Monday, October 24, 2011

L.A. PROGRESSIVES REBEL - OCTOBER


OCT. 1 OCCUPATION LOS ANGELES – LA CITY HALL LAWN 250 rebels

Occupy Wall St in LA, 99% vs. 1%; Young, leaderless.


OCT. 7 ICUJP, US Labor Against the War, Inter Faith Coalition

Fund Jobs, Stop Torture, End All US Wars 200 rebels

La Placita Church to downtown Federal Building Leaders arrested


LA ANSWER PROTEST Against 5 Global Wars (US Imperialism)

Westwood / Wilshire Federal Building unkn #


SM Peace Club, Progressive Democratic Workers 50 Bike rebels

“We - are - The - 99%” and “Tax Wall Street” - Night riders rally

SM Pier to Abbot Kinney, Venice for Friday Street Fair


OCT. 13 MOVE ON, PDWA, SMPeaceClub Rally at BofA 250 rebels

Banksters “Pay Your Taxes” “Foreclosure Moratorium Now”


OCT. 15 MOVE ON, JOBS-NOT-CUTS.org Sat. National Action 3000 rebels

950 cities nationwide Rally for JOBS-NOT-CUTS; MOVE ON

LA Pershing Square to Rally at Occupy LA, City Hall, SATURDAY


OCT. 19 SEIU, long term care, AFL CIO Unions, GoodJobsLA.org

99 % vs 1%, “Stop Cuts to Grammas”, Latino and AA 1000 rebels

“Hey, hey. Ho, ho. Corporate Greed's Gotta Go”

Pershing Square to Occupy LA, City Hall North and South lawns


OCT. 21 FAUX-NEWS-LIES PROTEST (first), Pico Blvd. Studios 200 rebels

GoodJobsLA.org, ChangeToWin, FreePress, AVAAP.org

50 rebels from Occupy LA. “Fox News Lies”, “Murdoch

hacked terror victim = Felony”, “Fox brainwashed my baby”


OCT. 22 200 US Cities OCCUPIED – 1000 Cities World Wide OCCUPIED

W.L.A. Santa Monica MOVE ON's Upcoming Local-National Actions

NOV. 5 MAKE BANKS PAY Rally at Chase Foreclosures, Westwood / Wilshire

NOV. 9 NATIONAL TEACH-IN; Banks caused Crash; must pay to rehire America

NOV. 19 Wall St/Fox/GOP TV , Pico Blvd at Motor (parking lot in Rancho Pk)

Contact MoveOn's Elizabeth / Linda at Blueprl@yahoo.com

Or Bill at PDWAmerica @ gmail.com – MoveOn + Unions + Peace orgs

Friday, October 21, 2011

Wildcat Strikes vs Alabama Laws

Alabama Workers Meet Harsh Immigration Law with WildcatsEduardo Soriano-Castillo | October 21, 2011

Tens of thousands of protesters marched through downtown Atlanta July 2 to protest an anti-immigrant law. Georgia's was one of four bills passed this year that are creating fear in immigrant communities, driving people out of state, and leaving crops rotting in the fields. Photo: Caitie Leary. Login or register to post comments
An all-out attack on immigrant workers, their families, and communities continues in the South and West. In Alabama, immigrant workers met it with a day of wildcat strikes.

The now-infamous Arizona anti-immigrant law SB1070 kicked off the current wave of anti-immigrant legislation last year. This year Georgia, Utah, South Carolina, and Alabama jumped on the “show me your papers” bandwagon with copycat legislation.

Immigrant rights advocates say Alabama’s law is the harshest. It gives police the right to stop and investigate anyone they “reasonably suspect” of being undocumented—in other words, an open invitation to racially profile.

The legislation also denies immigrants state medical aid and unemployment benefits. It forbids individuals and employers to hire, harbor, rent property to, or even give a ride to undocumented immigrants. Public schools must check the immigration status of children when they enroll.

One town, Allgood, announced that all water customers must have a state picture ID on file or “you may lose water service.”

ON HOLD
Most of Alabama’s law, and the other states’ laws, are on hold pending Department of Justice challenges. The government has argued that these state laws are unconstitutional because immigration is a federal matter.

