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Ihering Alcoforado

Welcome to the Oakland General Strike - 0 views

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    Welcome to the Oakland General Strike (Wednesday, November 2)   [NOTE: This invitation was addressed primarily to friends and contacts in the San Francisco Bay Area (approx. 1000 people and groups), but I also sent it to some 3000 other friends and contacts across the country and around the world, as well as posting it at this website, because I believe that many other people will be interested in hearing about what has been going on here. -KK]   Dear Bay Area Friends, As most of you probably know, the police raid and destruction of the Occupy Oakland encampments last Tuesday, followed by the notorious police violence against protesters later the same day, provoked such an immense expression of outrage from thousands of people in the Bay Area and around the world that the Oakland city government was thrown completely on the defensive. The next day police were scarcely to be seen. The fence surrounding Frank Ogawa Plaza was still in place, but the occupiers calmly took it down and began reoccupying the same spot. That evening, by a vote of 1484 to 46 (with 77 abstentions), the general assembly decided to call for a General Strike in Oakland on Wednesday, November 2. You can see their declaration, a press conference, and other information at www.occupyoakland.org. [Note that that website is continually updated. To find the posts relevant to this text, you will need to scroll back to the entries for the period leading up to November 2. Numerous videos from the day of the strike can be found here.] The fact that they reoccupied the encampment less than 48 hours after it had been demolished is astonishing enough. But that they immediately shifted to the offensive with such a marvelously audacious venture leaves me almost speechless with admiration. I hope that their appeal meets with correspondingly large-minded and supportive responses by people in Oakland and elsewhere in the Bay Area. Occupiers in many other cities have already been venturing outside their
Ihering Alcoforado

Yesterday in Oakland - 0 views

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    Yesterday in Oakland This seven-minute video gives a pretty good brief impression of what happened in Oakland yesterday, following the police destruction of the Occupy Oakland encampment at Frank Ogawa Plaza. Among other things, I call your attention to a poignant interaction around 4:45 where a few marchers start pushing a dumpster, as if to start a barricade. A guy hugs one of them and pleads with them, "Oh, no, guys, come on, let's be civil." One of the others says, "Are they [the police] being fuckin' civil?!" Hugging that second guy, he says, "I know, brother, they're savages, they're fuckin' savages. But don't be like them! Don't be like them!" If you think that rhetoric is excessive, note the very end of the video, where lots of people are running away and one of them is hit by a tear gas canister and falls to the ground. Several of the others run back to help him, and as they are all crowding around, the police throw a flash-bang grenade right down into the group which explodes in the injured man's face. Here is a clearer view of the same incident. The young man, Scott Olsen, an Iraq war veteran, has a fractured skull and is in critical condition. But I guess this sort of thing has to be done in order to maintain "public peace" and keep the Plaza nice and "hygienic" . . . I was at the 4:00 rally outside the Oakland Public Library. It began with a report on the situation of the arrestees. We learned that there are 105 of them, and that two of them have broken hands and another one is in the hospital. Then there was an open mic for an hour or so, then a march. (The rally and the march ranged between 1000 and 2000 people, with many coming and going at various times.) We intended to pass by the jail where our friends were being held, but were blocked by police. In the process of pushing and shoving, the police grabbed two of us, threw them down and handcuffed them. Hundreds of us crowded around them, shouting: "Shame! S
Ihering Alcoforado

