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Our Night At Camp Zuccotti: Dance Parties, Cokeheads, Free Love, And The 99%

Last night, equipped with just a yoga mat and curiosity, we decided to spend the night at Zuccotti Park, where an estimated 500 people were camped out as part of the Occupy Wall Street protest. It was freezing, but the 24-hour McDonald's provided a warm refuge, and the general spirit of peaceful camaraderie made it feel less like Tiananmen Square and a lot more like summer camp. Here's why:

There are Roaming Dance Parties and Group Sing-a-longs:
After the General Assembly (where protesters join together to try and find consensus on their demands) the occupiers lit incense, strummed on guitars, and shared a Kumbaya moment. A drum circle pounded away until 11 p.m., when the occupation's "quiet hours" began. Lights out, punks! Or not.

At 10:46 p.m. last night, it was announced that a "Roaming Dance Party" would commence, although some folks were already headed to sleep.

From 10:53-11:06 p.m., musicians took turns performing for campers, singing totally unexpected protest songs like Buffalo Springfield's "For What It's Worth" and Bobby D's "Like A Rolling Stone". And although camp counselors finally asked them to tone it down in observance of "Quiet Hours," that didn't stop a group of people from holding hands and singing Bob Marley's "Get Up, Stand Up" around 11:45 p.m. Somebody call the Camp Director:

Protesters Sing Bob Marley's "Get Up, Stand Up" at Zuccotti Park from Gothamist on Vimeo.

Camp Staff Helps the 99% Get Cozy:
Camp Zuccotti is fully equipped with makeshift amenities like the Comfort Station, where organizer Tom Pek told us, "We had 40 donated sleeping bags this morning and we're down to two now." The Camp Kitchen was still open at 11:30 p.m., doling out oysters to the hungry. Which is, tres chic for a DIY campsite. And starting at 8 a.m., a well rounded breakfast was offered for protesters to carb-load before their busy day of "mic-checking" and chanting, "We are the 99%!"

Campers are Safe Under the Strong Arm of the Law:
You're always safe at Camp Zuccotti, where the NYPD does impromptu walk-throughs at all hours of the night. At 11:25 p.m., a man was escorted from the site by NYPD after witnesses reported seeing him "doing a line of coke". Others said the man had been harassing women for the duration of his stay at Zuccotti Park and was in no way affiliated with the movement.

NYPD Escorts Alleged Drug User From Zuccotti Park from Gothamist on Vimeo.

The 11:25 p.m. NYPD beat cop walk-through was not enough to satisfy the higher-ups. At 12:06 a.m., the "white shirts" stomped through the park listing their demands of the campers for the evening. On their list of instructions: When videotaping them, "Don't get in my public space, my private space." Don't hang anything on the railings. No open flames. And "no building structures." To which one camper wisecracked, "Can we keep erections?"

"Make Out, Not War" Slogan Makes Camp Zuccotti the New OKCupid
Romances are not forbidden at this co-ed camp, and camp counselors generally seem to approve of couples canoodling atop their yoga mats. In fact, we tried not to stare as a couple transitioned from reading a Pablo Neruda anthology to each other to doing some exhibitionist style heavy-petting. The fifteen minute make-out session was interrupted by a man who kindly asked the couple if he could get his sleeping bag—which they were using as a pseudo-bed—back.

However, intercourse is frowned upon by some at Camp Zuccotti. We're told that couples who've made love connections at demonstrations have been spotted afterward making love, not war on tables throughout the campsite. One demonstrator who has been sleeping at Zuccotti Park since the beginning told us, "People were definitely having sex on the first night of sleeping here. It had to be addressed at the General Assembly meeting the next morning. I haven't seen anyone doing it since."

The 99% are 100% for the Camp Zuccotti Experience:
Brooklyn Law School student, Brendan Gilmartin, braved October's chilly weather last night at Camp Zuccotti for the first time and told us, "Despite the tough conditions, I really felt a sense of camaraderie sleeping amongst so many hundreds of strangers—like that we are all braving it out together, sacrificing our first world comforts to prevent a third world future...

"I found it really surprising how organized the protesters are. They seem to have a cogent structure of decision making to resolve day-to-day issues. They sort of have an internal police force making sure everyone is okay. They even have people sweeping up trash in the park during quiet hours. It's really like a utopian village among the sky scrapers and Wall Street banks. And ironically, the 24-hour McDonald's is awesome for letting people use their bathroom." The other local businesses, not so much.

Another camper, Tasha, who has been staying at the campsite for ten days instead of her East Village apartment, told us, "For the last week a lot of Unions have been joining the marches so [we've] grown tremendously. It's really packed here. We've been having a hard time trying to accommodate all these people. As far as the GA meetings, it's still really hard for people to hear, and they're trying to figure out a solution for that since we can't have loud speakers. But I welcome new people, the more the merrier! We just need to figure out how to accommodate them and I want them to understand the process that goes on in the GA meeting; it's a completely democratic process and when there's that many people involved it's hard for everything to be heard."

