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Posts Tagged ‘occupy boston’

Chicago, NATO protest May 17-22, 2012 – Part two, Who’s streets?

Thursday, May 31st, 2012

A march set off from the convergence center in northern Chicago on the night the buses from all over the country arrived, taking to the surrounding neighborhood streets. The next morning was the big union nurses rally, with Tom Morello, which turned into an impromptu march through DT chicago when a medic with his face covered was arrested for failing to reveal himself. The march then snaked through downtown before being cut off and dispersed on a bridge. From the bridge the march headed to the FED, before stopping at Grant Park, where a GA was held while a good number of protestors joined an ongoing 9 year old picket line in front of the Congress Hotel on Michigan Ave.

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Chicago, NATO protest, May 17-22 Documentary. Part One;Getting there.

Saturday, May 26th, 2012

I hope to edit down my footage from the Chicago NATO protests of May 17-22, 2012 over the next few days, releasing sections as a serialized documentary as I learn how to edit. So please, check back in every day or so until the story is told.

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On the occupation which has taken up the Massachusettes State House steps.

Monday, April 9th, 2012

Since the fall of the Occupy Camp at Dewey Square, which held for 71 days in the shadow of the Boston Federal Reserve building outside of the doors of South Station, a contingent of activists and community members have focused their energy and planning on the debt and budgeting controversy surrounding the MBTA. The group, calling themselves Occupy the MBTA, staged demonstrations as well as organized canvasing missions in which activists and community members rode the subway handing out literature and engaging other riders on the impending proposed band-aid solutions, layoffs, line cuts, fare increases, and further debt shuffling to come as “austerity” apparently becomes more than just the buzz word, but the application.

On Wednesday April fourth the MBTA’s Board of Directors voted yes to adopt a plan dubbeb the “third scenario” to close their $161 million dollar deficit in their 1.7 billion dollar annual operating budget for 2013; including service cuts and a 23% average fare increase which many feel affect those in the lower income bracket, students, and elderly at a disproportionally higher rate than other riders with deeper pockets.

Much of the money collect on the fare from the 1.3 million daily riders goes to paying off the principal on the T’s 5.6 Billion debt, much of it money loaned to fund the “Big Dig” which has by-and-by been bought off by JP Morgan, Deutsche Bank, as well as others, so that, instead of the T being able to expand and thrive to service more riders as we move forward into the future, the MBTA will be forced to scale back, while more and more of the capital is sucked of by the blood sucking vampire squids, yet again.

Cue the Occupation, with these already debt saddled and marginalized groups being, yet again, targeted and raked over the coals by those granted authority to do so, so that, once again, some of the largest and most ruthless banks in the world can collect, it begins to makes sense that the sleeping bags and pillows have come out, and this time, there are demands; namely,
“No Hikes, No Cuts, No Layoffs!” as the rallying call, but further, and just as serious, “A fully -funded, sustainable, and affordable transportation plan that works for the entire 99% of Massachusetts.”
This is Massachusetts,… and as Grace Ross of the Green rainbow Party informed onlookers and activists on Saturday at a teach in at “Camp Charlie”, the name of the Occupy Encampment on the State House steps, we are the third riches state in the country, it isn’t that the money isn’t there, it is that we aren’t willing to go and get it from those who have it.

So, why a 10 day protest? Because April 14th is the last day that the state legislature can step in and veto the April 4th vote by the MBTA board of directors on the budget. What can you do? Come to the steps of the State House to find out, calendar at http://www.occupyboston.org/… or, as always, you can write your representative.

A speech to a punk rock show about the Occupy Movement.

Friday, December 30th, 2011

I was asked to give a speech before Colin of Arabia played the American Nightmare/Give up the Ghost Reunion show in Revere last night; the following was prepared, however a truncated version was offered to the crowd.

I spent two months down at Dewey square, sure sometimes dirty, and yeah even sometimes involved in some hippyesque scenarios,…

But, what I want to talk about tonight is what is happening moving forward.

Physical occupation is a tactic, not an end, to get too bogged down with tactics, as opposed to education, to me, seems to be asking for a system which solves all of the problems of society for us, furthering us from blame, but also, and perhaps more dangerously, furthering us from the personal responsibility for change as something reachable and within us ourselves.

What is happening in this country is that the dialog has changed, drastically. inequality issues are on the table across the country, the people have the mic; Just attend your local General Assmebly.

