News Archive
Posted 12 years ago on Dec. 16, 2011, 5:20 p.m. EST by OccupyWallSt
In Washington, DC, protesters at Occupy DC-K Street are on Day 9 of a hunger strike for DC voting rights. As Occupy the Vote DC has written, “Despite paying taxes to the federal government and sending our citizens to fight and die in every war, Washingtonians have had no voting representation in Congress and have had to seek approval from people they did not elect on all legislative and budgetary matters.” Over 600,000 people live in the District, the majority of whom are people of color, immigrants, in poverty, or from other marginalized groups.
Today, Congress voted on riders that would, among other things, deny residents of the District their right to provide abortion to low-income women and block funding for a harm reduction needle exchange program that DC residents overwhelmingly support. Occupy DC, in solidarity with the Occupy the Vote DC Hunger Strikers, marched to the Capitol to demand legislative and budget autonomy for the District. Traffic was blocked on Independence Avenue along the National Mall.
Four people were arrested by police outside the House of Representatives, including one of the hunger strikers who has since been hospitalized.
Posted 12 years ago on Dec. 16, 2011, 3:01 p.m. EST by OccupyWallSt
Sunday, December 18th - 1:30pm until 5:00pm
Foley Square
Immigrants are part of the 99% and on December 18th we will march with
the Occupy Wall Street movement to demand immigrant justice including
putting an end to wage theft, and stopping detentions and deportations
of our beloved community members. As the Occupy Wall Street movement
highlights corporate profiteering we would like to shed light on those
that profit off our labor, exploit workers and refuse to pay dignified
wages. We also march against the corporations who support
anti-immigrant legislation so they can make billions of dollars by
detaining immigrants in private detention centers and deporting nearly
400,000 people per year.
As the occupy movement goes global we also recognize the destructive
role that these corporations play in exploiting resources and labor in
our home countries which forces millions to migrate. December 18th is
the International Day of Migrants and we stand in solidarity with
those world wide who are proclaiming Immigrant Rights as Human Rights.
Posted 12 years ago on Dec. 16, 2011, 2:56 p.m. EST by OccupyWallSt
A protest by the OWS Health Action General Assembly will take place at St. Vincent’s hospital this Saturday to demonstrate the growing frustration with a system that values luxury condominiums over care for the sick. The OWS Health Action General Assembly is composed of patients, nurses, social workers, physicians, and regular citizens coming together to seek alternatives to the present healthcare system.
We realize that the present healthcare, housing, and food crisis can no longer be solved by the ‘experts’ and ‘professionals’ only. It requires a much broader participation of citizens in order to succeed with any long-lasting alternatives. We are living in an era of created scarcity despite the abundance of technology, resources, and production at our disposal. This inequality present in our current healthcare system serves the interest of the few while leaving millions suffering.
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Posted 12 years ago on Dec. 15, 2011, 7:37 p.m. EST by OccupyWallSt
<img style="margin-right:0.7em" src=//i.imgur.com/LEKpo.jpg" alt="Archbishop Tutu" align="left" />
Sisters and Brothers, I greet you in the Name of Our Lord and in the bonds of common friendship and struggle from my homeland of South Africa. I know of your own challenges and of this appeal to Trinity Church for the shelter of a new home and I am with you! May God bless this appeal of yours and may the good people of that noble parish heed your plea, if not for ease of access, then at least for a stay on any violence or arrests.
Yours is a voice for the world not just the neighborhood of Duarte Park. Injustice, unfairness, and the strangle hold of greed which has beset humanity in our times must be answered with a resounding, "No!" You are that answer. I write this to you not many miles away from the houses of the poor in my country. It pains me despite all the progress we have made. You see, the heartbeat of what you are asking for--that those who have too much must wake up to the cries of their brothers and sisters who have so little--beats in me and all South Africans who believe in justice.
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