The anti-immigrant laws come as federal initiatives have driven deportations to an all-time high. A partnership between local law enforcement agencies and the federal immigration service (ICE), known as Secure Communities, has led to the deportation of a record 400,000 undocumented immigrants in 2011. They can be deported for any crime, no matter how small or nonviolent.

Dulce Guerrero, a DREAM activist and 18-year-old high school graduate from Mableton, Georgia, said three of her uncles have been deported after being stopped “for things like speeding and broken tail lights.”

Legislators’ strategy is to make conditions so unbearable for immigrant workers that they flee the country. But cruelty hasn’t led to out-migration. For many reasons, including a dangerously militarized border, the undocumented population has stayed in the U.S.—even as workers have fled to more welcoming states.

Workers, students, and small business owners in Alabama gave lawmakers a taste of what society would look like without them.

They led a “Day Without Immigrants” action October 12 that involved student walkouts and wildcat strikes, shuttering at least 40 businesses and slowing operations in half a dozen poultry plants.

SHUT IT DOWN
More than 2,000 mostly undocumented workers shut down the processing lines and butchering room floors in Albertville, in the state’s northeast corner.

Although a majority of the poultry plant workers are Latinos, a few white and Black workers also came off the line for the day in a show of solidarity with immigrant workers, said José Contreras, a Dominican immigrant. He’s the owner of a small grocery store and restaurant in Albertville who shut down his business for the day.

Plants closed included Diamond Food, Tyson, and Wayne Farms, which is a union shop.

Rick Major, secretary-treasurer of Food and Commercial Workers Local 1995, said “We had many members calling in to work and saying that they needed to pick up their children at school because of fears associated with the law.”

ONE STEP FORWARD
In a victory for undocumented students, California Governor Jerry Brown signed a bill October 8 that allows them to apply for California grants and state financial aid.

An earlier bill allowed such students to get financial aid from private sources. The two laws are the state’s equivalent of the federal DREAM Act that students have been advocating for two years—often risking arrest to publicize their plight, declaring themselves “undocumented and unafraid.”

Despite a new federal policy supposedly giving judges the ability to cancel deportations on a case-by-case basis, DREAM activists have recently faced a wave of deportations.

Major said the climate of fear is pervasive. Children are bullying Latino students, telling them, “They are going to come for your mom and deport her.”

School districts are reporting a sudden exodus of children, pulled from school by their parents, who fear retaliation or immigration agents coming to their front steps.

But the union didn’t back the October 12 strike.

“We could not support the wildcat action because our members have a no-strike clause in their contract,” Major said. “As the union, our concerns are upholding and enforcing the contract between the workers and the employer.”

Some unionists in the state were supportive. “Immigrants in Alabama are rightfully scared, and the whole time the boss is enjoying the benefits of a divided workforce that's working under the fear of deportation,” said Mark Bass, president of Longshore (ILA) Local 1410 in Mobile.

Contreras said that 40 business owners, including auto repair shop mechanics, car dealers, and restaurant owners all shut down in solidarity.

“Our goal was to illustrate the economic and social contributions of immigrant workers,” he said.

Elia Ortega Arista, a DJ at the Spanish-language radio station Doble X in Albertville, said a shutdown instead of a march was chosen because “community members are being terrorized and are understandably afraid of any confrontation with local authorities.”

Conversations at the grocery store, on Facebook, and on local radio stations helped organize the statewide shutdowns and walkouts.

Direct action is not new to Albertville. Five thousand supporters of immigration reform mobilized in 2006 for a mass strike, part of immigrant rights protests and walkouts nationwide.

“We asked that supporters do zero business and buy nothing,” Contreras said. “After seeing the economic devastation left behind in states like Arizona and Georgia, we thought it would be a useful illustration of what’s to come if Alabama lawmakers continue on this dangerous and self-destructive path.”

ROTTING IN THE FIELDS
Farmworkers, their families, and tax dollars have fled harshly anti-immigrant states like Arizona and Georgia in search of friendlier states, so farm owners have turned to probationers and prisoners on work-release programs to fill the void.

But those workers have been unable to keep up with the requirements of these backbreaking jobs, many quitting after just hours in the sun and leaving farm owners to watch their crops rot in the fields.

