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    The OB Media Rundown for 5/5/12

    A GOP convention protester’s playbook covers pepper spray to prison time

    Each person in an affinity group would have a job. Someone might be a driver, another in charge of supplies, like water. Several needed to be willing to get arrested, if it came to that. Someone else needed to be willing to handle the affairs of those who were taken into custody, like walking the dog or arranging bail. Part of being in an affinity group was protecting it from infiltration by a police informant, which made them cagey about their plans.

    Maria’s group, which also included several unemployed people, a couple of students and a few homeless, was trying to lay the groundwork for a march in August by the Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign, a movement to abolish poverty. It was starting to look like a giant obstacle course.

    Not only was Tampa trying to create a vast zone around downtown with special rules for protesters, there was also a federalized zone around the convention that was protected by the U.S. Secret Service. It would be difficult to get close to the delegates.

    Wright said the Poor People’s Campaign wasn’t going to bother getting a permit. “We’ve already decided we’re marching regardless,” he said.

    http://tinyurl.com/74l2ebb

    ‘The economic elite has launched a class war against us and they have indicated every intention of seeing it continue’

    This epic of financial capitalism has produced little real wealth but it has been an effective tool for shifting existing wealth from those who produced it to a small group of plutocrats via a state / financial nexus. The only proposed solutions emanating from the plutocrat / state are for more of the same policies that have destroyed the American economy, polity and culture. The sad truth is that the economic elite benefit from our declining wages and the looting of our social resources in direct proportion to what we lose. The economic elite has launched a class war against us and they have indicated every intention of seeing it continue.

    Current circumstances are understood in a general sense by most of us and in some great detail by a significant number. Legal scholars and current and former criminal prosecutors have identified a large number of actionable financial, war and environmental crimes committed by the financial and political elite that have gone un-prosecuted and unpunished. A social division exists where the rich and the politically connected have impunity for theirs crimes while the police and the surveillance state are used as tools of social control and political repression against the rest of us. Were redress available through the established order, criminal prosecutions of culpable elites would already have taken place.

    Meanwhile, a set of concrete economic proposals that would immediately improve the lives of those most affected by the current economic crisis, as well those of the long-term dispossessed, exists without being enacted and with no impetus for enacting them from either major political party.

    http://tinyurl.com/7blgr3h

    Economists’ Malign Influence on Taxes

    Free market economic “literature” as economists call it – and their papers frequently are works of fiction – gave succor and intellectual respectability to the decades of deregulation and tax cuts that have bankrupted the country. Congress is compromised, to be sure, but lobbyists and members need economic studies as cover for what they are doing.

    The United States is a plutocracy, with an income and wealth distribution that rivals South America’s worst cases, but economists refuse to acknowledge that these outcomes are attributable to ill-advised public policies on taxation, regulation, trade, and education spending over the last several decades.

    Economists bleat about “globalization” as though it were inevitable rather than a set of deliberate policy choices. Markets are political creations, so results produced by them are not inviolable or free from question. And they don’t always produce equilibrium.

    http://tinyurl.com/6n2gl5t

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 5/5/12” »

    “Connect the Dots” climate change-extreme weather global day of action rally in Boston today

    The Occupy Boston Climate Action, Sustainability, and Environmental Justice working group is joining a global day of action to issue a wake-up call and connect the dots between climate change and extreme weather . Come join local climate activists to literally connect the dots in a fun and informative game of (climate) Twister.

    Join us Saturday, May 5th, Boston Common at the Parkman Bandstand across from 165 Tremont Street.

    The OB Media Rundown for 5/4/12

    Occupy the American Psychiatric Industry solidarity rally in Boston, Saturday, May 5th, 2 pm

    MPOWER in MA is planning a May 5th action in solidarity with Philadelphia activists. Our “Occupy the American Psychiatric Industry” will take place on May 5, 2012 at 2 pm at the Arbour Hospital in the Jamaica Plain neighborhood of Boston: Arbour Hospital, 49 Robinwood Avenue, Boston, MA 02130

    http://tinyurl.com/d7huntf

    Occupy the American Psychiatric Association

    On May 5th, a reform psychiatric organization called Mindfreedom has organized a rally in Philadelphia and a march to “occupy” the American Psychiatric Association, which is holding its ritzy, drug industry funded yearly convention at the Pennsylvania Convention Center.  MindFreedom states that it represents those who say they have been harmed or even helped by organized psychiatry but find that recent proposed changes to the DSM will lead to increased practices of over or wrongful diagnoses and over-medicating with drugs that carry severe side effects. Among the scheduled speakers will be activist attorney Jim Gottstein, founder of Psychrights, who lobbies against forced institutionalization and drugging and exposed the dangers of atypical antipsychotics frequently prescribed for individuals with autism.

