Friday December 3, 1999

  • Mark Engler

    Mark Engler, a writer based in New York City, is a senior analyst with
    Foreign Policy In Focus and author of How to Rule the World: The Coming
    Battle Over the Global Economy (Nation Books, 2008). He can be reached via the Web site http://www.DemocracyUprising.com

    The Impact of the “Battle In Seattle”

    The 1999 protests against the WTO were dramatic enough to inspire a new feature film, but did they actually make a difference?

    by Mark Engler

  • lw

    Date: Tue, 7 Dec 1999 22:53:26 -0500 (EST)
    From: ****
    Subject: Re: The end of the story from Seattle..

    Warning -- this is possibly the longest email I have ever written.

    I've been in Seattle since Friday before the big day, leaving tonight... Here are some more parts of the story. I haven't had much chance to follow the media outside Seattle and I would love to know what came across and what didn't. I'm going to get on the internet and check it all out soon.
    lw

    --

  • pete tridish

    What I Learned At The WTO Protests In Seattle...
    by Pete Tridish,

    A Ruckus I Couldn't Miss:

  • pete tridish

    What I Learned At The WTO Protests In Seattle...
    by Pete Tridish,

    A Ruckus I Couldn't Miss

  • Mark Read

    The Shocking and Awful series is the document of the events that came out of that first Indymedia center. Over 100 Videographers contributed footage, and 30 minutes of programming was produced daily, uplinked to satellite, and rebroadcast by approximately 75 public access stations around the country, as well as on Free Speech TV. You can check out all the programs at deepdishtv.org. Search the catalogue for Showdown in Seattle, and "view program details."

    It was one of the most incredible weeks of my life, in all honestly. It changed me forever.

  • Just Whisper

    Remember the major news themes that began to emerge on around the third day of Seattle events? One was really great. It was focussed on the fact that third-world delegates were breaking ranks with the rest of the WTO and giving press conferences stating that the whole WTO was a sham ... that there was no democracy or transparency in the process. These delegates basically said that the protesters on the streets, and not the trade ministers inside, were right. ... we cheered before going off to do interviews or cover events outside the jail.

  • Mattro

    WTO Day 4: Dark Side Vanquished; Ewoks Victorious

    [published/posted Dec 3, 1999 in Raptorial 'zine]

    FRIDAY (Dec 3):

  • Starhawk

    I went to the WTO protests in Seattle in November, 1999 somewhat reluctantly. I had many commitments at home, my stepdaughter was in town that weekend for Thanksgiving, and I had lots of leftover pie to finish. But I knew some of the organizers, old friends from many years of nonviolent direct action campaigns against nuclear weapons, militarism, and other forms of injustice. And I had a posse of friends coming from up and down the West Coast—many of us veterans of those same campaigns going back to the Diablo Canyon blockade in 1981.

  • Jason Michael Adams

    Over the course of the year leading up to the Seattle WTO Protests in November/December 1999, I was involved in five different groups, each of which had its own founding principles, strategic guidelines and organizational narratives assisting the writing of their respective members into the common story of the unfolding events: mine were the Industrial Workers of the World, Direct Action Network, Workers and Students For a Walkout Network, Seattle Tenant's Union and Seattle Anarchist Response.

  • Jeremy O. Simer

    The WTO History Project, created in 2000 by several programs at the University of Washington, created an archive of materials and personal accounts of the WTO protests. It includes interviews with dozens of organizers and participants in the WTO protests; photographs; audio and video files; and images of planning documents, protest signs, fliers, posters and leaflets. Many of these materials are available online at www.wtohistory.org.

    Below is a more detailed description of the project, taken from the www.wtohistory.org website:

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