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    The Boston Occupier needs your help!

    Photo: Tess Scheflan/ Activestills.org

    The latest issue of The Boston Occupier is coming out THIS WEDNESDAY (Dec 21st), We want to get out the word — all over Boston, and beyond — that our movement is growing, changing, and as urgent as ever. WE NEED HELP DISTRIBUTING. Here is the game-plan.

    * Our BIG DISTRIBUTION PUSH is the Wednesday afternoon commute. WE NEED VOLUNTEERS!! We want to hit all the busiest T stations; let’s have commuters on every line reading our papers. Volunteers should MEET AT 4 PM at “E5” (33 Harrison Ave, 5th floor). (If you can’t come until 5 or 6, that’s ok too.) It’s more fun to go out in pairs, so hopefully we’ll have enough volunteers to make that possible. Wear your Santa hats, your OB tee-shirts and buttons, whatever — and let’s get out the Occupy news!

    * Copies of the paper will be available for anyone and everyone to pick up, beginning at noon on Wednesday in the Occupy Boston cubicle of “E5” (33 Harrison Ave, 5th floor). All of the papers (all 10,000 of them!) must be gone by the end of the week. Please take a stack and commit to distributing them in your community (small stacks in cafes, libraries, bookshops, laundry mats, community centers, waiting rooms, etc). In this issue: coverage of OB since Dewey, the raid, City Life / Vida Urbana, the student debt boycott, democratizing the economy, “Occupy la Migra,” protests at Harvard, movements all over Massachusetts, & more.

    * If you are a part of another local-area Occupy movement, a union, or a community organization that is willing to distribute papers — let’s make it happen! Send questions or suggestions about distribution to Julie O (juliettejulianna@gmail.com) — or, better yet, just pick up a big pile of papers from E5.

    You Can’t Evict a Song Today At Dewey Square

    You Can’t Evict a Song Today At Dewey Square

    Miss Dewey Square? Today at noon the Ad Hoc Chorus will be there performing a mix of classic carols, protest songs, and Occupy-related material. Anabel will lead today’s caroling, and the Chorus welcomes everyone to come and join them. They will meet at 11:45 at the corner of Summer St. and Atlantic Ave. (kitty-corner from South Station), and will sing from 12-1 pm. For more information, to get Anabel’s Tips for Singing Outdoors, or to download a copy of the Unofficial Occupy Boston Caroling book, visit their wiki, http://wiki.occupyboston.org/wiki/Sing.

    HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS: OCCUPY BOSTON TO SPEAK AT PRESS CONFERENCE & MARCH WITH CITY LIFE/VIDA URBANA

    City Life / Vida Urbana and the Bank Tenants Association, with support from Occupy Boston, will hold a press conference and tenant speak out at 12 noon on Friday, December 16, 2011 at 40 Fowler Street in Dorchester, MA 02121. The press conference will introduce the St. Simon family who will move into 40 Fowler, as well as testimonials from families who have successfully gotten their homes back about foreclosure.

    Home foreclosures have dominated the American landscape since the start of the recession. Through no fault of their own, families have been losing their homes and livelihoods. This is far too commonplace in America and has a disproportionate effect on low-income neighborhoods and communities of color.   City Life’s ongoing work demonstrates the willingness of families to remain in their homes despite the pressure of the banks and those in power.
    In addition to the press conference, Occupy Boston will join with City Life / Vida Urbana for an “Occupy our Homes” rally and march on Monday, December 19, 2011 at 12 noon at 10 Causeway St. in Boston, the Boston Regional Office of HUD. This rally is being called to bring visibility to the HUD eviction requirements.

    City Life / Vida Urbana, community activists, and local families oppose the HUD requirements that allow commercial banks to evict foreclosure victims who have FHA-insured mortgagers before the property is transferred to HUD.  This policy forces the foreclosing lender to evict in order to get their insurance, even when they could otherwise afford to stay in the property.

