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Recently in Salon News

Camp IMF
The protests remain peaceful and the chief gets a photo op as decorum dominates the Washington protests.

By Alicia Montgomery
[04/16/00]

Prepping for the protests
Washington's mayor and police force get ready to rumble, though they hope they won't have to.

By Harry Jaffe
[04/15/00]

Not just a Seattle sequel
The protests surrounding this weekend's meetings of the IMF and World Bank are the next step in the backlash to globalization.

By Bruce Shapiro
[04/15/00]

World Bank and IMF: Good, evil or irrelevant?
On the eve of the A16 protests, experts discuss the roles of the international financial organizations and the Seattle protests in this weekend's battle over globalization.

By Daryl Lindsey
[04/15/00]

On the verge
Tensions escalate in Dupont Circle and cops put on riot gear. But savvy protesters wonder where the badges are.

By Jake Tapper
[04/14/00]

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THE WASHINGTON PROTESTS
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What I saw at the revolution
That is, when the D.C. cops weren't running their motorcycles over me.

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By Jake Tapper

April 16, 2000 | WASHINGTON -- The first official day of protests against the policies of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund started pretty ugly for me, but after I picked myself up off the ground from a ridiculous full frontal assault by the D.C. police force, the day managed to be quite interesting.

Here are some of the sights:

News

Before noon, a lone policeman stands in a cordoned-off Lafayette Square, across the street from the White House.

News

Various masked protestors sit in the middle of a downtown street. Earlier I had started to take a picture of a different group of maybe two dozen protesters sitting in the middle of 15th Street when two from the circle -- a diminutive young man and a porcine, nose-pierced young woman -- approached me and told me to stop taking pictures of their "private meeting." I asked how any meeting could possibly be considered "private" if it was being conducted in the middle of a city street at noon. The two then accused me of trying to take away their constitutional right to assemble; I eventually gave up because they were so annoying. If the heads of the World Bank and the IMF ever met the duo, they would quickly be annoyed into submission.

News

A happy protester sports a papier-mâché costume of the three-headed cobra of corporate globalism. Poking their heads out from the cobra's flared hood are Michael Moore, director general of the World Trade Organization; Stanley Fischer, acting managing director of the International Monetary Fund; and World Bank President James D. Wolfensohn.

News

More papier-mâché -- a nice likeness of "Bill 'Corporate Puppet' Clinton."

. Next page | A common cause between gays, Koreans and the FALN


 
Photographs by Jake Tapper/Salon.com




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