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  • Thank you, OB Legal Team!

    On Friday, May 11, members of Occupy Boston attended the gala of the National Lawyers Guild, to see the OB legal team honored alongside other local leaders in legal justice.

    Thank you, National Lawyers Guild, for your generosity and wisdom and guidance! We are grateful to the NLG members who took time from their busy schedules (working towards social justice 24/7 as it is) in order to volunteer as legal observers at protest actions and at encampments — often at an hour’s notice! We are also grateful to those who represented us in the courts — we were proud to have you stand by our side. Mic Check! We love you!!!

    As they don their neon-green legal observer hats, the Occupy Boston Legal Working Group received the Legal Worker Award at the NLG Gala.

    The OB Media Rundown for 5/12/12

    Boston Police Patrolman’s Assn magazine ‘Pax Centurion’ provides revealing look inside the minds of city police officers

    I knew immediately that they all came from Cambridge, Newton, Arlington, Jamaica Plain, and other places where insane people reside. Soon, some sort of strange Native American or Indian music began to fill the air. The assembled idiots began a huge circle dance, back and forth for hours on end. Unfortunately, there were several young children with them, who were also forced to dance with the graying hippies. Those kids represent the next generation of idiot liberals, (they all looked like little Elizabeth Warrens, for some reason) and will be screwed up for life, or attend Harvard. (That’s redundant, isn’t it?)

    And to think I actually submitted an overtime slip. For the entertainment alone, I should have paid the city…

    http://tinyurl.com/cdbbdkm (Link is to the Nov/Dec 2011 issue pdf. Editorial excerpted is on page A7. This issue and others can be accessed directly from the Boston Police Patrolman’s Assn website http://bppa.org/)

    “Occupy Cop” under attack – Retired Philadelphia Police Capt. Ray Lewis could lose his life insurance for wearing his uniform to a protest

    Lewis continues to protest. In uniform. Last week he was in Center City Philadelphia, protesting outside police and FOP [Fraternal Order of Police] headquarters. He says that FOP leadership , a major force in city politics, depends on corporate donations to finance its union election campaigns and quarterly magazine.

    “The major part of the movement is to hold corporations accountable and to stop them from having so much control over lives and the earth,” he says. “If John McNesby is a receiver of the favors of corporate America, then I’m going to be the number one enemy. Because I’m a tactical warhead.”

    http://tinyurl.com/6w3qaz7

    Video captures WI gov. Scott Walker describing ‘divide and conquer’ strategy to destroy unions

    (video)

    The video clip shows Walker meeting with Beloit billionaire Diane Hendricks, who has since donated $510,000 to Walker’s campaign. Hendricks asked: “Any chance we’ll get to be a completely red state, and work on these unions, and become a right-to-work – what can we do to help you?”

    “Well, we’re going to start in a couple weeks with our budget adjustment bill,” Walker said. “The first step is we’re going to deal with collective bargaining for all public employee unions, because you use divide and conquer. So for us, the base we get for that is the fact that we’ve got – budgetarily we can’t afford not to. If we have collective bargaining agreements in place, there’s no way not only the state but local governments can balance things out…That opens the door once we do that. That’s your bigger problem right there.”

    http://tinyurl.com/burfls2

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 5/12/12” »

    Mothers’ Day Walk for Peace

    Occupy Boston’s People of Color, Anti-Oppression, and Decolonize to Liberate Working Groups all endorse the participation of Occupy Boston in the annual Mothers’ Day Walk for Peace, Sunday, May 13th. Registration starts at 7AM and the walk begins at 8:30AM from Townfield Park in Fields Corner, Dorchester.  The walk is nearly 4 miles long and is generally completed by 10AM.

    The People of Color Working Group (PoC WG) and their Allies are marching as a team in the Mother’s Day March for Peace, organized by the Louis D. Brown Peace Institute.  We’re laying the groundwork to continue working with the Peace Institute and other organizations in the Roxbury, Dorchester, Mattapan neighborhoods. We’re late registering our team, but you can still support this effort and make a donation. Will you march with us (yes, allies are welcome!) and/or help us raise our goal of $250? Every $1 counts!  You can go to our team page to make a donation and/or join the team.

