#OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Bruce Dazzling » Thu Oct 20, 2011 10:01 am

seemslikeadream wrote:
Let Them Eat Keller
Posted on Oct 20, 2011
AP / Andrew Burton

By Robert Scheer

Funny, he doesn’t look like Marie Antoinette. But when former New York Times Executive Editor Bill Keller asks his readers if they are “bored by the soggy sleep-ins and warmed-over anarchism of Occupy Wall Street,” it displays the arrogance of disoriented royal privilege.

Perhaps his contempt for anti-corporate protesters was honed by the example of his father, once the chairman of Chevron. In any case, it is revealing, given the cheerleading support that the Times gave to the radical deregulation of Wall Street that occurred when Keller was the managing editor of the newspaper.

As the Times reported on its news pages in 1998, heralding the merger that created Citigroup as the world’s largest financial conglomerate: “In a single day, with a bold merger, pending legislation in Congress to sweep away Depression-era restrictions on the financial services industry has been given a sudden, and unexpected, new chance of passage.”

The report all too breathlessly continued, “Indeed, within 24 hours of the deal’s announcement, lobbyists for insurers, banks and Wall Street firms were huddling with Congressional banking committee staff members to fine-tune a measure that would update the 1933 Glass-Steagall Act separating commercial banking from Wall Street and insurance. …”

The “fine-tuned” law, combined with another one similarly drafted by congressional Republicans and also signed by Democratic President Bill Clinton, exempted trading in collateralized debt obligations and credit default swaps from government regulation. That was the very action that enabled the banking crisis that has brought the nation’s economy to its knees and protesters to Wall Street. Citigroup, where Clinton’s treasury secretary and deregulation advocate Robert Rubin ended up as chairman, specialized in what proved to be toxic mortgage-backed securities and had to be bailed out with massive taxpayer credits.

One would think that the failure of The New York Times to cover this sorry tale as it was unfolding would leave Keller with some humble understanding of why protesters, undeterred by rain, should be celebrated rather than scorned. But such accountability has hardly been a hallmark of those in the media or in business and political circles, who with few exceptions got it so wrong.

Just how wrong was laid out in the Tuesday night Republican debate by Ron Paul, whose consistent libertarian critique has been refreshing throughout the banking meltdown. Other presidential candidates stumbled over their earlier support of the TARP banking bailout, and one of them, Herman Cain, responding to a question about Occupy Wall Street, stuck by his statement “don’t blame Wall Street, don’t blame the big banks, if you don’t have a job, you’re not rich, blame yourself.”

Paul took him on with a clarity that plainly endorsed the main point of the Wall Street demonstrators: “Well, I think that Mr. Cain has blamed the victims.” Paul pointed to the true culprits, those on Wall Street and their partners in crime in the government and the Federal Reserve, who bailed out the banks but not the people they victimized.

“The bailouts came from both parties,” Paul observed, adding, “Guess who they bailed out? The big corporations, the people who were ripping off the people in the derivatives market. … But who got stuck? The middle class got stuck … they lost their jobs, and they lost their houses. If you had to give money out, you should have given it to the people who were losing it in their mortgages, not to the banks.”

It was heartening that many in the Republican crowd cheered Paul’s statement, as it was earlier this week when the respected Quinnipiac poll found that “By a 67-23 percent margin, New York City voters agree with the views of the Wall Street protesters.” Despite the inconvenience of the protests to New Yorkers, the poll showed that by a 72-24 percent margin voters of that city say the protesters should be allowed to stay at their Wall Street location “as long as they wish.”

That’s an admirable sentiment on the part of New Yorkers, which was echoed by Times readers who directed a torrent of criticism at Keller. He pointed out on his blog that they took issue with what he referred to as “my slightly snarky reference to Occupy Wall Street. Okay, maybe not ‘slightly.’ ” He now claims he didn’t intend to show contempt for the protesters, but that is exactly what he did.


Bill Keller is a colossal fucking shitbag.

Earlier this year, Miss Dazzling took me to see A Prairie Home Companion when they were in NYC, and Bill Keller was one of a bunch of special guests who read poems.

I thought long and hard about standing up during his poem and shouting Bill Keller is a fucking war criminal! I didn't do it because Miss Dazzling was trying to give me a nice evening and I didn't want to ruin it, but I haven't stopped thinking about it in the six months since.

I really should have done it. She would have understood.

It's a mistake I won't make again.
"Arrogance is experiential and environmental in cause. Human experience can make and unmake arrogance. Ours is about to get unmade."

~ Joe Bageant R.I.P.

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Jeff » Thu Oct 20, 2011 10:12 am

Tea Partiers: The self-hating 99 per cent

Although the Tea Party and Occupy movement share surface similarities, they represent opposite world views.

Heather Digby Parton Last Modified: 20 Oct 2011

...

