#occupywallstreet

Month

April 2012

31 posts

Apr 30, 201232 notes
#general strike #may day #occupy wall street #mayday #strike #occupywallstreet

Currently spamming general strike pics because general strike.

Apr 30, 20127 notes
Apr 30, 2012113 notes
#may day #general strike #mayday #occupy wall street #occupywallstreet #international workers' day #labor day #strike
Apr 30, 201223 notes
#may 1 #may day #general strike #strike #occupy wall street #occupywallstreet
Apr 30, 201231 notes
#workers #international workers' day #immigration #migrant workers #undocumented immigrants #undocumented #general strike #may first #may day #blah
Apr 30, 201236 notes
#may day #mayday #general strike #strike #workers' day #labor day #international workers' day #occupywallstreet #occupy wall street
things brand new people should know about poc criticism of the occupy movement

deluxvivens:

this

this post about indigenous activist criticisms of occupy that came out in october;

the decolonize oakland website;

the occupy wall street poc commitee;

in front and center: critical voices of the 99%;

brown power at occupy wall street about poc activists working to change the language of the original ows declaration.

tequila sovereign with some background about occupy oakland’s interaction with indigenous activists

Take Back Wall Street, Occupied Since 1625

Apr 30, 2012524 notes
Apr 30, 2012106 notes
NYC Endorsers of May Day 2012

  • AFSCME DC37
  • AFSCME DC 1707
  • AFSCME CSEA Region 2
  • AFSCME Local 371 (SSEU)
  • AFSCME Local 372 DC 37
  • AFSCME Local 375 DC 37
  • AFSCME DC 37 Retirees Association
  • AFT - PSC/CUNY
  • American Federation of Musicians Local 802
  • Anakbayan NY/NJ
  • Answer Coalition
  • BAYAN-USA
  • Brandworkers
  • Centro Guatemalteco Tecun Uman
  • Coalition for a District Alternative
  • Coalition for Public Education (CPE)
  • Committees of Correspondence
  • Community Development Project at the Urban Justice Center
  • Community Farmworker Alliance
  • CSEA 1000
  • CWA District 1
  • CWA Local 1180
  • CWA Local 31003 The New York Newspaper Guild
  • NABET-CWA Local 16
  • Domestic Workers United
  • Filipinas for Rights and Empowerment (FiRE)
  • Freedom Socialist Party
  • Frente Unido de Inmigrantes Ecuatorianos
  • GABRIELA USA
  • Greater NY Labor-Religion Coalition
  • Green Party of NYC
  • Green Party of NYS
  • Guyanese American Workers United
  • Honduras USA Resistencia
  • IBT Joint Council 16
  • IBT Local 808
  • IBT Local 814
  • IBT Local 210
  • IBT Local 272
  • Immigrant Workers Movement
  • Immigrant Solidarity Network
  • Industrial Union Council New Jersey
  • International Action Center
  • International League of Peoples Struggle
  • International Migrants Alliance
  • International Socialist Organization
  • Jersey City Peace Movement
  • Jews for Racial and Economic Justice
  • Jornaleros Unidos de Woodside
  • Kurland Group
  • Labor Network for Sustainability
  • La Fuente
  • La Pena del Bronx
  • Labor for Palestine
  • Left Labor Project
  • LIUNA Local 10
  • LIUNA Local 78
  • LIUNA Local 79
  • Long Island Workplace Project
  • Make the Road New York
  • May 1st Coalition
  • National Alliance for Filipino Concerns (NAFCON)
  • National Domestic Workers Alliance
  • New Immigrant Community Empowerment
  • National Immigrant Solidarity Network
  • New York Broadcast Trades Council
  • New York City Central Labor Council, AFL-CIO
  • New York City Labor Against the War
  • New York City LCLAA
  • New York Committee for Human Rights in the Philippines (NYCHRP)
  • New York Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador
  • New York Communities for Change
  • New York Immigration Coalition
  • New York New Jersey Regional Joint Board, Workers United
  • New York Taxi Workers Alliance
  • NYS District Communist Party USA
  • NYS Nurses Association
  • Occupy Sunset Park
  • Occupy Wall Street
  • Operation Power
  • Organization of Staff Analysts
  • Pakistan USA Freedom Forum
  • Philippine Forum
  • Radical Women
  • Restaurant Opportunities Center of New York
  • Retail Action Project
  • RWDSU
  • School of Americas Watch (SOA Watch)
  • 1199SEIU
  • SEIU 32BJ
  • Senegalese Workers Association
  • Sisa Pakari Cultural & Labor Center
  • Take Back the Future TWU Local 100
  • UAW Region 9A
  • UAW Local 1981 National Writers Union
  • UNITE HERE Local 100
  • United Federation of Teachers
  • United NY
  • Veterans for Peace Chapter 3 NYC
  • Workers United, SEIU
  • Workers World Party
  • Writers Guild of America, East
Apr 29, 201217 notes
Apr 29, 201244 notes
Apr 28, 201260 notes
Report: American Corporations Are Adding More Jobs Overseas Than They Are At Home → thinkprogress.org
Apr 27, 2012107 notes
Apr 27, 201243 notes
Apr 23, 201264 notes
Apr 22, 201285 notes
submission from studentoccupy