You see, when I sat down think about what I was going to say, I wasn’t wrong or lying when I laid out a speech gilded with my vision of things moving forward, of every abandoned building in this country being reclaimed, legally, by the neighborhood surrounding it, so that we, the people can spring forth centers providing the civic and social services we need and require in our communities in the shadows of the bloated and failing which have failed us, so that groups and individuals can thrive and fulfill their mutual and self interests.

That is the beauty of what is happening in this country wight now, because at its base, the occupy movement is a conversation, and a sort of festival which has sprung up around it, this concept of consensus, the process of making decisions in a group while allowing for all voices to be heard as equal, or, as it is being referred to in relation to the Occupy Movement, horizontal democracy.

When the people took public space, on september 17, in order to have an open dialog with each other, we found that across the world the entire spectrum of political, social, ecological, and economic idealism was cracked open.

The idea of consensus appears to be gaining momentum; Moving into small towns, able to sustain once or twice a week General Assemblies, as opposed to physical 24 hour encampments.

It may be a hard pill for some to swallow, that the idea is so easy we have already won if we realize this one truth, that no longer can only the few prosper to the detriment of almost the entire herd.

That we can no longer allow ourselves to live with the cruel hope that elected officials will buck the trend and course of history and enact policy in the interests of the people.

What is currently on the table is that we are currently seeking is a center for civic discourse, an organizing headquarters and base of operations, the scope of which is being discussed.

We have and are looking at a lot of buildings in and around the area,some we can rent and move right into, some we could maybe buy and completely renovate, others would have to build from the ground up.

With effort and diligence as well as the help and voluntary association of everyone who would like to see genuine change, who would like to be a part to of a re-engaged public, whose will and spirit has been renewed, whose confidence and abilities have been restored, we can lay down a blue print of how to reclaim some of the blight in this country.

Howard Zinn said something to the effect of,
“if you want to be truly dangerous, if you really want to make the power structures scared, make being a radical, a revolutionary cool.”

Without us getting lost in the aesthetics, let us take that, along with the DIY and root ethics of punk rock and hardcore, to help blur the line between this, the punk rock movement, which is innately limited in it’s abilities to effect real widespread societal change, and the activism movement, where the sky, and maybe prosperity and justice is the limit.

On the sweep of Los Angeles and Philadelphia, as well as the freeze out, in place in Boston.

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011

When I hear the mayor of Los Angeles, just this afternoon, commending and congratulating his navy blue soldiers, I realize their tactic; and again implore those able to step forward to help us solve these problems before it is too late.

Some of the very first things I had brought to Occupy Boston, besides books, was the need to come up with some kind of fire prevention, health, and public safety plan; something which could be easily absorbed and understood by all. It is my opinion that the single most important thing any occupation could focus on is public health and safety, as well as fire prevention and preparedness.

This task is and has been proving to be above my individual capacity, and I will speak frankly about my attempts to do so following, but not before noting that I speak for myself and my experience within Occupy Boston, and will not attempt to speculate on other occupations efforts, only on concerns made public.

On my first night in Dewey I realized the real flaw of the Occupy Boston site, when my door was flung open in the pouring rain by a man in a neon green vest, smelling of alcohol as he ushered in a few rain drenched, also alcohol breathed strangers.

“What is going on?” I asked, immediately as I woke.

“Safety” the man barked with a rough voice, continuing, “these people need to sleep in here.”

“This isn’t a sleeping tent. It is going to be the library in the morning.”

“Well, they are staying in here tonight.” he said, with finality. The problem was that those compassionate intelligent individuals who waxed philosophic joined working groups that served their interests, and not ones which best served the interests of the camp, itself.

Tactical Logistics, who worked on spatial arrangement and distribution of goods broke up into two new Working Groups, safety, and logistics, which could have basically been renamed supplies and security.

The first safety team, comprised mostly of homeless boston natives, acted out autocratically,imposing their own will on the residents, sometimes using violence, while maintaining a heavy buzz. It was a joke to most, and a serious portent to others that the only real requisites one needed to be on safety were an authoritarian complex and an alcohol or substance abuse problem.

Like brought like, soon the space filled with wayward souls and the job of spatial arrangement, for a while, fell on those in safety brusque enough to stake a tent brutally close to it’s new neighbor.