In the process, they dispel the myth that immigrants are “stealing our jobs,” confirming that citizens are simply not interested in such exhausting and low-wage work.

Fox News Latino reported that on one Georgia cucumber farm, some Mexican and Guatemalan laborers were accustomed to filling 200 buckets before lunch, bucking for incentive pay. The fastest probationer filled only 134 buckets in a day.

DON’T SPARE WOMEN AND CHILDREN
Other immigrant workers are not as visible but equally important to performing the services middle-class Americans depend on.

They include the women workers who work inside their bosses’ homes. Domestic workers clean the houses, fold the clothes, prepare the meals, and take care of children and the elderly, for low wages and with no legal protections against wage theft or forced overtime, sometimes facing sexual harassment or worse.

They share with other immigrants the attack on their communities by politicians looking to make a name for themselves.

A diverse group from two dozen human rights organizations around the country—calling itself the We Belong Together Delegation—visited Georgia in September to document the impact of that state’s anti-immigrant law.

Women told of being afraid to report sexual harassment or wage theft to authorities for fear of being deported. They described choosing to stay with an abusive partner rather than report domestic violence and risk deportation and separation from their children. Many go without basic health care for fear of coming into view of law enforcement.

“It’s important that we highlight the issues which uniquely affect women and children,” said Linda Burnham with the National Domestic Workers Alliance.

As immigrants wage the uphill battle to reclaim the most basic of human rights, they too are among the 99 percent

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

FOX WIRETAPPING SCANDAL

Phone hacking: QC warned of

'culture of illegal information access'

at Fox's 'News of the World'

    Tom Crone

    Phone hacking: News of the World lawyer Tom Crone warned editor Colin Myler of about a 'damning email' in 2008. Photograph: PA

    This afternoon's events as they unfolded:

    2.30pm: The parliamentary select committee investigating phone-hacking at the News of the World has just published a slew of internal News International documents.

    They represent a treasure trove of new material and give fresh insight into how the News of the World, its editors and legal managers and ultimate boss, James Murdoch, handled serious phone-hacking allegations back in 2008.

    There are dozens of pages including notes relating to key conversations with Murdoch regarding a settlement with Gordon Taylor, the Professional Footballers Association boss who sued News International back in 2008 for phone hacking.

    We are going through the documents now.

    2.34pm: First up is an admission that Taylor has potential "fatal" evidence on phone hacking at the News of the World.

    It is contained in an email from the paper's former legal manager to the former editor of the News of the World Colin Myler in May 2008 regarding the discovery by Taylor of "a large number of transcripts of voicemails" from his phone.

    The email also raises concerns about alleged illegal activity on the News of the World including the identification of car owners via their number plates. A number of the people involved have moved to the Sun, Crone notes.

    Among the documents Taylor's lawyers got through a process of discovery were a list of News of the World journalists and detailed table of data protection infringements between 2001 and 2003.

    "A number of these names are still with us and some of them have moved to prominent positions on NoW and The Sun. Typical infringements are 'turning around' car reg and mobile phone numbers (illegal)," says the email.

    It adds: "This evidence, particularly the email from the News of the World is fatal to our case."

    2.44pm: In the same email Crone tells Myler that "recognising the inevitable", he has authorised the company's solicitors Farrers, to make a formal offer to Taylor of £150k plus costs.

    2.47pm: An hour and 15 minutes after this email, Crone emails Julian Pike, the lawyer dealing with the Taylor case at Farrers.

    The email is redacted but Crone tells Pike he has been through the Taylor documents and spoke to individuals at the News of the World regarding the transcripts and that that the private investigator [Glenn] "Mulcaire had been dealing with Greg Miskiw for months on it before that.

    Miskiw is a former news editor on the paper.

    2.59pm: James Murdoch's solution to phone hacking at the News of the World would be to "get rid of the cancer", the former editor of the paper tells Farrer lawyer Julian Pike in a telephone call on May 27 2008.

    A handwritten note of the phone conversation shows that Myler reported back to Pike.

    "Spoke to James Murdoch - not any options - wait for silks [sic] view." Myler goes on to discuss various individuals in the newsroom which are identified by initials. He refers to former royal editor Clive Goodman.

