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  • Archive: 2011

    Occupy Boston Takes Stand Against Predatory Lending and Illegal Foreclosures

    Occupy Boston achieved consensus on the following  proposal in the General Assembly of November 12th, 2011:

    Occupy Boston stands in solidarity with MAAPL against predatory lending and illegal foreclosure processes. Currently, Massachusetts allows mortgage companies to operate on the honor system. These corporations have proved themselves to be less than honorable and should be brought into court to prove ownership of the mortgages they seek to collect.

    Furthermore, these corporations should not be allowed to arbitrarily evict people from their homes, leaving vacant homes that not only damage the families affected but also the neighborhoods at large.

    Occupy the HOOD: Updates and Town Hall Mtg Monday, 11/14 6PM Dudley Library

    First, the bad news.

    A recently released report “points to concentrated need in Dorchester, Mattapan, and Roxbury, where 42 percent of children live in poverty, the densest cluster of childhood poverty in the state.”  According to the Boston Globe (11/9/11), the study also indicated that “in 1990, 24 percent of African-American children across the city lived in poverty. Nearly two decades later, that figure has risen to 35 percent.”

    And now, the good news.

    Occupy the Hood – Boston is focusing on organizing people of color to challenge these social injustices in Dorchester, Mattapan, and Roxbury. The project has been continuously active since its launch three weeks ago and has already collected an impressive list of accomplishments. In only three weeks, it has

    • organized a protest against Police brutality
    • helped re-elect the only Black city council woman in Boston through a get-out-the-vote effort to “occupy the polls”
    • mobilized for a rally to kill the 3 Strikes law S.2054 which would intensify  the prison-industrial complex
    • launched a community food drive to serve the neediest Boston residents
    • helped inspire the launch of Ocupemos El Barrio, which is taking root in East Boston and conducting its meetings in Spanish with real-time translation available for those who don’t speak Spanish

    This Monday 11/14, Occupy the Hood is putting on a Town Hall Meeting at the Dudley Library (65 Warren St. in Roxbury) at 6pm.

    The objective will be to discuss issues of concern to the community, and to share updates on Occupy Boston, Ocupemos El Barrio, and various other activist and community organizations. Come one, come all!

    WEB: www.blackstonian.com/occupythehoodTWITTER: https://twitter.com/#!/OTHBoston
    FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/occupythehoodboston
    YOUTUBE: http://www.youtube.com/user/occupythehoodboston
    GOOGLE GROUP / MAILING LIST: http://groups.google.com/group/occupy-the-hood-boston | occupy-the-hood-boston@googlegroups.com
    CALENDAR:  https://www.google.com/calendar/embed?src=occupythehoodboston%40gmail.com&ctz=America/New_York

    HASHTAGS / @S: #occupythehoodboston | #OTHB | #blackupyboston | #blackstonian|
    @OccupyTheHood | #occupythehood | #POCcupy | @POCworkinggroup

     

     

    Lesley University Faculty Assembly Statement of Solidarity with Occupy Boston

    We, the Faculty Assembly of Lesley University, join our voices with the local and national demonstrators of the Occupy Wall Street/Occupy Boston movement to strongly endorse principles of equity, equality, compassion, and pluralism.

    The economic crisis caused by corporate and bank greed, incompetence, and callous risk-taking led to a deep recession that continues to have a harmful impact on millions of people. It is a crisis that is unnecessary, preventable, and unconscionable. Rather than taking steps to restore health and fairness to a damaged economic and social system, we have seen dead-end political positioning and the constraint of meaningful democratic dialog.

    As university faculty we have a responsibility to our students, to the university, and to the broader society. It is our job to facilitate critical analysis of socio-political and economic policies to understand how communities of color and low-income communities are disproportionately harmed while more affluent communities are privileged. Our responsibility compels us to stand for principles of social and economic justice and to call for a society that cherishes and sustains multiculturalism, equity, equality, compassion, and the fair distribution of wealth. We join with others across the country to call for good public education, access to quality health care, affordable housing, and a national commitment to protect and care for people who are vulnerable.

    In recent decades we have seen a widening gap between rich and poor; we have witnessed the struggle of our students who often do not have adequate access to ever-more-limited resources of financial aid; we hear of those talented graduates who are among the 9% of the unemployed; we know family members who have lost homes to foreclosure or who have not had adequate health care for themselves or their children; we have seen the dismantling of unions and other venues that give every-day, working people a voice.  Our commitment to good education, vibrant arts, and emotional well-being is constantly challenged by budget cuts that take a tragic toll on the most vulnerable people and communities.

    We applaud the Occupy movement around the world for inviting non-violent engagement through careful and disciplined consensus-building, community-building, and diversity-building efforts in the service of equality, opportunity, and equity.

