Postcards from Europe
Yesterday there were big protests all over the world; Aaron Bady has lots of great photos over at his place. From what I hear, the march back in New York was large and successful.
Here in Luxembourg, things were a little more sedate. Here are some pictures of varying quality, which you can click to expand.
I got downtown at around 4:30, at which point the rally in the Place d’Armes had already been going for half an hour:
The speeches only lasted another 10 or 15 minutes after I got there; what I heard (and was in a language I understood) was pretty broad stuff about global economic justice, nothing too exciting to report. That crew on stage punctuated every brief speech with music though. I’m bad at estimating crowds, but there must have been a few hundred people there at least:
That might not sound very impressive, but keep in mind that Luxembourg City is a town of 80,000 people, of which some substantial fraction are bankers, and I think some folks went up to Brussels for the big demonstration there.
One thing that was very much absent was any of the major political parties. This guy’s swag from “The Left” was exceptional:
The organizers had covered the stage with signs, which reflected Luxembourg’s crazy quilt of languages and ethnicities. The messages on the right are, I believe, in the local Lëtzebuergesch language:
The dominant inspiration for yesterday’s event wasn’t Occupy Wall Street as much as it was the Spanish “indignados”:
There were also messages related to more general European-level concerns:
And some good old anti-capitalism:
That’s not to say that USA-related messages were absent:
And the “99%” meme has made it here too. I swear I took this picture yesterday, even though it looks like it came from some kind of activist stock photo site:
After the speeches wrapped up, we started marching through downtown Luxembourg City. Note what you won’t see in the following pictures: cops. I literally didn’t see a single one either at the rally, or as we marched around town, alternately on the sidewalks and in the streets. In fact, I’ve only seen the police once in the nearly two weeks I’ve been here, which really underscores the awful militarized quality of everyday life in American cities. I miss a lot of things about the US, but I’m very happy to be 3000 miles away from the nearest NYPD officer.
We were led on our march by this crew of singers and musicians; I guess they’re supposed to represent a cross-section of the working class, but they kind of look the activist Village People:
We stopped in front of the Grand Duke’s palace, which is the sort of thing you don’t get to do at American protests. Note the lone armed guard marching in the background:
We wrapped things up at this overlook; protesting in Luxembourg can be very scenic!
Finally, this has nothing to do with the protests, it’s just some miscellaneous awesomeness. On my way home, I came across these kids breakdancing underneath the main bus terminal: