As Barclays Center becomes locus for angry protests and harsh response, arena's boosterish bluster has new valance
Last night, the centrally-located Barclays Center, with its privately managed, publicly accessible plaza, became the locus of protests against police brutality and the painful-to-watch, seemingly white officer-caused death of black arrestee George Floyd in Minneapolis. (The officer has been charged with third-degree murder.)
The vandalism was worse in other cities, where some protestors may have been agents provacateurs. A federal officer killed in Oakland, and a Detroit protestor was killed, both in drive-by shootings, and reporters have been both arrested in Minneapolis and shot at with rubber bullets in Louisville, on camera. A reporter in Brooklyn, Gothamist reported, was thrown to the ground.
"Shit is getting real"
Consider the "BLM" (Black Lives Matter) defacing of a Barclays Center directional sign on "street furniture," plus, as the video below shows, another object--apparently a panel from the other side of the sign--being set aflame.
The meaning of Barclays
Some, remembering the years of controversy over the arena, suggested it had a larger meaning. I think it's mostly geography though, as noted, the arena's commercialism has a different valence now.
Wrote Jesse Spector in Deadspin, Brutality at the Barclays Center — The Heart Of Brooklyn:
Some people climbed on top of the transit entrance.A massive crowd is gathering for justice for George Floyd and an end to police violence. We are at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn NYC. The crowd has their hands up and is chanting, “No justice, no peace.” I’ll be posting photos and videos throughout the protest. [thread] pic.twitter.com/JtL7f8038m— Andy Ratto (@andyratto) May 29, 2020
Some protestors climbed onto that sloped park at the Barclays Center #GeorgeFloydProtest pic.twitter.com/S74EifJQEL— Andrew Solender (@AndrewSolender) May 29, 2020
It was hard not to look at the mothballed arena--used a few times as a distribution point for food--and see its slogans and sponsorships as inadequate to the moment, as I wrote. As Gothamist reported, things got ugly.I wrote about last night's protests at Brooklyn's Barclays Center. In August, it will be five years since the Ferguson riots. We’re still rioting because nothing has changed. As the protest chant goes, “No justice, no peace.”https://t.co/YTD5Kto5Gt— Shanté Cosme (@ShanteCosme) May 30, 2020
In both the level of rage from demonstrators and total lack of restraint from NYPD, last night’s protest was unlike anything I’ve seen in NYC. Here’s our report, with photos by @scottheins https://t.co/3baJsdDC3W pic.twitter.com/ex8jWDYYjx— Jake Offenhartz (@jangelooff) May 30, 2020
Densely backed into the plaza and surrounded by police, protesters milled about uneventfully for the rest of the afternoon.Then it got worse, with vandalism and counter violence.
By early evening, though, the tenor changed. Someone tossed water bottles towards police, and officers responded by charging into the plaza, shoving protesters to the ground, shooting pepper spray at their faces, and beating them with batons. More police forays into the crowd followed, as police waded in, wielding pepper spray and batons, to arrest teenage skateboarders who had climbed the artificial hill atop the Barclays Center subway entrance.
Photo shows "We Go Hard," talismanic rap lyrics, repurposed to boosterish bluster by @BrooklynNets & @BarclaysCenter, which seem very inadequate to the moment.— Norman Oder (@AYReport) May 30, 2020
+corporate sponsor of "public" plaza: "Resorts Worlds Casino NYC"
(+ "stormed"??? not what's even in NYT article) https://t.co/yVhIMwZLOA
protesting is not storming— drag name Viola DeLights (@NJDG) May 30, 2020
There were more than 3,000 protestors and some 200 arrests, with a molotov cocktail thrown into a police vehicle, and a police van torched. A union bus driver refused to transport arrestees; protestors chanted "NYPD suck my d***."Perspective looking down from (apparently) #461Dean tower— Norman Oder (@AYReport) May 30, 2020
"Best in New York" signage @barclayscenter another painful irony.