Occupy Reality » Counterpunch: Tells the Facts, Names the Names - 0 views

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    How Oversocialization and Feelings of Inferiority Cripple Bay Area Occupations Occupy Reality by MARC SALOMON The Bay Area has always been the outlier in American politics, often for the better and occasionally for the worse.  In the case of Occupy, the Bay Area's unique situation highlights the challenges facing the movement from both its relative "left" and "right" flanks.  The downside of this Bay Area specialness has been exposed like our earthquake fault lines after two actions, one in San Francisco on January 20th (J20) and another in Oakland on January 28 (J28). San Andreas fault on the right are the institutional actors, nonprofit corporation centered advocacy groups and organized labor with varying degrees of connection to the state, the Democrat Party and its corporate sponsors.   The Hayward fault on the left includes the dwindling ranks of sectarian leftists and the more predominant militant blacque bloque anarchoids, which exist outside of the constellation of power affiliated with the Democrat Party.  The attributes of labor and the nonprofit corporations are clear, but this anarchist would hesitate to ascribe the term 'anarchists' to the militants in Oakland. Despite of decades of activism and nominal public support for goals, professional activists have failed connect with and mobilize sufficient numbers of people to create critical mass and raise political power, although those years were not entirely fruitless in building some base capacity from which Occupy benefits now.   Power, for its part, succeeded in coopting activists into the nonprofit corporate sector beginning in earnest during the early years of Clintonia. Organized labor, long an ugly stepchild of the Democrat coalition, has been in slow free fall for the past three decades but less so in the Bay Area public sector.  Since labor abandoned unorganized workers, it has forfeited its relevance to most of the 99% and is paying the political price now.  The
Ihering Alcoforado

Occupy the Media-and the Message | The Nation - 0 views

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    In this Oct. 18, 2011 photo, an Occupy Wall Street protestor speaks into microphone for a live-streaming online interview at the media area in Zuccotti Park in New York. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)   From its inception, the Occupy movement has had a contentious relationship with the mainstream media. On September 17, a few hours into the first day of the occupation, as a couple of hundred people assembled in Zuccotti Park, some demonstrators were already complaining of a "media blackout." I was there, as an enthusiastic participant, yet even I wasn't convinced the event was particularly newsworthy: in May more than 10,000 people had marched through nearby streets airing similar grievances; a month later protesters camped for two weeks outside City Hall as part of a protest called Bloombergville. Yet accusations flew through the Twittersphere. The traditional media are ignoring us! Why aren't we big news? About the Author Astra Taylor Astra Taylor is the director of the documentary films Zizek! and Examined Life. She has written for Monthly Review,... Also by the Author Occupy Wall Street on Your Street (Occupy Wall Street) Banks trying to foreclose on homes are surprisingly vulnerable to direct action-a fact that Occupy Our Homes intends to exploit. Astra Taylor 7 comments The Other Prison Population (Movements, Disability Rights Movement) Disabled people march on Washington to protest policies that keep them out of sight, out of mind. Astra Taylor Related Topics Entertainment Religion Social Issues Technology War Before long, Occupy Wall Street would be. When protesters managed to hold their ground through the weekend, sleeping on hard concrete and eating pizza donated by well-wishers from around the world, reporters began dutifully to file stories. But the charge of a media "blackout" persisted until September 24, when shaky video of several young women being cordoned off and pepper-sprayed point-blank by a white-shirted police officer was up
Ihering Alcoforado

The Situationists and the Occupation Movements (1968/2011) - 0 views

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    The Situationists and the Occupation Movements (1968/2011)   One of the most notable characteristics of the "Occupy" movement is that it is just what it claims to be: leaderless and antihierarchical. Certain people have of course played significant roles in laying the groundwork for Occupy Wall Street and the other occupations, and others may have ended up playing significant roles in dealing with various tasks in committees or in coming up with ideas that are good enough to be adopted by the assemblies. But as far as I can tell, none of these people have claimed that such slightly disproportionate contributions mean that they should have any greater say than anyone else. Certain famous people have rallied to the movement and some of them have been invited to speak to the assemblies, but they have generally been quite aware that the participants are in charge and that nobody is telling them what to do. This puts the media in an awkward and unaccustomed position. They are used to relating with leaders. Since they have not been able to find any, they are forced to look a little deeper, to investigate for themselves and see if they can discover who or what may be behind all this. Since the initial concept and publicity for Occupy Wall Street came from the Canadian group and magazine Adbusters, the following passage from an interview with Adbusters editor and co-founder Kalle Lasn (Salon.com, October 4) has been widely noticed: We are not just inspired by what happened in the Arab Spring recently, we are students of the Situationist movement. Those are the people who gave birth to what many people think was the first global revolution back in 1968 when some uprisings in Paris suddenly inspired uprisings all over the world. All of a sudden universities and cities were exploding. This was done by a small group of people, the Situationists, who were like the philosophical backbone of the movement. One of the key guys was Guy Debord, who wrote The Society of the Sp
Ihering Alcoforado

