July272012
July252012

Because news in America sucks.

In case you are out of the loop with what’s happening in Anaheim, California, here’s some stuff we posted on Occupy Denver’s Twitter and Facebook:

Fresh Anaheim riots: Rage over police shootings, cops fire pepper pellets (PHOTOS)

Police Brutality in Anaheim Sparks Outrage After 2 Latinos Shot Dead and Demonstrators Attacked

Tweet by Anonymous of a shot kid

Let’s face it: Mainstream media isn’t covering this because this is happening in a minority community and it doesn’t involve buggy eyed, orange-haired white guys that the media won’t shut up about.

July192012

:/ Really, Nolan. Really?

Because this movie doesn’t scream propaganda:

Bane’s dastardly plot involves a massive transfer of wealth using the stock exchange. It consists further of inciting civil unrest and taking control of cutting-edge technologies that can be used for good or ill. Nolan’s critique of Wall Street is implicit in the portrayal of the rapacious and arrogant Wall Street traders, but some uneasiness about the Occupy movement is evident, as well, in the film’s depiction of people’s tribunals. However, to say that the movie steers a middle course would be to impose coherence on what seems more like a scattered set of fears and impressions.

- Source

The final half-hour is cleverly written and on a spectacular scale. You may have seen a city trashed in many a blockbuster, but never quite like this.

The picture also has the courage to grapple, however superficially, with two big themes: the fear of terrorism and economic collapse.

The bad guy, Bane (Tom Hardy), is like an 18th-century French revolutionary hoping to unite the oppressed masses against the capitalists and authorities who have kept them under control for so long. 

- Source

July122012
3PM
May22012
April292012

Over 6,000 arrests since September 17th, 2011 since Occupy Wall Street just started. Why has the president NOT said anything?


I cannot support this government until the OWS manifesto is addressed and recognized. 

Dear fellow Americans,

We are assembled in Zucotti Park — which we’ve renamed Liberty Plaza — in the financial district of New York, because we believe that the American economy is heading in the wrong direction and we have a few ideas for what to do about it.

There is a feeling shared by a growing number of people on the streets of the world that the global economy has become a kind of Ponzi scheme, a global casino, run by and for the benefit of the 1 percent.

We believe that it is possible to inject justice into the global economy. We have come up with the following list of things that can be done right now to rejuvenate democracy and economic justice in our country:

•        Halt foreclosures for the unemployed, sick and elderly

•        Increase funding to public services by taxing the richest 1 percent

•        Forgive all student loan debt

•        Reinstate the Glass-Steagall Act in order to control speculation

•        Work with the other G20 nations to implement a 1% “Robin Hood” tax on all financial transactions and currency trades

•        Ban high-frequency ‘flash’ trading and bring sanity to the markets

•        Break up the “too big to fail” banks that threaten our future

•        Arrest the financial fraudsters responsible for the 2008 meltdown and bring them to justice

•        Ordain a Presidential Commission tasked with ending the influence corporate money has on our elected representatives in Washington

If you agree with any of these demands, then join us!  We will stay here in our encampment in Liberty Plaza until President Obama responds to each of these demands.  This is just the beginning, there is more to come as we work together to reshape America.

— The People’s Assembly of New York City


(via corsetjinx)

April202012
denverpost:

Denver commission calls for delay in introduction of proposed homeless camping ban
The increasing numbers of homeless and Occupy Denver protesters camped out downtown overnight has divided the community as well as city lawmakers.
Advocates for the homeless are lining up against the ordinance. Business members are pushing for its adoption.
Does Denver need a camping ban? What alternatives are there?


Would you lovely people tell The Denver Post that this is class warfare at it’s finest?

denverpost:

Denver commission calls for delay in introduction of proposed homeless camping ban

The increasing numbers of homeless and Occupy Denver protesters camped out downtown overnight has divided the community as well as city lawmakers.

Advocates for the homeless are lining up against the ordinance. Business members are pushing for its adoption.

Does Denver need a camping ban? What alternatives are there?

Would you lovely people tell The Denver Post that this is class warfare at it’s finest?

April102012
April92012
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