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    Banks Need a Haircut! Today, November 28, from 3 to 6 pm

    Need to visit the barber?  Come to Occupy Boston (Dewey Square) for a haircut today!

    At Dewey Square today—Monday, November 28—you will see six barber stools representing the six biggest banks: JPMorganChase, Bank of America, Citibank, Wells Fargo, Morgan Stanley, and Goldman Sachs.  From 3 pm to 6 pm, skilled barbers will operate at each of these stations, providing free haircuts to occupiers and supporters.
    But why?
    Occupy Boston is transforming itself into a barbershop to send a message about a financial concept called a “haircut”.  In banking, a “haircut” is when a bank or other lender adjusts the terms of a loan to decrease the debt on the borrower. While banks routinely take “haircuts” when dealing with large corporations and wealthy clients, they rarely do the same when dealing with members of the 99% who are paying back mortgage loans, student loans, credit card loans and other debts.
    When faced with losses of homeowners and consumers, big banks often play hardball. They threaten homeowners with foreclosure and report the borrower to the credit agencies, damaging their credit rating.  But with bigger, richer borrowers like corporations, bankers routinely agree to negotiate haircuts and other changes in loan contracts, since refusing to do so could cause the borrower to file for bankruptcy, causing even bigger losses and jeopardizing future business (and the lucrative fees) from corporate borrowers.

    Now, big banks need to take a haircut.  Banks can provide immediate relief to American homeowners, families, working people, and students by writing down the value of underwater mortgages and unbearable consumer and student loan debt.  Banks agree to haircuts on loans for large corporations because rigid adherence to the terms of the loan will hamstring the prosperity and productivity of the borrower. Banks’ insistence on rigid adherence to the terms of loans is, right now, destroying the prosperity and productivity of American homeowners, students, and workers.  By taking haircuts on loans belonging to the 99%, banks would reduce monthly loan payments for millions of Americans, providing immediate relief to household budgets and spurring economic recovery.

    Banks need a haircut. Do you?

    Occupy Harvard Rally to Defend Freedom of Speech with Christopher Hedges

    Christopher Hedgeshttp://www.facebook.com/events/323715837642347/

    On Friday, November 18, 2011, peaceful protestors at Davis were
    systematically pepper sprayed by the university police force. In an
    enormous GA on Tuesday, November 22, they called for a general strike
    on all UC campuses. They will attempt to disrupt the meeting of the
    provosts of the University of California.

    We will stand in solidarity with them.

     

    Monday 11/28 Schedule of Events

    3:30 pm: Rally in support of University of California student strike! Meet in front of Science Center.

    5:00 pm: Chris Hedges addresses Occupy Harvard! He will first come through the Yard, then head over to the Science Center to speak to those who can’t get in. (At 6:00 pm, he will give a talk entitled Death of the Liberal Class at Yenching Auditorium: http://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/?q=node/341.)

    6:00 pm: Occupy Harvard General Assembly. Meet at Johnston Gate.

    Later: Chris Hedges returns to the Occupy Harvard encampment to embed for the night!

     

     

    November 24 – Occupy the Hood Food Drive!

    First, some numbers:

    In 2007, there were 36.2 million people in the U.S. (12.2%) living in food-insecure households, with the highest prevalence  among Blacks (22.0%), Latinos (22.3%), people in households with children under 6 years of age (17.7%), and single-mother households (30.4%).  In 2010, that number went up to 48.8 million.    In 2010, 4.8 percent of all U.S. households (5.6 million households) accessed emergency food from a food pantry one or more times, with nearly half of those households having to choose between paying for utilities or heating fuel and food.

    This Thanksgiving, Occupy the Hood will be continuing their winter food drive, bringing food and staples to needy families across Boston.  Bring your canned vegetables, fruits, rice, whole grain cereal, granola bars, peanut butter, beans, pasta, macaroni and cheese, canned tuna, pancake mix, baby food, tomato sauce, dried/canned soups, oatmeal/cream of wheat, and help support families in need.

    Help feed the Hood!   Bring your canned good and dry donations to the following daily drop-off locations:

    • MAMLEO, 61 Columbia Rd. (corner of Columbia Rd. & Seaver St.) from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
    • 201 River St. Mattapan, MA, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

    Canned food is good — turkeys are even better!   Your donations will go to support the purchase of high-quality goods for families in need.   To donate to support this effort, visit www.blackstonian.org

    Food drive is ongoing!   To get involved, contact 617-297-7721 or email occupythehoodboston@gmail.com

    Occupy Boston Summit on Sat Nov 19

    OCCUPY BOSTON SUMMIT

    Speak Up — Add Your Voice — Join The Conversation

    • Where is our movement headed?
    • What opportunities and challenges are we facing?
    • How do we think creatively about the future?

    SATURDAY NOVEMBER 19 @ 2-6 pm

    Quincy School
    885 Washington Street, Chinatown

    A 15 minute walk from Dewey Square
    or Orange Line to Tufts Medical Center

    Planning to come? Need childcare or translation? Want to volunteer? Let us know! obsummit@gmail.com

    http://tinyurl.com/obsummit

    Day of Action March Today, November 17, at 4 pm in Dewey Square

    Across the country, our infrastructure is falling apart. Our bridges, our roads, and our public transit systems are in a state of disrepair. Enough! It’s time to revitalize our economy with the creation of local jobs that serve our country as a whole! At 4 pm, tens of thousands of people who are deeply engaged in the labor movement will join us in Dewey Square, march to our bridges, and demand that we get back to work.

    The candlelight march will proceed from Dewey Square down Atlantic Avenue to the North Washington St. Bridge—a bridge that is desperately in need of repair—for a speak out against unemployment, austerity, and infrastructure cuts.

    Contact us

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