    Endorsements:
    Lesley University Faculty Assembly, 2011-2012
    Seeking Educational Equity and Diversity (SEED), 2011-2012
    Lesley University Diversity Council
    Graduate School of Arts and Social Sciences Diversity Committee
    American Association of University Professors (AAUP), Lesley University Chapter

    Action and March in Springfield, Massachusetts on November 21

    Occupy Boston’s Outreach Working Group is organizing a large-scale trip to Springfield, Massachusetts on November 21 to support Springfield No One Leaves, which is a day of action and a march against Wall Street and big banks to protest foreclosures across Massachusetts. They need a lot of help to organize this! They’re hoping to get 20 to 30 people to share a bus from Boston with City Life/Vida Urbana as well as smaller groups from other area occupations. Details on Springfield No One Leaves event can be found on their website.

    Daily Digest for November 12

    Good Morning from Occupy Boston!

    Below please find your daily digest.

    Fact of the Day: Cumulative student loan debt is on fast-track to pass the $1 trillion mark by the end of this year. With outstanding student loan debt doubling over the past five years, it now exceeds total credit card debt in the United States.
    News from other Occupations:  Check out The Guardian’s interactive map of Occupations across the globe, underscoring this is a worldwide movement that has spread wide in far in a very short amount of time

    Occupy Boston – Saturday, November 12, 2011

    Today’s Weather and EventsMostly sunny with highs in the lower 50’s. Really nice occupying weather so you should come on down. Check out our Calendar of Events for today, also posted at the bottom of this email.

    Highlights: Join the March for Health Care Justice Speak Out at 12:00pm and march at 1:00pm — Come discuss Citizens United at an open form at 3:00 p.m., meeting at the OB Library. And don’t forget the General Assembly at 7:00 p.m.!

    Volunteer Opportunities:  

    – Love talking about Occupy Boston? Want to bring more people in to build the movement? Outreach needs all the volunteers it can get, especially ahead of some big events coming up. E-mail if you are interested in more details

    – The Safety Working Group needs more volunteers! We need people familiar with the Occupy Boston community. Come today, 6:30pm in the library or emailInfoTent@OccupyBoston.org
    – Free School University needs more volunteers in order to keep this amazing feature of Occupy Boston up and running. Please see FSU’s volunteer page for more details.

    Other Working Groups seeking volunteers include Media, Outreach, Info Tent, Winterization, Logistics, Library and many, many more; every group is looking for volunteersso find the group that appeals to you and don’t be shy about offering help. Click here for a full list of Working Groups and their contact information. See where you think your strengths lay and where you can be most effective. We are looking for support both on and off-site, so even if you can’t come down there is something to do;  send an email the Info Tent for further assistance

    Donate!
    If you are able to, we are still looking for both material and financial support. Any help you can give is greatly appreciated. For information on how our money is managed, please see our Financial Accountability Working Group page.

    Saturday, November 12
     Project No One Leaves: Anti-Foreclosure Conference
    » 1:00am “Thrive” Movie Screening; Global release
    9:30amFree Health Screening (organized by Health Justice Working Group)
    10:00amGet Warm with Breath and Movement.
    10:45am**Cost of War Series (FSU) – Gold Star Military Family, The Arredondo’s (Camp Alex)
    11:00am Loving Kindness Meditation
    12:00pm**Speakout: Health Care Justice
    12:00pmFaith and Spirituality Working Group meeting
    12:00pm Meeting of the Hippy Drum Circle Working Group
    1:00pm March for Health Care Justice
    1:00pm **Cost of War Series Listening Sessions: Sarah Fuhro, Military Family
    1:30pm **Cost of War Series Listening Sessions: Vietnam Veterans
    2:00pm Winterizing meeting
    2:00pm **Concert- The Doctor’s Fox
    2:00pmCost of War Listening Session: Alice Copeland Brown
    2:30p Cost of War Listening Session: Joyce and Kevin Lucey, Gold Star Families Speak Out
    3:00pmFSU: What is Violence? What is Nonviolence? (Roundtable Discussion)
    3:00pmCost of War Listening Session: Military Family, Wayne Jaquith
    3:30pm Open Discussion on Citizens United
    3:30pm Women’s Caucus
    4:00pmFacilitation Working Group Meeting
    4:00pm**Cost of War Listening Session, Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans
    5:00pm Anti-Oppression Working Group meeting
    5:00pm **FSU: The Howard Zinn Memorial Lecture Series, Noel Ignatiev
    6:30p Safety meeting
    7:00pmGeneral Assembly

    Questions or concerns? Please e-mail InfoTent@OccupyBoston.org and we can help you with whatever you need.

    Contact us

    Occupy Boston Media <Media@occupyboston.org> • <Info@occupyboston.org> • @Occupy_Boston