actually bring the message out.
00:36:03We're mostly directing now, I guess, toward a social justice aspect.
00:36:10Because, I feel like, not only, I mean, the money is just the root of the problem,
00:36:18but we just have to branch out to so many ways, like housing, and marriage equality,
00:36:28and so many things out there, like healthcare, childcare, education,
00:36:36all these things that need to be improved.
00:36:40And what I see, Occupy, what they're doing is trying to find ways to be self-sustainable,
00:36:49teach all the people to be self-sustainable.
00:36:53And what I see in the future is like, somehow, small co-ops,
00:37:01Occupy is like making working groups as a co-operative to actually teach how to build a community.
00:37:11Yeah, I've heard of Occupy from one of our guys, and there's some other things too.
00:37:16And I've heard from some of the young Occupies, Occupy farms,
00:37:19that Occupy has shown them how to find food, how to find clothes,
00:37:23it shows them how to find resources, they have friends,
00:37:26you don't have to spend a lot of money in the bar just to hang out with your friends,
00:37:29you have your friends that you actually work with at Occupy, or whatever you're working on.
00:37:33So Occupy has been good for a lot of people, myself included,
00:37:38I've been writing a lot more because of Occupy, and interviewing a lot of people because of Occupy,
00:37:43so Occupy certainly has had a lot of good effects.
00:37:47We're all a bunch of controversial people, but that's what it takes.
00:37:52Yes, we are.
00:37:54It's interesting seeing the melting pot in Occupy,
00:37:59how we're coming from all different walks of life, and all spiritual or religious backgrounds,
00:38:08and non-religious or non-spiritual backgrounds,
00:38:12and there are even Capitalists among our midst, which is strange,
00:38:19but they have their own ideas on how to make it work,
00:38:22so we've gone from the Capitalists to the Anarchists all together here,
00:38:26trying to figure out a middle point.
00:38:28And so far, the only thing we have in common, and that we can agree on,
00:38:33is that things are fucked up and bullshit,
00:38:37and that we all want pizza.
00:38:39We all want pizza, yes.
00:38:41Everybody waits until the store is closed, and we all fucking pizza.
00:38:44That's one of the best things about Occupy.
00:38:47The pizza.
00:38:49Yeah, things are fucked up, and we need pizza.
00:38:53Other than that, we are trying to find a middle ground,
00:39:00a safe ground where we can actually work,
00:39:04and I'm pretty happy about the outcomes.
00:39:12We're not sleeping on the sidewalks of Wall Street anymore,
00:39:16but we're still showing presence over there, showing presence in New Square,
00:39:20and as Mayday gets closer,
00:39:25we're projecting that there's going to be more sites in the city
00:39:31where we are going to be able to make a presence,
00:39:34places that we want to target,
00:39:37and I'm not going to mention them right now,
00:39:40but a few places that we are not too much in love with,
00:39:45that we may be able to target,
00:39:47or just places where we are going to be able to gather and just be visible.
00:39:55I feel very hopeful, among all the craziness here,
00:39:59the fights that sometimes we have among each other,
00:40:01I am pretty happy about this happening.
00:40:04And I'm very happy for the move to Union Square,
00:40:06because Union Square already had a lot of protesters,
00:40:08and all types of people already came to Union Square,
00:40:10from students to working people,
00:40:14to people who don't have a place to stay.
00:40:16Union Square already had all types of people,
00:40:18so I think it was a good fit for Occupy,
00:40:20although we do have other locations too, downtown,
00:40:22and I'm sure other locations, like you said, will pop up.
00:40:26It will be interesting to see where Occupy evolves,
00:40:29because in the fall,
00:40:32Occupy in each city was about a central camp in the city,
00:40:35and now it's something that's become more decentralized.
00:40:39Yes, we've always been decentralized.
00:40:42We've always been decentralized, yeah.
00:40:44We always had a central place of meeting during those first two months.