One of the central myths about the Tea Party is that it came about as a reaction against the Wall Street bailouts. It's true that there were some scattered "Tea Parties" around the Ron Paul campaign in 2008, but virtually everyone agrees that the movement was really galvanised by a famous rant from CNBC anchor Rick Santelli from the trading floor of the Chicago commodities exchange.

Only one month into the Obama administration, Santelli called for a "new Tea Party" to be held on tax day, April 15, and it became an instant YouTube sensation and rallying cry for the right wing.

He was mad about bailouts alright, but not the Wall Street bailouts. What sparked his fury was the proposed plan to help average homeowners in trouble with their mortgages. Santelli raved: "Do we really want to subsidise the losers' mortgages? This is America! How many of you people want to pay for your neighbour's mortgage? President Obama, are you listening? How about we all stop paying our mortgages! It's a moral hazard."

Here's how his colleague Lawrence Kudlow characterised the outburst: "Santelli called for a new Tea Party in support of capitalism. He's right."

Support for capitalism - and antipathy toward government interference in it - is the very essence of Tea Party populism. There wasn't much talk about the moral hazard of a "too big to fail" banking system but there was plenty of fulminating about government interference in "the market" and righteous anger about the stimulus plan and what they characterised as the "government takeover" of the healthcare system.

It was never about corporate greed, but was about the usual right wing resentment at the government spending their tax money on people they don't think have earned it. These are not billionaire bankers - they are the people on the lower rungs of the ladder. Unsurprisingly, this attitude turned out to be useful to corporate interests looking to allay any real populist impulses among the citizenry, and they soon moved in through various means to help the "movement" organise itself.

...

In recent days, many of them have issued statements denying any similarities with the Occupy Wall Street. Judson Phillips, spokesman for the Tea Party Nation, responded to the claim with this: "The clueless revolt continues and it is painfully obvious those who are showing up to 'protest' do not have a job. In most cases, it is painfully obvious why they don't have a job. To paraphrase the Jimmy Buffett song Margaretville: 'It's your own damn fault'."

Brian Hickey of the Independence Tea Party was somewhat less flippant but equally unequivocal in his rejection of Occupy Wall Street: "The idea that Wall Street is the root of all evil is an anathema to us."

...

If one is to take Tea Partiers at their word, they have thrown in with Wall Street and the Occupiers are their enemy. They are already organised around opposing them. The Occupy Wall Street movement does not see the world in such terms. If they are lucky, some of the formerly hostile salt-of-the-earth working folk who might have opposed them on cultural grounds in the past have been radicalised by Wall Street's greed and will join the occupation.

But I wouldn't count on too many of them. This is a political and cultural fault line that runs deep. But then again, in this polarised country, all it takes is a few to cross over and make a majority.


http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/op ... 41716.html
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Bruce Dazzling » Thu Oct 20, 2011 10:31 am



Wolf PAC

Our politicians are bought. Everyone knows it. Conservatives know it. Liberals know it. The Democrats are bought. The Republicans are bought. They don’t represent us. They represent their corporate donors who fund their campaigns and promise them well paying jobs after they leave office. We have taxation without representation. Our democracy is in serious trouble.

What happened? CLICK HERE to find out.

So what can we do to regain our ability to make our votes count and take back our democracy? We have to concentrate all of our resources into one single attack – making sure we take corporate money out of politics. The only way to do that is to bypass the corporate owned Congress and the Supreme Court – and pass a Constitutional amendment. We must pass an amendment saying that corporations are not people and they do not have the right to spend money to buy our politicians.

The objective of Wolf PAC will be to raise money and raise an army for the sole purpose of passing this amendment. We need a Constitutional revolution to get unlimited corporate money out of politics. Please join us and help retake our democracy.

CLICK HERE to read our proposed amendment.

Join the Fight

The objective of Wolf PAC is not theory, it is results. We will pass the amendment and we will regain our democracy. Here is how we're going to do it.

We must gather up a fighting force. We need programmers and organizers and lawyers and leaders. We need this movement to be in all 50 states. So, first we are doing a call for generals in this army. Please write into us and tell us what your expertise is and how you can help.

Our Congress is completely infected with the virus. So proposing an amendment through Congress seems hopeless. But luckily there is another way. We can do this purely at the state level. The states can call for a constitutional convention and they can ratify an amendment that comes out of one. And there is nothing our corrupt federal government can do about it.

We are hoping that the first wave of volunteers help us organize at the state level. Let's go occupy the states!



"Arrogance is experiential and environmental in cause. Human experience can make and unmake arrogance. Ours is about to get unmade."

~ Joe Bageant R.I.P.

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby 2012 Countdown » Thu Oct 20, 2011 11:04 am

Occupy The Web - Hacking for the 99%

Here’s the list of projects that came out of the 10/15 hackathon event in SF and DC (NYC coming soon).

How to Occupy:
Question and answer site for #occupy organizers. Users can ask questions about issues they’re dealing with, and others can share their experience. The code for site is up here: https://github.com/occupyhack/How2Occupy and for the mobile app, here: https://github.com/occupyhack/OccupyHandbook.