Recently a bill was introduced in the senate that would require the wealthiest Americans to pay their fair share of taxes, the bill would also eliminate tax loopholes for big businesses. It’s no surprise that our senators (many of them in the top 1 percent) didn’t pass this bill. Here is a list of senators that voted against the bill and how you can contact them. Please write at least a few of these senators everyday, and hopefully we can get this bill re-introduced and passed. Remember that you have to be the change you wish to see so you can’t sit there and expect other people to write these senators it has to be YOU that does it. Here is the letter that I sent to every senator:

Hello, I am emailing you because recently a bill was introduced that would require some of the wealthiest American citizens to pay their fair share of taxes. Those funds could be used to pay down some of the federal debt, and could be used for education, or helping our homeless veterans, or any number of good causes which is why I believe you should re-consider your vote on this bill. I can not understand why anyone would oppose making some of the most fortunate Americans help some of the most unfortunate Americans, or at the very least make these Americans pay a little more than the average citizen.

Here is a list of the contact information for all senators who voted against this bill:

  • http://www.alexander.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=Email
  • http://www.ayotte.senate.gov/?p=contact
  • http://www.barrasso.senate.gov/public/index.cfm FuseAction=ContactUs.ContactForm
  • http://www.blunt.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/contact-form?p=contact-roy
  • http://www.boozman.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/e-mail-me
  • http://www.scottbrown.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/emailscottbrown
  • http://www.burr.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Contact.ContactForm
  • http://www.chambliss.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=Email
  • http://www.coats.senate.gov/contact/
  • http://www.coburn.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/contactsenatorcoburn?p=ContactForm
  • http://www.cochran.senate.gov/email.html
  • http://www.corker.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=ContactMe
  • http://www.cornyn.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=ContactForm
  • http://www.crapo.senate.gov/contact/email.cfm
  • http://www.demint.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=ContactInformation
  • http://www.enzi.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/contact?p=e-mail-senator-enzi
  • http://www.lgraham.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Contact.EmailSenatorGraham
  • http://www.hatch.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/contact?p=Email-Orrin
  • http://www.grassley.senate.gov/contact.cfm
  • http://www.heller.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/contact-form
  • http://www.hoeven.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/email-the-senator
  • http://www.hutchison.senate.gov/?p=email_kay
  • http://www.inhofe.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Contact.ContactForm
  • http://www.isakson.senate.gov/contact.cfm
  • http://www.johanns.senate.gov/public/?p=ContactSenatorJohanns
  • http://www.ronjohnson.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/contact
  • http://www.kirk.senate.gov/?p=contact
  • http://www.kyl.senate.gov/contact.cfm
  • http://www.lee.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/contact
  • http://www.lugar.senate.gov/contact/
  • http://www.mccain.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Contact.ContactForm
  • http://www.mcconnell.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=contact
  • http://www.moran.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=e-mail-jerry
  • http://www.murkowski.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=Contact
  • http://www.paul.senate.gov/?p=contact
  • http://www.portman.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/contact?p=contact-form
  • http://www.risch.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=Email
  • http://www.roberts.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=EmailPat
  • http://www.rubio.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/contact
  • http://www.sessions.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=ConstituentServices.ContactMe
  • http://www.shelby.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/emailsenatorshelby
  • http://www.thune.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/contact
  • http://www.toomey.senate.gov/?p=contact
  • http://www.vitter.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Contact.ContactForm
  • http://www.wicker.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Contact.EMailSenatorWicker
  • http://www.pryor.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=ContactMe
Apr 19, 201217 notes
#submission
ACTION AGAINST LAND-GRABBING, April 24 - NYC

Over 1000, 1-percenters are meeting at Waldorf Astoria (April 23-25), for a major farmland investment event that will decide the fate of millions of Africans.

