The OB Media Rundown for 12/23/11

Brother of fallen Marine for whom ‘Camp Alex’ was named commits suicide

Brian Luis Arredondo, 24, took his own life in Norwood on Dec. 19, according to a statement from his father Carlos and stepmother Melida. Brian and brother Alexander grew up in JP. Alexander was memorialized this year in the post office renaming, and also in a “Camp Alex” anti-war display that appeared at Occupy Boston and currently in an Occupy JP display at Monument Square’s First Church in Jamaica Plain Unitarian Universalist. Alexander’s name is also memorialized in an honorary street sign at the intersection of South and St. Rose streets.

According to the family statement, Brian Arrendondo “never was able to recover from his deep sadness over the death of his brother Alex, a condition called complicated grief.”

http://tinyurl.com/7mz8arc

Manger Square meets Dewey Square: Occupy protesters mark Christmas

Around 20 members of Occupy Boston returned to Dewey Square Park for a holiday-themed protest today, the first day the park reopened to the public following the eviction of protesters by police Dec. 10.

Arriving at noon, protesters and protest chaplains – a group of clergy and lay people who have brought a spiritual framework to the Occupy movement – donned biblical garb and held up signs with messages such as “There is still no room at the inn” and “Peace on Earth, goodwill to the 99%.”

http://tinyurl.com/85gpumu

It’s time to occupy, my friends

At the Occupy Boston encampment at Dewey Square in the city’s financial district, Shane Aspinall, a 25-year-old African-American, says he has been living there because “it’s time black people take back the initiative to reclaim their history and rewrite it together with our present and hopefully better futures.”

Aspinall, who believes that the historical economic and social discrimination against African-American communities in the US must change, says: “At the moment, this [occupation] is the only alternative we have. The Republicans and the Democrats don’t represent us . . .  [President Barack] Obama will always have that history of being the first black president of the US but you’ve seen his record.

“I recognise there are structural problems in Washington with political lobby groups and the influence of business and his hands are tied. But, if not him, who? Us, that’s who.” Aspinall says the Occupy Wall Street outreach programmes to Boston’s ghettos are vital to reinvigorate civic interest in social self-help.

http://tinyurl.com/736xjhk


Fundamental conflict at the heart of the Occupy movement, and how anarchists and progressives could help resolve it

It would be highly misleading to identify New Deal liberalism with social democracy. We have barely seen the shadow of social democracy in the US. And yet, that is the dream that most inspires people in what the New Deal stood for: the ideal of a society that treats people like human beings, not commodities. This is the full meaning of what social democracy is all about. Yet, it requires enormous state effort, which Americans have very little faith in.

This is a fundamental conflict at the heart of the Occupy movement. On the one hand, they are as sceptical of government as anyone else in the US. They see it as a wholly-owned subsidiary of Wall Street and the 1 per cent.

And much of what I’ve written above completely supports them in this view. Their treatment by local Democratic mayors and other local officials only further discourages them from seeing conventional politics as a credible way forward. And yet, the side of the US they appeal to and want to see restored – the US as a land of freedom and opportunity for all – is precisely that which the New Deal best captured. Without government – no, without big government, that ideal has never even come close to being realised.

http://tinyurl.com/82pyr9x

Occupy Forces Local News to Focus on Real Issues

(video)

http://tinyurl.com/7umck3a

More mainstream media criticism of Obama ‘nothing to see here, move along’ stance on foreclosure fraud

It isn’t hard to see that the Obama Administration is choosing to sit on its hands. But the interesting part is that the ranks of supine validators may be thinning a smidge. The more state level prosecutions and headline-grabbing private cases move forward, the more difficult it will be for the Team Obama to persuade the press that really, truly, nothing can be done about those big rich bankers.