OccupyDesign:
The project’s goal is to create freely available visual tools around a common graphic language to unite the 99%. Follow @occupydesign for details or to pitch in and help.

OccupyTheHub:
The #occupy needs to see and feel the support. OccupyTheHub is a visually compelling experience that brings together online activity. For more info: occupythehub [at ] gmail

OccupyAdvertising:
Crowd sourced and funded #occupy videos. Aggregates best videos, provides easy access to existing remixing tools, and connects directly to crowd funded ad platform LoudSauce to get 15 sec, 30 sec or 60 sec videos on the air. Building on the success of the first #Occupy TV ad thatraised over $5k in three days, this will be an open source project supported by LoudSauce and friends. For more info contactcolin@loudsauce.com.

OccupySMSnet:
A proof-of-concept universal group messaging utility to help organize people in real time via sms (aka ad-hoc group messaging through SMS). GitHub coming, in the meantime contact @alexlevinson

OccupyChronology:
We want to use a timeline to tie together the events, people and groups that look unrelated, but actually part of one movement. For more info: gene.brock at gmail

Police Brutality Tracker:
Reporting and cataloguing tool for CopWatch. Code at: github.com/occupyhack/web-cop-watch. Live site coming soon. For more info: @beatpanda

NeedsOfTheOccupiers:
Centralized location for material donation requests/offers searchable by category, location, and item. A way to consolidate needs and mark off what needs have been received to minimize unnecessary donations and to highlight the most pressing needs. For more info: mikejens at gmail

OccupiedWSJ Memo
We were solicited by the OccupiedWSJ folks for some ideas on how they could build a high quality web presence and made some specific suggestions on how to go about it.

Shouty:
Shouty is an Android app based on some of the ideas in wifi island. It can serve as an electronic aid to the people’s microphone, a tool for listening in on meetings you can’t attend, or a way to share live music. Shouty broadcasts a live mp3 stream from the phone’s microphone to any one on the local wifi network. Common music playing apps, like iTunes and Banshee, can play this stream using their built-in “internet radio” features.

Right now it has a very clunky interface, but it works. If you want to help out (or just provide moral support) on the project so that it continues to be developed, find it on github.

Occupyist
Occupyist shows the humble beginnings of what will be a sortable, searchable, location-specific list of events (Meetup and Facebook) and Twitter feeds (screen names and hashtags) related to the Occupy movement.

Ridehack
Ridehack helps you share rides to your favorite events and carpool with like-minded people. Thanks to Meetup,OccupyTogether.Ridehack.com helps activists ridehack their way to local Occupy Together meetups.

(NYC project list lives here: https://github.com/meetup/occupy-togeth ... ki/Results)

--
http://occupyhack.com/?page_id=42

===

Loaded with lots of hotlinks if you'd want to look up how you could help if you like. For example...
===
OccupyDesign:
Image
Designers
If you’re a designer who wants to get involved with this project, there’s a few things you can do. First, download the toolkit below. Second, check out the live list of design requests from occupations around the world. Third, choose a design, tackle it, and post it to any of the social media outlets below (include links to PDF/PNG/SVG if possible). For infographics, make sure you choose a data source that is reliable, and cite it in the description of your work.

Finally, please leave your information on the Google form below and we will follow up with more information about getting involved ASAP. We’re currently building out a more robust system for connecting designers directly with the needs and ideas of occupations around the world, and will keep you posted with progress!

Sharing Your Designs

If you have signage designs you’d like to make freely available to occupations around the world, please share with us via Facebook or Twitter. You can also add the tag: OccupyDesign to any Flickr images you want to share, and they’ll show up in our photo stream.

Occupy Design Toolkit

The Design Toolkit is meant to kickstart designers contributing to the movement and to provide some common visual threads across designs. It includes:

■An Illustrator Template for infographic signage
■Rasterbator Standalone (Windows) for creating large-scale tiled signage from 8.5″ x 11″ sheets
■Occupy Design Fist SVG Logo
■Occupy Fist SVG Logo
■Oswald Font for Designs
Download the Toolkit now!

PHOTOSTREAM OF EXAMPLE CREATIONS-
http://occupydesign.org/photos/

--
Our goal is to assist occupiers with logistical operations and communication of their message by getting as many open-source, well-designed, freely-available signs on the street as possible.

If you are an on-the-ground occupier, or supporting an occupation, you can use the following steps to get usable signs on the street quickly and cheaply.

Find -> Print -> Demonstrate
1. Search through this site for protest signs, logistical signs, and icons. If you don’t see what you’re looking for, you can request a specific design below and our network of volunteer designers will take it on as soon as possible.

