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    Need a ride to S17?

    Want to celebrate the 1-year anniversary of Occupy Wall St in NYC?

    Want to ride down with us?

    Sign up at s17.occupyboston.org.

    Help us Plan for S17

    UPDATE: Due to Jimmy Fund preparations in Copley Square, we’re moving the Sunday Sept. 9th GA and SAA to the Community Church of Boston.

    Next weekend is #S17, the one-year anniversary of Occupy Wall Street.

    Want to talk about #S17 planning? Come to Copley Square on Sunday September 9th for GA at 4pm, and a Strategic Action Assembly at 5pm.

    Results from Our First Annual DHS Creative Writing Contest

    Earlier this summer we announced our first Department of Homeland Security Creative Writing Contest, and we’re long overdue for publishing the results. They’re finally here! But before showcasing the awesome writing submissions, we should say a few words about the current state of big government surveillance.

    The big news of the day: CISPA is dead! The Cybersecurity Act of 2012 (S.3414; the senate version of CISPA) was defeated by filibuster in the Senate. That’s a big victory over government cyber-surveillance, at least for now.

    On the downside, NSA dragnet surveillance continues under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). According to the Office of the Directory of National Intelligence (ODNI, the overseer of intelligence agencies), "it is not reasonably possible to identify the number of people whose communications have been reviewed" by the government. Remember that our writing contest dealt with the DHS — a different agency than the NSA. How many three-letter government agencies does it take to spy on an American?

    Finally, Kudos to twitter for following in Google’s footsteps, and issuing a transparency report. In the first six months of 2012, twitter received 849 government requests for user information. Of those, 80% (679 of 849) came from the united states. Twitter turned over information for 75% of the US requests. Perhaps Google could take a lesson from twitter (Google satisfied 93% of US government information requests, according to their latest transparency report).

    The Contest Submissions

    Time for the good stuff. The challenge was to take the list of keywords from the DHS’s social media monitoring program (see pdf, pages 20–23), then write a short piece that has nothing to do with national security, but uses as many keywords as possible. Here’s what people sent in. Can you pick out the keywords?

    From Jo of Winchester:

    Damn! I am in quarantine because I got infected with norvo virus drinking mudslides in Tijuana

    Southwest Airlines sucks. Stuck in San Diego and all I want is to get to Tucson to see la familia

    I love that I live Salem and we have homegrown pirates. I wonder if they are recruiting!

    Reading an amazing book about public health and multi drug resistant TB in Somalia, so glad we have smart people with the WHO, training homegrown providers to combat this pandemic!

    I wonder if the DHS has informed the CDC about this new infection caused by something called norvo virus

    Jo also quips about the term “norvo virus”, which appears on the DHS keyword list:

    I do love the fact that there is actually no such thing as “norvo virus” there is Norwalk Virus aka norovirus but definitely no norvo virus.

    I suppose that’s a DHS oops :)

    From Terra:

    at dress rehearsal at the theater today, the explosion of boos from the audience in the facility was toxic. people running from the theater had to control themselves and be civil as they burst out. in our opinion, the plot is a bomb and mayhem and riots on opening night are expected as audience members scramble to get their money back. we believe that the lead actor will be the latest casualty in this disaster of a performance. due to the expected unrest in the case, we would have thought that the strategy would be to retain more security personnel, in anticipation of the death of the run of this disaster of a theater piece, because we anticipate that people will by dying to leave and would perhaps “kill” for a cab in an attempt to flee. in total, the entire effort is a waste of theater infrastructure. and i recommend greater policing of public arts funding to ensure that we force better quality. use of public funding in this manner is a crime. even though the media came to shoot, that was not an indication that the initiative in this worthless exercise has any value. the entire thing is a threat to our civilization. if we don’t stop this kind of waste, it will breach not only public trust, but will incite civil unrest. i expect that this will blow up into a huge incident, as smaller arts collectives complain of their destruction because of lack of funding. when a small art house can have a huge hit, with home grown resources, and a large funded facility like what i saw today crashed and burned, it makes you wonder why we get any traffic at this huge facility. whether arts authorities are listening or not, they should take this as a warning. arts funding is in crisis. and the emergency is magnified when disasters like this are allowed to open. they should all be blacked out and blow to smithereens.