     

    This is the 16th annual Mothers’ Day Walk for Peace, organized by the Louis D. Brown Peace Institute in Dorchester.  The Peace Institute is a small grassroots, survivor-led agency that serves over 90% of the families of homicide victims in the Greater Boston area.  The Peace Institute is renowned for its crisis management services as well as empowerment of parents and siblings in the aftermath of homicide through court education and political advocacy (such as testimony given before Boston City Councilors and the Governor).  The Peace Institute is also known for their peace curriculum used in local Boston public schools, and they are beginning to become known for their new healing center using art therapy and other alternative holistic modalities such as massage and acupuncture.

    Please remember that this is not an Occupy Boston event but one in which we are continuing humbly to build relationships with marginalized communities impacted by structural oppressions and legacies of colonialism.  Any signage used that day should be small and respectful.  The walk is open to the public and many join in from all segments, but the leaders are the families who have lost their loved ones to street violence and who have their own chants that they use as they lead the march.  Please join in with humility and respect.

    General Assembly Updates

    Proposals Passed at the General Assembly on 5/3 at Boston Common:
     

    Presented by Aria Littlehous
    Passed by consent
    1. Reimbursing Occupy Jamaica Plain for money spent on supplies for  Wake Up the Earth. Receipts attached for the sum of $345.67

     

    Presented by Gregory Murphy
    Passed by consent
    1. Proposal to spend $60 to pay the Harriet Tubman House for the meeting that occurred on 5/2.

     

    Presented by Aria L, Joe Cuigini & Ethan Harrison
    1. Discussion Proposal presented by Occupy Jamaica Plain to set an agenda for the General Assembly on 5/5.
    The following agenda was passed by consensus:
    1. Fifteen minute section of announcements and report-backs
    2. Five minutes for individual stack between sections of the Assembly. A progressive stack would be used with one minute per person and a prompt of something like “What do you care about?”
    3. Having facilitators – B and David Lamoso
    4. Discussion topics with small group discussion
                – How do we make the voice of the 99% heard
                – What does JP want to see from Occupy
                – Immigrant issues
    5. SAA style action planning
                – Encourage email exchange ( community forum)
    Proposals Passed at the General Assembly on 5/10 at Boston Common:
    Presented by Angela Giudice
    Passed by consent
    1. Reimbursing the family of Angela Giudice for rent of apartment for use as storage space for the sum of $1000.

     

    Presented by Greg Murphy
    Passed by consent
    1. Proposal to spend $1090 to buy ten tickets for the annual gala of the National Lawyers Guild. Tickets will be made available on a first come, first serve basis.

     

    General Assembly Agenda
    Presentation:
    Understanding Wall Street Banking & How OCCUPY Can Do Better for the 99%

    Saturday, May 12th, 5-6:30 pm,  Occupy Boston General Assembly
    Community Church of Boston, 565 Boylston Street, Boston
    The Occupy movement has been instrumental in exposing the financial system’s complete control of the global economy for the profit of the few. The purpose of OB Bank Working group’s presentation is to develop a common knowledge base about the financial sector and to stimulate ideas and actions for creating financial institutions committed to the public good.
    Confirmed speakers:
    Jim Campen is a professor emeritus of economics at the UMass-Boston. He served from 2007 to 2009 as executive director of Americans for Fairness in Lending, which “exists to raise awareness of abusive credit and lending practices and to promote re-regulation of the industry.”
    Fred Moseley  graduated from Stanford and has been teaching economics at Mt Holyoke College since 1989. He has taught  Political Economy, US Economic History, Marxism and  written and published numerous papers including analyses of US economic conditions.
    Both speakers are important contributors to Dollars and Sense, a Boston based democratic and non-hierarchical collective of radical economics graduate students and faculty founded  in 1974. Dollars and Sense publishes a blog, books and a periodical devoted to ‘real world economics’.
    Proposals on Stack:
    1. Proposal by Linda Jenkins to refund the mutual aid fund $300 in order to issue T passes
    2. Proposal By Allie Bresee to have an Occupy Boston March every two weeks, to be planned at the Strategic Action Assembly
    3. Proposal by Matthew Hacker to cancel Thursday General Assemblies
    4. Proposal by Joe Cuigini to start the 5/12 General Assembly promptly at 5:00 PM and end at 7:40 PM so that GA members can attend the POC sponsored event at Alewife to honor the stand of beautiful silver maples which may be cut down to make way for a high-income condo project.
    5. Proposal by Justin Almeida to continue discussion of goals and objectives of the movement started on 4/28