2. Print out the signs on-site, or contact someone who can print and deliver them for you. We support several formats for each image we produce, namely 8.5″ x 11″ fliers, 25.5″ x 33″ mosaics of 9 letter pages in a 3×3 grid, and scalable graphics for large-format printing (banners, etc). Find a printer near you on inkerlinker.com.

3. Use the signs at a protest or occupation, and hold them up high! If you do end up printing and using some of these resources, please tag them with occupydesign on Flickr – they’ll show up in the photostream on this site and help document how they’re being used around the world.

Check this live Google Doc to see what designs have been requested already before submitting a new request below.

---

Request a Design
Put in a request or idea for a protest sign, infographic sign, logistical sign, or icon that you think would be useful to your occupation or the movement as a whole - we'll get our network of designers on it as soon as possible, and we'll make this a completely open process shortly where anyone can submit designs for anything in a simple way.

http://occupydesign.org/guide/for-occupiers/
George Carlin ~ "Its called 'The American Dream', because you have to be asleep to believe it."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=acLW1vFO-2Q
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby elfismiles » Thu Oct 20, 2011 11:08 am

#OccupySOA

http://www.SOAW.org


Image

Actions speak louder than words. Only through consistent struggle will we create lasting change and forge a new world. Are you ready to join thousands this November 18-20 in a celebration of resistance and memory?

http://soaw.org/take-action/november-vigil

November 18-20, 2011: SOA Vigil at the Gates of Fort Benning, Georgia
Friday, November 18
10-12pm Stewart Detention Center Rally and Vigil V *Please contact becca@soaw.orgThis e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it to coordinate transporation.

2-11pm Workshops

2-5pm Nonviolence Training (note: this is not preparation for the weekend, if you are considering civil disobedience at the vigil, you should contact directaction@soaw.orgThis e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it ahead of time)

7:30-8:30pm Direct Action Meeting (for people who are interested in learning more about possible creative nonviolent educational actions)

2-5 Peacemakers Training

8:30-11pm Concert

Saturday, November 19
9-10:30am SOA Watch Plenary- Find out what's been happening in the movement over the past year! Hear voices from across the Americas, and get renergized to continue the fight! Get legal information to keep you safe over the weekend.


10:30am Women's Peace Convergence on Columbus
11:30am-4pm Rally at the gates

5pm to 11pm Workshops

5:45-6:45pm Interfaith Service

7-8:15pm Panel: Somos Una America! Connecting Our Struggles Across the Hemisphere This panel discussion will bring together leaders from the Americas to talk more in-depth about their struggles, and how we are all connected, from Haiti to Honduras to Georgia. Karina Macias will be moderating this open discussion, with questions and answers following.
8:30-11pm Concert


Sunday, November 20
7:45am Veterans for Peace March to the gates, meet at the Columbus Inn (formerly the Days Inn)
8:45am Vigil at the Gates, followed to funeral procession, speakers, puppetistas pageantry and more!

(Visit here to see a detailed schedule of the weekend)
http://soaw.org/take-action/november-vi ... -of-events



Save the Date
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=31703

SOA WATCH : Seven SOA Graduates Convicted in Peru
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=29704

Honduras Coup: Soldiers kidnap VZ, Cuba, Nicaragua envoys
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=24373&hilit=soaw.org

Bloods and Crips
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=19573&hilit=soaw.org

Obama and the School of the Americas
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=18870

Vigil to Close the SOA/ WHINSEC November 17-19, 2006
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=9198

... more ...
search.php?st=0&sk=t&sd=d&sr=posts&keywords=soaw.org&start=15
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby beeline » Thu Oct 20, 2011 12:17 pm

From Facebook:

Statement of Solidarity from Temple University Faculty

by Occupy Philadelphia on Thursday, October 20, 2011 at 12:11am.

As faculty members at Temple University, we wish to express our solidarity with the Occupy Wall Street movement now underway in our city and elsewhere. We are proud to serve at a public university that has helped generations of Philadelphians, many of them the first in their families to attend college, to improve their own economic situations, to produce new knowledge, and to become more engaged in civic life. But we see that legacy under grave threat when we consider the increasingly difficult lives of our students, many of our faculty, and our neighbors in North Philadelphia. It is a threat born of a collusion between concentrated wealth and political power; Occupy Wall Street gives eloquent testimony to this dangerous alliance and offers some hope for a solution.

As faculty and staff at a public university, we understand that cuts in state funding for higher education and in federal student grants have driven the costs of a college education beyond the means of many. Students are increasingly forced to finance their education through extraordinary levels of personal debt. Thus, we support the Occupy Wall Street movement, in part, because only by restoring progressive taxation at the federal and state level can we restore adequate funding of higher education and render it accessible and affordable to all. We also endorse calls for a federal program that would relieve students of the back-breaking debt levels they have been forced to assume. Higher education, for those able and willing to pursue it, should be a right and not a privilege.