Vid: "Best in New York. Best where it matters." https://t.co/FFErBlW7rQ
The vandalism was worse in other cities, where some protestors may have been agents provacateurs. A federal officer killed in Oakland, and a Detroit protestor was killed, both in drive-by shootings, and reporters have been both arrested in Minneapolis and shot at with rubber bullets in Louisville, on camera. A reporter in Brooklyn, Gothamist reported, was thrown to the ground.
"Shit is getting real"
Consider the "BLM" (Black Lives Matter) defacing of a Barclays Center directional sign on "street furniture," plus, as the video below shows, another object--apparently a panel from the other side of the sign--being set aflame.
But videos and reports showed an aggressive response by some cops, with several on-camera examples of unprovoked violence, which surely will be part of the review (by Attorney General Letitia James) announced today by Mayor Bill de Blasio.Shit is getting real over here at Barclays Center pic.twitter.com/aQ4StmnWOi— Jasper Apollonia (@GatSummitt) May 29, 2020
This is 2 blocks from the precinct.It didn’t make anyone safer.You can see the escalation happen in 7 seconds. pic.twitter.com/7knUjWc5vz— Seth Pollack (@sethmpk) May 30, 2020
We, not just the police department but all of NYC suffered last night after professional & organized agitators caused havoc on the city resulting in violence, injured police officers, and the destruction of property. pic.twitter.com/pWeSFHSDRC— NYPD NEWS (@NYPDnews) May 30, 2020
Both legislative leaders in New York are Black.— Josefa Velásquez (@J__Velasquez) May 30, 2020
Tonight two of their members, who are also Black, were pepper sprayed and one was handcuffed by NYPD during the #GeorgeFloyd protest in Brooklyn https://t.co/1mw1AjZSNa
Here is Brooklyn a few after the Barclays Protest. The streets are clean and @NYCSanitation is picking up household garbage.— Raul Rothblatt (@rauldougou) May 30, 2020
Thank you #EssentialWorkers pic.twitter.com/NIREzmKkyI
I wonder if the police counted how many people had guns during stay at home protests. https://t.co/hHP34UqVZP
— John Eligon (@jeligon) May 30, 2020
Protestors Criticized For Looting Businesses Without Forming Private Equity Firm First https://t.co/rbdfMJOiQ8 pic.twitter.com/YHY3sZaxAU
— The Onion (@TheOnion) May 28, 2020
The meaning of Barclays
Some, remembering the years of controversy over the arena, suggested it had a larger meaning. I think it's mostly geography though, as noted, the arena's commercialism has a different valence now.
It’s a convenient central location in Brooklyn, with a fair amount of open space around it, easily accessible from many neighborhoods.— Sarah Goodyear (@buttermilk1) May 30, 2020
Yeah, it's a place of convergence.— Norman Oder (@AYReport) May 30, 2020
But sad truth is the big winner of the whole #AtlanticYards @barclayscenter project so far (now @pacificparkbk, very much unfinished, majority owned by Shanghai-govt-owned Greenland USA) was Russian oligarch Prokhorov https://t.co/ozhcpStaAC
All of the surrounding buildings (Atlantic Terminal Mall, Atlantic Center Mall & Modell’s) we’re forged in backroom deals, plus Barclays Bank, that acquired the naming rights to the arena, has origins in the slave trade.— Luminonymous (@lumimichelle) May 30, 2020
The "essence of Brooklyn"?2007: "If [Nets owner/arena builder Bruce] Ratner cared to reveal himself as a true philanthropist with BK's best interests at heart, he would have named this arena after Jackie Robinson & told Barclays to keep its cash." @Ian_OConnor, Bergen Record https://t.co/s5g5dRBn4K— Norman Oder (@AYReport) May 30, 2020
Wrote Jesse Spector in Deadspin, Brutality at the Barclays Center — The Heart Of Brooklyn:
Barclays Center represents a lot of what there’s been to be angry about in Brooklyn. But it’s also a central location to stage a community gathering that the borough of my youth didn’t have. It’s not something I ever thought about as part of the return of sports to Brooklyn, but it’s there now, even with the Nets not there for the foreseeable future.
It’s the essence of Brooklyn, and neither coronavirus nor the NYPD can take that away.
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