    "CG sprayed around allegations, horrid process."

    This appears to refer to a Goodman letter, already published by the culture select committee, in which he alleged phone hacking was not limited to a single rogue reporter.

    Colin Myler Former News of the World editor Colin Myler. Photograph: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images

    Myler tells Pike he could not substantiate these allegations.

    "appealed agst his sacking failed to give direct evidence."

    The hand-written note show Myler then went on to discuss what top management would do and refers to Les Hinton, the former executive chairman of News International who had been sent to New York to run the Wall Street Journal, then recently acquired by Rupert Murdoch.

    "Les no longer here - James wld say get rid of them - cut out cancer'.

    The note does not specify who 'them' refers to, or whether this was a verbatim report of a conversation Myler had with Murdoch earlier.

    He has just had a conversation with James Murdoch and subsequently spoke to lawyers at Farrers.

    A hand-written note of a conversation lawyer Julian Pike had with Myler on 27 May 2008 has also been published.

    3.13pm: Another handwritten note of a conversation between Pike and Mark Lewis, Taylor's solicitor. They were discussing a potential settlement after Taylor had got hold of the highly damaging 'for Neville' email that proved phone hacking at the tabloid was not confined to "one rogue reporter".

    A figure of £1.2m is discussed, according to the notes.

    Taylor wanted "7 figures not to open his mouth". The Football Professionals Association boss also wanted to "be vindicated or rich", the note says, confirming evidence submitted in September to the select committee.

    3.20pm: The two lawyers go on to discuss costs and Taylor's determination to go to court if he has to. "One way or another this is going to hurt," Lewis tells Pike, also warning that phone hacking was "rife in organisation".

    This is the transcript of what Lewis said:

    "Don't know if that is a [indecipherable'
    7 figures not to open his mouth
    be vindicated or rich
    paid £1m all costs - indemnity costs 200k inc barrister + VAT he [Taylor] won't be beat

    "advised not be casual not at risk an more - j might think been generous

    "i want to carry on because of issues because NGN is wrong then carry on - one way or another this is going to hurt

    "want to show NoW stories - NoW doing this - rife in organisation - Palt enquiries told this not happening when it was. I want to speak out about this."

    3.35pm: The telephone conversation between News International's lawyers and Gordon Taylor's lawyers subsequently relayed to New Group Newspapers, publishers of the News of the World.

    Gordon Taylor PFA boss Gordon Taylor. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/Guardian

    The memo published by the select committee shows how Taylor was driven to seek £1m in compensation plus £200,000 in costs because he was not happy that the company was telling parliament that phone-hacking was limited to one rogue reporter.

    "Taylor wanted to show that the News of the World stories had been illegally obtained".

    "He wanted to demonstrate that the NoW had been doing this and that it was rife in the organisation when The NoW had been making public statements including statements in parliament telling them that they [sic] were simply a rogue trader. Taylor was not happy about this. He wanted to speak out about all of this."

    3.47pm: Farrer partner Julian Pike has a subsequent conversation with the then News of the World legal affairs manager Tom Crone on June 10, 2008.

    Crone tells Pike he has had a meeting with JM - presumably James Murdoch - and CM - presumably the then editor Colin Myler.

    The note of the conversation is confusing but two points are clear - Murdoch wants to consider his options and Myler wants to Taylor to "fuck off".

    Here's the transcript:

    "Tom
    Mtg with JM + CM
    JM sd he wanted to think through options

    CM moving towards to tell Taylor to fuck off
    - on the end of drip drip - do a deal with them
    - paying them off + then silence fails
    - if intriguing progress

    GM in more deeply - if damages award admitting liability - be in jointly for + if he is."

    4.01pm:News Group was advised by legal counsel as far back as June 2008 that the evidence uncovered by Taylor's legal team was "very damaging to NGN" and that the police disclosures showed that "at least three" journalists were "intimately involved" in illegal research.

    Barrister Michael Silverleaf said in a written legal opinion to NGN dated 3 June 2008, that "it seems clear that Mr Mulcaire was specifically asked to look into certain activities by Mr Taylor".