Dubbed as “the next big thing in finance” some of the largest hedge funds, private equity groups, university endowment managers, and other high rollers will meet to discuss how to continue to make money from food and water shortages. The event is organized by HighQuest Partners, a heavy hitter in the hedge fund market of big agro, bio-tech and bio-fuel companies. Entrance fee to attend is a mere $3,000.
These money managers are there because they are promised to make more than 25% return on investments in areas of the world where there exists incredible food insecurity. In 2009 only, nearly 60 million hectares of arable land – an area the size of France – was purchased or leased, 70 percent of it in Africa. It’s impossible to acquire that much of land without the continued taking of land previously held by small indigenous farmers. That number has only been increasing as more and more land has been leased off to companies and governments in Africa – by corrupt dictators, that have no moral qualms about displacing millions from their ancestral lands. On their website, HighQuest partners brag about representing $3.5 trillion in aggregated institutional assets and 25 million acres under cultivation in 2011 alone. This year they are expecting to double. BTW 25 million acres is the size of Vermont, New Hampshire and Massachusetts combined together, OR 11 times the size of Yellowstone National Park.  
Please join in solidarity with food justice activists, Environmental ORGs, OWS groups, African students and communities in exposing these cabal of evil doers -that their “next big thing in finance” is nothing more than the next financial bubble with far more ill-consequences for humanity and the planet.

Day of Action: April 24 2012
Where: The Waldorf-Astoria
301 Park Avenue. NY, NY

Apr 16, 201236 notes
#agriculture #protest #land #farming #africa #food #water #privatization #privatisation
Yes, the 99% Spring is a Fraud | Charles M. Young → counterpunch.org

With hindsight gained by googling “MoveOn” and “co-opt” after the fact, I can’t claim that nobody tried to warn me. Many websites with left and even liberal politics had said in so many words, “Be wary of this organization called The 99% Spring. It is a Trojan horse for the Democrats.” I just didn’t read that anywhere in a timely fashion. I’ve had a lot of stuff on my plate lately. That’s my excuse. And in my ignorance, I responded to some spam about “nonviolent direct action training” organized by MoveOn and got invited to this 99% Spring thing on April 10 at the Goddard Riverside Community Center in Manhattan. Somebody even called me all the way from San Francisco to make sure I was a sincere seeker on the left and would be attending, along with 120,000 others in training sessions around the country.

Which I did. The meeting was a few blocks from where I live. The spam said it was “inspired by Occupy Wall Street.” I wasn’t sure what that meant, but I was vaguely hoping that whatever The 99% Spring was, it would start a chapter of Occupy Wall Street on the Upper West Side, conveniently near my abode, and agitate for the Democrats and MoveOn to move left.

The first clue that my evening might go otherwise was the sign-up table, where there were a bunch of Obama buttons for sale and one sign-up sheet for the oddly named Community Free Democrats (are they free of community?), which is the local Democratic clubhouse. That killed the “inspired by Occupy Wall Street” vibe right there. No piles of literature from a zillion different groups, as there had been in Zuccotti Park. No animated arguments among Marxists, anarchists, progressives, punks, engaged Buddhists, anti-war libertarians and what have you. Just Obama buttons, which didn’t appear to be selling. [++]

Apr 15, 201240 notes
#OWS #99% Spring #politics
Apr 15, 2012804 notes
Apr 11, 2012271 notes
Apr 11, 201215 notes
Apr 10, 201248 notes
#bank of america #bank #forelosures #run #ows #wall street
Apr 10, 201221 notes
Apr 6, 2012186 notes
#ows #occupy #occupywallstreet #posters #1m #may day #general strike
SF Chronicle: Occupy protesters take over vacant Turk Street building

oldenough2burmom:

(04-01) 17:57 PDT San Francisco — A group of marchers led by Occupy movement protesters has entered a vacant building at Turk and Gough streets in San Francisco, claiming the property as a “permanent occupation” and refuge for homeless people in the city.

The group entered the building at about 5:45 Sunday evening, after marching there following a really at Union Square. Police were on the scene, but there were no immediate arrests or confrontation.