More broadly, we share the outrage of Occupy Wall Street at a system that provides increasingly few opportunities for the majority –– the 99% –– while generating vast profits for a tiny minority. Along with the demonstrators, we are demanding an end to the extreme inequalities that structure our society. We share with many Americans acute anger at the government's unconditional bailout of bankers and Wall Street firms that drove the economy to disaster. Our country urgently needs to address not the problems of Wall Street but the problems of the 99%: massive unemployment, the erosion of our social safety networks, our decaying infrastructures, social and education programs, and workers' wages, rights, and benefits. We join Occupy Wall Street in calling for urgent action to increase employment and to protect programs such as Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, in part by requiring the wealthy, the investment bankers, and the large corporations to pay their fair share of taxes. We also join the protesters in decrying the disastrous effects of the costly wars that the United States has been conducting overseas since 2001. Only by identifying the complex interconnections between repressive economic, social, and political regimes can social and economic justice prevail in this country and around the globe. We applaud the efforts to keep the protests peaceful and democratic. As teachers we express our conviction that without social justice, education is a shell game. And as scholars we celebrate the creative and intellectual work of Occupy Wall Street as an essential partner to our own efforts to facilitate the emergence of a better social order and a smarter commitment to its lively perpetuation. As individuals proud to be members of the Temple Association of University Professionals, we join our colleagues in the labor movement, especially teachers unions, and at other universities and colleges, in supporting this peaceful and potentially transformative movement, and we call on all members of the Temple community to lend their support.



(NB: Much of the language of this statement, especially in the last paragraph, is borrowed, with thanks, from a statement by faculty of the University of Pennsylvania.)



Steve Newman, English

Joseph Schwartz, Political Science

Sook Kyung Kim, English/First-Year Writing

Laura Levitt, Religion

Naomi Schiller, Anthropology

Rebecca Alpert, Religion

Peter Gran, History

Miles Orvell, English/American Studies

Kathleen Biddick, History

Patricia Hansell, Anthropology

Sherri Grasmuck, Sociology

Barbara Ferman, Political Science

Judith Goode, Anthropology

Howard Spodek, History

Josh Klugman, Sociology

Anne Shlay, Sociology

Jeffrey Solow, Music

Nora Alter, Film and Media Arts

Philip Yannella, English and American Studies

Kim Goyette, Sociology

Rickie Sanders, Geography and Urban Studies

Matthew Greenbaum, Music

Michael Ryan, Film and Media Arts

Matt Wray, Sociology

Dennis Lebofsky, English

David Allen, Sociology

Terry Halbert, Legal Studies

Lynne Andersson, Human Resource Management

Elisabeth Subrin, Film and Media Arts

Stuart Schmidt, Human Resources

Noah Shusterman, Intellectual Heritage

Anthony Ranere, Anthropology

Joyce Lindorff, Music

Alistair Howard, Political Science

Maurice Wright, Music Composition

Arthur Hochner, Human Resource Management

Daniel Szyld, Mathematics

Paul LaFollette, Computer and Information Science

Jude Tallichet, Painting

John Paulos, Mathematics

Susan B. Dickey, Nursing

Arthur Schmidt, History

Louis Natali, Law

David Waldstreicher, History

Marina Angel, Law

Nancy Morris, BTMM

Debra Kroll, Law

Jan Fernback, BTMM

Andrea Lopez, Human Resource Management

David Watt, History

Daniel Chomsky, Political Science

John Deckop, Human Resource Management

Eli Goldblatt, English

Frank Friedman, Computer and Information Science

Miriam Solomon, Philosophy

Rea Tajiri, Film and Media Arts

Jim Korsh, Computer and Information Science

Robet Kaufman, Sociology

Jena Osman, English

Brian Mann, Communications and Theatre

Margaux Cowden, Women's Studies/American Studies

Billie Goldstein, Computer and Information Science

Karyn Olivier, Painting

Luke Kahlich, Dance

Erin Lebofsky-Downs, English/First-Year Writing

Mary Stricker, Sociology

Benny Marcus, Sociology

Sally Kyvernitis, Computer and Information Science

Marshall Ford, Computer and Information Science

Giorgio Ingargiola, Computer and Information Science

Joan Shapiro, Education Leadership and Policy Studies

Lisa Grunberger, English/First-Year Writing

Susan Wells, English

Amy Friedman, English

Sonja Crafts, English

Sam Schild, English

Michael Blancato, English

Juan Agudelo, English

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby MinM » Thu Oct 20, 2011 12:48 pm

elfismiles wrote:From Andy Worthington


Protestors in Washington D.C. Call for an End to the Afghan War on its 10th Anniversary, and the Transformation of American Politics
7.10.11

“Stop the Machine! Create a New World!” and “Human Needs, Not Corporate Greed!” are the rallying cries of a movement, October2011.org, that launched on June 6 this year, calling for the occupation, on October 6 (yesterday), of Freedom Plaza in Washington D.C. on an open-ended basis. The movement is calling for nothing less than the total transformation of American politics, but the immediate focus today is on the war in Afghanistan, which began exactly ten years ago.