http://tinyurl.com/cfthpqc

SEC Enforcement Chief Whines that Trying Cases Takes a Lot of Effort

The entire basis of the request for stay pending appeal is that the SEC is too busy to handle this trial. But think about that for a second. They claim to have done their investigation, so trial is only about pulling things together. What else do their trial lawyers have to do? They only filed a single suit against Goldman Sachs over one ABACUS deal, when Goldman Sachs did a bunch of them, all cookie-cutter deals. They have only filed one suit against any of the investment banks that did the same kinds of deals. They have to go to trial against the individuals they singled out at the solely responsible human at each bank. Here’s my suggestion: quit trying million dollar insider trading cases and go after billion dollar cheats and liars.

http://tinyurl.com/73q3aad

Occupy the Corporation

If we had occupied the corporations decades ago – reorganizing them as cooperatives directed democratically by their workers – they would not have undone the reforms and regulations that so many people worked so hard to put into place in the 1930s.

The lesson of the undoing of the New Deal is this: We cannot respond to this latest capitalist crash with another set of reforms and regulations that leave the organization of enterprises unchanged. If we do, we will have ourselves to blame as we watch corporate boards of directors and major shareholders undo them yet again. Only this time, it well happen faster, because they have had so much practice since the 1930s. The lesson of America’s painful struggles with capitalism’s instability is this: Occupy the corporations and democratize them.

http://tinyurl.com/7movsyn

Occupy protesters sue over free speech, force

Most major Occupy encampments have been dispersed, but they live on in a flurry of lawsuits in which protesters are asserting their constitutional rights to free speech and assembly and challenging authorities’ mass arrests and use of force to break up tent cities.

Lawyers representing protesters have filed lawsuits – or are planning them – in state and federal courts from coast to coast, challenging eviction orders and what they call heavy-handed police tactics and the banning of demonstrators from public properties. Some say the fundamental right of protest has been criminalized in places, with protesters facing arrest and charges while doing nothing more than exercising protected rights to demonstrate.

http://tinyurl.com/7mmhlpm

“Cannibal Capitalism” shines light on Occupy

The 2012 presidential election may be a referendum on President Obama’s job performance, specifically his ability to improve an economy that continues to teeter along a dangerous edge.

But with the coming of the Occupy movement, there is another possibility: The upcoming election will be an appraisal of the nature of modern capitalism – its merits, limits and ills. And the candidate who speaks in harmony with the electorate’s assessment of capitalism will win.

http://tinyurl.com/cshwslu

Bank forecloses on home of 91-year-old Pearl Harbor veteran in the Sierra

The recent foreclosure of a home belonging to a local Pearl Harbor survivor has touched a nerve among dozens of Occupy Nevada City protesters.

They protested in front of Bank of America Wednesday night, the same bank which foreclosed on 91-year-old Lou Conter.

http://tinyurl.com/cykrcww

City attorney offers to drop charges against Occupy L.A. protesters if they take a class on the 1st amendment

To keep costs down, City Atty. Carmen Trutanich has offered a deal: He will drop charges against the other protesters if they agree to pay $355 to take a class on the 1st Amendment.

In a Times article on Thursday, City Hall reporter Kate Linthicum says that lawyers for the protesters consider the offer ironic, because most of their clients were arrested for what they believed was an exercise of their free speech rights.

Trutanich deputy William Carter says the free-speech class will teach protesters the nuances of the law. “The 1st Amendment is not absolute,” he said, noting that the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that the government can regulate when, where and how free speech can be exercised.

http://tinyurl.com/dxqochc

Occupy Hecklers Drown Out Bachmann At Iowa Diner

The Hamburg Inn in Iowa City has long been a popular stop for presidential candidates, but it probably won’t be high on Rep. Michele Bachmann’s list anymore.

About two dozen activists with Occupy Iowa City packed the diner before Bachmann arrived there Thursday, then loudly chanted in unison as she tried to mingle with supporters. Their chant blasted the Minnesota congresswoman’s position on gay rights, health care and taxes and ended with: “You’re not wanted here. So go, just go.”

