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Wanted: Sleeping Space for Protesters. Hot Water Optional.
NY Times ^ | 8.17.2004 | Michael Brick

Posted on 08/17/2004 12:26:35 PM PDT by NYC GOP Chick

August 17, 2004

Wanted: Sleeping Space for Protesters. Hot Water Optional.

By MICHAEL BRICK

Two weeks before her guests plan to arrive, the hostess cannot remember their travel arrangements or even their names.

"It's hard to keep track," said the hostess, Shelby Eidson, 24. "The Canadian couple's driving. The lesbian couple's driving. The biker activist girl is driving or getting a ride."

Ms. Eidson has little to offer these people, only a dark wooden floor in a small room near the Boy's Grocery in Sunset Park, Brooklyn. She walks the floor in faded overalls and flip-flops. Her toenails are painted baby blue. She affects a purposeful tone.

"The more people that can be here, the better," Ms. Eidson said. "As long as they don't mind sleeping on the floor, it's free."

Though her accommodations are modest, Ms. Eidson expects seven houseguests in her two-bedroom apartment during the Republican National Convention. Aside from those traveling with their partners, the guests have never met. Yet they share common ground in their intention to protest in the streets and their willingness to depend on the kindness of strangers.

Unlike the delegates and journalists coming to New York, protesters are being offered no hotel rooms, no free Broadway shows and no massages.

Still, they are receiving an outpouring of hospitality from scores of people who are opening their apartments, churches and improvised spaces as temporary shelter, free of charge.

The choices are scattered across the boroughs and are as diverse as the protesters themselves. The process of finding a place to stay is a lot like ordinary roommate hunting, except that the starting point is neither neighborhood nor amenities, but rather vague political affinity.

The hosts have been encouraged to participate by organizers of loosely allied protest groups with names that leave little to interpretation, like Counter Convention and R.N.C. Not Welcome.

"They don't need to be told why we're protesting the convention," said Geoff Johnson, 26, an organizer who, like many of those involved in planning protests, has a day job unrelated to politics. "The sell is that it's a minor crisis, so it's something people are willing to help out with."

Once so motivated, the hosts find guests through word of mouth and advertisements posted on politically sympathetic Web sites. The hosts expect to be cramped, but aside from the close quarters, their first concern is screening the guests. The popular image of protesters as wild-eyed, window-smashing anarchists is an unfair stereotype, but still, the world is full of crazy people.

"Some people said their name was Flowerchild and they were bringing a dog, and I didn't want to give the room to them," said Judi Aronowitz, 67, who lives in Manhattan. After sorting through dozens of responses, Ms. Aronowitz said, she settled on three young men from Florida who "just sounded honest."

Some hosts are hoping that their advertisements will ward off undesirables. Lauren Knighton, who is offering a space in the one-bedroom apartment she shares with her boyfriend in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, specified that drug use and cigarette smoking were against the house rules.

By the same token, other hosts are warning applicants that their apartments are not exactly the Four Seasons.

"There is a disabled child living here, which causes enough chaos," one posting says. Another says that the apartment can accommodate six people, or perhaps more if the guests are "creative sleepers."

Most of the protesters will find more comfortable lodging than the guests of Casa del Sol, an unfinished building in the Mott Haven section of the Bronx whose ownership is in dispute, and where squatters have taken up residence. They have posted notice that they can accommodate 70 people - in rooms with no air-conditioning or hot water, on floors covered in sawdust.

To its credit, Casa del Sol, on East 136th Street, is easy to find. The brick facade is festooned with graffiti and signs, including one that says: "This Is Our Community. Clean Up After Your Dog. Prevent Fascism."

A mounted camera points at the front gate, and the side yard holds an enormous white tepee. The entrance is filled with wood chips, and a coat rack holds a vest, an umbrella and a surgical mask. Spray enamel and fire extinguishers sit in a hallway under a wooden bas-relief of green cactus, blue clouds, yellow sun, orange world. One day last week, young men and women dressed in unwashed shorts scurried up and down the building's staircases, at work cooking or pushing around the sawdust.

On the sixth floor, there is a room with exposed rafters and windows that look out on highway ramps. The floor holds blankets, soundproofing materials and a plastic record player - the kind that girls used to take to slumber parties - spinning a Rolling Stones record.

"To live in this town, you must be tough, tough, tough, tough, tough, tough, tough," Mick Jagger's voice sang through the speaker.