00:40:50That, not having the power really put us haywire,
00:40:58like rocking our heads for a while,
00:41:00but we learned that there's actually power in the decentralization,
00:41:07and it does empower the whole leaderless movement,
00:41:11and we are sure, as long as it's within our guidelines and agreements,
00:41:17we suffocate for people to do autonomous actions,
00:41:20which takes part out here and there once in a while.
00:41:24Well, the one good thing that we did also,
00:41:27the bureaucracy in Occupy, the Spokescouncil and General Assembly,
00:41:30everybody quit that bullshit.
00:41:32A lot of the work is being done by working groups,
00:41:37by people who are doing individual autonomous actions.
00:41:40When people decided to camp downtown,
00:41:42a bunch of people just said, let's go, and they did it.
00:41:45So, I think, in terms of decision-making,
00:41:48Occupy has gotten better in the past year.
00:41:50Well, originally, GA kind of dissolved,
00:41:55and so did Spokescouncil before GA did.
00:41:59Mostly because the people who were running that
00:42:02were not the core Occupiers,
00:42:05but there's some talk about another GA to be sprung out soon,
00:42:09just because apparently they're, since we started Occupy,
00:42:13some kind of a palacao was established by Wall Street.
00:42:18But that one is not going to be released until we actually organize.
00:42:23Now that we have people,
00:42:25we probably think that we can be more on the same page,
00:42:29because we're actually Occupy,
00:42:31and all we want is to have our basic needs met,
00:42:35like food, medical supplies,
00:42:41maybe even a small battery pack to charge our phones, stuff like that.
00:42:46Just, like, not a ridiculous amount of $2,000, $3,000 for an action,
00:42:51and we don't know what money we went for.
00:42:54Because we don't really need that much money for an action, really.
00:42:58We just need people to show up, and let them be rowdy,
00:43:02and do whatever they need to do.
00:43:05And set-up funds aside for just support would be great,
00:43:11like mail funds and just support,
00:43:14but that money that came to that palacao,
00:43:18we would like it to have for basic needs,
00:43:22as soon as we can actually forget about GA.
00:43:27That would not be run by 10 percenters.
00:43:30Okay, you're right.
00:43:31Well, you know, Kitchen can get money directly,
00:43:34because they serve the food.
00:43:35So maybe if somebody were to donate money to Kitchen directly,
00:43:38or donate food even to Kitchen,
00:43:40anybody who wants to donate money to Occupy,
00:43:42or is on the ground, such as yourself,
00:43:44can give food directly, or can give money directly.
00:43:46They can look you guys up.
00:43:48This is Felix Rivera, Petrie.
00:43:50You know, hit him up online to find out how to help,
00:43:53how to give direct donations,
00:43:55or whatever's needed to help him and others keep up a good life.
00:44:01Yeah, I'm in Facebook right now.
00:44:04You've got a Turkish guy inspiring you.
00:44:06Turkish guy inspiring me, yes.
00:44:08So, what brings you to Occupy?
00:44:13Well, it started the movement,
00:44:15and this seems like 10 to 15 years ago,
00:44:18as a kind of a culture jamming thing.
00:44:20And that was something I knew how to do.
00:44:22I know a lot about perception,
00:44:23or I think I know a lot about it.
00:44:25I perceive myself as a knower of perception.
00:44:27And I came here to participate in this major issue,
00:44:31and I can't lie to you,
00:44:35between that time and now,
00:44:37I've been like 50 things,
00:44:40and I don't know why,
00:44:42and I feel kind of like I've lived in a very trashy reality show.
00:44:46Okay.
00:44:49So, you...
00:44:51How do you feel about Occupy's move to Union Square?
00:44:54Good, because I had a connection to Union Square prior to Occupy.
00:44:59Okay.
00:45:00And has Occupy had any influence or change on your life?
00:45:04Has it changed you at all?
00:45:06Yes, it's wrapped me.
00:45:10It's been my ruin.
00:45:12It's been your ruin?
00:45:13Yes.
00:45:14How has it ruined you?
00:45:15I've been here on and off for six months.
00:45:18So, it stopped you from doing other things?
00:45:22It's been important.
00:45:24I mean, this world is about, in a way, different things much of the time.
00:45:30Yeah.