Stage One: Occupy Public Space. What Next? - 0 views

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    Stage One: Occupy Public Space. What Next?Posted on November 3, 20112Stage One: Occupy Public Space. Occupy Together, an outgrowth of Occupy Wall Street, has seen tens of thousands of people in cities all over the world reclaiming public spaces. Stage Two: Occupy Unused Property. Occupy Oakland, perhaps the most radical - and perhaps most effective - of the occupations has moved on to the logical "next stage," and movements everywhere should take note. This is not without precedent in this movement and those that inspired it. Last week in Madrid, a hotel was occupied and opened up to people evicted in foreclosures: The abandoned Hotel Madrid, which was taken over by an unknown number of squatters on October 16 after a mass rally in the capital organized by the 15-M movement, opened its doors on Monday to the first person to take up the group's stated strategy of "freeing up spaces for common use."   Continue reading →Posted on November 3, 20112Stage One: Occupy Public Space. Occupy Together, an outgrowth of Occupy Wall Street, has seen tens of thousands of people in cities all over the world reclaiming public spaces. Stage Two: Occupy Unused Property. Occupy Oakland, perhaps the most radical - and perhaps most effective - of the occupations has moved on to the logical "next stage," and movements everywhere should take note. This is not without precedent in this movement and those that inspired it. Last week in Madrid, a hotel was occupied and opened up to people evicted in foreclosures: The abandoned Hotel Madrid, which was taken over by an unknown number of squatters on October 16 after a mass rally in the capital organized by the 15-M movement, opened its doors on Monday to the first person to take up the group's stated strategy of "freeing up spaces for common use."   Continue reading →
Ihering Alcoforado

Sobre voces, símbolos y una gran X :: Periódico Diagonal - 0 views

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    RETOMANDO LA CALLE, HACIENDO POLÍTICA: EL MOVIMIENTO OCCUPY EN EE UU Sobre voces, símbolos y una gran X El arraigo del movimiento de ocupación de plazas en EE UU ha sido una de las sorpresas del comienzo de curso. Este texto aborda la particularidad del movimiento: su virtud de "reconstruir conexiones y capacidades colectivas". VICENTE RUBIO VIERNES 11 DE NOVIEMBRE DE 2011.  NÚMERO 161 Un miembro del sindicato de estibadores, en un acto de Occupy Oakland el 1 de noviembre. Foto: Oakland Local En una entrevista realizada en 2006, el artista Mark Di Suvero mostraba su malestar al ser preguntado por esa "gran X" de acero y pintura roja que acababa de instalarse en Zucotti Park, y cuya autoría le correspondía. "No es una X. Es una serie de tetraedros abiertos en sus extremos", respondía secamente. Los actuales ocupantes de la plaza, y los habituales del lugar -colaboradores en los grupos de trabajo, curiosos, paseantes-, además de rebautizar el espacio como Liberty Square, hace ya semanas que se refieren a la estructura firmada por Di Suvero como "la cosa roja" -o el "cacharro rojo", o "esa cosa fea roja"-. Es un elemento más de esa geografía improvisada y crepitante que conforma la plaza. Hace unos días, a la sombra de esa gran X, el filósofo esloveno Slavoj Zizek advertía a los ocupantes de la plaza sobre los peligros de dejar traducir la energía social que OccupyWallStreet ha desatado en una estrecha serie de 'demandas': "Las protestas han creado un vacío en la hegemonía ideológica. Y se necesita tiempo para llenar ese vacío adecuadamente, ya que es un vacío preñado de posibilidades, una apertura hacia lo verdaderamente nuevo". La pregunta es pues ¿cómo, con qué, llenar ese vacío? En torno a esa incógnita aguardan multitud de posibilidades, y también peligros y trampas. Algunos comentaristas ya han señalado el acecho de la mercantilización del fenómeno: el canal de televisión MTV ha grabado un episodio de
Ihering Alcoforado