The host here is Rafael Bueno. His wispy salt-and-pepper hair pokes out from under a baseball cap, and he wears clear-rimmed plastic glasses and a short-sleeved flannel shirt.

Mr. Bueno, who says he is a Mayan priest, also appears to be something of a collector. Scattered around the building are a bathtub, a bow and arrow, a sombrero, a pumpkin-shaped lampshade, tools, milk crates, spray cans, a piano and a small ax. A thin cat squints up from a blanket in his studio.

Mr. Bueno opened files full of applications for lodging, all of which he has approved.

"Everybody I've screened have been the best people in the world," Mr. Bueno said. "The least comprehended people in a society are the most beautiful."

Those seeking a somewhat more comfortable stay can go across the river to Harlem, where the Rev. Earl Kooperkamp expects to house 30 to 50 protesters at St. Mary's Episcopal Church, near the 26th Precinct station house. His guests can choose between the wooden pews or the cool tile floor downstairs. The basement is air-conditioned, but it is used as an outreach center, so protesters will have to be up and out the door by 6 a.m.

Father Kooperkamp has persuaded about three dozen religious institutions to open basements, sanctuaries, gymnasiums and parish halls, enough room for about 500 protesters in all.

Though he shares the protesters' politics and intends to demonstrate against the convention, he speaks of other motivations.

"The practice of hospitality both makes us more human and makes the world a more humane place," Father Kooperkamp said. "As long as they're standing firm against war, working for peace, that's what the church is supposed to be about. We pray every day to a guy called the Prince of Peace."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; News/Current Events; US: New York
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To: oceanview
But look at the flipside - give the left credit for being willing and organized well enough to do something like this. our side could never pull something like this off...

That's because many of us on the Right have several things with which to concern ourselves; things that these Leftists consider alien. Namely, a job, a family, children, a mortgage, et cetera...

21 posted on 08/17/2004 12:35:44 PM PDT by Prime Choice (I remember when John Kerry last lied to us. It is seared into my mind.)
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To: pete anderson
Hopefully Mayor Bloomburg will take the same actions Mayor Dailey did in 1968!

You're joking, right? Hell, Bloomberg is practically as Liberal as the protesters.

22 posted on 08/17/2004 12:36:32 PM PDT by Prime Choice (I remember when John Kerry last lied to us. It is seared into my mind.)
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To: NYC GOP Chick
Though her accommodations are modest, Ms. Eidson expects seven houseguests in her two-bedroom apartment during the Republican National Convention. Aside from those traveling with their partners, the guests have never met. Yet they share common ground in their intention to protest in the streets and their willingness to depend on the kindness of strangers.

Oh man oh man, I wish they were airing this apartment 24 hours round the clock for the week!

They are so absolutely going to despise each other by day two! I would pay to watch the Canadians try to broker an uneasy peace between the two lesbians and the biker activist girl.

“Can we all calm down, eh?”
“If I have to hear one more goddamned Indigo Girls song I’m going to tear their heads off!”
“You filthy f*#king breeder! How dare you insult the Indigo Girls!”
“Perhaps we could have a little quite time, eh?”
“Back off Frenchie, or I’ll wrap your nutsack around your neck!”
"Get that f#*king camera out of my f*#king face!"

23 posted on 08/17/2004 12:36:35 PM PDT by dead (I've got my eye out for Mullah Omar.)
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To: NYC GOP Chick

These protesters are nothing but hate-America filth and should be deported since they hate the country do much. On Hannity's show the other day some protester was encouraging violence.


24 posted on 08/17/2004 12:37:10 PM PDT by KC_Conspirator (This space outsourced to India)
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To: cripplecreek

LOL!!


25 posted on 08/17/2004 12:37:37 PM PDT by elephant
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To: Dan from Michigan; dubyaismypresident

Rand: The knee-jerk bleeding heart liberals, sipping tea and playing patty-cake, those useless hippie potheads, those commie pinko leftists, the bunny-huggers, the pillow-biters...

Droz: Pillow-biters?

Rand: The butt pirates! And those beastly man haters! Tell those chicks to shave their pits and call me!


26 posted on 08/17/2004 12:37:37 PM PDT by hobbes1 (Hobbes1TheOmniscient® "I know everything so you don't have to" ;)
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To: NYC GOP Chick
Father Kooperkamp has persuaded about three dozen religious institutions to open basements, sanctuaries, gymnasiums and parish halls, enough room for about 500 protesters in all. Though he shares the protesters' politics and intends to demonstrate against the convention, he speaks of other motivations.