    Silverleaf says the material obtained from the Metropolitan police "has disclosed that at least three NGN journalists ... appear to haver been intimately involved in Mr Mulcaire's illegal researching into Mr Taylor's affairs."

    He refers to a document dated 4 February 2005, and signed by Greg Miskiw, a former news editor on the paper which agrees to pay a Paul Williams £7,000 on publication of a story.

    Williams is a pseudonym used by the private investigator at the centre of the phone-hacking scandal, Glenn Mulcaire.

    4.23pm: News Group was also advised by Silverleaf that there was nothing that could "possibly justify the use of unlawful means to obtain information" about the Taylor story.

    He advises them that the prospects of winning against Taylor in a breach of confidence and invasion of privacy case are "slim" to "non-existent".

    4.28pm: Silverleaf told News Group that it was "vicariously liable for the conduct of its employees unless they were acting on a frolic of their own".

    If you are wondering why the expression "vicariously liable" seems familiar, it's because the phrase was used by James Murdoch in a letter to the select committee last week.

    In the letter Murdoch admitted that News International will have to pay any damages awarded against the private investigator Glenn Mulcaire, in instances where it is proven he was instructed to hack phones by News of the World staff.

    4.29pm: Silverleaf does not pull his punches.

    He says there is a "powerful case" that there was a culture of "illegal information access" at the paper and if this came out in court it would be "extremely damaging to NGN's public reputation".

    Paragraph 6 of his legal opinion to NGN in June 2008 says:

    "There is overwhelming evidence of the involvement of senior NGN journalists in the illegal enquiries into ...[redacted]."

    "In addition there is substantial surrounding material about the extent of NGN's journalists' attempts to obtain information access to information illegally in relation to other individuals.

    "In light of these facts there is a powerful case that there is (or was) a culture of illegal information access used at NGN in order to produce stories for publication.

    "Not only does this mean that NGN is virtually certain to be held liable to Mr Taylor, to have this paraded at a public trial, would I imagine, be extremely damaging to NGN's public reputation."

    5.06pm: John Whittingdale, chairman of the select committee says the documents are proof that senior managers at News of the World were aware "for a long time" of evidence that phone hacking was widespread at the tabloid.

    "This contradicts the evidence given to us previously and we shall be asking about this when James Murdoch comes before the committee," he said.

    A summary of the day's events:

    • News International was advised by legal counsel as far back as 2008 that there was "overwhelming evidence" that at "a number of senior journalists" at the News of the World were involved in phone-hacking.

    • Michael Silverleaf, QC, told the publisher there was "a powerful case" that a "culture of illegal information access" existed on the paper and this would be "extremely damaging" to the "company's public reputation" if this got out in a court case.

    • The News of the World's chief lawyer Tom Crone privately told the paper's editor as long ago as 2008 that a "damning email" existed showing that the tabloid made use of "extremely private voicemails" left on the telephone of football boss Gordon Taylor in 2008

    • Taylor's lawyers had obtained evidence that "at least three journalists" on the paper were "intimately involved" in Glenn Mulcaire's illegal researching.

    • Crone described the evidence as "fatal to our case" in a memo to ex editor Colin Myler ahead of a meeting with James Murdoch to discuss whether to settle Taylor's claim. He said the company's position was "perilous".

    .
    • This article was amended on 2 November 2011 to remove an incorrect reference to former News International chief operating officer Clive Milner in the 3.47pm update. The "CM" referred to was presumably News of the World editor Colin Myler.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Labor Supports Occupy Wall St.and LA

AFL-CIO Summit Supports
Occupy Wall Street Protests
by Donna Jablonski, Oct 2, 2011

The 800 young workers, activists and students at the AFL-CIO Next Up Young Worker Summit in Minneapolis announced their strong support of the Occupy Wall Street protesters:

”The world in which we live isn’t working for the vast majority of people. The top 1 percent controls the economy, makes profits at the expense of working people, and dominates the political debate. Wall Street symbolizes this simple truth: a small group of people have the lives and livelihoods of working Americans in their hands.

“In the last two weeks, young people have sparked a movement on Wall Street, just as they did through the Arab Spring and in Wisconsin against Scott Walker. Participants at the AFL-CIO Next Up Young Worker Summit left Occupy Wall Street to join with young people in the labor movement to talk about how best to take back our economy for the middle class.