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Comments [rss]

  • Guest

    Oh snap! "Can we keep erections?" Tss tsss, dat nigga got dat cop.  Blech.

  • Look liek a bunch of homeless losers lol. get a job you fagggits lol

  • raddcivil

    today iS? ANY OF THIS FREE FOOD GOING TO SHELTERS WITH CHILDREN.???
                                TIME TO GET OFF YOUR WHITENESS....:) !!!

  • AQ

    You don't have to shout, raddcivil. We're right here. It's OK to use your indoor-voice.

  • raddcivil

    THAT WAS my indoor voice now you need to go outside.

  • JacksBack72

    How nice for these 'protesters' to have a cause. . . I guess. . .
    Yes- I too, think the war in Vietnam is wrong!

  • marutwhite

    Hmmm.Spoken like someone who hasn't been down there.

    But yeah, that was quite clever.

  • citylion

    Yeah, I was down there and as I said, it's quite a spectacle and what are your thoughts on the farmers of the farmers' market on that site losing days working there and contributing to that community? Please feel free to inform me of your opinion as you're shucking your own donated oysters for breakfast or lunch. I'm quite informed, have been down there and am not pleased with the mess that I've seen there. 
    I've read plenty on the demographics, the varied demands and it just seems like a shit show and an excuse for some for a day off.
    I'm a college student working his way through school in nyc and this is a farce and an insult against locals from people that have come here from out of the city and have contributed to this in such an unorganized manner. 
    Shame on you for taking up our tax dollars. Whether I'm exempt this year or not you're taking up unnecessary resources regardless of the donations. 
    I invite response and debate to my own response otherwise I see your group as failures as I've seen them already in person.

  • The_Green_Devil

    So what are your feelings about protests in general- are they part of democracy or just a lame fuck-around.   And tell us please your position on the crimes committed by Wall Street that led to the world-wide economic meltdown- should we continue to stick our heads in the sand and not punish the crimes already committed and trust that these same corporations learned their lessons and won't do it again?

  • Protests in general are dumb.  Whining is not how you win.  OWS is especially dumb, b/c the bums and hippies can't even get their thoughts together to protest the same damn thing.  I prefer "the rent is too damn high" party.  At least that has a singular focus.  This occupation may hang its hat on being part of "democracy," but it's not constitutionally protected in its current form.  When Bloomberg has had enough, he will deem OWS a threat to the public and kick everyone from the park.  Zucotti can't overrule him in that circumstance.  That is, if the weather doesn't do it first. When the hospitals turn the OWS crowd away b/c they're full and the people don't have insurance, then you'll see what pain and suffering truly is.  Being fed oysters....jesus christ. 

    I agree that financial reform is necessary, but screaming "this is what democracy looks like" and "banks got bailed out we got sold out" like broken records won't put real money in YOUR pockets.  Hell, even your own finance committee is holding out on you all.    The drummers are already in the throes of revolt.  This whole thing is like the worst reality show of all time. You think the govn't is crooked---I think your damn finance committee is crooked! 

    In other words, leave the City, clean yourselves up, and start at the bottom, working whatever you can, and then work your way  up.  If you can't get a job in your chosen field, take any job you can until things improve or you can create your own job!   

  • nayerr

    Wow. This shit is just getting silly now.

  • Guest

    My roommate wanted to help these guys by purchasing sleeping bags.  I asks which retailer he wanted  ---and his answer was Walmart or Target.   

    I wanted to punch him in the face.

    He's a hypocrite , just like 99% of the people protesting Wall Street.  

  • So they're striving to be the flip side of the shit-covered coin for the Tea Party?

  • Joe

    Wow, according to posters here they must be 100% purists. God forbid they use the McDonalds bathroom. Under that logic the Union should have fought naked during the Civil War since cotton was picked by Southern slaves. 

  • citylion

    It's just kind of ironic and silly since they're using up a greenmarket space and there's plenty of free or voluntary tasteful spaces to use outside of a macdonalds nearby. If you even used some of the money you saved on housing and food you could use a membership to a nearby gym w/ guest passes for showers and facilities. Let's hear what your thoughts are on this.

  • lexluthor666

    Why is this post no longer visible on the front page?

  • raddcivil

    BEEN AWAY THE LAST FEW DAYS....I HEAR ABOUT FREE FOOD , MUSIC,SOME SEX
                 AND GOOD TIMES FOR ALL. Is ANYONE FEEDING THE "HOMELESS"Is
                 SOME Of that FOOD going to shelters WITH children.
       WE ARE ABOUT US.....NOT SHOWING OFF FOR THEM.....JUST A THOUGHT.    

  • are those H&H Bagels I see there?

  • schmeep

    I was there today, it was very touching. 

  • Colonel_Ingus

    Yes, the "EAT THE RICH" and "HANG THE BANKERS" signs warmed the cockles of my heart.

    Now I have hot cockles.

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