Bringing the war to an end ought to be a priority for the American people on a number of fronts.

Firstly, the war is unwinnable. Ousting al-Qaeda from Afghanistan may have been a success, but the battle for hearts and minds was lost early on, through bombing raids that killed thousands of civilians, and the casual and imprecise violence that led to the imprisonment and abuse of hundreds of Afghan Taliban conscripts in Guantánamo and Bagram. To topple the Taliban, the US worked with brutal warlords, whose corruption, in many cases, had prompted the rise of the Taliban in the first place, and although the Taliban were ousted from power, the pointless diversion into Iraq was ruinous for the muddled and ill-conceived nation-building mission in Afghanistan.

Secondly, the cost is astronomical. According to the Cost of War project, the total cost to date is over $460 billion — and a useful breakdown of that figure, including some mention of what it could have been used to fund instead, is available here.

Thirdly, the loss of life is unforgivable. 1,407 US military personnel have been killed in Afghanistan since “Operation Enduring Freedom” began, and 14,342 have been wounded. Up to 29,000 Afghan civilians have been killed as a result of U.S-led military actions, and hundreds of thousands wounded and displaced.

A fourth reason to end the war, which is generally less well known (or at least less thought about), is because it led to the creation of Guantánamo, where a small number of terror suspects are held along with Taliban foot soldiers and innocent men seized by mistake, but all of the 779 prisoners held throughout the prison’s history were deprived of their rights and designated as “enemy combatants” without rights, who could be abused with impunity.

171 of these men are still held, even though only 36 of them have been proposed for trials, and there is no sign of when, if ever, the rest will be released. An end to the war will bring to an end the US government’s claim that it can justify holding prisoners at Guantánamo forever because of the Authorization for Use of Military Force, passed by Congress the week after the 9/11 attacks, which is used to justify the detention of prisoners seized in the “war on terror.” With the end of the war, and the end of the AUMF, the US government will have to explain how long the war in which the prisoners were seized will actually last.

A fifth reason to end the war is to close the US prison at Bagram airbase, and, as with Guantánamo, to ensure that, in future armed conflicts, the US government once more offers the protections of the Geneva Conventions to those seized in wartime. Instead, those in Bagram are still held arbitrarily, without even the compromised habeas corpus rights given to the Guantánamo prisoners by the Supreme Court (and since gutted by the D.C. Circuit Court). At Bagram, the prisoners have nothing but a periodic military review process that has nothing to do with the Geneva Conventions.

In launching the “Stop the Machine! Create a New World!” campaign, activist and author David Swanson wrote:

When other nations’ governments go off track, their people do something about it. In Tunisia and Egypt people have nonviolently claimed power in a way that has inspired Americans in Wisconsin and other states, as well as the people of Spain and the rest of the world.

Washington, D.C. is the weakest point in our democracy, without which state-level reform cannot succeed. Most Americans want our wars ended, our corporations and billionaires taxed, and our rights expanded rather than curtailed. We want our money invested in jobs and green energy, not a global military that can’t stop itself. Our government in Washington goes in the opposite direction, opposing popular will on these major issues, regardless of personality or party.

This will not be another rally and march on a Saturday, make home movies, pat ourselves on the back, and go home. We are coming to Washington to stay.


The organizers — Maria Allwine, Ellen Barfield, Catarina Correia, Ellen Davidson, Margaret Flowers, Tarak Kauff, Mark Mason, Devra Morice, Udi Pladott, Ward Reilly, Lisa Simeone, David Swanson, Dennis Trainor, Jr., the Rev. Dr. Bruce Wright and Kevin Zeese — also issued the following pledge, which has since been signed by many, or most of those turning up to protest:

I pledge that if any U.S. troops, contractors, or mercenaries remain in Afghanistan on Thursday, October 6, 2011, as that occupation goes into its 11th year, I will commit to being in Freedom Plaza in Washington, D.C., with others on that day or the days immediately following, for as long as I can, with the intention of making it our Tahrir Square, Cairo, our Madison, Wisconsin, where we will NONVIOLENTLY resist the corporate machine by occupying Freedom Plaza to demand that America’s resources be invested in human needs and environmental protection instead of war and exploitation. We can do this together. We will be the beginning.


And this is from their mission statement:

We call on people of conscience and courage — all who seek peace, economic justice, human rights and a healthy environment — to join together in Washington, D.C., beginning on Oct. 6, 2011, in nonviolent resistance similar to the Arab Spring and the Midwest awakening. [...]

Forty-seven years ago, Mario Savio, an activist student at Berkeley, said, “There’s a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious — makes you so sick at heart — that you can’t take part. You can’t even passively take part. And you’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus, and you’ve got to make it stop. And you’ve got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you’re free, the machine will be prevented from working at all.”

