Monday, December 5, 2011

17 Arrested on Final Day of ALEC Summit, SRP Lockdown and First Friday Demo


“It’s a black bloc blur but I’m pretty sure it ruled… damn. Last Friday night...”

On Friday, December 2nd, the final day of mobilization against the summit of the American Legislative Exchange Council, 16 were arrested at an action against Salt River Project. The action was led by DinĂ© and O’odham elders and had multiple stages of escalation.

Salt River Project is on the Corporate Board of ALEC, Louise Benally, a resident of Black Mesa impacted by SRP’s operations, delivered a letter to SRP that outlines critical concerns of her community. She expressed that “My community is heavily impacted by Salt River Project’s coal and water extraction activities. SRP has extensive ties to Peabody Energy’s massive mining operations and the Navajo Generating Station which they co-own. Coal mining has destroyed thousands of archeological sites and our only water source has been seriously compromised. Their operations are causing widespread respiratory problems, lung diseases, and other health impacts on humans, the environment, and all living things.”

Five people locked down in the lobby and numerous others blockaded the front entrance. Banners inside and outside read “Expose ALEC, Peabody Kills”, “UnOccupy Our Lands” and “Shut ALEC Down, Relocation = Genocide” in specific reference to the past forty years of forced relocation of DinĂ© people from Black Mesa. The police presence started out small and increased to a massive collaborated effort between the Police Departments of Tempe, Scottsdale, and Phoenix, including riot police and a bomb squad. Streets on both ends were shut down and business was disrupted for multiple buildings. Riot police snatched multiple individuals in the crowd, who continued to chat, dance, etc. The numbers started out at around 70 and continued to swell as others found out about it. The whole action lasted 6 hours.

More information on the SRP action here: http://azresistsalec.wordpress.com/2011/12/02/breaking-news-indigenous-elders-supporters-occupy-alec-member-salt-river-project-headquarters/

As the day continued the undercover police presence was particularly pervasive and obvious. Many people were monitored and followed throughout the day culminating in the presence of more than a dozen known undercovers after a police attack on the first Friday demo.

First Friday Demo

A call was put out for people to converge at a particular intersection in downtown Phoenix during the monthly art walk and to take the street. Many arrived in bloc with a ‘Class War!’ banner for a roving dance party following a radical marching band. The police responded heavily about twenty minutes in and pepper spray started to fly. Scuffles erupted as the police tried to snatch people, and ultimately the pigs were only able to take one person away.

From the AZ Resists ALEC call for legal support:

“Branson was snatched from the crowd of protesters during the initial pepper spray of the crowd, and placed under arrest. Branson was then brutalized by police who left him with cuts on his body and abrasions on his face. The police also pepper sprayed Branson once he was cuffed and in the back of the police car, completely unable to defend himself. The unwarranted pepper spraying left him with chemical burns on the areas of his body that had open sores from the brutal arrest. Branson is being charged with 2 counts of aggravated assault on an officer. His bond is $2800.”

Some portions of the crowd continued on as others scattered, some of whom were followed by police. At this point, the presence of undercovers in various spaces in downtown increased dramatically, though fortunately, no further arrests were made.

Jail Support

During the three days of the ALEC summit, a total of 25 people were arrested, two of whom face serious felony charges. All are now out of jail. This comes two weeks after the state re-arrested one person on felony charges from last year’s anti-nazi actions in Phoenix. During that re-arrest, Phoenix Police photographed others present and interrogated them as to whether they were anarchists. Long term support is needed for all those under attack by the state in Arizona – indigenous people, undocumented people, all people of color, trans and queer people, poor and working class people and anarchists.

