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    Occupy Boston Tackles Campaign Finance Reform

    The Citizens United Working Group of Occupy Boston will host a Community Gathering and forum Monday, January 2nd at the Community Church, 565 Boylston Street in Boston. This event is the kick off to a month-long campaign designed to inspire and educate the greater public about corporate influence over public policy.  The program will begin at 7:30, but guests are invited to arrive early for refreshments and social networking.  Featured speakers include MA Sen. Jamie Elderidge, who has introduced many of the bills that support campaign finance reforms in the State House, and Arthur Macewan from Dollars and Sense and author of the Wealth-Power Connection.

    Macewan will address the larger problem of corporate personhood and the myriad of problems it has created with respect to money in politics.  Sen. Elderidge will be there to discuss some of the related bills and resolutions that he is sponsoring in the State House.  This event is open to the public.  The speakers will be followed by a facilitated open discussion geared toward building a vision for what steps we can take to solve these problems.  Getting corporate and special interest money out of politics is an important issue for people across the political spectrum.  Everyone is encouraged to attend and participate in building a unifying strategy to affect change.

    The goal of the evening is to introduce people to the campaign finance issues surrounding the Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Citizens United vs FEC. Among the issues discussed will be the idea of Corporate Personhood, which as a result of several misguided court decisions prior to Citizen’s United, has given corporations rights and protections that the Founders intended only for people. Corporate Personhood has come at a terrible cost to our democracy–especially with regard to the financing of elections and the influence of money in politics.

    In addition, campaign financing and fundraising have become huge distractions for our elected officials. In order to raise enough money to be competitive, candidates are forced to pander to big money corporate donors, lobbyists and PACs which often puts them directly at odds with wishes of the people they are supposed to represent. The Citizen’s United decision, in which the Supreme Court ruled that corporations have a First Amendment right to spend unlimited — and unreported — amounts of money to influence elections, has further undermined democracy.

    Getting corporate and special interest money out of politics is a unifying issue for people across the political spectrum. Fixing this problem is essential if we want our representatives to be responsive to the 99% and not just their deep-pocketed corporate backers.

    This Community Forum on “Citizens United vs FEC” is part of a month-long educational campaign that will culminate with a two-day “Rally & Summit to Unite Citizens for Democracy” on January 20 and 21. The rally will bring together organizations that have been working specifically on these issues for years, like the Coffee Party, Free Speech for People, Move to Amend and Rootstrikers, along with groups like the MA League of Women Voters and the Nurses Union that also want to have a voice in this debate. For more information about any of these events, email citizensunited@occupyboston.org or occupybostonmedia@gmail.com.

    Boston Activists to Occupy First Night

    This Saturday, Occupy Boston is planning a series of festive and diverse activities at First Night Boston — the latest in a string of actions taken since being forcibly evicted from its home in Dewey Square on December 10, 2011. With approximately one million people expected to attend First Night, these actions will celebrate the Occupy movement’s successes in 2011, plans for continued dialog and engagement, and our hope for a better tomorrow in 2012.

    “Evict us, we’ll multiply.”

    A number of Occupy Boston Working Groups have exciting actions and events planned for First Night.  A partial listing is below. Not all activities are being publicized ahead of time to preserve the element of surprise, but rest assured: the 99% will be everywhere come First Night, Saturday, Dec 31, 2011.

    • From 1:00-5:00 PM, the Info Tent Working Group will be canvassing with mobile info tents, dispersing Occupy Boston buttons and literature; and engaging revelers and visitors about the Occupy movement. The canvassers will set out from the Community Church at 565 Boylston St at 1:00 PM.
    • From 1:00-2:00 PM, members of the Peace Action Working Group (PAWG) will join the weekly peace vigil at Park Street Station. At 3:00 PM, the group will table at Copley Square along with the Stop the Wars Coalition, the United National Antiwar Coalition, and United for Justice with Peace. After the tabling, PAWG will join the First Procession along with Palestine solidarity activists.
    • From 1:00-7:00 PM, Free School University will host a “roving soap box” around the city.
    • From 5:00-8:30 PM there will be an Occupy Boston Meet and Greet Social Event at the Community Church of Boston, 565 Boylston Street.
    • At 8:00 PM, the Women’s Caucus is hosting a spectacular, not-to-be-missed art “event” at Copley Square.

    For the latest information on other Occupy Boston First Night activities, to watch a livestream of the various First Night events, or for upcoming Occupy Boston General Assembly meetings dates and locations, please visit https://www.occupyboston.org/.