    Occupy Boston is encouraging community members, families, students, activists, and victims of the foreclosure crisis to join City Life / Vida Urbana, the Bank Tenants Association, and Occupy Boston at these two important events. For more information visit http://clvu.org/ or https://www.occupyboston.org/

     

    Education & Entertainment are a Weapon of Mass Construction

    The Second Line Band played until 2 a.m.

    As many of you know, this week the temporary restraining order was lifted from the camp, which was promptly followed by a 12-hour eviction notice from the mayor, issued yesterday, giving protesters until midnight to voluntary leave Dewey Square.  We did not leave we grew.

    In response, over a thousand people showed up for a festive environment to protect our right to occupy Dewey square and to continue free speech. This included the Second Line Band that played until 2 am, Veterans for Peace were out in force, and street theater rogue bankers were circling the park, shouting to defend the right to private property. We took over Atlantic Avenue and set up tents in the street. It was an amazing night!

    In the next 72 hours, with your help we will fill Dewey Square between the hours of 10 p.m. and 2 a.m. If you have a band, a costume, a secret stash of giant puppets – if you can show up at midnight and run a teach-in on ANY subject — if you have been wanting to organize a build party, a workshop, or a flashmob – please come out between now and Sunday!    The daytime hours, from now until Sunday, will be spent cleaning, organizing, discussing, and figuring out how to move forward.

    Join us by scheduling programming between the hours of 10 p.m. to 2 a.m.
    We’re looking for people TONIGHT, tomorrow, and Sunday, get on the schedule of events for the next 72 hours. We have GA tonight at 7pm in Dewey. We will generate an updated schedule for tonight by 6 tonight.  Please be in contact with Katie or Kevin:  katie.gradowski@gmail.com, kevin@occupyboston.org, and cc fsu@occupybosotn.org if you are available to occupy any time, any day after 11pm.

     

    Thousands Rally to Defend Occupy Movement

    Occupy Boston crowd on Atlantic Ave

    They came by bus from New York and DC. They carpooled from Providence and flew in from Chicago. They drove from Worcester, New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine. Last night, demonstrating how clearly Occupy Boston’s message has been heard and understood, two thousand people traveled from near and far to defend Dewey Square. They painted signs and spoke in General Assembly. They chanted and sang, “Which Side Are You On?” six times, at least, as a brass brand blew steam into the frozen December night. They rallied at midnight, making circles two deep around tents, as the Veterans for Peace stood guard, white flags snapping in the wind. They dressed as bankers so that bankers might be arrested for once. And when the news came that no raid was coming, no eviction imminent, they danced in the streets to celebrate.

    The longest continuous occupation in America continues.

    Two weeks ago, a federal judge blocked a settlement between the Securities and Exchange Commission and Citigroup, saying that he could not be sure that it was “fair, adequate, or in the public interest.” Last week, on the same day that Occupy Boston appeared in court, the District Attorney announced she was suing the banks for fraudulent foreclosure practices. Commentators across the political spectrum are thinking anew about unemployment and pensions. A blocked settlement, a lawsuit, a renewed conversation – these are not our goals, but it is not too much to call them symptoms of our success, surface indications of a fundamental change we are building. We are not surprised. We have learned over the past ten weeks just how powerful the people can be. We have come together across vast differences of experience, brought face to face by the belief that our collective capacity is greater than has been shown, that democracy is not exhausted by stale puppetry sponsored by finance, and that we can do better. And now, last night only most recently, we are united by the concrete knowledge that not only can we do better, we are. We are winning.

    The banks and their enablers in government present no serious claim on reason or right. Theirs is an entrenched interest secured by ill-gotten influence. One can certainly defend banking, but no one can defend these banks. This is why we march by day but they come for us by night. Why they arrest the press while we would seek it. Why it is, most importantly, that we grow stronger while they weaken. Threatened with eviction, we are beset by allies and friends. Unproductive wealth struggles to justify its inefficiency, and deceit grows helpless before a truth that has found its people. All across the world, the occupy movement has started a conversation about what is right and what is wrong about our economic systems and our governments. We hope you’ll join us throughout the day and then tonight for GA as we continue to converse together and speak out in Dewey Square.

    Contact us

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