The march, which numbered a few hundred, was peaceful along the route. Marchers were playing music, chanting slogans and carrying signs saying “House Keys Not Handcuffs” as police officers looked on and blocked traffic.

When marchers reached the building, a two-story commercial structure at 888 Turk Street, they were met by activists dressed in black who had already entered the building and allowed them inside.

The march followed an afternoon rally in Union Square. The event, described in a press release as “poor people play April Fool’s prank on Union Square,” was promoted as part of a supposed 12-city April Fool’s Day action designed to “demonstrate poor peoples’ right to exist in public space.”

Speakers protested laws that keep homeless people from sitting, lying down, hanging out “and-perhaps worst of all-sleeping,” organizers said. They claimed that citations for offenses like these comprised “roughly one third of all prosecuted offenses in San Francisco at the end of 2011.” Paul Boden, one of the organizers, told the crowd at Union Square that area businesses “are targeting poor people as being bad for business. If you ain’t shopping, they don’t want you around here.”

Before leaving Union Square, those assembled were joined by a contingent from Occupy Oakland, who arrived on an old AC Transit bus. The bus, decorated with graffiti and fitted with a screen door at its entrance, followed the marchers along the route.

Benny Evangelista is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. bevangelista@sfchronicle.com


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2012/04/01/BAP11NTE3K.DTL#ixzz1qqDvQAal

Apr 1, 201231 notes
#april 1 #occupy san francisco #union square #occupy #homeless #poor people #protest march #ows

March 2012

33 posts

Play
Mar 29, 201226 notes
#ows #occupy #occupywallstreet #internet #networking #decentralization #communication #media #fnf #free network foundation #freedom tower #mesh networking #mesh #meshnet
Mar 27, 2012262 notes
Mar 27, 201254 notes
#ows #occupy #dhs
I was preparing for Whistleblowing Wednesday and I found something worth sharing:

occupyallstreets:

According to leaked documents (obtained by WikiLeaks), the DHS is monitoring OccupyWallStreet’s Tumblr.

Members domesticterrorism, cartonrouge and laughing-rabbit of the OccupyWallStreet Tumblr blog may also be monitored by Homeland Security. 

Two out of the three members follow this blog and they frequently reblog my post on the OccupyWallStreet blog. 

The Twitter account @OccupyWallStNYC is also being monitored. It just so happens that they follow me as well.

Since this blog is arguably the most frequently updated and popular OWS-related Tumblr, I have reason to believe this blog is also being monitored and that could explain the frequent reportings. 

If I find anything new, I will post an update. You can read the document here.

HAHAHAHA

Why, hello Agent Scully! Hope you enjoy our updates.

Mar 27, 2012103 notes
Read this and listen. → racismschool.tumblr.com

zyyllyhoo:

occupywallstreet:

occupyallstreets:

occupywallstreet:

I saw OWS people trying, not to integrate with but to change the direction of the route. I saw OWS people screaming for everyone to go to Zuccotti Park. After seeing this and then seeing the arguments of people saying that this was not about OWS, only to have the OWS people say that it WAS, I became physically ill. If there was ever a time when you should have worked to keep the focus on the actual cause, this was it […]

He tried to remain calm while he explained what he saw. He saw the same thing that I did. Only in a different form and at a different location. He saw OWS people yelling that it wasn’t about race and that it would be best to incorporate this into the OWS movement. 

This behavior is unacceptable.

These are real concerns. They are legitimate concerns. Listen to what people have to say without being patronizing. That people in this movement are acting like this is a serious problem (and don’t think for a second this is an isolated incident) and this blog will no longer turn a blind eye to it. 

Including concerns of POC, women, queer folk, etc. does not mean making them take a back seat to what you think the “real issues” should be, and it does not mean making them assimilate into what you think the movement should be. It is a racist, imperialist attitude and it is an insult to the democratic ideals this movement was supposed to have been built on.

In no way is the idea that we should figure out economic issues first and get to everyone else later acceptable. In no way is deriding people’s concerns because you think yours come first acceptable.

I care about this movement and I have since the beginning, but it is worthless - absolutely worthless - while these serious problems go un-addressed, and while we continue to let racist, alienating garbage dominate the discussion. Read this post, listen to other concerns, learn what the fuck intersectionality is, and use your goddamn brains.

These concerns aren’t “divisive,” your bullshit is. 