“Today, more than 800 Next Up participants from around the country stand with those on Wall Street who are making their voices heard. The future of our country depends on young people demanding the future we believe in.

And we believe that Wall Street should pay for the damage they’ve done to our economy, our jobs, and our communities – foreclosing on homes, making massive profits with no oversight, and not sharing in building a future for the next generation.

“We stand together in calling for a country that doesn’t just work for the top 1 percent. We stand together to call for a sustainable future that doesn’t begin with massive tax breaks for the wealthy and end with austerity measures and a jobs crisis.

“We are one."

Saturday, October 1, 2011

Speculators Drive Up Oil Prices

Sanders writes: "Why have oil prices spiked wildly? Some argue that the volatility is a result of supply-and-demand fundamentals. More and more observers, however, believe that excessive speculation in the oil futures market by investors is driving oil prices sky high."

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) (photo: WDCpix)
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) (photo: WDCpix)


Wall Street's Secret Oil Games

By Sen. Bernie Sanders, Reader Supported News

he top six financial institutions in this country own assets equal to more than 60 percent of our gross domestic product and possess enormous economic and political power. One of the great questions of our time is whether the American people, through Congress, will control the greed, recklessness and illegal behavior on Wall Street, or whether Wall Street will continue to wreak havoc on our economy and the lives of working families.

I represent Vermont, where many workers drive long distances to jobs that pay $12 an hour or less. Many seniors living on fixed incomes heat their homes with oil during our cold winters. These people have asked me to do all that I can to lower outrageously high gasoline and heating-oil prices. I intend to do just that.

Why have oil prices spiked wildly? Some argue that the volatility is a result of supply-and-demand fundamentals. More and more observers, however, believe that excessive speculation in the oil futures market by investors is driving oil prices sky high.

A June 2 article in the Wall Street Journal said it all: "Wall Street is tapping a real gusher in 2011, as heightened volatility and higher prices of oil and other raw materials boost banks' profits." ExxonMobil Chairman Rex Tillerson, testifying before a Senate panel this year, said that excessive speculation may have increased oil prices by as much as 40 percent. Delta Air Lines general counsel Richard Hirst wrote to federal regulators in December that "the speculative bubble in oil prices has concrete detrimental consequences for the real economy." An American Trucking Association vice president, Richard Moskowitz, said, "Excessive speculation has caused dramatic increases in the price of crude oil, which harms end-users like America's trucking industry."

I released records last month that documented the role of speculators and put the information on my Web site for three reasons.

First, the American people have a right to know why oil prices are artificially high. The CFTC report proved that when oil prices climbed in 2008 to more than $140 a barrel, Wall Street speculators dominated the oil futures market. Goldman Sachs alone bought and sold more than 860 million barrels of oil in the summer of 2008 with no intention of using a drop for any purpose other than to make a quick buck.

Wall Street, of course, wants to hide this information. They don't want the American people to know the extent to which speculators keep oil prices artificially high and the great damage that does to our economy. After the information became public, it was suggested that some on Wall Street may stop trading in the oil futures market. Good!

Second, Congress recognized last year that excessive oil speculation must end. The Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation required the CFTC to eliminate, prevent or diminish excessive oil speculation by Jan. 17, 2011. Months after that deadline, the commission still has failed to enforce the law, and speculators still are making out like bandits.

Third, the commodity regulators' claim that they cannot end excessive oil speculation because they lack sufficient data is nonsense. As the information I released makes clear, the commission has been collecting this information for more than three years. The time for studying is over. It is time for action.

I agree with those who say trust in government is at an all-time low. That's not because Washington is too heavy-handed with Wall Street. Quite the contrary! The American people are angry and disillusioned because they see our government act boldly to protect Wall Street CEOs but not ordinary Americans. When Wall Street needed a $700 billion bailout, the government was there for them. When working families need an end to excessive oil speculation and real relief at the gas pump, the government has failed to act.