    The High Cost of War for One Family

    Assembly called “The Cost of War” by Carlos Arredondo, in Dewey Square

    Carlos Arredondo was a regular presence at Occupy Boston’s camp at Dewey Square. With a sparkle in his eye, he would make a child or adult smile with a kind word, and he would explain every detail of his Camp Alex tent to anyone with the time and interest. Camp Alex commemorated his son Alex, who was killed in the Iraq war in 2004, and contained photographs of Alex, letters he had written home from Iraq, Alex’s combat boots and dog tag, and many other artifacts. Now, tragically, Carlos is commemorating his other son’s passing.

    Brian Luis Arredondo took his own life in Norwood, Massachusetts, on the 19th of December, 2011. Brian survived his brother, Alexander, by seven years, three months, and twenty four days. Brian is survived by his father and stepmother, Carlos and Melida Arredondo, and his mother, Victoria Foley.  Those close to him said that Brian never fully recovered from the loss of his brother, Lance Corporal Alexander Scott Arredondo, to a sniper’s bullet in Najaf, Iraq.

    Brian was “broken” on the day his brother died, according to Carlos Arredondo. Brian was living in Maine at the time. His mother had moved to Bangor three months earlier, to make a new start in life. Carlos and Melida had moved to Florida to be near Melida’s elderly mother. On August 25th, 2004, three U.S. Marines and a Chaplain showed up at Brian’s house in Maine. They would not say why they were there, although Brian knew, but requested to speak with Brian’s mother, Victoria, who was not home at the time. Continue reading “The High Cost of War for One Family” »

    Christmas Eve Candlelight Vigil and March in Honor of Brian L. Arredondo, and all Victims of War and their Families

    Brian L. Arredondo, 24, died by his own hand December 19. He had been distraught for some time about the death of his brother, Alexander S. Arredondo, during the Iraq war.

    Many Boston Occupiers and their supporters came to know the story of Brian’s brother Alex during the Dewey Square occupation as his family created and maintained ‘Camp Alex,’ an anti-war  memorial dedicated to the fallen Marine. Carlos Arredondo, Brian and Alex’s father, was also a Dewey Square Occupier himself.

    An Occupier who visited with Carlos and Melida Arredondo yesterday asked how Occupy Boston could help:

    “Carlos said that the best ways are to make the issues visible. Suicide among military members and families of military are too prevalent. In the last two years, more U.S. service members took their own lives than were killed in combat.”

    The family has extended an invitation to all to join them for the vigil and march, which will begin at 6 pm at the First Church (Unitarian Universalist) in Jamaica Plain, 6 Eliot St, Boston, MA 02130. The march will be to the post office that was renamed in honor of Alex.

    A Brian Arredondo Memorial Fund has been set up to cover memorial expenses at The Cooperative Bank, 40 Belgrade Avenue, Roslindale, Massachusetts 02131.

    Occupy Boston Mobilizing “Anti Big Bank, Pro Local Credit Unions March” on Christmas Eve!

    On Saturday, December 24, 2011 members of Occupy Boston will be holding an “Anti Big Bank, Pro Local Credit Unions March” starting at 1 pm at the Parkman Bandstand in the Boston Commons with march kicking off at 2 pm.

    This march is a continuation of activities surrounding “Bank Transfer Day,” which was on November 5, 2011, and was a great victory for Main Street with approximately 440,000 people transferring money from the “Big Banks” and depositing it into their local credit unions.  But the fight is not over!  Corporate financial institutions continue to be bailed out on Wall Street with taxpayer money and they continue to use our money recklessly.  It is estimated that during this holiday season the nation’s seven largest banks are doling out $156 billion dollars in executive bonuses.  Show big banks that we will not accept these irresponsible actions any longer!

    Credit Unions are non-profit institutions that are owned by each account holder, meaning they are looking out for YOU, not a group of stockholders. They provide a wide range of financial services with no fees, lower interest rates, lower ARP rates. 

    Join us for us for our Christmas Eve march to educate, remind and encourage Bostonians that each one of us has the choice to support our local credit unions instead of continuing to fund the Big Banks and line the pockets of their leaders.  

    We have the power to make a difference.  We are the 99%. 
    *If you take photos of this march or any other Occupy Boston action and want to share them with us, please upload them to our new Flickr Group: Occupy Boston Media Photo Sharing

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