By Paul Beston on 8.24.04 @ 12:07AM
New York's "Republican" mayor attempts to buy off troublemakers.
NEW YORK -- If estimates are to be believed, the number of
delegates and party officials in New York for the Republican
convention will be more than outweighed by the population of
demonstrators. Manhattan, which voted 79-15 for Al Gore in 2000,
will still be very much a Democratic city while the Republicans are
visiting. In fact, Manhattan will be more left wing than usual,
because among the protesters will be a good portion of radicals.
The latter include anarchists who have been rather open about their
plans to cause urban mayhem for a police force already taxed by
heightened terror alerts.
According to the New York Sun, an anarchist group
called A-31 has discussed forming blockades and disrupting order
outside the offices of Citigroup, the Carlyle Group, the Rand
Corporation, and Hummer of Manhattan, as well as a meeting of Bank
of America executives at Tavern on the Green. They will try to
crash private parties and otherwise show up "where the Republicans
least expect us. " Another plan described in the New York
Times involves hijacking a Republican delegates' bus by
pasting signs over the windshield to obstruct the driver's vision,
then surrounding the vehicle and getting the driver to abandon it.
Other radicals have refused to rule out attacks on property.
The NYPD has been conducting extensive preparations for the
arrival of troublemakers. Some 10,000 officers have been equipped
with power saws and bolt cutters to separate protesters who may
chain themselves together, perhaps as part of the blockades
described above. As for the bus attack, a police spokesman said
only, "We're prepared to deal with that tactic."
Imagine the reaction in the media, and among Boston government
officials, if groups of conservative protesters had announced their
intention to "disrupt" the business of the city during the
Democratic convention last month. Reasonable citizens might wonder
why the NYPD, working overtime to guard against terrorists, should
have to work so hard to protect the city from American citizens as
well. They might also wonder why those making threats against
locations like the Citigroup building (already targeted by
terrorists) are not brought in for questioning.
Fortunately for the radicals, New York's accommodating Mayor
Bloomberg has come up with a different response: he is giving out
discount buttons for use at local restaurants, stores, and Broadway
shows, to all protesters who promise not to be violent. In
announcing his "Peaceful Protester" program, Bloomberg memorably
said, "It's no fun to protest on an empty stomach." But it seems to
me that foot soldiers for justice and equality should know what
hunger feels like. They need to suffer and build solidarity with
the millions reeling under the tyranny of President Bush.
Instead, radicals stand to get access to many of the same
discounts as convention delegates, and all for abstaining -- or
pledging to abstain -- from violence and vandalism. This must be
the first time a mayor has paid radicals protection money.
It should come as no surprise that Bloomberg's unprecedented
hospitality is being met with scorn. Like all provocateurs, the
radicals interpret accommodation as weakness. "We don't want
discounts, we want our First Amendment rights," said a spokesman
for United for Peace and Justice, the largest of the protest
groups. He was referring to the legal battle between the group and
the city over a permit for a rally in Central Park on August 29th.
The city has balked, saying the estimated number of protesters will
destroy the park's Great Lawn, which was re-seeded a few years ago
at considerable taxpayer expense. The city has offered a large
swath of the West Side Highway for the rally, and has also approved
a separate march up Seventh Avenue past Madison Square Garden,
where the convention is being held.
If the city was any more accommodating, they would have to call
this the Radical National Convention.
Bloomberg's attempt to buy off trouble is reminiscent of the
defeatist attitude New York had about crime and public order before
the arrival of his predecessor, Rudy Giuliani. The city's
demoralized attitude was encapsulated in the hand-written signs
inside many parked cars that read, "No Radio." The authors of these
signs were not only accepting thieves' presence as a fact of life,
they were attempting to bargain with them. Most of the time, their
windows got smashed anyway.
Now Mayor Bloomberg has taken a similar stance toward radicals
openly threatening people and property. Give them a discount at
Starbuck's, send them to The Producers, and pray that they
don't act up. It's the kind of thinking that got New York into
trouble.
If windows do get smashed, New Yorkers may wish Giuliani was in
City Hall again, instead of just speaking from the convention
stage. But then, some of us wish he never left.
topics:
Business, Law