The same Dodd-Frank bill that required commodity regulators to limit speculators included my amendment calling for an audit of the Federal Reserve from Dec. 1, 2007, to July 21, 2010, the period of the financial crisis. What we learned was that the Fed provided $16 trillion in secret, low-interest loans to every major American financial institution and to other central banks, large corporations and wealthy individuals. The audit provision was vigorously opposed by the Federal Reserve chairman.

It was right, however, that the veil of secrecy at the Fed was lifted and the American people learned about its actions.

Now it is appropriate to lift the veil of secrecy in the oil futures market. The American people have a right to know how much excessive speculation has driven up oil prices and which Wall Street firms are doing it.

WALL STREET CROOKS AGAIN?

TWU Supports 'Occupy Wall Street'

Occupy Wall Street Protests Poised to Grow Rapidly With Union Support

Dissent

by Carl Franzen

The “Occupy Wall Street” protests, now entering their third week, are poised to get a whole lot bigger than its core of 200 to 300 people, potentially even exceeding the protesters original goals of 20,000 demonstrators, thanks to recent pledges of support from some of New York City’s largest labor unions and community groups.

On Tuesday, over 700 uniformed Pilots, members of the Air Line Pilots Association, took to the streets outside of Wall Street demanding better pay.

On Wednesday night, the executive board of the New York Transit Workers Union (TWU Local 100), which represents New York City's all-important Train and Bus workers, voted unanimously to support Occupy Wall Street.

TWU Local 100 counts 38,000 active members and covers 26,000 retirees, according to its website. The Union on Thursday used Twitter to urge members to take part in a massive march and rally on Wednesday, Oct. 5. That effort is being co-sponsored by another eight labor and community outreach organizations.

The Village Voice spoke with TWU Local 100’s spokesman Jim Gannon on Wednesday, who explained the group’s reasons for joining the protests:

“Well, actually, the protesters, it’s pretty courageous what they’re doing,” he said, “and it’s brought a new public focus in a different way to what we’ve been saying along. While Wall Street and the banks and the corporations are the ones that caused the mess that’s flowed down into the states and cities, it seems there’s no shared sacrifice. It’s the workers having to sacrifice while the wealthy get away scott-free. It’s kind of a natural alliance with the young people and the students — they’re voicing our message, why not join them? On many levels, our workers feel an affinity with the kids. They just seem to be hanging out there getting the crap beaten out of them, and maybe union support will help them out a little bit.” The other eight organizations expected to join in the October 5 rally, based on its Facebook page, are United NY, Strong Economy for All Coalition, Working Families Party, VOCAL-NY, Community Voices Heard, Alliance for Quality Education, New York Communities for Change, Coalition for the Homeless, which have a collective membership of over 1 million.

As Jon Kest, the executive director of New York Communities for Change, told Crain’s New York Business: “It’s a responsibility for the progressive organizations in town to show their support and connect Occupy Wall Street to some of the struggles that are real in the city today. They’re speaking about issues we’re trying to speak about.”

Crain’s also quoted a political consultant who said of the demonstration: “”It’s become too big to ignore.”

Meanwhile, the New York Metro 32BJ SEIU, which represents maintenance workers and security officers and counts some 70,000 members, is also re-purposing a previously planned rally on Oct. 12 to express solidarity with the Occupy Wall Street protesters, the Huffington Post reports.

“The call went out over a month ago, before actually the occupancy of Wall Street took place,” said 32BJ spokesman Kwame Patterson. Now, he added, “we’re all coming under one cause, even though we have our different initiatives.” Occupy Wall Street, which was first proposed by Canadian countercultural magazine Adbusters in July, initially received traction online thanks the support of Anonymous, the loosely-knit “hacktivist” collective. The event began on September 17 with around 3,000 protesters, but the numbers have varied considerably since then, with a core group of around 200 to 300 people maintaining a camp in nearby Zuccotti Park, despite being pepper-sprayed, beaten and arrested for frivolous offenses by police.