OWS needs to become more POC-friendly and address the issue on wealth inequality amongst racial minorities. A large majority of people at Occupy Wall Street are white and do not realize that the recession has effected POC a lot more than it has effected whites.

That is why Occupy The Hood and POCcupy is essential to the movement. What upsets me is that we have to separated ourselves because the entire movement does not recognize the issues latinos and blacks go through. Our median household income is significantly less than whites and the Stop & Frisk policy in NYC (which OWS has protested) is directed at blacks and latinos. 

I repeatedly tried to convince Occupiers to march in Harlem, Washington Heights and Bushwick because we desperately need things to change over here. There are 8 million people living in New York City, why are we limiting ourselves to downtown Manhattan and why are we completely ignoring the issues racial minorities face in America. 

We also need to appeal to Asians. In Chinatown there are a massive amount of undocumented people there. They are afraid and often exploited. There is no excuse for not marching in Chinatown because it is only blocks away. 

If we’re going to grow as a movement we need to recognize our internal flaws and fix them. There is no reason why OWS is more than 80% white in a racially diverse city like NYC. This is a serious flaw in Occupy and OWS cannot defend themselves by saying all races are welcomed because they don’t feel welcomed. Whites do not face this issue so they wouldn’t understand but it’s time that they do. 

If Occupy doesn’t change I have no choice other than to abandon the movement. I believe OWS has the power to change things but if you ignore racial inequality then you are ignoring blacks, latinos and asians. At this point Occupy Wall Street should call themselves the 80% to represent the amount of whites in America.

Just be careful with how you word that and how you present those ideas. It’s way to easy for “we need to include” to end up meaning “we need to lasso their concerns to be part of our concerns and direct their message toward what we think it should be.”

“Appeal to” sounds like politician pandering. Like “we need to get “the Asian vote.”” No. What we need is to support their issues, and for their concerns to be our concerns without expecting them to sit down and take a back seat. What we need to do is stop othering.

And we need to stop making excuses for ourselves.

OWS definitely needs to work to support EVERY group within the 99% - we all have to work together to get what we need, or we will never succeed in getting the change that would make life better for all of us.

However, that does NOT mean it is at all in any way right for OWS to invade and try to take over the events and rallies of other causes. OWS wants to still be noticed and included, I get that - but you cannot steal the spotlight from other issues. You cannot force this cause into another cause, even when they are related; he was not target by the wealthy, he was targeted by a racist, and although his lack of prosecution is because the police, an institute often owned by the wealthy, failed to act… even though you have issues and concerns with police in general, which is the ONLY reason I can think why they would try to come into this protest and claim it’s “not about race”, it is not right to try and take the focus away from this. Justice for Trayvon is what must come first and foremost from these protests, and not the furthering of OWS’s goals.

Mar 22, 201285 notes
Read this and listen. → racismschool.tumblr.com

occupyallstreets:

occupywallstreet:

I saw OWS people trying, not to integrate with but to change the direction of the route. I saw OWS people screaming for everyone to go to Zuccotti Park. After seeing this and then seeing the arguments of people saying that this was not about OWS, only to have the OWS people say that it WAS, I became physically ill. If there was ever a time when you should have worked to keep the focus on the actual cause, this was it […]

He tried to remain calm while he explained what he saw. He saw the same thing that I did. Only in a different form and at a different location. He saw OWS people yelling that it wasn’t about race and that it would be best to incorporate this into the OWS movement. 

This behavior is unacceptable.

These are real concerns. They are legitimate concerns. Listen to what people have to say without being patronizing. That people in this movement are acting like this is a serious problem (and don’t think for a second this is an isolated incident) and this blog will no longer turn a blind eye to it. 

Including concerns of POC, women, queer folk, etc. does not mean making them take a back seat to what you think the “real issues” should be, and it does not mean making them assimilate into what you think the movement should be. It is a racist, imperialist attitude and it is an insult to the democratic ideals this movement was supposed to have been built on.

In no way is the idea that we should figure out economic issues first and get to everyone else later acceptable. In no way is deriding people’s concerns because you think yours come first acceptable.

I care about this movement and I have since the beginning, but it is worthless - absolutely worthless - while these serious problems go un-addressed, and while we continue to let racist, alienating garbage dominate the discussion. Read this post, listen to other concerns, learn what the fuck intersectionality is, and use your goddamn brains.

These concerns aren’t “divisive,” your bullshit is. 