I would question them during my first week on site, watching the space grow painfully closer,
“Don’t you think there will need to have emergency exits?”
“Bro. Do you think anyone cares about that shit here? one safety member replied, “Besides, bro, there ain’t no more room,and they are part of the 99%, too, bro.”

Shortly into my stay with Occupy Boston I was handed a 2way radio by a member of the safety team, saying,
“You should have this.” it stayed on from then, almost constantly.

As more and more activists were turned down at logistics for lack of space, more and more of the cities marginalized began to show up, unafraid to squat or relocate an abandoned tent; some being those who had been turned down from all the shelters, or too proud or wily to ever even try.

As the rain came, me and several others would try and explain proper tarping, and drainage techniques; usually met with derision, until we would walk away, only to come back later to “autonomously cut their tarp” to better fit the foot print of the tent, which would allow water to drain to the ground, as opposed to channel itself under the tent.

The safety team almost entirely disbanded, save one previous member of the original team, almost two weeks after I arrived, so I joined.

In doing the first few over nights, I realized how out of control the problem had gotten; incident after incident, drug deals, to severe beatings, sexual harassment claims, to public urination/deification allegations and sightings.

I began to get on stack, to ask for fire extinguishers, two way radios, new communal tents, sanity, policy, volunteers, removal of entire areas of the camp; all which would pass, or else, and more common, we would lose quorem to decide upon,…still nothing has hit the ground; with the exception of the food tent,…two weeks late, and the good neighbor agreement, widely ignored.

Along with the medics the new safety team, which has since been more formally banded,with daily meetings, something which never happened with the old crew, began to take down tents which were serious health violations, mold,drug paraphernalia, caved in, etc,..

With this came a wave of backlash which was almost as bad as the conditions the tents themselves were having on the community; accusations of racism, fascism, elitism, to the point of parody.

It took weeks for the food tent, the canary in the coal mine, so we could gauge city reaction, while the remaining 4000 out of 5 allotted to the working group tent budget remained unspent; all the while everything from “winter tents” to pallets, shelving, and literally anything besides food or clothing, were being denied by the police at the gate, without escalation of protest from outside of Dewey, in. This simply must be an effort to freeze us out.

Every day the Fire department walks through, I great them when I can, and they point out new piles of materials, tarps, fabrics, anything,…they point out how closely aligned the tents are, cigarette burns on individual tents, and kinds of manner of etc,… and I tell them I will talk to the people in the tents; which i do.

Some help, they listen and they learn, others will assert their inalienable right to do whatever they want, whenever they want.

There is a man onsite who built himself a patio out of the gravel on the road, I told him,
“every shovel full of gravel in front of your tent is a puddle in the road every one uses.”
“Oh, don’t give me that bullshit. You little faggot peckerhead nazi’s ain’t going to tell me shit.”

Later that day one of the park directors approached him with the police superintendent as well as a sergeant; echoing my concerns on their own; all three were met with similar insults as I.

The rights of the individual on site at Occupy Boston still far supersede those of the group. On two consecutive nights the right to eject an individual for violence, threats of violence, and extreme substance abuse issues was turned down at the GA; one being the same man aforementioned.

When a person is asked not to smoke in their tent, the concerned will often be met with a,
“Fuck you.”

It is a more than unfortunate symptom of our current condition, people who have built up such a callous to advice, or the opinion of any other being, let alone a group; easily the embodiment, in a certain sense, of everything the movement is fighting against; this mean and vile condition, perhaps self willed, perhaps cast down from high, trickled all the way down; selfishness.

A solution? Motivation building; purpose finding; first within the self, and then within the movement; awakening individuals to the light of truth, that each of us, however hard we try and stifle it, has a voice,….

It is my proposal that most cities should have two outdoor occupations, one which is arranged intentionally, perhaps with larger living spaces so that motivated people can meet, and live together, effectively, so that they can thrive and stay on message; then, another which the city can police, while empathetic individuals with an inclination to work on some of society’s largest problems, that being substance abuse and homelessness, can step in and work directly with the problems which are currently pushed under the rug, or swept outdoors; for, if we simply allow the city to sweep up our mess, or worse, we turn those at risk of themselves back to the wilds of society, I fear, we, as a movement and philosophy, will be mortally dissatisfied.

I have yet to hear in any published language a disassociation of the 99% with the lowest rungs on the economic ladder; and I am grateful for that; while we attempt to bring down those at the top, let us not forget to bring up those at the bottom; even if it means getting dirty.