Those words have an even greater urgency today. We face ongoing wars and massive socio-economic and environmental destruction perpetrated by a corporate empire which is oppressing, occupying and exploiting the world. We are on a fast track to making the planet unlivable while the middle class and poor people of our country are undergoing the most wrenching and profound economic crisis in 80 years.

“Stop the Machine! Create a New World!” is a clarion call for all who are deeply concerned with injustice, militarism and environmental destruction to join in ending concentrated corporate power and taking direct control of a real participatory democracy. We will encourage a culture of resistance — using music, art, theater and direct nonviolent action — to take control of our country and our lives. It is about courageously resisting and stopping the corporate state from destroying not only our inherent rights and freedoms, but also our children’s chance to live, breathe clean air, drink pure water, grow edible natural food and live in peace.

Since June’s announcement, of course, another movement, “Occupy Wall Street,” has sprung up on a similar basis, recognizing that only a permanent occupation, rather than turning up for the day, patting ourselves on the back, and going home can bring about change. Although prompted primarily by opposition to the war, and its ruinous cost, the organizers of the Freedom Plaza occupation were also clearly motivated by the bigger picture — the revolutionary movements in the Middle East, the inspirational actions in Madison, Wisconsin in February and March, and the mass movements in Greece and Spain — which all fed into “Occupy Wall Street” and the hundreds of other occupations that are now taking place all over the United States.

With the additional focus on seeing “our corporations and billionaires taxed,” and “our money invested in jobs and green energy,” the aims of the Freedom Plaza occupation are, of course, dovetailing with those of the “Occupy Wall Street” movement, which began its own mobilization in Washington D.C., “Occupy D.C.,” on Saturday, and which continues to draw new supporters.

The timing could hardly have been more fortuitous. As “Occupy Wall Street” continues to grow, finally attracting some serious mainstream attention, it seems as if a revolutionary call for change is gaining momentum in the US — driven not just by the long-term activists behind October2011.org, but also by the young people of the “Occupy” movement, educated but without work, who are ideally placed to take to the streets as permanent protestors, and not to leave until a solution is found.


http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/1 ... -politics/


Lisa Simeone, NPR Freelance Host, Fired For Occupy DC Involvement
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/2 ... 21676.html
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Laodicean » Thu Oct 20, 2011 1:46 pm



Good stuff.
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby N8wide » Thu Oct 20, 2011 2:00 pm

Response to Occupy Wall Street

The Venus Project realizes the significance of the Occupy Wall Street and Occupy Together movements and offers a positive solution for their grievances.

We at The Venus Project fear that any acquiescence to the protestor’s demands will do very little if the processes that cause the problems are left in place. In this case whatever laws or regulations are made will be eventually bypassed or overturned and conditions will revert back. This has almost always been the situation historically.


http://www.thevenusproject.com/

I was curious what everyone thought of this organization/philosophy.
"A belief which leaves no place for doubt is not a belief; it is a superstition."
José Bergamín (1923, The Rocket and the Star)


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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby ninakat » Thu Oct 20, 2011 2:49 pm

Peter Joseph of the Zeitgeist films embraced (I think he still does) the Venus Project, but it's just a little bit too utopian and unrealistic in my view. OK, it's way too utopian and seems almost cult-like. It could probably work for the 1% while the rest of us lived in squalor or simply died off. The idea of abundance of everything (especially energy), and a sustainable way of living that looks like this (see picture below) for 7 billion people? Delusional. Hey, but you can't say Jacque Fresco isn't a dreamer.

Image

And, in case you missed it, the Venus Project bit starts @ 4:15 -- but really, watch what leads up to it. Fucking brilliant.

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby N8wide » Thu Oct 20, 2011 4:10 pm

Peter Joseph of the Zeitgeist films embraced (I think he still does) the Venus Project, but it's just a little bit too utopian and unrealistic in my view. OK, it's way too utopian and seems almost cult-like. It could probably work for the 1% while the rest of us lived in squalor or simply died off. The idea of abundance of everything (especially energy), and a sustainable way of living that looks like this (see picture below) for 7 billion people? Delusional. Hey, but you can't say Jacque Fresco isn't a dreamer.


Thank you for the additional information, after about a half an hour of research, I too was thinking cult-like. I do think he makes some good points with his "Resource based economy" ideology, but utopian indeed. I had a bizarre feeling the whole time I watched the videos. :roll:
"A belief which leaves no place for doubt is not a belief; it is a superstition."
José Bergamín (1923, The Rocket and the Star)


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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby 2012 Countdown » Thu Oct 20, 2011 4:22 pm

Image
Pepper Spray Cop Didn't Mean To Spray Those Women, But He'd Do It Again
By John Del Signore in News on October 20, 2011 3:00 PM

Poor Tony Bologna. Ever since video surfaced showing those two nogoodnik protesters got their pretty eyes in the way of his pepper spray, he's been widely reviled by a misinformed public. After being formally reprimanded for the incident, losing ten vacation days, and getting ridiculed by The Daily Show, Bologna is now trying to set the record straight. He's not some fascist who goes around inflicting agonizing pain on innocent young women; he's got the "best intentions." And he tells veteran crime reporter Murray Weiss he's been "tortured" since the incident.
"I did not intend to spray the women," the 30-year veteran says via DNAinfo's sources, adding that he "acted with the best intentions" when he blasted the women in the eyes without provocation and in violation of NYPD guidelines. Bologna says he was “shell-shocked” when the video went viral, but if he could turn back the clock he "would do things the same way." Though we imagine he might give the person who videotaped this a nice spicy spritz, too.

