Occupiers from across the northeast revel outside Republican debate
On an unseasonably warm New Hampshire night, Occupiers from across the northeast danced and chanted to a band marching through the little streets of Saint Anselm College before Saturday’s ABC News/Yahoo! debate.
In a parking lot nearby, Eric Lawson and four other members of Occupy Boston were hastily assembling a 10-foot tall wooden elephant, struggling to mount it on a wheeled base. Lawson, a molecular biologist, said about 60 people had come up from Boston, and dozens from other areas of the northeast, to protest the G.O.P. primary candidates, and that they had used the elephant in a parade earlier in the day. http://tinyurl.com/6vpdrs2 Twitter fights to reveal more Subpoenas, this time from the DOJ against Wikileak volunteers – Google and Facebook implicated in government snooping by their silence Last night, Birgitta Jónsdóttir – a former WikiLeaks volunteer and current member of the Icelandic Parliament – announced (on Twitter) that she had been notified by Twitter that the DOJ had served a Subpoena demanding information “about all my tweets and more since November 1st 2009.” Several news outlets, including The Guardian, wrote about Jónsdóttir’s announcement. What hasn’t been reported is that the Subpoena served on Twitter – which is actually an Order from a federal court that the DOJ requested – seeks the same information for numerous other individuals currently or formerly associated with WikiLeaks, including Jacob Appelbaum, Rop Gonggrijp, and Julian Assange. It also seeks the same information for Bradley Manning and for WikiLeaks’ Twitter account. And the key question now is this: did other Internet and social network companies (Google, Facebook, etc.) receive similar Orders and then quietly comply? It’s difficult to imagine why the DOJ would want information only from Twitter; if anything, given the limited information it has about users, Twitter would seem one of the least fruitful avenues to pursue. http://tinyurl.com/7na3ov2 More questions about suppression of citizen journalists in wake of Global Revolution raid Last Monday, the headquarters of Global Revolution TV, the livestream that puts out video for Occupy Wall Street content, was raided by New York City building inspectors. Despite having paid $2,000 a month for rent on their apartment and studio space at 13 Thames St. in Bushwick for two years, Vlad Teichberg and his pregnant wife Nikky suddenly found themselves at 8 p.m. on the day after New Year’s, with guns allegedly pointed at their faces as cops and firefighters accompanied the Inspectors who deemed their floor unlivable. They were forced to leave. The next day, Mr. Teichberg and six of the Global Revolution operatives were arrested for trespassing and (Mr. Teichberg was also held for 30 hours and charged for assaulting his landlord) when they tried to go back into their own home and retrieve papers from their apartment. It does strike us as odd that the police would arrest Mr. Teichberg and the Global Revolution crew-and only those individuals-for living in a commercial space that was being leased out to a whole building’s worth of residents. And here are some more questions: Why was Global Revolution’s floor the only one served an eviction notice? Wouldn’t the bigger issue be that the landlord, Mr. Wing Chow was illegally leasing “”imminently perilous to life” commercial space as Bushwick lofts and artist studios? Why was the surprise building inspecting check performed on a national holiday, with police and firefighters in tow, and why were none of the other floors’ residents evacuated if the building had indeed been zoned as commercial instead of residential. |