RICO!!!

27 posted on 08/17/2004 12:37:59 PM PDT by AppyPappy (If You're Not A Part Of The Solution, There's Good Money To Be Made In Prolonging The Problem.)
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To: NYC GOP Chick
"Those seeking a somewhat more comfortable stay can go across the river to Harlem, where the Rev. Earl Kooperkamp expects to house 30 to 50 protesters at St. Mary's Episcopal Church, near the 26th Precinct station house. His guests can choose between the wooden pews or the cool tile floor downstairs."

I'm sure if political affiliations were reversed the ACLU / PU / et al. wouldn't say a word about the church losing its tax exempt status. </ sarc>
28 posted on 08/17/2004 12:38:30 PM PDT by Texas_Jarhead
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To: NYC GOP Chick
After sorting through dozens of responses, Ms. Aronowitz said, she settled on three young men from Florida who "just sounded honest."

So did Ted Bundy.

29 posted on 08/17/2004 12:38:30 PM PDT by Repairman Jack
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To: Texas_Jarhead

whoops - PU should be AU


30 posted on 08/17/2004 12:39:24 PM PDT by Texas_Jarhead
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To: Texas_Jarhead

I think PU is correct. ; )


31 posted on 08/17/2004 12:40:43 PM PDT by elephant
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To: KC_Conspirator

to be honest with you - we want them to turn violent. it will get more media attention (negative), will permit a stronger police response, and will go further to show the sheeple across the country what the Democratic party really is made up of at the core.


32 posted on 08/17/2004 12:40:46 PM PDT by oceanview
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To: ken5050
I was seriously considering the moral issues around trolling their sites and inviting them to stay in either fictituous addresses or people I know wouldn't have them, or public buildings like a firehouse or office building. Leave them stranded in NYC with no place to stay, and likely very little money to get a place.

Those seeking a somewhat more comfortable stay can go across the river to Harlem, where the Rev. Earl Kooperkamp expects to house 30 to 50 protesters at St. Mary's Episcopal Church, near the 26th Precinct station house. His guests can choose between the wooden pews or the cool tile floor downstairs. The basement is air-conditioned, but it is used as an outreach center, so protesters will have to be up and out the door by 6 a.m.

Father Kooperkamp has persuaded about three dozen religious institutions to open basements, sanctuaries, gymnasiums and parish halls, enough room for about 500 protesters in all.

Housing political partisans certainly seems like a direct violation of IRS rules. That should eliminate their tax free status. What was that organization that always attacks Christian Churchs that support Bush and claims to be non-partisan?

33 posted on 08/17/2004 12:41:13 PM PDT by blanknoone (Everything is impossible to those who refuse to try.)
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To: blanknoone

Or, would he make the same offer to a group of pro-lIfe demonstrators?....


34 posted on 08/17/2004 12:42:29 PM PDT by ken5050 (We've looked for WMD in Iraq for LESS time than Hillary looked for the Rose Law firm billing records)
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Comment #35 Removed by Moderator

To: NYC GOP Chick

I can see the headlines now...

Day After GOP Convention Sees Thousands Of Complaints Of Vandalism

Eventually the story will clarify that the protesters were the source of the vandalism, and the complaints were filed by their hosts who found themselves missing money and valuables.


36 posted on 08/17/2004 12:42:53 PM PDT by coconutt2000
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To: NYC GOP Chick
Another says that the apartment can accommodate six people, or perhaps more if the guests are "creative sleepers."

Considering the freaks that are involved in the protest culture, I don't think creativity will be a problem.

37 posted on 08/17/2004 12:42:59 PM PDT by Lil'freeper (You do not have the plug-in required to view this tagline.)
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To: NYC GOP Chick

I hear there are plenty of rooms available at Rikers Island....


38 posted on 08/17/2004 12:43:30 PM PDT by Libertarian444
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To: hobbes1

David Spade's best speech!


39 posted on 08/17/2004 12:44:01 PM PDT by Dan from Michigan (A gun owner voting for John Kerry is like a chicken voting for Col. Saunders. (bye bye .30-30))
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To: Repairman Jack
So did Ted Bundy.

And Andrew Cunnanan

40 posted on 08/17/2004 12:44:19 PM PDT by Tijeras_Slim (Be a Dollar a Day FReeper, and SMILE when you get your Mastercard bill!)
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