To support those arrested during the ALEC mobilization, see the Legal Aid page from AZ Resists ALEC here: http://azresistsalec.wordpress.com/legal-aid/

Photos from SRP action:





Video of pepper spray at First Friday demo:

http://www.youtube.com/shutdownalec#p/a/u/1/5f9vi3TDyek

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http://www.blackmesais.org
http://www.azresistsalec.wordpress.com
http://www.chaparralrespectsnoborders.wordpress.com
http://www.firesneverextinguished.wordpress.com
http://www.shutdownalec.org
(A)

HUMBOLDT COUNTY GENERAL ASSEMBLY

http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1504390858#!/events/288827554488920/

Sunday, December 4, 2011

West Coast Port Shutdown

Palestinian-Isreali conflict continues.



Bil'in

The threat of rain resulted in a smaller than usual demo in Bil'in. Only 5 internationals and about 15 Israelis joined the Bil'iners in their protest against being excluded from their own lands by the apartheid wall. The theme was Autumn - the elementary demands of the Palestinians. By the time we got to the fence, the shabab had already been busy throwing stones, but only when the the peaceful procession approached did the army bother to shoot a few canisters to welcome us. The protesters gathered next to the fence, chanted, were threatened by the soldiers, and had gas shot over their heads in the direction of the shabab. A lively discussion developed across the wall between some shabab and some settler kids revolving mainly around their mothers. The settler kids swirled some stones in a makeshift sling, but didn't seem to know quite how to launch them.

Rani Abdel Fatah - pics

International communities - pics

Nabi Saleh

Dozens participated in this week's demonstration in Nabi Saleh against the theft of its lands and spring by the Halamish Israeli settlement and the Israeli occupation that sustains it. Nabi Saleh residents, other Palestinians, and international and Israeli supporters marched peacefully from the center of the village. Referring to recent news, demonstrators called for Hamas and Fatah reconciliation in order to boost Palestinian struggle against the settlements, annexation wall and occupation.

As always, a peaceful demonstration met with Israeli army attack. Volleys of tear gas canisters were shot on the entire demonstration from a cannon installed on Israeli military jeeps. Sole canisters were also shoot by Israeli soldiers directly at people, in violation of their army's own regulations. Israeli forces used their “skunk” track, carrying a foul-smelling water cannon, which said to be of different “flavor” this time, according to protesters. However, the “skunk” couldn't reach but few people due to a rocks-made protesters road block that prevented it and all other military jeeps from deepening their incursion into the village. Few people also threw stones at the army's position and managed to ward off some soldiers advancing on foot from a different direction.

At least 3 people suffered from minor injuries from the Israeli attack. One protester who suffered from gas inhalation was carried by others a few dozen meters until they reached a road, where an ambulance waited to rush him out for medical treatment.

The demo, which was accompanied by a rainy cold day, lasted about 3 hours, after which the army retreated to its post at the main entry to the village.

International communities http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.312767178733593.86420.136633479680298

Israel Puterman - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I7Zr4dpqiXI

Ni'lin

Pics

South of Hebron Hills

Another Saturday of accompanying villagers to their lands.

Guy Butavia - pics

Walaje

A comrade report: "We gathered near the first mosque and despite the weather decided to walk down to where the army and construction company had recently blown up the mountain. There were about 50 people and after marching through the village we went down to the valley and began walking the planned route of the wall. We were shown various sites including where the original village of al Walajah used to be on the other side of the valley.

From where we were standing we could see the railway line which signifies the green line and the road. Palestinians including of course the residents of al Walajah are denied access to this Israelis only road. So in all defiance of the occupation and its apartheid rules we walked down to the road. As we got down to the road some of the Palestinian protesters began blocking the road with large rocks. Cars were coming round the corner to be greeted with a roadblock. After a debate on whether or not to stay there with the rocks or remove them and keep moving we chose the latter and began walking the road back up to the junction where the illegal settlement of Har Gilo and al Walajah meet.

The border police came down just after we had left the rocks. They stopped their Jeep and one soldier got out. After a short confrontation we carried on walking up ignoring the absurd calls of the two and half soldiers. The Jeep followed behind us. We carried on chanting and signing to cars that were passing. A police van passed us up to the junction and another Border Police van drove down to follow us in front. As we reached the junction and the entrance to the village we were joined by the Mayor of al Walajah and about 15 Border Police and the settlements head of security. After two speeches we ended the completely non-violent and peaceful demonstration on our own terms."

