Posted on 04/15/2016 9:34:16 AM PDT by pabianice
At approximately 6 p.m. Thursday evening, nearly 100 students and local residents filed out of the Whitmore Administration building at the University of Massachusetts shouting, Aint no power like the power of the people cause the power of the people dont stop. [sic]
The line of students, carrying orange signs denouncing the use of fossil fuels, were met by a crowd of similar size at the end of the ramp leading to the Whitmore Administration building. The crowd echoed the chants and lingered for nearly an hour after the building closed to listen to a series of speakers who denounced UMass President Martin Meehan for his alleged unwillingness to meet the demands of the organization.
The occupation of Whitmore orchestrated by the UMass Fossil Fuel Divestment Campaign (http://divestumass.org/) continued Thursday, the fourth straight day, but did not result in any arrests. Thirty-four total participants of the protest, which is demanding that the UMass Foundation divest all funds from fossil fuel companies, were arrested Tuesday and Wednesday by the UMass Police Department on charges of trespassing.
Varshini Prakash, one of Divests members and a UMass alumna, said that although more people considered being arrested Thursday, the group decided it wasnt necessary. Prakash said the size of the turnout was enough of an indication of the power of the group and that theyve moved beyond the need for arrests to act as a tool to communicate their message.
In a statement to the crowd, Prakash said University officials would rather tear apart the fabric of the UMass community than act on the right side of history. She referred to two Smith College students and one Hampshire college student who were part of the 19 arrested Wednesday and received a no trespassing order that barred them from UMass campus for two years.
Stacey Schmeidel, a spokesperson for Smith College, said the college is not pursuing disciplinary action against its two students. A Hampshire College spokesperson would not comment, citing privacy matters.
Organizers promised to continue the sit-in on Friday morning and encouraged the crowd outside of Whitmore to return as another effort to get their message across to the Board of Trustees.
The University released a statement to Divest UMass organizers Thursday evening, stating it would place the possibility of divestment on the agenda for their next meeting in mid-June, according to the groups organizers.
Kristie Herman, one of Divests organizers, shouted through a megaphone that (A pledge) is not enough. It is not what we want. It has been on the agenda for three years and a pledge is not enough.
At its height, nearly 120 students participated in the sit-in, according to campaign organizer Filipe Carvalho. Students lined the walls of the hallway leading up to Chancellor Kumble Subbaswamys office, some slouched on the floor asleep or sprawled out with computers and books, silently awaiting instruction from the multiple organizers who walked the halls.
Blake Simon, a freshman political science major who described himself as very conservative, walked past the sit-in and expressed opposition to the groups actions.
I think the sit-in gives the impression that theres more student activism than there actually is, Simon said. It gives our University a bad name, makes it look like the campus cant contain itself. It looks like another waste of a protest.
On Tuesday afternoon, members of Divest UMass spoke with Meehan and Chairman of the Board of Trustees Victor Woolridge about the possibility of the UMass Foundation withdrawing all investments from the fossil fuel industry.
Following the first day of sit-ins Monday, the University released a press release reading,
UMass system leaders today said they would advocate for a policy that would see the five-campus UMass system divest and prohibit direct investment in fossil fuel companies.
Woolridge and Meehan said the step they were recommending represented a logical next step on the action the University took last year when UMass divested its direct investments in coal companies.
Meehan and Woolridge called their commitment to advocating for divestment both a proposal and a pledge in the release.
Divest UMass request included a UMass commitment to make a plan for divestment no later than June 1.
We dont want UMass officials to make a pledge, Carvalho said. We want them to divest. The UMass Foundation is a non-profit organization hired by the UMass system to handle the private investments of its endowment. The Foundation is entrusted to garner profit returns from these investments. It is not governed by the Board of Trustees but Meehan does chair its Board.
Carvalho said that throughout the day members were prepared to be arrested for their cause. He said they did not want to be arrested but would do so to prove their commitment to a powerful social movement.
Carvalho said the occupation and protests would end when President Meehan and Chairman Woolridge would make a concrete commitment, not a pledge, to remove all investments from the top 200 publicly traded fossil fuel companies. Carvalho said that specifics regarding what companies received investments and the amount of those investments were difficult to obtain.
Caroline Murray, a local resident and UMass alumna, also spoke outside of Whitmore. She highlighted a sign she held that contained information regarding former General Electric CEO Jack Welch. While Welch, an UMass alum, oversaw GE for three decades, the company received multiple environmental dumping violations. The sign read that Welch had donated nearly $5 million to the UMass endowment. Murray joined the crowd in shouting the word shame after the figure was read aloud.
Welch has donated $5 million to UMass, but the funds are set aside for scholarship funds which are awarded to two students each year as $20,000 packages, according to a UMass press release.
Shortly after, the crowd began to disperse but organizers reiterated that they would return the following day with even larger numbers.
Were ready to do whatever it takes, were ready to escalate, Carvalho said.
Let’s “divest” the little snowflakes of electricity. They need to live what they say.
Compare and contrast with yesterday’s events at The Ohio State University ...
That president of Ohio State university who sent the occupiers home needs to explain to U Mass how this is supposed to be handled.
Every normal man must be tempted, at times, to spit on his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin slitting throats.
H.L. Mencken
Looks like their english language skill are fully intact. Ungrateful snot alert.
If you don’t like fossil fuels don’t use them you pathetic lib hypocrites.
What these folks need, is a good dose of 500 of the opposition who are, shall we say, not too friendly as they evict them onto the sidewalk.
Since people from off the campus are welcome, why not?
My gosh, what damn idiots! If I have to pay for their College, I will riot!
These folks are clueless and hopeless.
Hmmm- peopel have taken over a federal building huh?
I wonder if the FBI will lure them out under false pretenses, and set up a roadblock on a lonely stretch of highway, and ambush them in cold blood like they did Finicum and crew?
Permanently Expelled unless they spend 90 days in the Socialist Utopia of Venezuela practicing what they preach.
5.56mm
When will the feds shoot a leader/spokesperson?
Tere must be some Ohio National Guardsmen who dis good work at Kent State putting an end to much of the anti-Vietnam War whoopdidoo, who are still able to handle their rifles. So much to do and so little time. You never know what busy is until you retire.
>Lets divest the little snowflakes of electricity. They need to live what they say.
That’s a micro-aggression right there: having their iXYZ juiced is a Right, don’t ya know?! /s
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