Friday, November 18th was unlike any day, or moment in time, I’ve ever experienced. I’d walked into Zuccotti Park the night before, having
traveled in the back of a crowded van for the past three nights with little sleep. My only possessions were a small backpack of meager supplies, forty
dollars, a pair of sandals, and the clothes on my body. Nevertheless, I was excited just to be there. The gathering that morning was the
culmination of the entire movement, a movement for freedom and revolution that had sprung up from nowhere only a few weeks before.
And it promised to be quite a day, for sure. The G-8 leaders were convening for an emergency economic summit at the CapitalTech Tower on Wall St.,
only a few blocks to the southwest. Between us and them stood about three hundred well-outfitted riot police with dogs, tear gas, and orders to keep
protesters away at all costs. Despite the formidable presence of the riot police, our determination was unbreakable. We were going to march down Wall
St., pigs be damned. We would march to the Tower, and our voices would be heard. The battleground was taking shape.
Luckily, the numbers were on our side. Looking about the square, I gazed in awe at the crowd of over ten thousand protesters – some were carrying
signs while others chatted about their reasons for being here or about what might happen when the demonstration approached the police line. Some had
come representing organizations, such as the Rainforest Action Network, the United Federation of Teachers, and the SEIU. Some came only to represent
themselves, as human beings calling for change, for freedom from the chains of economic slavery. Several television and movie celebrities, major ones,
had joined us to support the effort as well. Together, we would march as one.
If only we’d known what was about to happen that morning - I think we would have dropped our signs and run for our lives to fight another day.
Around nine-thirty a.m. the chanting began, lead by Occupy New York organizer Avery Rogers who carried a bullhorn and prompted us to yell slogans such
as “Break the banks!” and “Fire the Fed!”. How incredible it was to be there, in the moment, a part of something real for the first time in my
life. The atmosphere was charged with excitement, but also apprehension. We chanted for at least an hour, and then Avery Rogers handed his bullhorn to
anyone who wanted to speak. One by one, people used it to vent their anger toward the system as Occupy volunteers directed us into formation along the
street.
I suppose the idea was to form a phalanx to break the police line. We began to chant again, this time even louder. A guy named Travis Stonehill from
the Global Poverty Coalition (GPC) introduced himself and began screaming for accountability: accountability from the greedy bankers, the evil
CEO’s, and the corrupt Federal Reserve, his voice echoing among the towering glass buildings that represented the corporate greed we all despised so
much.
Down the street, the riot police were taking up their positions – they must’ve sensed a charge was imminent. Seeing this, we were alarmed, and
grew ever more angry. I remember bottles being thrown toward the line, accompanied by curses of anger and frustration. Avery Rogers called out to us
from the bullhorn pleading for momentary calm, and to clear room for an ambulance to arrive. It was being summoned for Mr. Stonehill who, in a fit of
rage, had gone into some kind of arrhythmia and was having difficulty breathing. Almost no one listened though…anger was surging through the crowd
like a wildfire, and the noise our chants and screams became deafening.
Then it happened…all of a sudden I couldn’t shout anymore. In fact, I couldn’t even breathe. Noticing my difficulty, someone started hitting me
on the back between my shoulder blades. He must’ve thought I was choking, but I wasn’t. I just couldn’t breathe. As I fell to the pavement in
terror, I saw the same thing started happening to the others around me. The screams of rage became cries of terror as protesters, one by one, dropped
to their knees while clutching their throats and gasping for breath. Some ran away, others frantically dialed 911 on their mobile phones before
collapsing helpless onto the pavement like dying fish on a dry dock. Moments later, my own consciousness faded away to blackness.
Continued below
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