New Yorkers Protest Outside of Rep. Ocasio-Cortez’s Queens Office in Freezing Cold

January 16, 2022 in News by RBN Staff

GLASGOW, SCOTLAND – NOVEMBER 09: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, U.S. Representative for New York’s 14th congressional district, speaks during an event at the US Climate Action Centre during COP26 on November 09, 2021 in Glasgow, Scotland. Day ten of the 2021 climate summit in Glasgow will focus on Gender, Science and Innovation. This is the 26th “Conference of the Parties” and represents a gathering of all the countries signed on to the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Paris Climate Agreement. The aim of this year’s conference is to commit countries to net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. (Photo by Ian Forsyth/Getty Images)

By Dave Paone View profile

 

January 15, 2022

QUEENS, New York—Protesters held a demonstration outside the Queens office of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) on Jan. 14.

The activists, not representing any one organization, said their purpose was to persuade Ocasio-Cortez, also known as AOC, to introduce legislation in the House of Representatives to stop U.S. military involvement in Yemen.

Several of the protesters who participated were senior citizens, giving the illusion of a Woodstock reunion.

Alice Sturm Sutter has been participating in anti-war demonstrations since she was 20, during the Vietnam War era.

“I’m here because I’m so horrified that we’re still in the war attacking the people of Yemen,” Sutter told The Epoch Times.

Sutter sees the situation as a “humanitarian catastrophe.”

Epoch Times Photo
Activists hold a demonstration regarding the U.S. military involvement in Yemen outside the Queens office of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.). (Dave Paone/The Epoch Times)

“People are suffering starvation, cholera,” she said. “People cannot get food.”

While Sutter’s winter coat was adorned with buttons that read “Black Lives Matter” and “Climate Emergency,” she puts the blame on both parties, saying the United States has been cozying up to Saudi Arabia (which is at the center of the conflict) in each administration since President Barack Obama was in office.

Sutter doesn’t think it’s up to any one party to fix the situation.

“I’d like everyone in Congress to listen to their conscience and to spearhead a resolution,” she said. “We’re appealing to AOC because we think we have some chance of success.”

However, Ocasio-Cortez’s website currently has a notice stating that neither of her New York offices are staffed, due to public health guidance from the House physician.

“Just less than a year ago, on Feb. 5, President Biden said that the war in Yemen was a disgrace and a humanitarian disaster, agreeing with most of the world,” Brian Terrell told The Epoch Times.

“And he said then that this war had to stop, and the U.S. was going to stop providing weapons to the Saudis.”

Biden has yet to make good on that promise.

Terrell feels the money currently being made in weapons manufacturing is an example of what President Dwight Eisenhower meant when he spoke about the “military-industrial complex.”

Epoch Times Photo
Activist Chantelle Schultz, 26, of New York protests the U.S. military involvement in Yemen outside the Queens office of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) on Jan. 14, 2022. (Dave Paone/The Epoch Times)

The demonstration was organized by Alice Pote, a 30-year-old from Manhattan.

“There’s ample opportunity and a very clear need based on the situation in Yemen for someone in AOC’s position to act, and given all that she’s said about opposing war and so on, it’s pretty outrageous that she’s not acting,” Pote told The Epoch Times.

“What are these progressive politicians actually doing?”

Several speakers used a megaphone to address the demonstrators and passersby, leading chants of “Biden, you can’t hide; you’re supporting genocide” and “We don’t want a photo op; we want this war to stop.”

“This is an extraordinary situation where with very few members of Congress who we think might do something and could do something,” Terrell said. “I have great hopes in AOC that she might.”