By Leslie Minora
Sat., Oct. 8 2011 at 10:00 AM
Photos by Stephen A. Masker
Alex Jones amongst fans and followers at Friday evening's
"End the Fed" rally


Friday evening, two groups of protesters, Occupy Dallas and
Occupy the Federal Reserve, lined opposite side of N. Pearl
Street at Woodall Rodgers in front of the Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas. "We got sold out, Feds got bailed out!" Occupy Dallas
protesters shouted in unison on the west side of Pearl. And,
all around them, the Occupy the Federal Reserve crowd -- consisting
of fans and followers of Dallas-born, Austin-based radio-show
host Alex Jones -- had their own mantra: "End the Fed, End the
Fed!"
It's tough to say whose crowd was bigger -- probably around
200 on both sides. Police said the protesters had been peaceful;
only one person's been arrested since the Occupy Dallas folks
began their demonstrating Thursday morning. "They're well-behaved,
so that helps a lot," said Sergeant Thomas Fry, scanning the
crowd.
Jones -- the 9/11 truther, a man who recently called the
Gates Foundation "obviously a eugenics operation," the street
preacher in Richard Linklater's A Scanner Darkly and, to a few,
a resurrected Bill Hicks -- grabbed a megaphone a little after
6 p.m. "A hundred years of these scumbag bankers is a hundred
years too long," he yelled.
"I love you, Alex!" a voice carried over the crowd.
"I love you guys. You're the only prayer we've got," Jones
yelled back.


Sweat seeped through Jones's blue button-down shirt. He shook
hands as he pushed through the crowd to meet a reporter for
a Christian news show. "If the devil lives anywhere in the world,
it's in the Federal Reserve banks," Jones said. "The whole thing
is just a ridiculous scheme, and it's time people know about
it."
"Let's go kick some ass, Alex," someone screamed. "Give 'em
hell!" Nearby, someone held a sign that read, "The government
that robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support
of Paul."
"These are the people killing off humanity," someone shouted
into a megaphone on the sidewalk at the foot of the Federal
Reserve Bank skyscraper. "These are the people that funded Adolf
Hitler and the Communists. ... They are pure evil."
"It's legalized theft," said Brooke Kelley, a "truth fairy"
attired in a tutu and wings. She said she was fed up with the
government taking money from taxpayers to pay private banks.
"We don't have to take it."
"J.P. Morgan is now dead, here today we end the Fed," Arby
Branch, a freshman at the University of North Texas, screamed
into a megaphone. Wearing a Bob Marley shirt and a long skirt,
she bounced around the scene. Salvador Vasquez joined in, wearing
a button-down shirt and waving his arms and grabbing at his
glasses.
"It's private individuals subsidized on the backs of public
citizens," said Vasquez, a barber and former fifth-grade teacher
who drove to Dallas from Austin for the protest. "The problem
isn't capitalism. ... Wall Street is just a function of banks."
"I'm actually here with Occupy Dallas," said Branch, who
had crossed the street to mingle among the Occupy the Fed group.
"We're all the 99 percent," she added, meaning, of course, that
they're not among the 1 percent of the wealthiest Americans.
"I'm sick of the same old shit," she said. "I'm just ready
for people to put out new ideas."
"Do you want to do another chorus with me?" Vasquez asked
her.
"Sure."
"Rockefeller is now dead, here today we end the Fed," they
shouted.
A cop told Branch she had to move. "We were getting a nice
groove," Vasquez said as Branch walked away. Then, from a median
in the street, once again, louder: "Rockefeller is now dead.,
here today we end the Fed!"