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    Latest Boston Occupier Out Tomorrow: Distribution Help Needed!

    The latest issue of the Boston Occupier is coming out this Wednesday, February 15th.  Help the Occupier  get out the word — all over Boston, and beyond — that our movement is growing, changing, and as urgent as ever.  Julie O explains the game-plan for distributing all 15,000 copies of Issue #5, as well as an exciting new subscription plan for the Boston Occupier.

    * Our big distribution push is the Wednesday afternoon commute. We need volunteers. We’ve found that the best strategy is actually to ride the T, moving from car to car, passing out papers to riders. This is especially appropriate because we are covering the ongoing protests against MBTA fare hikes & service cuts. Volunteers should meet between 4:30 and 5 pm at “E5” (33 Harrison Ave, 5th floor, Boston; if you can’t come until 5:30 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. So, come spread the Occupy news!

    * Copies of the paper will be available for anyone and everyone to pick up, beginning at 2 pm on Wednesday in “E5” (33 Harrison Ave, 5th floor). All of the papers (all 15,000 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, campuses, etc). In this issue: coverage of “3 Strikes” legislation, the Greenway Conservancy, Occupy UMass, MBTA protests, consequences of the Citizens United decision, churches & Occupy Boston, and more, more, 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.

    * Also available with this issue is our new subscription service, part of our effort to raise funds and make the Boston Occupier sustainable for the foreseeable future. Read about it online here. I hope you’ll encourage those you know to subscribe to the paper!

    Please feel free to respond to me (juliettejulianna@gmail.com) with any questions, ideas, or suggestions.

    This Monday: Ride the Rails & Rally At Copley to Save the T!

    On Monday, February 13, 2012, activists from Occupy Boston and other local Occupations will ride their respective train lines and converge on Copley Square for a mass rally at 4:30 PM to Save the T.  At the rally, Occupiers and advocates for Boston’s working-class, seniors, students and  environmental justice will demand “No Service Cuts!” and “No Fare Hikes!” After the rally, demonstrators will attend a public hearing sponsored by the MBTA and voice their concerns directly to agency representatives.

    The public transit system that the 99% relies on has been underfunded by the Massachusetts Legislature for years, and is now threatened with staggering debt – much of it transferred to the MBTA from Big Dig projects. Currently, every penny of our fares is spent paying off this debt – not on the maintenance we need to keep an aging system in working order.  Meanwhile, the big bailed-out banks have exploited the MBTA’s financial situation, raking in untold millions of dollars by underwriting the MTBA’s bonds and profiting off of interest rate swaps with the agency.  Despite the dire situation, the MBTA’s two proposals would do nothing to shore up the long-term sustainability of the T while devastating local communities by raising fares and slashing services.

    “The proposed MBTA service cuts and fare hikes are the perfect way to appease elected officials and their corporate partners by draining the remaining resources of the 99%,” said Brett West, an organizer for Occupy Boston. “For us, affordable and accessible public transit is a necessity, not a luxury.  We say ‘none of the above’ to the MBTA’s so-called solutions and demand a permanent funding solution that does not attack the resources of Boston’s elderly, students or working-class people.”

    Monday’s Day of Action will offer activists a number of ways to have their voices heard.  Several local Occupations and community groups will ride their respective trains and buses to the rally and engage other riders about the cuts and hikes through live streaming, flyering, mic-checking, singing, and conversation.  Confirmed meeting times are as follows:

    • Occupy Boston will meet at Downtown Crossing at 3:00 PM (contact brett@occupyboston.org for more info.)
    • Occupy Somerville will ride the rails in from Davis Square at both 4:00 PM and 5:00 PM (occupysomerville@yahoo.com).
    • Occupy Dorchester will meet at Fields Corner at 3:45 PM.
    • Occupy Quincy will be leaving at the Quincy Center T station at 3:30 PM (brykoulouris@gmail.com).
    •  Occupy JP and Occupemos El Barrio are planning similar actions; check back here or contact your local Occupy for meeting times and locations.
    • Students Against the T Cuts will meet at the Boylston T Stop at 4:00 PM (media@studentsagainsttcuts.org).

    At Copley, the Occupiers will join the T Riders Union and a coalition of dozens of community, student, senior and environmental groups for a rally to say “No!” to the MBTA’s draconian proposals of service cuts and fare increases and demand that the Legislature fund a transit system that benefits everyone.  At 6:00 PM, the rally moves indoors for the MBTA’s public hearing.

    Whether you can make one or all of the above actions, we need you on Monday. The T is a lifeline for our communities and vital for building a strong, sustainable economy. A strong public transit system is a linchpin of a society that prioritizes the needs of all before the profits of a few. Join us!

    This Sunday: The Occupy Boston Student Summit

    On Sunday, February 12, 2012 at 12:00 PM, students from more than twenty campuses across  New England will gather at Harvard University for the first Occupy Boston Student Summit.  The Summit, which will be held at Emerson 105 in Harvard Yard, will bring together a diverse array of students to strengthen relationships and exchange ideas among those who have been or want to be involved with the Occupy movement.  All students, whether officially enrolled anywhere or not, are encouraged to attend.

