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Reporting from Oakland -- Several hundred residents crammed into Oakland City Hall on Thursday evening to debate this city’s Occupy movement, decry the violence that has marred it and
attempt to reach some consensus about what comes next. But as the meeting wore on, that seemed unlikely. Molly Bolt approached the lectern, her baby in her arms. The 30-year-old’s voice
shook as she chided city leaders for razing the protesters’ original encampment. PHOTOS: OCCUPY OAKLAND “You cannot beat us into submission,” Bolt said. “You are just beating on the bricks
of a loose dam.” When Interim Police Chief Howard Jordan spoke, he was met with cries of “lies” when he asserted that officers had used tear gas and other projectiles only after being
attacked by protesters. The City Council president called for order. The crowd called on Jordan to resign. The meeting came one day after a citywide protest had drawn more than 7,000 largely
peaceful demonstrators before devolving once again into violence. Riot police arrested more than 100 people in the pre-dawn hours Thursday who had taken over an empty building, armed
themselves with bottles, rocks and firecrackers, and set blazes. Five protesters and three officers were injured, Jordan said. Many who spoke at City Hall expressed pride over the massive
turnout and downplayed the conflict. “I am here to say that yesterday was a beautiful and amazing day,” resident Pamela Drake said. “What happened late last night should not overshadow what
a beautiful thing happened.” But business leaders voiced a starkly different message. “The situation we find ourselves in is absolutely unacceptable,” said Oakland Metropolitan Chamber of
Commerce President Joe Haraburda. “We have made our position clear.… We want Occupy Oakland closed.” That situation was in full display around the Civic Center area as city workers boarded
up shattered store windows and scrubbed away graffiti. Meanwhile, Occupy Oakland activists struggled to distance their movement from the vandals they said were intent on co-opting its
message. Officials characterized those arrested as a relatively small group of black-clad provocateurs who favor face masks and confrontational tactics. But the violence stung the body of
protesters occupying the encampment near City Hall. “We have never ever acted like this in this democratic stronghold,” said Regi Hayes, a 35-year-old artist, as he took his turn at the camp
microphone earlier Thursday and pointed to a “stream of negativity” — including signs that said: “Kill the cops.” In an effort to make amends to area business owners, Occupy Oakland
supporters donned rubber gloves and joined the cleanup. A sign someone posted amid the damage read: “This is not the story.” “I don’t like it,” said a subdued Leandro Marques, a 33 -year-old
audio engineer who came from his home in Berkeley when he saw the damage on several blogs. “We’ve been protesting to change inequality that’s been going on in this country for a long time,
and I want it to be focused,” he said as he scrubbed. “We don’t want our movement to become an anarchist movement.” But for some, the protesters’ goodwill gestures may not be enough. Noemi
Perez, 42, who manages The Juice Joint in the plaza, said a customer came in Thursday to apologize for her absence these last few weeks. “She said she didn’t want to come down here,” said
Perez, whose business has dropped markedly. “We are happy because we are OK,” she said of her unscathed storefront. “On the other hand we don’t feel good because everything is dirty … and
broken.” PHOTOS: OCCUPY OAKLAND [email protected]_ MORE TO READ