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Update: Occupy Seattle organizer will 'absolutely' stay in park, defying mayor

Members of Occupy Seattle on Monday afternoon.
Jake Ellison
/
KPLU
Members of Occupy Seattle on Monday afternoon.

For continuous updates throughout Wedensdaysee this story.

 

One of the early organizers of the "Occupy Seattle" protest and camp still in place in downtown Seattle says he will "absolutely" stay in Westlake Park.

Yesterday afternoon, Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn told “Occupy Seattle” to take down their tents and leave the park during the night when it and other Seattle parks are normally closed to the public.

"I have a moral obligation to stay," said Pete Whipple, one of the organizers who has been staying in the park since Friday. "I don't see how I can leave now."

Wednesday morning the roughly 30 tents and 100 protesters and others were still in place.The protestors are one of dozens of groups across the country in support of the protests in New York by a movement called “Occupy Wall Street.”

Mayor McGinn issued a statement late yesterday afternoon that said no matter how worthy the cause, no one group can use Westlake Park to the exclusion of others.

However, Whipple said that since the protests that overturned the government in Tunisia, the rest of the world is counting on America to keep the "revolution" going.

"All these countries are saying the same thing: people before politics. There are so many with so little and so few with so much. No culture in the world says that's okay," he said.

Earlier report

Protestors told KPLU yesterday that they’ve had good relations with the city so far and are talking about permits and other possible locations.

“We’ve been given permission to be here while the permits go through for a permanent camp, and we’ve made promises that we wouldn’t be bothering (people),” said Whipple. “You know we follow some very simple rules from the parks department and the police department: No drugs, no alcohol, keep the dogs on a leash and keep it clean.”

Wherever they go, their concerns remain the same – wanting less corporate control of government.

“There’ a gentleman running around here with this awesome sign which I think probably makes it as clearly and concisely as possible in the fewest words and he says, and I agree, that ‘a government owned by corporations cannot and will not take care of its citizens or the environment properly.’ And I think that sums it up in a nutshell,” said Whipple.

Roda from Edmonds added:

“The reason I’m here is because I don’t feel I’m represented by the government because I feel that the government does what the top 1 percent does, that is corporations, banks, and ultra-rich. In order to have a voice you have to have a lot of money and 99% of the people in this country don’t have enough money to have a voice.”

Both Whipple and Roda have been protesting at Westlake since Saturday. The city says there are several upcoming events at the Park, including a rally to mark the 10-year anniversary of the war in Afghanistan.

McGinn said in sympathy: "We are facing unprecedented inequality in this country. It is always true that bad times are harder on the poor. But we have not seen income inequality this great since 1928, the year before the Great Depression started. The top 1 percent control 34 percent of the nation's wealth. The top 10 percent control two-thirds of the nation's wealth. It is an unprecedented grab by the most powerful to get a bigger share of a shrinking pie."

It was unclear Tuesday night where the protesters would go or if they would all go peacefully.