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    The OB Media Rundown for 2/4/12

    Menino responds to Anonymous collective’s hack attack on BPD website: ‘Showboats!’ Casts blame at Occupy Boston

    These bold cyber attacks drew anger from onetime Occupy supporter and Boston Mayor, Thomas Menino.

    “They’re about showboats. They want to cause trouble, but there’s nothing that results out of those troubles…this hacking, we have to change our whole system now,” said Menino. “It’s a concern…If they can hack that, what else can they hack?”

    After the hacking, the Boston Police Department’s website was replaced with a message that read, “Anonymous attacks Boston Police website in retaliation for police brutality at OWS.” OWS refers to the Occupy Wall Street movement.

    http://tinyurl.com/7o5f6d6

    Anonymous Hits BPD, Marine Lawyer: Warns of Day of Mayhem

    [There’s several dozen stories in news searches right now about the Anonymous attacks from as far away as New Zealand, Australia and Europe that reference Occupy Boston, too many to link here.]

    Already today they’ve taken credit for attacking the Boston Police Department’s Website in response to their treatment of Occupy Boston a little while back. Later, they took credit for defacing the Greek Ministry of Justice’s website. Both websites are still unavailable at the time of this writing.

    They’ve also been mobilizing against Neil A. Puckett and Haytham Faraj, lawyers who defended SSgt Frank Wuterich, a marine accused of leading his troops in a massacre of unarmed Iraqi civillians in 2005. They took their website down and posted personal information on an ominous-looking black and red website.

    They’re still playing their cards close to the chest, but they’ve been teasing more and more action for what they’re calling #F***FBIFriday.

    http://tinyurl.com/73glgjq

    Occupy activists to protest right-to-work at Super Bowl

    Anti-Wall Street activists said on Friday they will march to protest Indiana’s new anti-union “right-to-work” law in downtown Indianapolis this weekend, where the New England Patriots and New York Giants will face off in the Super Bowl on Sunday.

    Organizers of the Occupy Wall Street movement said they expected activists from a number of different unions, including the National Football League Players Association, to participate in the protests.

    Greg Lambert with Occupy Indianapolis said the protests would begin each day on the south lawn of the Indiana statehouse, which is located just blocks away from Lucas Oil Stadium, where the NFL championship game will be played Sunday evening.

    http://tinyurl.com/6ukrmjg

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 2/4/12” »

    The OB Media Rundown for 2/3/12

    200 protesters turn out for rally against Barstool Sports website party

    A controversial sports website based in the Boston area brought its national party tour to the House of Blues last night near Fenway Park, but not without vocal opposition from about 200 protesters who blasted the site for posting content that critics say is demeaning to women and makes light of rape.

    “We’re down here because we want to let people know that the perpetuation of rape culture is not cool,” said Northeastern University junior Anna Siembor, 21, one of the creators of the blog Knockout Barstool, which organized last night’s protest at the nightclub on Lansdowne Street.

    http://tinyurl.com/6sqdz89

    Hundreds protest T cuts in JP, highlight diversity of opposition to the plan

    A parade of 75 speakers, including many Jamaica Plain officials and residents, blasted the MBTA’s proposed fare hike and service cuts at a Roxbury Community College meeting on Jan. 19. Another meeting was slated to be held Wednesday night in JP as the Gazette went to press.

    At least 250 people attended the Jan. 19 meeting. A few people were willing to pay higher fares, but no one wanted service cuts. Those include killing the E Line subway/streetcar on the weekends and eliminating most of the JP Loop bus, among other slashings.

    Joining local residents in opposition were officials from such major institutions as Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Northeastern University and Wentworth Institute of Technology. Other organizations joining the protests included Occupy Boston, the T Riders Union and the Massachusetts Senior Action Council.

