Berkeley Finds a New Way to Make War Politics Local
Having failed in recent years to impeach President Bush and stop the war in
To that end, the council awarded the group, Code Pink, exclusive use of the parking spot for four hours one afternoon each week, for the next six months, to stage its protests. “If you’re going to join the Marines, you’re going to join the Marines,” said Zanna Joi, an activist with Code Pink, which favors cotton-candy-colored garb and in-your-face tactics. “But you don’t have to join the Marines from our town.”
In taking on the Marines, the council also directed the city attorney to investigate legal means of ousting the recruiting station, calling the Marines “uninvited and unwelcome intruders” in this bastion of liberal politics, 1960s free speech and high-minded nonbinding resolutions.
Tom Bates, the city’s mayor and a former Army man himself, said the vote represented his constituents’ longstanding — and frequently vocal — distaste for current military activity.
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One of the nine council members, Gordon Wozniak, opposed the resolution and the parking spot.
“I believe in free speech, and I certainly respect the right of Code Pink to protest,” Mr. Wozniak said. “But I’m also concerned we treat all sides fairly, and I think the Marines recruiters are just doing their job. They’re not evil people.”
Mr. Wozniak, a retired nuclear scientist who opposes the war in
“A lot of the same people who voted for this felt Bush bent the rules,” Mr. Wozniak said, referring to the president’s unfounded claims that
This is hardly the first attempt by
In 2001, the City Council also called for an end to the bombing of
Despite the vote on Tuesday, Mr. Bates said it was not clear if the city could actually force the Marines to move out of town.
“They still have a year and a half on their lease,” he said.
That said, the resolution also calls for the city attorney to look into possible violations of the
Maj. Wes Hayes of the Marine Corps Recruiting Command in
“It’s business as usual,” Major Hayes said.
Inside the
After being open earlier in the day, the front door was locked and the window blinds drawn on Thursday afternoon, at least for a while, as Code Pink protesters chanted happily outside.
Brandon Rousseau, an information technology consultant who works across the street and has a cousin in the Marines, said both sides had a right to go about their business.
“Even if that were a Nazi recruiting station,” Mr. Rousseau said, “they have a right to do that in
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