OWS needs to become more POC-friendly and address the issue on wealth inequality amongst racial minorities. A large majority of people at Occupy Wall Street are white and do not realize that the recession has effected POC a lot more than it has effected whites.

That is why Occupy The Hood and POCcupy is essential to the movement. What upsets me is that we have to separated ourselves because the entire movement does not recognize the issues latinos and blacks go through. Our median household income is significantly less than whites and the Stop & Frisk policy in NYC (which OWS has protested) is directed at blacks and latinos. 

I repeatedly tried to convince Occupiers to march in Harlem, Washington Heights and Bushwick because we desperately need things to change over here. There are 8 million people living in New York City, why are we limiting ourselves to downtown Manhattan and why are we completely ignoring the issues racial minorities face in America. 

We also need to appeal to Asians. In Chinatown there are a massive amount of undocumented people there. They are afraid and often exploited. There is no excuse for not marching in Chinatown because it is only blocks away. 

If we’re going to grow as a movement we need to recognize our internal flaws and fix them. There is no reason why OWS is more than 80% white in a racially diverse city like NYC. This is a serious flaw in Occupy and OWS cannot defend themselves by saying all races are welcomed because they don’t feel welcomed. Whites do not face this issue so they wouldn’t understand but it’s time that they do. 

If Occupy doesn’t change I have no choice other than to abandon the movement. I believe OWS has the power to change things but if you ignore racial inequality then you are ignoring blacks, latinos and asians. At this point Occupy Wall Street should call themselves the 80% to represent the amount of whites in America.

Just be careful with how you word that and how you present those ideas. It’s way to easy for “we need to include” to end up meaning “we need to lasso their concerns to be part of our concerns and direct their message toward what we think it should be.”

“Appeal to” sounds like politician pandering. Like “we need to get “the Asian vote.”” No. What we need is to support their issues, and for their concerns to be our concerns without expecting them to sit down and take a back seat. What we need to do is stop othering.

And we need to stop making excuses for ourselves.

Mar 22, 201285 notes
How Occupy Wall Street Co-Opted The Million Hoodie March → newsone.com

When Occupy Wall Street first got the national spotlight they were so worried about the co-option of their message, yet they have no problem co-opting others. A couple of Occupiers recognized me and asked if I noticed some of the nonsense that was happening. I said yes and one of them explained that after this march and two months of working with Occupy, she and her friends no longer wanted to be associated with them.

Every time I attempt to have a conversation about issues within Occupy, I’m told that there are no leaders, and that some people do crazy things, but “that’s not OCCUPY.” I grow weary of actions without consequences and disrespect without anyone being held responsible. Just because a movement did some good doesn’t mean that it’s infallible. Occupy chapters have serious issues and there have been serious discussions about its relations with women and people of color. With incidents like what occurred on Wednesday, I see a clear reason why people of color don’t flock to the movement.

Some more, incredibly important, points.

Mar 22, 201264 notes
Read this and listen. → racismschool.tumblr.com

I saw OWS people trying, not to integrate with but to change the direction of the route. I saw OWS people screaming for everyone to go to Zuccotti Park. After seeing this and then seeing the arguments of people saying that this was not about OWS, only to have the OWS people say that it WAS, I became physically ill. If there was ever a time when you should have worked to keep the focus on the actual cause, this was it […]

He tried to remain calm while he explained what he saw. He saw the same thing that I did. Only in a different form and at a different location. He saw OWS people yelling that it wasn’t about race and that it would be best to incorporate this into the OWS movement. 

This behavior is unacceptable.

These are real concerns. They are legitimate concerns. Listen to what people have to say without being patronizing. That people in this movement are acting like this is a serious problem (and don’t think for a second this is an isolated incident) and this blog will no longer turn a blind eye to it. 

Including concerns of POC, women, queer folk, etc. does not mean making them take a back seat to what you think the “real issues” should be, and it does not mean making them assimilate into what you think the movement should be. It is a racist, imperialist attitude and it is an insult to the democratic ideals this movement was supposed to have been built on.

In no way is the idea that we should figure out economic issues first and get to everyone else later acceptable. In no way is deriding people’s concerns because you think yours come first acceptable.

I care about this movement and I have since the beginning, but it is worthless - absolutely worthless - while these serious problems go un-addressed, and while we continue to let racist, alienating garbage dominate the discussion. Read this post, listen to other concerns, learn what the fuck intersectionality is, and use your goddamn brains.