    Sarah Horsley, a JP resident Fenway Community Development Corporation employee, noted the unity of such a diverse group of people against the plan. “We’re not always on the same side of an issue, but we’re all here tonight saying this is not acceptable,” she said.

    http://tinyurl.com/6p7qs88

    Online Campaign Prompts Sallie Mae to Change Fee Policy for Loan Suspensions

    Score two for online consumer advocates – or, as they might be called, Occupy Online.

    On Thursday, three months after Bank of America backed down from imposing a $5 monthly debit card fee in response to an online Change.org petition that collected 300,000 signers, Sallie Mae, the nation’s largest private student-loan provider, changed its fee policy in response to an online petition.

    For years, Sallie Mae had required unemployed people who could not afford their monthly payments to pay a $50-per-loan fee every three months to suspend their payments temporarily, even as interest charges mounted.

    Sallie Mae called this forbearance fee a “good faith deposit” – but it was neither credited to the borrower’s account nor refunded.

    http://tinyurl.com/855z7bm

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 2/3/12” »

    The OB Media Rundown for 2/2/12

    Occupy Boston: Coming soon, to a television station near you

    With a talk show aimed at making social change, and plans to air short films “on everyday action that people can take to challenge the 1 percent,” Occupy Boston members are taking to the airwaves.

    “We want people to see what we are doing and become inspired,” said Occupy Boston TV member Bill Lewis at Brookline Access Television’s headquarters, where the group produces Occupy Boston Live.

    http://tinyurl.com/7yka99k

    Protestors renew calls for banks to re-write loans

    Decked out in snorkels, fins, and scuba gear, more than 150 activists took to the streets of Boston’s financial district on Monday to call attention to “underwater” mortgages which they say are the root cause of the nation’s ongoing foreclosure crisis.

    The demonstration – a joint effort made by members of City Life/Vida Urbana, MassUniting, and elements of the Occupy Boston and Wall Street movements – was met with curious looks from bank employees standing in the lobbies of Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, and Fannie Mae. But organizers did catch the ear of City Councillor-At-Large Felix Arroyo, who last week announced a proposed ordinance that would require the city only conduct business with banks working to reinvest in Boston.

    Filed last Wednesday, the Invest in Boston ordinance would ask city financial officers to review the banks in which the city stores its revenue – accounts that together total more than $1 billion. Arroyo says that the city should only do business with banks that are financially responsible at the local level.

    http://tinyurl.com/7bn374l

    Don’t Cut the T

    Here’s a story you might have heard about the MBTA: it’s billions of dollars in debt. Boston has the lowest transit fares of any major city in the country, but the system is facing a $161 million budget deficit for fiscal year 2013, and it’s time for the riders to pay their fair share. To that end, the T released a proposal in early January containing two possible scenarios for fare increases and service cuts, to take effect in July of this year.

    Here’s another story. The T is a lifeline for millions of people in the 175 cities it serves. Those most dependent on it are students, senior citizens, disabled people, and lower-income workers. Even those who don’t ride it reap the benefits, as public transportation keeps cars off the road, lowers pollution, and attracts tourists and shoppers who contribute to the city’s economy. The T employs over 6,000 unionized workers and enables thousands more to reach their jobs. The Ride transports elderly and disabled people to doctors’ appointments and allows them to live full lives rather than being confined to their homes. Harvard students use the T to get to extracurricular activities, job interviews, and the cultural events that make Boston an attractive place to go to school.

    http://tinyurl.com/8yjkvsy

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

    The OB Media Rundown for 2/1/12

    MBTA fare hikes are just a Band-Aid

    Occupy Boston has spawned a related movement called Occupy MBTA with the goal of pressuring government officials to back off the proposed changes to public transit. Their view echoes the view of many Boston area residents – that neither cutting transit lines nor raising rates is an acceptable solution to the MBTA’s budget shortfall.

    http://tinyurl.com/74s729j

    Menino, Advocates Urge Alternatives To MBTA Cuts

    “Riders should not be forced to shoulder the entire weight of this debt,” said Mayor Menino in a letter to MBTA General Manager Richard Davey, as quoted in this article in the Boston Globe.