Bologna claims his intended target was three mysterious young men who were "on the ground trying to grab officers' legs from under the netting." He says he went to spray them but missed, hitting the ladies in stead. SO SUE HIM! (Actually, they probably will.) Of course, those three groper protesters escaped, so we'll just have to take Officer Bologna's word for it. Which is okay with Murray Weiss, who writes, "Bologna may have made a mistake in judgment and deserved a rip. But it is hard to see a crime here." Hmmm, somehow, we suspect it's a bit easier to see the crime if your eyes are full of pepper spray.

One of Bologna's victims, Kaylee Dedrick, 24, of Manhattan, tells the Post, "It was a tremendous amount of pain. I was blind for abut 45 minutes... I want something to happen, for this man to feel the repercussions of what he did that day." But Bologna—who has received death threats—insists that he felt the repercussions immediately: you see, some of the pepper spray actually blew back into his face. Yes, there's a tiny violin playing right now in Zuccotti park (you just can't hear it because they're not allowed to use amplification).

http://gothamist.com/2011/10/20/pepper_ ... t_mean.php
George Carlin ~ "Its called 'The American Dream', because you have to be asleep to believe it."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=acLW1vFO-2Q
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby 2012 Countdown » Thu Oct 20, 2011 4:34 pm


October2011 Movement Closes Citibank to Protest Record Profits Made at the Expense of Human Needs
Uploaded by ncftTV on Oct 20, 2011

Like/ FAV/ Share -- make this go viral!
shot by Asher Platts and Kevin Egan
Cut by Dennis Trainor, Jr

Contact :
*** http://www.facebook.com/dennistrainorjr & http://www.twitter.com/dennistrainorjr ***


Washington, DC - A group of 40 protesters marched to the Citibank, a subsidiary of Citigroup, at 14th and G Streets NW this morning to protest the announcement of the seventh consecutive quarter of massive profits by Citigroup while the economy continues to collapse. Upon the arrival of the protesters, the bank shut down. Six protesters including a video team remained inside the building. Video will be available soon. Police have been called to the scene.

Citigroup, one of the nation's largest banking and investment firms, reported yesterday that their quarterly earnings are up $3.8 billion, 74% higher than a year ago. Citigroup continues to foreclose on mortgages. They hold back loans to small businesses and consumers. They choke the economy while they are profiting massively.

This is a slap in the face to the average American who earns miniscule interest rates on the money they have in Citigroup banks, are unable to obtain loans and mortgages, and are being forced to pay all sorts of fees and charges just to access their own money.

Citigroup's profits are typical of the banking industry in general who accepted billions in bailout loans from the American people, yet now seem to think that the money belongs to them personally.

Here is a list of complaints aganst Citibank:

1. Citigroup has paid ZERO corporate taxes for the last four years.
2. Citigroup has 427 subsidiaries in foreign tax havens to hide their profits.
3. Citigroup was the LARGEST recipient of federal bailout money-- $476 billion.
4. CEO John Havens receives $9.5 million annually, while paying their tellers $12.65 an hour.
5. Citigroup just posted a 3rd quarter net profit of $3.8 billion, a 74% increase over last year.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pl ... J6QzKW4DYc
George Carlin ~ "Its called 'The American Dream', because you have to be asleep to believe it."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=acLW1vFO-2Q
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Thu Oct 20, 2011 4:36 pm

The Venus Project is a bunch of paintings...it's not even good sci-fi. It is absurdly shallow on the logistics and engineering details. Never understood the love for Fresco, he's just doing second-hand Bucky routines without the knowledge to back it up.

I am reminding myself more and more this year that I need to be gracious, and anything that brings people into the conversation and gets them thinking and asking questions is good. I'm glad Venus Project exists just like I'm glad Zeitgeist exists but I don't take either of them seriously. They are gateway drugs and I don't think that #Occupy needs to take their "advice" into account.
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby undead » Thu Oct 20, 2011 5:10 pm

The Venus project is a ridiculous farce. The second 2 Zeitgeist films are a bait-and-switch scheme for this technocratic crack-pipe dream. In the third Zeitgeist film the guy is calling for all of society to be coordinated by an AI computer. I think that is enough to place it on the counterproductive side of things. The Gabor Mate section is great, but like I said, bait and switch.
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