RSS Feed   
  • Latest News:

    Another world is possible
  • Author Archive

    Support Occupiers Headed to Occupy Congress on #J17

    The #BostonGA passed a proposal on Saturday, January 14, 2012 allocating $2500 from our general fund to send more than 30 Boston occupiers to Washington, DC to join thousands of others occupying Congress on #J17. This historic event is the first major occupy-led national demonstration in DC. Boston’s voice will be well represented as we continue to build the movement to take back our nation’s capital.

    Today, we ask you to support Occupy Boston as we stand in solidarity with the 99% nationwide; your support will also allow us to continue our critical work in Boston and around the county.

    >> Donate to Occupy Boston <<

    Without a steady physical presence at Dewey Square, donations to OB have been less frequent. Can you support us today to ensure that we can continue to fund efforts like #J17?

    A rundown of costs:

    • $1500 for transportation. We will be renting two 15 passenger vans, (the most cost-effective solution).
    • $500 for food.
    • $500 for miscellaneous items to make sure occupiers are safe.
    Follow Occupy Boston’s #J17 efforts on Twitter with the hashtag #OBDC. Thank you for your support!

    Continue reading “Support Occupiers Headed to Occupy Congress on #J17” »

    The OB Media Rundown for 12/15/2011

    Occupy Everywhere

    Just hours after a 5 am police raid cleared Dewey’s tent city – Occupiers braved the cold to regroup at the Boston Common bandstand. On Sunday, they met there again to get down to business, planning a new strategy: Occupy Everywhere.
    Already, neighborhood Occupy outposts are popping up from Allston to the suburbs. In Boston this week, more than a dozen well-attended working groups met each day. Without the burden of maintaining the campsite, the focus has been on action, and lots of it.

    Whatever else Occupy was, it was a home to people who now need new accommodations – but the passion and resolve of Occupiers is intact.

    http://thephoenix.com/Boston/news/131316-occupy-everywhere/

    Occupy Boston camp raided

    “While Occupy Boston protesters may be exercising their expressive rights during the protest, they have no privilege under the First Amendment to seize and hold the land on which they sit,” McIntyre declared in her decision. “The act of occupation, this court has determined as a matter of law, is not speech. Nor is it immune from criminal prosecution for trespass or other crimes.”
    It should also be noted that on December 8, there were two right-wing bigots who attempted to disrupt our General Assembly by telling us that we should leave. There were only the latest in a line of wreckers and police provocateurs who have attempted to disrupt our General Assemblies over the weeks. Fortunately, our chanting was able to drown them out, and they left early.

    http://socialistworker.org/2011/12/15/occupy-boston-camp-raided

    Judge rules that Occupy Movement protesters are common trespassers

    For interest to our real estate readers, the Judge balanced the City?s property rights vs. the protesters First Amendment speech rights. The judge ultimately concluded that the “occupation” as practiced by the Occupy Boston protesters – physically taking over the public park from the City and to the exclusion of others – was a classic trespass and not a First Amendment right.

    http://www.boston.com/realestate/news/blogs/renow/2011/12/judge_rules_tha.html

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 12/15/2011” »

    The OB Media Rundown for 12/14/2011

    Time’s Person of the Year: The Protester

    The nonleader leaders of Occupy are using the winter to build an organization and enlist new protesters for the next phase. They have shifted the national conversation. As Politico recently reported, the Nexis news-media database now registers almost 500 mentions of “inequality” each week; the week before Occupy Wall Street started, there were only 91. But what would count, a few years hence, as success? According to gung-ho Adbusters editors Kalle Lasn and Micah White, it’s already “the greatest social-justice movement to emerge in the United States since the civil rights era.” Yet it took a decade to get from the Montgomery bus boycott to the federal civil rights acts, which were just the end of the beginning.

    The wisest Occupiers understand that these are very early days. But as long as government in Washington – like government in Europe – remains paralyzed, I don’t see the Occupiers and Indignados giving up or losing traction or protest ceasing to be the defining political mode. After all, the Tea Party protests subsided only after Tea Partyers achieved real power in 2010 by becoming the tail wagging the Republican Party dog. When radical populist movements achieve big-time momentum and attention, they don’t tend to stand down until they get some satisfaction.

    http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/printout/0,29239,2101745_2102132_2102373,00.html

    Occupy protesters arraigned; some get probation

    Arrested on the denuded Dewey Square early Saturday, 24 Occupy Boston protesters were arraigned yesterday in what has become a familiar place to the movement, Courtroom 17 in Boston Municipal Court.

    Five men and three women refused offers of probation and decided to continue to fight the charges. Another 16 defendants accepted probation, from six months to a year, and were ordered to stay away from Dewey Square.

    http://bostonglobe.com/metro/2011/12/13/occupy-protesters-arraigned-some-get-probation/aJTspKJ5czqJeNobXSbUGN/story.html

    Occupiers seize the day – in court

    Sixteen Occupy Boston protesters accepted prosecutors’ offer of pre-trial probation yesterday while eight others were arraigned in Boston Municipal Court and released on their own recognizance after their eviction from their Dewey Square encampment.

    “We are going to continue taking over public space – with permits – to spread our message,” said Daniel Chavez, 23, of Boston. “There’s even more passion now. We don’t need tents to continue to build momentum for this movement.”