    Autism parents have trouble enough attending their own dental appointments much less rallies but the way this event is organized, there is nothing to stop anyone from carrying a sign protesting the proposed changes the DSM’s autism category.  There is also an occupy rally in Boston on the same day in solidarity with the Philadelphia event.

    http://tinyurl.com/clp3r77

    PHOTOS: Boston May Day 2012 Rally at City Hall Plaza

    Following a march from Copley Square, over 100 activists from Occupy Boston, Boston May Day Committee, Student Anarchist Federation, and several other progressive organizations held a traditional May Day rally at Boston City Hall Plaza on Tuesday at lunchtime. Many attendees then proceded to an immigrant march from East Boston to Everett later the same afternoon.

    There was a moderate police presence, no incidents and no arrests. The event was one of several May Day 2012 activities in Boston. Organizers said steady rain kept numbers low throughout the day. (Open Media Boston)

    http://tinyurl.com/ckqz2db

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 5/4/12” »

    The OB Media Rundown for 5/3/12

    Occupy skirts the MSM – movement attempts to build its own media infrastructure so it doesn’t need to rely on traditional outlets

    The stitching together of independent journalists, citizen journalists, livestreamers and tweeters into a cohesive and popular platform seems to be a priority for occupiers over the next few months, as Occupy looks to remain in the headlines (even if they might be their own). “I saw a great sign that I believe sums up what we’re doing,” [independent journalist Sam] Lewis told me. “It said: Don’t criticize the media, organize journalists.”

    http://tinyurl.com/764dfn2

    A May Day alert for the Occupy movement

    So, Occupy got it together for May Day – at least, in New York City. You would never know it, though, from mainstream news: those reports were full of what I call the “erectile dysfunction” narrative, the default narrative in American new coverage of mass protest. “Why Occupy May Day Fizzled”, as CNN had it: flaccid efforts, always in “drenching rain”, that may be well-intentioned but have no staying power.

    But if you click onto the new site Occupy.com – or if you actually went to the rally held in the late afternoon in Union Square – it was a very different story: thousands of euphoric protesters, a massive sound stage, edgy hip-hop artists who had created Occupy anthems that were euphorically received by the crowd, and representation by dozens of community groups and unions in Manhattan. In other words – if built on further – a power base. Maydaysolidarity2012.org showed a coalition of what must be 30 unions and community groups, ranging from the Domestic Workers United, to New York Immigration Coalition, to Veterans for Peace Chapter Three, to the journalists’ union, the National Writers’ Union.

    http://tinyurl.com/c5dbs5s

    Occupy buries capitalism – Rest in pieces

    Seattle Occupiers threw bricks through windows. Oakland anarchists got tear-gassed. Chicago protesters shut down five Bank of Americas. And tens of thousands of students in New York flooded Wall Street. Yet Boston’s mild May Day actions ended with the tamest protest of all – one that was slow and solemn, bizarre and symbolic: an elaborate funeral procession mourning the death of capitalism.

    Probably fewer than 100 anti-capitalist activists from Occupy Boston and beyond met on the steps of Copley Square’s Trinity Church around 7 pm Tuesday for this radical act of street theater. They came armed with elaborate costumes (hats, gloves, face paint), giant puppets, masks, instruments, and candles.

    “This is a funeral,” said one facilitator via people’s mic, before the procession departed from Copley. “There will be no running, no jogging, no skipping . . . Unless you’re partying with Sacco and Vanzetti.”

    http://tinyurl.com/cscwnvs

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 5/3/12” »

    The OB Media Rundown for 5/2/12

    Workers express anger, gloom, elation on May Day

    With Europe’s unemployed denouncing austerity measures, Asia’s laborers demanding higher salaries and U.S. protesters condemning Wall Street, Tuesday’s demonstrations by hundreds of thousands were less a celebration of workers’ rights than a furious venting over spending cuts, tax hikes and soaring unemployment.

    In Boston, activities are being planned that will include a noon rally at City Hall, and a “Death of Capitalism Street Theater Funeral Procession” later in the evening, according to CBS Station WBZ Boston. Occupy Boston called for people to skip work and school, strike and not shop. (CBS News)

    http://tinyurl.com/7d33hm5

    Boston Phoenix photo album: Occupy Boston’s May Day rally


    http://tinyurl.com/7boxeqk

    Occupy Boston Marks May Day With Rallies, ‘Funeral’

    It’s May Day, an international labor holiday, and demonstrations of varying size and message are under way around the world, as NPR and other outlets are reporting.

    Here, Occupy Boston planned “A Day Without The 99%,” as it urged “the 99% to strike, skip work, walk out of school, and refrain from shopping, banking, and business.”

    The group began its schedule of area events this morning in Boston’s Financial District, where, as WCVB-TV reports, “[a] small group of Occupy Boston protesters braved the rain and marched.” Demonstrators then gathered at Copley Square and Boston City Hall Plaza. (WBUR)

    http://tinyurl.com/c4moc3p

    Occupy Boston protesters return to rally (NECN)

    (video)

    http://tinyurl.com/cg7r58r

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 5/2/12” »

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