The Occupy Movement is Too Big to Be Shut Down | On the Commons - 0 views

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    The Occupy Movement is Too Big to Be Shut Down "The start of a new era in America", according to Jeffrey Sachs BY JAY WALLJASPERSHARE Print Occupy Iowa City before the snow came. (Credit: JSchueller2 under a Creative Commons license from flickr.com) Something is happening here that wind, cold, snow, tear gas and police batons cannot deter. Recent headlines chronicle police busting up Occupy encampments in New York, Los Angeles and Oakland. But the movement has spread so far and wide that it can't be shut down that easily. Two nights ago on a chilly night in Grand Rapids, with the wind howling off of nearby Lake Michigan, I sat down to talk with the young activists of Occupy Grand Rapids, camping out on the plaza of a downtown church. They were comfy with a big tent and piles of donated food with the brick walls of the church offering a great wind shelter. They weren't going anywhere-except to classes the next morning. But they would be back. The week before in Iowa City, I visited the encampment of 27 tents in College Green Park as the wind blew snow sideways to my face. Most of the occupiers were gone, off to college classes or their jobs, debunking right-wing claims that the movement is little more than modern-day bums. Occupy Iowa City is still going. Karen Kubby, who owns a store on Washington Avenue, Iowa City's Main Street, noted that College Green Park was once the site of Chautauqua festivities- a grand American tradition of the early 20th Century where people flocked to see lecturers and performers appearing in tents. Not so different from the Occupy actions, another idealistic public education movement taking place in tents. "Occupy Wall Street and its allied movements around the country are", in the words of Jeffrey D. Sachs (the economic strategist who introduced capitalism to Russia as shock therapy) "most likely the start of a new era in America." Something is happening here that wind, cold, snow, tear gas and police
Ihering Alcoforado

Cooperation Law for a Sharing Economy: Toward a Legal Framework for the New Economy by ... - 0 views

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    Cooperation Law for a Sharing Economy A new sharing economy is emerging-but how does it fit within our legal system? Time for a whole new field of cooperation law. Document Actions Email Print Feed  Share by Janelle Orsi posted Sep 23, 2010 Residents of cohousing communities could benefit from the advice of "sharing lawyers." Photo by Joe Behr What do you call a lawyer who helps people share, cooperate, barter, foster local economies, and build sustainable communities? That sounds like the beginning of a lawyer joke, but actually, it's the beginning of a new field of law practice. Very soon, every community will need a specialist in this yet-to-be-named area: Community transactional law? Sustainable economies law? Cooperation law? Personally, I tend to call it sharing law. We need sharing lawyers to help people like Lynne: Lynne lives in an urban cohousing community and shares ownership of a car with two neighbors. Every day, she fluidly shares, borrows, and lends (rather than owns) many household goods, tools, electronics, and other items. She is a member of a cooperative grocery, through which she receives significant discounts in exchange for putting in a few monthly work hours. She grows vegetables on an empty lot and sometimes sells the veggies to neighbors. She has a successful rooftop landscaping business, which she launched using 20 microloans and investments from friends and family. She often barters, doing odd jobs in exchange for goods and services. She also owns a 5 percent share of a hot springs retreat center outside of town, which she acquired through sweat equity. With the help of sharing, cooperation, and collaboration, Lynne has managed to craft an affordable, comfortable lifestyle, put her skills to use, do varied and self-directed work, and live/work in a supportive community. She has "financed" property ownership and launched a thriving business off of the traditional financial and banking grid. Lawyers Are Going to Have a B
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