Above photo: A protester is led away by a New York City police officer during a September 18, 2023 climate protest in Lower Manhattan. Spencer Platt/Getty Images.
“Why are we getting handcuffed while people who literally torch the planet get celebrated for their ‘civility’ and their ‘moderation’?”
A day after tens of thousands of climate activists marched through Manhattan’s Upper East Side demanding an end to oil, gas, and coal production, thousands more demonstrators hit the streets of Lower Manhattan Monday, where more than 100 people were arrested while surrounding the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to protest fossil fuel financing.
Protesters chanted slogans like “No oil, no gas, fossil fuels can kiss my ass” and “We need clean air, not another billionaire” as they marched from Zuccotti Park—ground zero of the 2011 Occupy Wall Street movement—to pre-selected sites in the Financial District. Witnesses said many of the activists attempted to reach the New York Stock Exchange but were blocked by police.
“We’re here to wake up the regulators who are asleep at the wheel as they continue to let Wall Street lead us into ANOTHER financial crash with their fossil fuel financing,” the Stop the Money Pipeline coalition explained on social media.
“No oil, no gas! Fossil fuels can kiss my a**!”
Blocking the entrances to the @federalreserve as arrests happen.
The Fed is SHUT DOWN.
We need policies to protect the climate and communities, stop fossil fuels, not subsidies and bailouts for fossil fuels! pic.twitter.com/5RPRUpuCBb
— New York Communities for Change (@nychange) September 18, 2023
Local and national media reported New York Police Department (NYPD) officers arrested 114 protesters and charged them with civil disobedience Monday after they blocked entrances to the Fed building. Most of those arrested were expected to be booked and released.
“I’m being arrested for exercising my First Amendment right to protest because Joe Manchin is putting a 300-mile-long pipeline through my home state of West Virginia and President [Joe] Biden allowed him to do it for nothing in return,” explained Climate Defiance organizer Rylee Haught on social media, referring to the right-wing Democratic senator and the Mountain Valley Pipeline.
As she was led away by an NYPD officer, a tearful Haught said Biden “sold us out.”
“He promised to end drilling on federal lands, and he’s selling out Appalachia’s future for profit,” she added.
Stop scrolling. Stop scrolling. Our organizer Rylee just got arrested at the New York Fed. It is morally outrageous that Rylee is being taken away in handcuffs while climate criminals get honorary Harvard degrees and Davos keynotes. It is morally outrageous. pic.twitter.com/vIjNcbeFr3
— Climate Defiance (@ClimateDefiance) September 18, 2023
Responding to the “block-long” line of arrestees, Climate Defiance asked: “Why are we getting handcuffed while people who literally torch the planet get celebrated for their ‘civility’ and their ‘moderation’?”
Alicé Nascimento of New York Communities for Change toldWABC that the protests—which are part of Climate Week and are timed to coincide with this week’s United Nations Climate Ambition Summit—are “our last resort.”
“We’re bringing the crisis to their doorstep and this is what it looks like,” said Nascimento.
At least a thousand End Fossil Fuels protesters have surrounded the Federal Reserve on NYC Wall Street protesting the financing of fossil fuels. Several dozen arrests thus far. pic.twitter.com/25mbZidLna
— Antonia Juhasz (@AntoniaJuhasz) September 18, 2023
As they have at similar demonstrations, protesters called on Biden to stop approving new fossil fuel projects and declare a climate emergency. Some had a message for the president and his administration.
“We hold the power of the people, the power you need to win this election,” 17-year-old Brooklynite Emma Buretta of the youth-led protest group Fridays for Future told WABC. “If you want to win in 2024, if you do not want the blood of my generation to be on your hands, end fossil fuels.”