00:45:31And the Greek word philio, I believe it,
00:45:33the kind of friendship has grown on me.
00:45:36Yeah.
00:45:38I would say it's like it's transformed me,
00:45:40a compassionate, decent person.
00:45:42I wasn't that bad to begin with.
00:45:44Okay.
00:45:45But it gave me some opportunities to connect in important ways.
00:45:48So, it's connected you to other people and...
00:45:50Yes, it has.
00:45:51Has it improved your social skills?
00:45:53I think mine are good.
00:45:55Other people don't.
00:45:56That's their problem, but...
00:45:58They hold many of the cards in these matters.
00:46:02No, but the whole thing is, on a number of levels,
00:46:05been important.
00:46:07I mean, there's been a change in discussion,
00:46:10and that's been good.
00:46:12We've had opportunities of such magnitude,
00:46:14it's hard to wreck it.
00:46:16And we've not always, let's say, done stuff with them.
00:46:20And there's a lot more to be said,
00:46:22but I think that's enough for now.
00:46:24Okay, that's good.
00:46:25There may be a part two,
00:46:26because I know the man behind this camera.
00:46:28Okay, good.
00:46:29Well, thank you very much, George.
00:46:32All right, there is a Trayvon Martin March today,
00:46:34and there's one tomorrow.
00:46:37Specifically, what are people doing on this march?
00:46:41Well, the march today was organized by the TWU.
00:46:45And I guess it's to raise awareness.
00:46:48Yes.
00:46:49And in solidarity with other actions happening throughout the country.
00:46:52Yes.
00:46:53And the one tomorrow, which is at 6 o'clock, the rally,
00:46:57and then at 7, the march,
00:46:59is I think that the grand jury is going to convene.
00:47:02Yes.
00:47:03But I heard they're not going to convene.
00:47:05I heard the grand jury is not even going to go through.
00:47:07But they're still having a rally tomorrow here,
00:47:09and a march that's leaving at 7 o'clock.
00:47:11And basically, that's in solidarity with other actions
00:47:14going on throughout the country.
00:47:16And that's also the black community
00:47:18and other disenfranchised communities coming out
00:47:21and speaking out against police brutality,
00:47:24or speaking out against other state-sanctioned brutalities
00:47:29against people of color.
00:47:31Okay.
00:47:32Tomorrow, specifically,
00:47:34the reason why I agree with rallies and marches like this
00:47:38is because it raises awareness about core issues
00:47:41of what's going on in the black community
00:47:43and other minority communities that are disenfranchised.
00:47:47You know, you have systematic discrimination
00:47:49and you have systematic disenfranchisement
00:47:53through brutality.
00:47:56For example, you have stop and frisk,
00:47:59you have other policies that target specifically
00:48:02these disaffected communities.
00:48:04Do you feel that, not that I'm advocating drug use,
00:48:08I'm totally against this,
00:48:09but do you feel that the war of drugs totally,
00:48:12what's the word,
00:48:14has disparate impact on poor people
00:48:16or people in poor communities?
00:48:18Let's say somebody has a small amount of marijuana
00:48:20and they get stopped on that and locked up in jail.
00:48:22Do you think that's...
00:48:24Is that negatively affecting these communities?
00:48:27Yes, I would say it was negatively affecting the community.
00:48:30Even the limited amount of benefit it has on the community,
00:48:35like busting of drug dens,
00:48:37or busting of drug corners.
00:48:40Yes.
00:48:41Yes, that's a very limited benefit.
00:48:45Because at the same time,
00:48:47you're really not addressing the deep problems
00:48:50of why people are using drugs.
00:48:53You're just criminalizing the issue
00:48:55and you're arresting people that have a bag of marijuana,
00:48:57for example.
00:48:59You're clogging up the judicial system
00:49:02and you're messing up these people's records
00:49:05and futures, possibly.
00:49:08Possibly with convictions,
00:49:09they may have a hard time getting a job or going to school, right?
00:49:11Exactly, because that's already hard enough.
00:49:14If you don't have that,
00:49:15so having that is definitely an extra impediment
00:49:20for your advancement in this society.
