News Archive
Posted 12 years ago on July 15, 2012, 5:38 p.m. EST by OccupyWallSt
Where: Union Square, Manhattan
When: Tuesday, July 17 at 5:30pm
Join #OWS and many others as we rally in solidarity with NYC LABOR & UWUA 1-2. Assemble at the Con Ed HQ Picket Line At 4 Irving Place at 4:30pm, then march with the locked-out Local 1-2 workers to Union Square!
This is not a walkout:
It’s a LOCKOUT!
FAIR CONTRACT NOW!!!
For more information: uwua1-2.org | www.nycclc.org
Posted 12 years ago on July 15, 2012, 1:28 p.m. EST by OccupyWallSt
Republic Windows and Doors workers occupy their factory for the first time in Dec. 2008, chanting "Bank of America got bailed out, we got sold out," eventually inspiring OWS and many others to do the same
via OWS Coops
Our Best Chance for a Better Future: Let the People Rule
The Republic Windows and Doors workers in Chicago are trying to take the first step into that future and are attempting to buy the factory they used to be employees in. But the company would rather scrap the factory and avoid the workers. We will all lose if they lose.
Chicago Workers Fight Back
The cost of living keeps rising as wages fall. We can sit back and whine, or we can stand up and fight. The factory workers of New Era have chosen to fight. Rather than watch their jobs sunken into the abyss by the rich, they’ve decided to buy their factory. It’s a good faith effort to build a better world where they will both earn their keep and experiment with self-management. Now, their company, Serious Energy, is trying to deny them the right to bid for the machinery they’ve been working on for years. As they march the 99% into exciting new efforts toward economic justice, we, members of the cooperative working group of New York City, call everyone who has supported our movement to stand with them.
Read More...
Posted 12 years ago on July 14, 2012, 2:21 p.m. EST by OccupyWallSt
via SaveOaklandSchools.org
The Lakeview Sit-In and People's School Presents:
A Celebration and Convergence for Public Education
featuring Boots Riley, Digital Martyrs, Dregs One, Jabari Shaw, Eni, and many political speakers, including YOU.
This will be a Mass Rally to discuss how to fight the attacks on public education. Lakeview is only the first step... It's Time to Fight!
When: Sunday, July 15th @ 5PM
Where: Splash Pad Park @ Lakeview and Grand, Oakland CA
Join us to celebrate the Lakeview Sit-In, Plan How We Can Move Forward and how YOU can be part of it...
tags: oakland
Posted 12 years ago on July 14, 2012, 1:28 p.m. EST by OccupyWallSt
Anarchopanada, a fixture at the Montreal general strike demonstrations, faces off with the police to defuse tensions in the wake of Quebec's draconian anti-protest legislation
If you live in New York and would like to get involved in the anti-debt struggle and solidarity actions with Quebec, join the Strike Debt Assembly at noon this Sunday in Washington Square Park.
via StopTheHike.ca
For months now, all over Quebec, the streets have vibrated to the rhythm of hundreds of thousands of marching feet. What started out as a movement underground, still stiff with the winter consensus, gathered new strength in the spring and flowed freely, energizing students, parents, grandparents, children, and people with and without jobs. The initial student strike grew into a people’s struggle, while the problem of tuition fees opened the door to a much deeper malaise – we now face a political problem that truly affects us all. To find its remedy and give substance to our vision, let us cast our minds back to the root of the problem.
The way we see it, direct democracy should be experienced, every moment of every day. Our own voices ought to be heard in assemblies in schools, at work, in our neighbourhoods. Our concept of democracy places the people in permanent charge of politics, and by « the people » we mean those of us at the base of the pyramid – the foundation of political legitimacy. This becomes an opportunity for all those who are never heard. It is a time for women to speak up as equals and to raise issues that are too often ignored or simply forgotten about. The democracy we see does not make promises: it goes into action. Our democracy banishes cynicism, instead of fuelling it. As we have shown many times over, our democracy brings people together. Each time we take to the streets and set up picket lines, it is this kind of democracy that at last breathes free. We are talking about shared, participatory democracy.
Democracy, as viewed by the other side, is tagged as « representative » – and we wonder just what it represents. This brand of « democracy » comes up for air once every four years, for a game of musical chairs. While elections come and go, decisions remain unchanged, serving the same interests: those of leaders who prefer the murmurs of lobbyists to the clanging of pots and pans. Each time the people raises its voice in discontent, on comes the answer: emergency laws, with riot sticks, pepper spray, tear gas. When the elite feels threatened, no principle is sacred, not even those principles they preach: for them, democracy works only when we, the people keep our mouths shut.
Our view is that truly democratic decisions arise from a shared space, where men and women are valued. As equals, in these spaces, women and men can work together to build a society that is dedicated to the public good.
Read More...
Posted 12 years ago on July 14, 2012, 12:49 p.m. EST by OccupyWallSt
via The Occupied Times of London
Every morning this week, Occupy activists have been up early, quietly placing stickers on the panels of the ‘Boris bikes’, which are sponsored by Barclays.
The London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) rate fixing scandal is being described as possibly the biggest fraud in history, affecting hundreds of trillions of dollars of financial transactions.
Despite being set in London, the LIBOR is the average interest rate agreed by the world’s largest international banks; it indexes the short and long term interest rates for ten currencies across the world.
Occupy supporter Liz Beech gave her take on the action: “We’ve been taken for a ride by Barclays and the Financial Times is reporting that more banks will be implicated. The apparently mild response by Occupy London – stickering bikes – should not be understood to underestimate the gravity of the revelations about LIBOR. Occupiers are recognising that the corruption is beyond even our imaginings and that all financial services worldwide should be scrutinised and that all wrongdoing must be prosecuted with vigour.”
Another Occupy supporter who wished to remain anonymous said: “The bike stickers are a highly visible way of alerting busy Londoners to the issue. I went out stickering at 5am on Monday morning. I was warned that I could possibly be arrested for criminal damage. Really? I mean, who are the criminals here? Concerned citizens highlighting a huge, international fraud with stickers which don’t exactly render the bicycles useless? Or the banks which are bleeding our communities dry?”
Former Chief Executive of Barclays, Bob Diamond, has been forced to resign and the UK serious fraud squad have launched a criminal investigation into rate fixing.
Barclays urges customers to “let us know straight away if you have fallen victim to fraud”. Victims of LIBOR-rigging may wish to call the Barclays hotline 0845 755 5555.
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