    From M.L. Browne, Winchester, MA:

    I was riding my bike when a dog came from nowhere on a side street and attacked my right leg. I crashed and he ran off. I felt the burn up my bloodied leg. Since bacteria and infection from bites are so nasty, I called the CDC. They said treat it, wrap it, ice it for relief, and report the incident to the police. I did what they said, but I wish the damned dog had at least barked a warning before he bit me.

    Finally, from Monica (aka femmevox):

    What kind of nutcase names her pet Pekineses Ricin, Sarin, Anthrax and Salmonella? Someone in love with the plague, or with a sick sense of humor. And I had to walk them.

    Teaching The Tempest to my ESL students is a disaster. Or a riot! Google translates it The Storm, half the students mistake Caliban for Taliban, while the smart kids burst out laughing.

    Help! His Trojan burst, this flood might be a disaster! Or a warning. I’ve got to find my power, get out before I’m stranded in some brownout of a life.

    Big twinkles to everyone who sent in submissions.

    Forums and Blogs: voices.occupyboston.org

    The Occupy Boston IT group recently took the wraps off a new website, voices.occupyboston.org. The new site provides two resources to the OB community: forums and individual blogs.

    The goal behind forums was to have a public discussion space that was larger and more accessible than the typical OB mailing list. The next time you need to start an open dialog, try doing it on the forums! You might be able to reach a few more people.

    Blogs? Yes, anyone can have their own blog on voices.occupyboston.org. Just write a blog post, and you’ve got a blog. It’s that simple.

    Try it out! If you have suggestions or ideas for improving the site, please send your
    feedback to the IT group.

    A Little Bake Sale for Big Oil

    Can you spare $11 billion for big oil?
    Sorry, I didn’t bring my wallet …

    On Saturday August 4th, activists from 350ma and Occupy Boston met in Dewey Square, to hold a little fundraiser for big oil. Why a fundraiser? Washington gives big oil, coal, and gas roughly $11 billion in subsidies and tax cuts each year, and there’s talk of trimming some of that back. Cutting these subsidies would be a (nudge-nudge, wink-wink) job killing travesty; so, we went out and canvassed the sidewalks, chatted up people on corners, and panhandled in the street.

    But wait … oil is modern day miracle. It’s in everything
    I own, right down to my shoelaces.

    Don’t get us wrong, we’ve got nothing against people tying their shoes. In fact, we think that tying your shoes is a darn good idea. But we do take issue with petroleum spilling onto our coastline, pollution spreading across out atmosphere, and CO2 warming our planet. Yes, oil is cheap (and heavily subsidized), but it’s also a finite, non-renewable resource. Eventually we will have to find something else to help us get our shoes tied.

    Who do you work for? I’m a Scott Brown supporter.

    I suppose that’s a reason to support big oil. Scott Brown supports big oil, and big oil supports Scott Brown — to the tune of $227,860 so far. And this has been a good investment for big oil; Scott Brown voted to protect big oil subsidies, and voted to gut portions of the Clean Air Act that might hurt big oil’s profitability. Maybe Senator Brown has a point. The oil industry only made $137 billion in 2011, while the rest of our nation’s economy was floundering.

    By the time the event was over, we had given away a few dozen baked goods, and collected a full $0.95 for big oil. We hope that Shell, BP, and Exxon Mobile appreciate our efforts.

    Here are a few photos of the event. You can find more photos at 350ma.org.

    Occupy Boston and 350ma Activists
    Stop Donating my tax dollars to big oil, coal, and gas

    Contact us

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