00:49:22So I guess it's sort of weird,
00:49:24because often when people talk about limited government,
00:49:27you know, the government is too big in this country,
00:49:29blah, blah, blah.
00:49:30We hate the government.
00:49:31It seems ironic that the government would punish people
00:49:34for doing marijuana.
00:49:37I'm not saying become a pothead or become an alcoholic
00:49:39or become a this or become a that,
00:49:41but that seems like...
00:49:43A choice should be left up to you to do that.
00:49:45Yes, it's a contradiction.
00:49:47A lot of so-called Republicans
00:49:49or so-called conservatives,
00:49:51if they pride themselves on limited government,
00:49:53it shows their hypocrisy.
00:49:54Because the only time they want limited government
00:49:56is when the government is actually going in
00:49:58and busting up monopolies
00:49:59or going in and providing poor people with social services
00:50:02like Medicare, SSI, Section 8.
00:50:05However, when the government is trying to regulate
00:50:08what women do with their body as an abortion
00:50:10or when the government is trying to regulate
00:50:12the amount of drug use people use,
00:50:14which is something personal,
00:50:15and at best a sickness,
00:50:17these same people are saying that the government
00:50:20should arrest them, convict them, and harass them.
00:50:24So it shows the contradiction, right?
00:50:26It shows the blatant and inherent contradiction
00:50:28and imposition.
00:50:30And arguably, if you want to make government smaller,
00:50:33if you reformed the drug laws,
00:50:35let's say not locking people up for marijuana, for example,
00:50:38you would have a lot less government spending
00:50:40because I know people talk about they hate taxes.
00:50:42We've all worked.
00:50:44Nobody likes having taxes cut out of your paycheck.
00:50:46So, yeah, somebody commits a serious crime,
00:50:49murder, theft, lock them up.
00:50:51But kids smoking marijuana,
00:50:52arguably, by throwing so many people in jail for that
00:50:56or even prosecuting them,
00:50:57even if they don't go to jail,
00:50:58that's a huge waste of taxpayer money,
00:51:00wouldn't you say?
00:51:01Yeah, I'd say it's a big use,
00:51:03but you have to consider also, too,
00:51:05let's take an example of what's going on here.
00:51:09Zuccotti and what's going on in Union Square
00:51:11with all these police doing overtime.
00:51:13A lot of times, these institutions,
00:51:15they need something to justify funding.
00:51:19And again, preservation,
00:51:20like take the DEA.
00:51:22The DEA and other organizations like that,
00:51:25they want the war on drugs to continue.
00:51:27Why?
00:51:28Because it funds them.
00:51:29It's a career for them.
00:51:31It's the same thing like the war on terror.
00:51:34You want a war on terror
00:51:35because if you own a surveillance camera company,
00:51:40you're going to get that funding from the government.
00:51:42Or if you're a company like, let's say,
00:51:44Dick Cheney's company.
00:51:45What's the company's name?
00:51:49Halliburton.
00:51:50Halliburton.
00:51:51Or KBR.
00:51:52Well, if you have this running on so-called war on drugs,
00:51:55it's good for your coffers, for your pockets.
00:51:58You really don't care about the issue,
00:52:00but you care about what the issue is doing for you.
00:52:03You're like not my brother, not my father,
00:52:06not my cousin, not you, not him, not him, not her, not anybody.
00:52:11Never again should anybody,
00:52:15like my three-year-old mother should never be,
00:52:18or never have a press conference.
00:52:20No one should lose their kids to an unjust system
00:52:23that doesn't want us to be here,
00:52:25but brought up here to explain their worst.
00:52:27If you didn't want to be,
00:52:28you shouldn't have brought up me.
00:52:29You shouldn't have brought up me.
00:52:32The question would be on my back.
00:52:34Now you're telling me this is my grandpa.
00:52:36She made this shit work.
00:52:38So try to choose it's my grandpa.
00:52:41These people are my family.
00:52:43All of you are my family.
00:52:45Every last one of you, black, white,
00:52:47I don't care what the fuck you look like,
00:52:48just use my language.
