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  • Archive: December, 2011

    Signs Will Point to OB on First Night

    The following proposal was passed by the General Assembly on December 27, 2011:

    Signs WG Proposal for First Night: To allocate funds for materials for banners and other materials for First Night. We propose the ability to draw up to $250 for the purchase of these materials to be able to supply other Working Groups with banners and related materials for use on First Night for the purpose of engaging and educating the 99%, including a banner to be hung from The Community Church on Boylston Street.

    Costs include:

    Fabric $150

    Paint and other supplies $50

    Taxes and overages $50

    The OB Media Roundup 12/29/11

    Occupy blogger fighting subpoena

    The American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts is fighting on behalf of a blogger with apparent Occupy Boston ties who has been subjected to a subpoena that authorities filed through a social media site.

    Peter Krupp, an attorney from Lurie and Krupp LLC, who is working on behalf of the ACLU, said the ACLU has moved to have the subpoena, sent to Twitter, quashed on First Amendment grounds. A hearing has been continued to today in Suffolk Superior Court.

    http://tinyurl.com/cpchr7k

    Suffolk court is occupied by Twitter

    A judge is expected to decide today whether to unseal court documents involving prosecutors’ attempts to obtain Twitter user information – including from an account linked to Occupy Boston – as part of a probe into the alleged hacking of Boston police email.

    Suffolk Superior Court Judge Carol S. Ball temporarily sealed the case yesterday during a brief conference requested by Suffolk Assistant District Attorney Benjamin A. Goldberger.

    http://tinyurl.com/cahke6p

    Twitter Subpoena Reveals Boston PD Is After User Information

    It appears as though Twitter has ignored request from the Boston Police Department and the Suffolk Massachusetts District Attorney’s office that a subpoena for user information be kept under wraps.

    http://tinyurl.com/cab8ncs

    Occupy the future – As it evolves, the movement is building on a network laid down in the encampments

    After barreling straight ahead for more than three months, Occupy is at its first fundamental turning point. Encampments in city after city have been eviscerated and plowed under. In Boston, after a judge ruled that the Dewey Square Occupation wasn’t protected as free speech, protesters – with the help of police – broke camp and dispersed. All this while critics say the movement has to either take a new form or perish.

    But in fact, Occupy has been moving toward that new form for months. Since early October, hundreds of activists from Occupations nationwide have been building connections by phone, e-mail, and Internet relay chats. Now, despite lower public visibility, this network is metamorphosing into something stronger and more sustainable – approaching what renowned group dynamics guru Clay Shirky calls “movement nirvana.”

    http://tinyurl.com/bq3poal

    Continue reading “The OB Media Roundup 12/29/11” »

    Announcing Occupy Boston Screen Print Guild

    Want your own handmade T-shirt proclaiming Occupy Boston or that you are part of the 99%?

    Occupy Boston Screen Print Guild is looking to create it.

    Occupy Boston Screen Print Guild also needs donations – please bring donations of clean blank cotton t-shirts, sweatshirts and canvas bags to this General Assembly on Thursday, December 29, 7pm – 11pm Emmanuel Church, 15 Newbury Street, Boston.

    If people want to get their own shirts printed on, they should bring a cotton shirt labeled with their name and contact info – we will do our best to return all printed shirts to their rightful owners. People can also get some ink on their own hands by joining us during a print production to learn how to do some basic screen printing (times and locations of print productions still TBD)

    For more information email: obscreenprint@gmail.com or check out: http://wiki.occupyboston.org/wiki/Screen_Print_Guild

    Follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/OBScreenPrint

    Like us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/OBScreenPrint

     

    The OB Media Rundown for 12/28/11

    BPD Subpoenas Occupy Boston Twitter Accounts, Mistakenly Confuses Handles & Hashtags

    Perhaps what’s most interesting about the subpoena, though, is that the BPD and the DA don’t seem to understand Twitter at all. First, “Guido Fawkes” is the user name associated with the account @p0isAn0N, not a separate account. On top of that, @p0isAn0N tweeted earlier today that the BPD actually meant to target @p0isAnon, a different account associated with Anonymous.

    Second, @OccupyBoston is an account that has been inactive since March 2010. The subpoena most likely meant to target @Occupy_Boston, the unofficial official account for the Occupy Boston movement. Similarly, for #d0xcak3, they most likely meant user @DoxCak3, who has ties to Anonymous, although it’s unclear.

    http://tinyurl.com/d7umsme

    Twitter Subpoena Reveals Law Enforcement Monitoring OWS Via Social Media

    Twitter has been subpoenaed for information related to Occupy supporters’ accounts, proving that law enforcement agencies have been monitoring OWS supporters’ activity on social media. The Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office in Massachusetts is fed up with being mocked, ridiculed, and criticized by faceless Tweeters, so it’s taking matters into its own hands.

    http://tinyurl.com/7jmnh2e

    DA cautioned over Twitter subpoenas

    A prominent civil liberties -advocate is warning prosecutors to tread lightly as they subpoena information on the Twitter handles linked to the hacking of -Boston police email. The Suffolk District Attorney’s Office asked Twitter to stay mum abut its subpoena for user information, but one user targeted was among the first to post a link to a copy of the -subpoena.

    “Never declare war on the young,” said Harvey Silverglate, a noted civil libertarian. “They’ll outlast you. They’ll outthink you. They’ll outdo you. … That may be the lesson the DA’s office is about to learn.”

    http://tinyurl.com/83z3twb

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 12/28/11” »

    The High Cost of War for One Family

    Assembly called “The Cost of War” by Carlos Arredondo, in Dewey Square

    Carlos Arredondo was a regular presence at Occupy Boston’s camp at Dewey Square. With a sparkle in his eye, he would make a child or adult smile with a kind word, and he would explain every detail of his Camp Alex tent to anyone with the time and interest. Camp Alex commemorated his son Alex, who was killed in the Iraq war in 2004, and contained photographs of Alex, letters he had written home from Iraq, Alex’s combat boots and dog tag, and many other artifacts. Now, tragically, Carlos is commemorating his other son’s passing.

    Brian Luis Arredondo took his own life in Norwood, Massachusetts, on the 19th of December, 2011. Brian survived his brother, Alexander, by seven years, three months, and twenty four days. Brian is survived by his father and stepmother, Carlos and Melida Arredondo, and his mother, Victoria Foley.  Those close to him said that Brian never fully recovered from the loss of his brother, Lance Corporal Alexander Scott Arredondo, to a sniper’s bullet in Najaf, Iraq.

    Brian was “broken” on the day his brother died, according to Carlos Arredondo. Brian was living in Maine at the time. His mother had moved to Bangor three months earlier, to make a new start in life. Carlos and Melida had moved to Florida to be near Melida’s elderly mother. On August 25th, 2004, three U.S. Marines and a Chaplain showed up at Brian’s house in Maine. They would not say why they were there, although Brian knew, but requested to speak with Brian’s mother, Victoria, who was not home at the time. Continue reading “The High Cost of War for One Family” »

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