For the first time villagers of the Al-Walaje village managed to walk on settlers bypass road built on their lands.

Photos

Video

From Foreclosure to Occupation: Tenants Organize To Beat Evictions


A group of low-income San Franciscans has come up with a positive, long term solution to the housing crisis that is causing millions of Americans to be evicted and some to embrace the "Occupy Homes" movement: buy the buildings.

In October 2011, residents of the Columbus United Cooperative (CUC) in San Francisco celebrated final approval of the ownership of their building as a permanently affordable, resident-owned limited-equity housing cooperative. The residents can now purchase shares in the co-op for only $10,000 in the heart of San Francisco (where most housing starts at $500,000) to become cooperative homeowners, though most earn less than 50 percent of area median income. Previous to the conversion they had been living in their building under the threat of eviction.

According to a Lender Processing Services report on November 18, "just under 6.3 million properties nationwide are either 30 or more days delinquent or in foreclosure." Another study published in June by Templeton LPA states that the number of court orders to evict tenants have risen by 9% over the last year, and the number of tenants in serious arrears with their rental payments is up by 13%, with 2.1% of all tenancies in arrears nationwide.

Long waiting lists for public housing mean that people remain homeless or in shelters longer. The National Coalition for the Homeless reported that in 2007, before the economy went into full recession, the average stay in homeless shelters for households with children was 5.7 months . Rising foreclosures and tenant evictions have been helping to fuel the fire of the Occupy movement. "Occupy Homes" is a new offshoot of Occupy Wall Street that links homeowners with activists in direct action to halt foreclosures in some of the local strongholds across the country of the Occupy movement. Occupy Oakland has announced it will start occupying vacant homes starting in December and Occupy Portland is already starting to move into foreclosed homes. Homeless advocacy group "Homes Not Jails" is teaming up with Occupy San Francisco to turn abandoned hotels into homeless shelters.

After Occupy L.A. organized a vigil and camp at her home and occupied the local Fannie Mae office, Rose Gudiel was able to keep her and her disabled mother's home from which they were being evicted, as the bank opened up to renegotiating their mortgage.

Chicago, New York and Minneapolis have branches of Occupy Homes, too.

Ohio Congresswoman Max Rameau, an organizer for Take Back the Land who began this work five years ago, says, "The banks are actually occupying our homes."

But in the US, squatters have few rights and face an steep uphill battle to stay in the homes they've claimed. Owners of foreclosed homes might have some ability to bargain with banks if they can afford to, but many can't, and others are being kicked out of rentals, especially as former homeowners are now moving down the housing chain and renting. The National Low Income Housing Coalition estimates that "40 percent of families facing eviction due to foreclosure are renters and 7 million households living on very low incomes are at risk of foreclosure. Squatting isn't for everyone, in particular the sick, disabled, elderly and children, and living in substandard housing under threat of the police isn't exactly ideal. Unless the mainstream joins Occupy Homes and the government starts recognizing squats of vacant and foreclosed properties, the movement will likely remain on the fringe.

Tenant-owned, cooperative housing can provide a more stable solution to the housing crisis. When the residents of the 21-unit Columbus United Cooperative (CUC) in San Francisco converted the building to a limited-equity housing cooperative, the low income, Chinese-speaking resident families were able to stay in their homes.

The San Francisco Community Land Trust (SFCLT) used the limited-equity housing cooperative model to prevent eviction, which Director Tracy Parent says is a first.

"This building represents the community," said longtime resident Miao Yan Wen. "It is important to take care of the low-income people who live here. There are many seniors who live in this building. If the building were torn down, they would have to move out of the neighborhood and lose their access to doctors, stores, services."

Now that the building is a cooperative, she says,"I feel stable and safe."

SFCLT Director Tracy Parent remarked, "This is a victory not just for these 21 families but for the greater community of San Francisco. Limited equity housing cooperatives ensure that other families can buy these homes for an affordable price in the future."