    The OB Media Rundown for 5/11/12

     Secure Communities program assailed by immigrant groups

    Leaders from an immigrant rights group said Thursday they plan to “demand” that Gov. Deval Patrick sign an executive order against the planned launch next week of the controversial Secure Communities program.

    “If he is really against this program he can really do it,” said Patricia Montes, executive director of the Latino immigrant organization Centro Presente.

    The federal program, which refers arrested illegal immigrants to federal immigration officials, is slated to launch in Massachusetts next Tuesday, the Globe reported. Boston is the only community in Massachusetts that has enacted the program.

    http://tinyurl.com/cetcgzy

    Occupy global call to action on May 12th

    We are living in a world controlled by forces incapable of giving freedom and dignity to the world’s population. A world where we are told “there is no alternative” to the loss of rights gained through the long, hard struggles of our ancestors, and where success is defined in opposition to the most fundamental values of humanity, such as solidarity and mutual support. Moreover, anything that does not promote competitiveness, selfishness and greed is seen as dysfunctional.

    But we have not remained silent! From Tunisia to Tahrir Square, Madrid to Reykjavik, New York to Brussels, people are rising up to denounce the status quo. Our effort states “enough!”, and has begun to push changes forward, worldwide.

    This is why we are uniting once again to make our voices heard all over the world this 12 May.

    We condemn the current distribution of economic resources whereby only a tiny minority escape poverty and insecurity, and future generations are condemned to a poisoned legacy thanks to the environmental crimes of the rich and powerful. “Democratic” political systems, where they exist, have been emptied of meaning, put to the service of those few interested in increasing the power of corporations and financial institutions.

    http://tinyurl.com/cjjumu2

    Tactical briefing – Occupy’s turning point, and how governments are now using ‘lawfare’ to attack us

    Last May 15, a hundred thousand indignados in Spain seized the squares across their nation, held people’s assemblies and catalyzed a global tactical shift that birthed Occupy Wall Street four months later. Our movement outflanked governments everywhere with a thousand encampments in large part because no one was prepared for Occupy’s magic combination of Spain’s transparent consensus-based acampadas with the Tahrir-model of indefinite occupation of symbolic space. Now exactly a year later, a big question mark hangs over our movement because it is clear that the same tactics may never work again.
    Spring re-occupations have largely failed here in North America. The May Day General Strike was stifled by aggressive, preemptive policing that neutralized Occupy’s signature moves. In light of these challenges, Saturday’s May 12 rebirth of the indignados could be a tactical turning point.
    Across the world, authorities are using “lawfare” to piecemeal outlaw any tactic that we used last year. In Spain, there is an attempt to criminalize the use of the internet to catalyze nonviolent protests and occupations. The International Business Times reports that this is part of a larger European move to “punish those who use social media and instant messaging to organize and co-ordinate street protests.” Canada wants to ban wearing masks at “unlawful assemblies,” a legal designation often used to disperse nonviolent protesters. Meanwhile Germany is taking a more direct route: they have simply issued a decree “banning” the Blockupy anti-bank protest in Frankfurt. As in the U.S., when outlawing free speech and the right to assembly doesn’t work, authorities are increasingly using brutal, paramilitary force.

    http://tinyurl.com/czuuvkp

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 5/11/12” »

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