These concerns aren’t “divisive,” your bullshit is. 

Mar 22, 201285 notes
Mar 22, 201294 notes
#montreal #canada #hausse #quebec #tuition fees #protest #activism
PSA.

deluxvivens:

I have NOTHING but sideeye for white folks in occupy movements that are marching thru manhattan and oakland today because “we are all treyvon” but repeatedly called POC “divisive” for wanting to bring up racism as an issue within the occupy movement and outside of it.

That’s some bullshit.

Just so you know.

Mar 22, 2012146 notes
Mar 22, 2012391 notes
While I think it's safe to say that the majority of us support it, I'd like to make clear that the Million Hoodie March is not a part of Occupy

There’s a difference between support and appropriation. It’s one thing to say we support their cause, it’s another to claim their cause as our own. 

Mar 21, 201271 notes
#awaiting reblogs from butthurt white liberals
Mar 21, 201278 notes
#Million Hoodie March #Trayvon Martin #Livestream #Wall Street bull #Coruption #NYPD
Occupy Wall Street protesters are planning to ramp up activities → thinkprogress.org

…with the return of warm weather, now focusing on the 2012 elections. Yesterday, hundreds of protesters returned to Zuccotti Park in New York City for the six month anniversary of the beginning of the movement, leading to dozens of arrests when police broke up the demonstration.

Mar 19, 201253 notes
Mar 18, 201230 notes
Mar 18, 201216 notes
Mar 18, 201227 notes
Mar 18, 201276 notes
Mar 18, 2012122 notes
#zuccotti park #ows #occupy #new york city #st. patrick's day
“But as we walked up Broadway, a noise made us turn—just in time to see the same young man fall to the ground, curl into a ball, and to see a police officer raise his foot and stomp on him. The police quickly surrounded him, and livestreamers, photographers, and onlookers shouting “Shame” quickly surrounded the police, who dragged him to his feet and loaded him into a waiting van. The Guardian’s Ryan Devereaux told us that the young man was a Marine. So when I reached my apartment that night, it wasn’t exactly shocking to hear that the police had charged back into the park, arresting many. Gregg Levine reports that some occupiers remained, linking arms, in the park when the police declared it needed to be closed (some reported that they heard it was for “cleaning”, though that’s unverified). Twitter reports a broken jaw and a broken thumb among the injuries suffered as the cops charged in.” —

Liberty Plaza Re-Occupied for 6-Month Anniversary of Occupy Wall Street; Police Violently Raid | Sarah Jaffe | AlterNet

so, reoccupation, crackdown, broken windows, broken jaws, do we get to call it violence when the cops do it? 

(via champagnecandy)

Mar 18, 201264 notes
Mar 18, 2012328 notes
Mar 16, 201259 notes
#occupywallstreet #ows #wall street #occupy #protest
Sign a petition in support of Occupy LA starting a community garden in downtown LA → change.org
Mar 13, 201216 notes
Mar 10, 2012255 notes
Occupy Wall Street Movement Plans Spring Surprises  → abcnews.go.com

It’s shaping up to be a busy spring for Occupy. The movement born last year in a New York City park has come roaring back to life this week after a period of hibernation. It promises to be even livelier in weeks and months to come.

On Monday, according to the Sacramento Bee, a crowd numbering in the thousands, including Occupy protesters, converged on California’s capital to denounce soaring college tuition costs. Chanting “You’ll hear us out, or we’ll vote you out,” they tried to occupy the capitol rotunda. Some succeeded. In what the Bee called “a massive show of force,” 100 California Highway Patrol officers arrested 68.

Occupy is taking credit for the White House’s recent decision to move a May meeting G-8 leaders from Chicago, where Occupy and other groups had threatened protests, to safer and more remote Camp David. “We scored a victory, forcing them to retreat to the back woods of Maryland,” Andy Thayer, Occupier and spokesperson for the Coalition Against NATO/G-8, tells ABC News.

Protests still will be mounted, he says, against NATO, which has chosen not to flee Chicago and will meet there as planned. “There’ll be a mass march on the NATO summit,” says Thayer, “not only a march, but any number of other activities. It’s unclear whether it will be on the 19th or 20th. We will decide in the next few days.”

Mar 8, 201245 notes
#occupywallstreet #ows #protest #activism #direct action #occupy #g8 #g20 #nato #occupy chicago
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