But its appeal appears to be spreading, not only to other groups, but other U.S. cities as well. Around 200 protesters in Boston took to the streets around Boston Common to begin their own related demonstration there. An Occupy Chicago event also began on September 23, but has so far remained limited to a small number of protesters in the double digits.

http://idealab.talkingpointsmemo.com/2011/09/occupy-wall-street-protests-poised-to-grow-rapidly-with-union-support.php

Welcome to Infoshop News
Saturday, October 01 2011 @ 04:10 PM CDT

Occupy Wall Street Protests Poised to Grow Rapidly With Union Support

Dissent

The “Occupy Wall Street” protests, now entering their third week, are poised to get a whole lot bigger than its core of 200 to 300 people, potentially even exceeding the protesters original goals of 20,000 demonstrators, thanks to recent pledges of support from some of New York City’s largest labor unions and community groups.

Occupy Wall Street Protests Poised to Grow Rapidly With Union Support

by CARL FRANZEN

The “Occupy Wall Street” protests, now entering their third week, are poised to get a whole lot bigger than its core of 200 to 300 people, potentially even exceeding the protesters original goals of 20,000 demonstrators, thanks to recent pledges of support from some of New York City’s largest labor unions and community groups.

On Tuesday, over 700 uniformed pilots, members of the Air Line Pilots Association, took to the streets outside of Wall Street demanding better pay.

On Wednesday night, the executive board of the New York Transit Workers Union (TWU Local 100), which represents the city’s all-important train and bus workers, voted unanimously to support Occupy Wall Street. TWU Local 100 counts 38,000 active members and covers 26,000 retirees, according to its website.

The Union on Thursday used Twitter to urge members to take part in a massive march and rally on Wednesday, Oct. 5. That effort is being co-sponsored by another eight labor and community outreach organizations.

The Village Voice spoke with TWU Local 100’s spokesman Jim Gannon on Wednesday, who explained the group’s reasons for joining the protests:

“Well, actually, the protesters, it’s pretty courageous what they’re doing,” he said, “and it’s brought a new public focus in a different way to what we’ve been saying along. While Wall Street and the banks and the corporations are the ones that caused the mess that’s flowed down into the states and cities, it seems there’s no shared sacrifice. It’s the workers having to sacrifice while the wealthy get away scot-free. It’s kind of a natural alliance with the young people and the students — they’re voicing our message, why not join them? On many levels, our workers feel an affinity with the kids. They just seem to be hanging out there getting the crap beaten out of them, and maybe union support will help them out a little bit.”

The other eight organizations expected to join in the October 5 rally, based on its Facebook page, are United NY, Strong Economy for All Coalition, Working Families Party, VOCAL-NY, Community Voices Heard, Alliance for Quality Education, New York Communities for Change, Coalition for the Homeless, which have a collective membership of over 1 million.

As Jon Kest, the executive director of New York Communities for Change, told Crain’s New York Business: “It’s a responsibility for the progressive organizations in town to show their support and connect Occupy Wall Street to some of the struggles that are real in the city today. They’re speaking about issues we’re trying to speak about.”

Crain’s also quoted a political consultant who said of the demonstration: “”It’s become too big to ignore.”

Meanwhile, the New York Metro 32BJ SEIU, which represents maintenance workers and security officers and counts some 70,000 members, is also re-purposing a previously planned rally on Oct. 12 to express solidarity with the Occupy Wall Street protesters, the Huffington Post reports.

“The call went out over a month ago, before actually the occupancy of Wall Street took place,” said 32BJ spokesman Kwame Patterson. Now, he added, “we’re all coming under one cause, even though we have our different initiatives.” Occupy Wall Street, which was first proposed by Canadian counter cultural magazine Adbusters in July, initially received traction online thanks the support of Anonymous, the loosely-knit “hacktivist” collective. The event began on September 17 with around 3,000 protesters, but the numbers have varied considerably since then, with a core group of around 200 to 300 people maintaining a camp in nearby Zuccotti Park, despite being pepper-sprayed, beaten and arrested for frivolous offenses by police.

But its appeal appears to be spreading, not only to other groups, but other U.S. cities as well. Around 200 protesters in Boston took to the streets around Boston Common to begin their own related demonstration there. An Occupy Chicago event also began on September 23, but has so far remained limited to a small number of protesters in the double digits.

http://idealab.talkingpointsmemo.com/2011/09/occupy-wall-street-protests-poised-to-grow-rapidly-with-union-support.php

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Saturday, October 01 2011