    Occupy Boston has provided student activists from varying backgrounds the opportunity to meet and work with others who wish to unite to reform both our political and economic systems.  The Student Summit will offer participants a chance to delve deeper into issues that affect student occupiers, including systemic oppression within the occupy movement, the roots of education inequality, the history of radical student movements, and the organizational future of Occupy Boston Students.  The summit will also include a session on how student loan debt is used to enrich banks and needed systemic changes — including forgiveness — to the student loan structure.

    Whether you’re a seasoned Occupy veteran or just curious about the movement, please join us at the summit on Sunday!

    For more information, please visit: http://www.facebook.com/events/374522779228867/.  The agenda for the summit is available here.  http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=2722240691032&set=o.159369867486219&type=1&theater

     

    Occupy Boston Rallies to Demand “No War on Iran”

    On Saturday, February 4th, the Action for Peace Working Group (APWG) of Occupy Boston led an inspiring day of action to demand “No War On Iran!” The day included a march, a rally at the Israeli consulate to urge Israel not to act as a proxy for oil interests in starting a war with Iran, and a speakout at Copley Square.  Saturday’s Boston action was one of fifty-five demonstrations taking place in the United States and in six countries to demand, “No War! No Sanctions! No Assassinations! No Intervention!”

    Marilyn Levin of APWG spoke first, and noted how the current situation mirrored the run up to the war in Iraq. She added, “The War Against Terror has led to endless war, and an assault on both our Constitution and democracy.”

    Alex Shams, a Harvard student with the Palestine Solidarity Committee at Harvard, was excited by the march and the turnout:  “This demonization does not make sense. I am just so happy to see how many are against bombing more people.” Shanes who is Iranian, described how living under sanctions has been devastating for the people of Iran.  He also said people in believe it is inevitable that the United States will attack them and destroy their homes and country. He urged the crowd not to let that happen.

    Shawn Golden from ISA said that as the U.S. threatened to start yet another war, they have yet to held accountable for what the Iraq and Afghanistan wars have done to civilians, and the hundreds of thousands who died.

    Steve Kirschbaum, Chair of United Steelworkers local 8751 spoke, noted the devastating economic consequences of endless war: “Every bomb means no money for a school. Every bomber means roads and bridges that are neither repaired nor maintained. Solidarity with Indiana. Children go hungry due to this endless war, the 1000 bases. We lure our young people who cannot find jobs into the killing machine. We lure them to study for jobs that they will never have, and to take on a trillion dollars in debt so bankers profit. It is time for the people to occupy everything.”

    The Smedley Butler Brigade of Veterans for Peace were there in force, and Pat Scanlon spoke at the speakout. Scanlon invited everyone to the Saint Patrick’s Peace Parade for March 18. For more information, contact Info@massvfp.org

    The next meeting of the Action for Peace Working Group is on February 5, 2012 at E5, 33 Harrison Avenue, Boston at 3 PM.

    No War on Iran: March and Rally, Saturday, February 4

    On Saturday, February 4, The Action for Peace Working Group of Occupy Boston will co-sponsor a rally and march as part of an international day of action to demand NO WAR ON IRAN.  The march, which begins at Park Street Station at 1:00pm, will include a visit to the Israeli Consulate and will end with a rally at Copley Square.  Saturday’s Boston action is one of fifty-five demonstrations taking place in the United States and in six countries to demand, “No War! No Sanctions! No Assassinations! No Intervention!”  All members of the 99% who want peace, not war, are encouraged to attend.

    “The United States is now following the same path of aggression with Iran as it did with Iraq – using the false pretext of WMDs to start a war whose real goal is control of oil by the 1%,” said Marilyn Levin, a member of the Action for Peace Working Group.  “The costs of war – in lives and to the economy — are staggering.”

    The United States went to war in Iraq after twelve years of crippling sanctions using the fabricated claim that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction.  The costs of that war were devastating:  thousands of lives, trillions of dollars, and the destruction of a country that posed no threat to the United States.  The war also unleashed a decade of endless war with a massive war budget, cutbacks on social services, and attacks on our Bill of Rights.

    The campaign of demonization against Iran – including brutal sanctions and threats of war from Israel and the United States – mirrors the run-up to the war on Iraq.  This time, the false claim is that Iran is developing nuclear weapons when there is absolutely no evidence that Iran is doing anything but developing nuclear power, a legal act that poses no threat to other nations.  Once again, we are seeing the 1% threatening to start a horrible war to dominate the flow of oil from that region.

    Added Levin, “To prevent that disastrous history from repeating itself, we need the voices of the 99%. Join us on February 4.”

    The march and rally are co-sponsored endorsed by many peace and justice organizations in the Boston area, including Boston United National Antiwar Coalition, United for Justice with Peace Coalition, International Action Center, and Dorchester People for Peace.  For more information, please visit http://www.facebook.com/events/214341975322807/.

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