The restaurant blared Christmas songs over the loudspeaker to drown out the protesters. Police arrived as tensions rose, but no one was arrested.

http://tinyurl.com/76gnb54

What Eisenhower Republicans Had In Common With Occupy Wall Street

Watching the movie other night, I realized what I should have decades ago: Of course they were happy to be alive. They’d all survived a world war, and before that a Depression far worse than the one we’re limping through in 2011. If I had spent 20 years afraid of not getting enough to eat, of not surviving the year, of watching society collapse, I’d probably want to revel in life and a few consumer goods too. What had looked like an oppressive past when I was a teen-ager now looks like a distant dream for the future. Imagine it – general prosperity! no ongoing war!

http://tinyurl.com/747z6cz

An “occupy movement” by the tribals of Alirajpur

As “Occupy movements” are beginning to emerge as the latest form of protest across the world, tribals of Alirajpur have started an “occupy movement” of their own. For the last three and a half weeks, over tribals displaced due to the Sardar Sarovar dam Project (SSP) have been occupying and tilling government land in protest against their not receiving land as compensation for their submerged lands under the dam project.
The Sardar Sarovar is one of the 30 large dams planned across the Narmada river and has been mired in controversy for decades over the slow progress of rehabilitation of the project affected families.

http://tinyurl.com/7dx4yfw

Hong Kong churches promote economic justice at Christmas

The Hong Kong Catholic Church has reminded its members to be aware of the need for economic justice during the Christmas season and two other church groups are participating in the “Occupy” anti-corporate movement.

The Diocesan Catholic Commission for Labor Affairs (CCLA) has organized a Christmas campaign to boycott shopping centers to promote the cause and highlight the need to alleviate the wealth gap in society.

http://tinyurl.com/czqv5tf

Revolution through Banking?

Over the last several weeks, we have been examining what legislative changes are needed to reform the banking sector: some day soon there may be Occupy-originated proposals and draft legislation, for instance to amend the so-called “Volcker Rule”. One group has split off to explore and design the creation of an ideal bank that would put into practice the values of Occupy. What would this look like?

The ideal bank would be democratically owned and controlled by its customers and its employees. Like at many credit unions, all depositors would get an equal say, regardless of the size of their accounts. It would be non-profit, building in a competitive advantage over the for-profit banks. It would be accessible to all, in particular the poor (we are inspired by the Grameen Bank, started by Mohamed Yunus in Bangladesh). It would be a bank that anyone can bank with and receive better service than what they receive today at conventional banks. Any small-scale bank we establish say in New York would have be to be replicable by others elsewhere.

http://tinyurl.com/6w3zgwt

Re-Occupy: A Movement Seeks a Sanctuary

The Occupy movement has lent American society so much energy, rage, and creativity, and it has made a rupture. It has broken a spell. But now it needs the very institutions that have been the mortar of complacency to follow suit, to take risks.

It’s not enough to simply applaud the movement and then keep keeping on. The unions need to endanger their comfortable pacts with politicians and big business, to be willing to actually shut down the engines of an unjust economy. The non-profits need to mobilize their resources and knowledge in new, more radical ways. And the religious communities need to offer their spaces, their networks, their moral leadership.

http://tinyurl.com/6lkrsyy

Revolutions Don’t Happen in a Day: Five Ways OWS Can Stay Powerful and Truly Build a Movement

Winter is the nagging truth that the next decade of organizing must be more sustainable than the first months we spent in the sun; that this is a struggle for the long-haul, that burn-out and martyrdom are no good for anyone and no good for the cause. Winter tells us to see our families and take a day off when we are sick, because the movement has to be healthy if it’s going to last. Winter is here to remind us that revolution is not an event but a process, and that social transformation means not only harnessing a moment, but building a movement.

http://tinyurl.com/827t998

Last Occupy protest camp in Canada closed

The final Occupy protest tent camp in Canada has been closed by police in Winnipeg, Manitoba, based on fire safety concerns, officials said. Protesters spent 67 days in the city park as part of the Occupy Wall Street financial disparity movement that began in New York earlier this year. Demonstrators in more than 20 Canadian cities marched Oct. 15 and set up tent cities but all were gradually ordered dismantled, the Winnipeg Free Press reported.

http://tinyurl.com/7tmsd5w