    Chavez, like most of the protesters, was charged with trespassing and resisting arrest. The resisting arrest charge for Chavez and 11 other protesters who agreed to a year’s pretrial probation was dropped, according to the DA’s office. If they stay away from Dewey Square and don’t break any laws, they will not be arraigned and their cases will be dismissed, the DA’s office said. Four female protesters were placed on six months’ pretrial probation with the same conditions.

    http://news.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view/2011_1214occupiers_seize_the_day__in_court/

    Tiny tents in Dewey

    Photographer Aaron Spagnolo took a miniature Coleman tent down to the newly refurbished Dewey Square for some camera fun. I am no expert when it comes to photography like this but it’s pretty cool.

    http://boston.com/community/blogs/less_is_more/2011/12/tiny_tents_in_dewey.html?comments=all#readerComm

    [see the pictures on Flickr here:]

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/aaronspagnolo/6506656161/in/set-72157628406065771/

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 12/14/2011” »

    The OB Media Rundown for 12/13/2011

    Beyond the Rhetoric: The Complicated, Brief Life of Occupy Boston

    Whatever you think of the Occupy Wall Street’s tactics, methods or politics, one thing is indisputable: the Occupy Wall Street movement make people emotional. Even after wading through confusion to understand how Occupy actually works, people tend to love it or hate it.

    And Boston is an emotional city. More than any occupy I visited, passersby would scream and honk in support and derision many times a day.

    http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2011/12/brief-complex-life-of-occupy-boston/?pid=212&pageid=34330&viewall=true

    Occupy Boston: ‘This is a movement of the mind’

    Occupy Boston protesters marched back to Dewey Square on Monday. It doesn’t look like the place they remember. Barricades up, police standing guard, walling off the newly planted sod at Dewey Square from the occupiers who took over and called this place home for more than two months.

    “I’m glad we’re here just to show that we’re not locked down on a physical property because this is a movement of the mind,” Carlos Ashmanskas of Quincy said, adding that he had camped out since Sept. 30.

    http://www.necn.com/12/12/11/Occupy-Boston-This-is-a-movement-of-the-/landing_newengland.html?blockID=610998&feedID=4206

    Boston counts, counsels homeless

    In Downtown Crossing, Mayor Thomas M. Menino and emergency shelter director Jim Greene offered assistance to Courtney Smith, 35, during Boston’s homeless census last night.

    Menino and Greene spent several minutes talking to Harris, as an activist passing by with a tray of sandwiches from an Occupy Boston meeting handed him one.

    “I’ve been feeding the homeless for a long time,” said the activist, David Lamoso, 30, of East Boston. “We did it a lot in Dewey Square” where Occupy Boston had been located. As the night and the count went on, some homeless residents accepted transportation to shelters, while other refused.

    http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2011/12/13/boston-counts-counsels-homeless/IcX5EnERCaG84LkqsTfr6I/story.html

    Boston Herald runs photos of arrested Occupy protesters as columnist mocks

    Howie Carr: A mug shot is worth a thousand words. And these BPD mug shots from Occupy Boston tell us quite a story, namely, how greasy and dirty you’ll look if you stop bathing for weeks at a time.

    http://www.bostonherald.com/news/columnists/view/2011_1213wonder_why_occupy_lugs_have_no_jobs/

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 12/13/2011” »

    Guide to Court Etiquette for Occupy Boston

    Written by Andy Cowan, with input from many others.

    In General

    Court is a serious place, in which serious things happen that affect people for the rest of their lives. Judges, district attorneys, court officers and court clerks take their jobs very seriously. Court etiquette is about respecting the seriousness and impact of what happens in court, and performing certain rituals that the people who work there expect. Please also respect the fact that many other people are in court because they, or their loved ones, are facing charges that represent some of the most serious obstacles in their lives. Some of the people there are in danger of losing their freedom for very long periods of time. Please show them respect.

    What to Wear and What Not to Wear

    • Don’t wear a hat, chew gum, or have anything in your mouth in the courtroom; no eating or drinking in the courtroom. Turn your cell phone off or put it on silent mode (not vibrate) before going into the courtroom
    • Dress as close to “business” or “church” clothes as possible. Try to avoid wearing jeans, sweats, and track suits. Don’t wear clothes with obvious holes.
    • Take your coat off indoors (to show off how dressed up you are!)

    While waiting inside the courtroom

    • Court officers will not allow you to read or use electronic devices in the courtroom.
    • Once the judge comes out onto the bench, court officers are generally very strict about enforcing silence among spectators so that the court can conduct its business
    • Do not bring any food or beverages into the courtroom, unless they are stored out of sight.
    • If you must make or take a phone call, send a text message, or do anything else with your phone, step outside the courtroom.
    • If you need to step outside the courtroom for any reason, wait for a pause in between cases or a conversation at sidebar. Try to avoid going out while people are talking with the judge. If you must, be very quiet.
    • Stand when the court officers say, “all rise.” Sit when the court officer or the judge says, “you may be seated.”
    • If you have questions for your lawyer, step outside the courtroom to talk to him/her.

    Continue reading “Guide to Court Etiquette for Occupy Boston” »

    Contact us

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