00:52:49I'm just very upset.
00:52:51And she was right.
00:52:53We can't wait for the council to tell us what to do.
00:52:55We can't wait in calls.
00:52:57Phone calls are not enough.
00:52:58We have to get up and get out here.
00:53:00And I brought us out here to make that a statement.
00:53:02And this is just the beginning.
00:53:04We're going to march.
00:53:05We're going to walk.
00:53:06We're going to hold up our signs, our flags,
00:53:08our middle fingers, our feet, whatever.
00:53:10I don't care what you do.
00:53:11You're just going to walk,
00:53:12and you're going to scream at the top of your lungs
00:53:14every single person you have lost to this system.
00:53:16Every single person that's locked up right now
00:53:18and you know shouldn't be there,
00:53:19you say their name while you walk.
00:53:21I don't care if you cry.
00:53:22I'm crying in front of all of you right now.
00:53:24It means nothing.
00:53:25No one should be in jail
00:53:27for no reason other than if they committed a crime.
00:53:30It's another form of slavery.
00:53:31It is, you're right.
00:53:32It is.
00:53:33So follow us as we march down here
00:53:35towards Washington Square Park.
00:53:37And we're going to hold up our flags,
00:53:39take pictures.
00:53:41And thank you all for coming out to support me.
00:53:43I really do appreciate it.
00:53:58Congratulations, you're now able to walk!
00:54:04We are Trayvon Martin!
00:54:09We are Trayvon Martin!
00:54:13He's our Trayvon Martin!
00:54:16We are Trayvon Martin!
00:54:19We are Trayvon Martin!
00:54:21We are Trayvon Martin!
00:54:25We are Trayvon Martin.
00:54:35We are Trayvon Martin.
00:54:45We are Trayvon Martin.
00:54:55We are Trayvon Martin.
00:55:05We are Trayvon Martin.
00:55:15We are Trayvon Martin.
00:55:25We are Trayvon Martin.
00:55:35We are Trayvon Martin.
00:55:45We are Trayvon Martin.
00:55:55We are Trayvon Martin.
00:56:05We are Trayvon Martin.
00:56:15We are Trayvon Martin.
00:56:25We are Trayvon Martin.
00:56:35We are Trayvon Martin.
00:56:45We are Trayvon Martin.
00:56:55We are Trayvon Martin.
00:57:05We are Trayvon Martin.
00:57:15We are Trayvon Martin.
00:57:25We are Trayvon Martin.
00:57:35We are Trayvon Martin.
00:57:45We are Trayvon Martin.
00:57:55We are Trayvon Martin.
00:58:05We are Trayvon Martin.
00:58:15We are Trayvon Martin.
00:58:25We are Trayvon Martin.
00:58:35We are Trayvon Martin.
00:58:45We are Trayvon Martin.
00:58:55We are Trayvon Martin.
00:59:05We are Trayvon Martin.
00:59:15We are Trayvon Martin.
00:59:25We are Trayvon Martin.
00:59:35We are Trayvon Martin.
00:59:45We are Trayvon Martin.
00:59:55We are Trayvon Martin.
01:00:05We are Trayvon Martin.
01:00:15We are Trayvon Martin.
01:00:25We are Trayvon Martin.
01:00:35We are Trayvon Martin.
01:00:45We are Trayvon Martin.
01:00:55We are Trayvon Martin.
01:01:05We are Trayvon Martin.
01:01:15We are Trayvon Martin.
01:01:25We are Trayvon Martin.
01:01:35We are Trayvon Martin.
01:01:45We are Trayvon Martin.
01:01:55We are Trayvon Martin.
01:02:05We are Trayvon Martin.
01:02:15We are Trayvon Martin.
01:02:25We are Trayvon Martin.
01:02:35We are Trayvon Martin.
01:02:45We are Trayvon Martin.
01:02:55We are Trayvon Martin.
01:03:05We are Trayvon Martin.
01:03:15We are Trayvon Martin.
01:03:25We are Trayvon Martin.
01:03:35We are Trayvon Martin.