    The Mayor also came out in favor of a gas tax or “another levy” to close the T’s revenue gaps, and recommended that the Big Dig debt that the T is carrying be forgiven, a stance that is also popular with some members of the Occupy Boston group, Occupy The T.

    In an article from the Boston Occupier, writer Doug Greene says that several present at a recent Occupy The T meeting, “argued that the banks should cancel the T’s debt.”

    http://tinyurl.com/8a2go6a

    Activism in 2012: SDS founder discusses Occupy movement

    The man credited with founding the Students for a Democratic Society, the movement that came to symbolize the radicalism that swept the 1960s, hasn’t thrown down the gauntlet [sic]. Alan Haber, now 75 and living in Ann Arbor, continues to fight the fight, from Occupy Ann Arbor and Wall Street to lobbying for development of an urban park on the downtown Library Lot on Fifth Avenue where an underground parking structure is being built.

    Ultimately, the couple said, Occupy Ann Arbor fell victim of splintering groups. Haber summed it up: “There was difficult interfacing between activists and homeless.” Things grew petty with who would clean and straighten the tents, he said. These kinds of “human relations/cross classness” issues will be discussed at Crazy Wisdom Thursday night, Haber said.

    Occupy Ann Arbor was never a big event, not compared with those in Boston and New York City, which Haber attended. “Here we had a little park and a few tents and a not-very-together general assembly,” Haber said. “But I was blown away at Occupy Boston. There were hundreds of tents and a library and a spiritual tent.”

    http://tinyurl.com/7o9mrh2

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 2/1/12” »

    The OB Media Rundown for 1/31/12

    Occupy the Super Bowl: Now more than just a sloganThe Super Bowl is perennially the Woodstock for the 1%: a Romney-esque cavalcade of private planes, private parties, and private security. Combine that with this proposed legislation, and the people of Indiana will not let this orgy of excess go unoccupied. Just as the parties start a week in advance, so have the protests.  Over 150 people – listed as 75 in USA Today, but I’ll go with eyewitness accounts – marched through last Saturday’s Super Bowl street fair in downtown Indianapolis with signs that read, “Occupy the Super Bowl” “Fight the Lie” and “Workers United Will Prevail.” Occupy the Super Bowl has also become a T-shirt, posted for the world to see on the NBC Sports Blog.

    The protests also promise to shed light on the reality of life for working families in the city of Indianapolis. Unemployment is at 13.3%, with unemployment for African American families at 21%. Two of every five African American families with a child under 5 live below the anemic poverty line. Such pain amidst the gloss of the Super Bowl and the prospect of Right to Work legislation is, for many, a catalyst to just do something.

    http://tinyurl.com/79v64d6

    ‘Police used flashbang grenades in Oakland’

    On Sunday, Occupy Boston marched in solidarity with Occupy Oakland where 300 people were arrested on January 28, “including a number of journalists”, Daniel Schneider, editor of The Occupy Boston Globe told Press TV’s U.S. Desk in an interview on Monday.

    Occupy Boston marched in solidarity with Occupy Oakland “with a little over 150 people marching to downtown,” Schneider added.

    http://tinyurl.com/6nb2bqt

    Oops! Conservancy Exec’s E-mail to PR Advisor – Sent to Reporter in Error

    How many times have NPQ Newswire readers sent errant e-mails to the wrong person? The CEO of the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway Conservancy meant to ask her PR advisor about how to dodge a reporter’s request for public information on Greenway salaries, including her own, but she accidentally sent it to the Boston Herald reporter. In Rick Perry’s words, “Oops!”
    . . .

    The Conservancy might not have been known to NPQ Newswire readers if not for Occupy Boston protesters who camped out on property managed by the Greenway. Last fall, the Greenway asked Boston Mayor Thomas Menino to get Occupy off-and out-of the Greenway. The message for the Conservancy and Brennan in light of this e-mail imbroglio? Occupy transparency.

    http://tinyurl.com/85yqmzs

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 1/31/12” »

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