SFCLT has several of buildings in the queue at various stages to become new housing cooperatives, including a rental coop with an income cap and a 139 rental unit that will be converted to tenant-owned housing - both in a rapidly gentrifying, African-American community. These coop conversions can take many years to complete, but they make a long term impact. Families that are being evicted are able to buy their homes for only slightly more than than their controlled rent.

Community land trusts are local non-profit organizations that retain ownership of the land under the coop housing and separate it from the ownership of residential buildings. Residents control their buildings by owning one share in the housing cooperative, which allows each household one vote in the affairs of the co-op. By separating the ownership of the land from the buildings, using permanent deed restrictions to restrict maximum resale increases (limited equity), and receiving government and private grant money, the CLT can drastically reduce the cost of owning to slightly more than the cost of a rent controlled unit. Other nonprofits which are not land trusts, like the Alliance to Develop Power in Massachusetts, are developing new housing coops (1,200 units so far) run by their low income members as part of their social justice mission.

This is not an entirely new concept. A housing advocacy group called the Urban Homesteading Assistance Board in New York City, has since 1974 enabled the conversion of over 1,600 foreclosed, city-held rentals into limited-equity, resident-controlled co-ops, preserving over 30,000 units of affordable housing. In 1977, while many NYC landlords were failing to maintain and pay taxes on their properties, the city passed Local Law #45. This law allowed the city to begin foreclosure proceedings after just one year of non-payment of taxes, resulting in thousands of buildings, some of them occupied, to be confiscated by the city of New York through in rem foreclosure. In 1978, the city's housing agency created new housing programs that gave residents and community groups control and eventual ownership of in rem buildings.

Pressure for housing will likely only continue to grow at current unemployment rates. Local governments and police will have to spend more and more money and time on evictions and property security and on shelters and subsidized housing.

Or they can proactively support permanently affordable, limited equity, tenant-owned housing development, which is a much more cost effective, humane and safe plan for everyone in the long run.

For more more info on how to start a tenant-owned housing cooperative see http://www.shareable.net/blog/how-to-start-a-housing-coop.

Mira Luna is a community activist working to develop an alternative economy in the San Francisco Bay Area. Her article was originally published at Shareable.net. If you would like to contribute as a citizen journalist to The Huffington Post's coverage of American political life, please sign up at www.offthebus.org.

Situations, Occupations, and Revolution: On Taking Steps Forward to Fight the End of the World


Virtually anyone who has been even remotely involved in social justice work in recent history cannot help but smile just a little bit, as for the first time in a long time (in my lifetime) a real radical, social movement is afoot. The Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movement, or simply the Occupy movement has captured most major US and World cities in a brilliant attempt to stop the ruling class from decimating what’s left of the world’s economy, culture, and environment; what some people would call “the end of the world.” By occupying these public squares, activists and organizers have not only gained mass-media attention, even from the corporately run mainstream media, but have begun organizing in a way that sows the seeds for what could be a worldwide revolution. By promoting the ideas of non-hierarchal organizing, including consensus, and utilizing direct democracy, this movement has also set itself apart from major non-profit, humanitarian and social justice organizations, giving it a more viable chance to succeed and not be co-opted by the capitalist system. But now, two months into the Wall Street occupation, important questions are arising about where the movement is heading, and in the upcoming chilly winter months, activists must seriously address some questions about the movement or it will stall indefinitely.

First, however, it’s good to point out some of the things that OWS has done right. It picked an excellent target: Wall Street: the world’s biggest capitalist casino, one of the most ludicrous and destructive forces on earth, that holds the power to impoverish entire nations at the whim of investors. It is not simply greed that these protests are speaking out against, but rather the clear inequalities that have arisen from this institution. This is class struggle, and there’s no doubt about it. Second, of course was the rhetoric. Radical activists have been struggling for years to create slogans that actually appealed to the masses, who aren’t yet on the same page. By using the 99% vs the 1%, OWS has clearly labeled itself as a movement for everyone, devoid of affiliation with any sort of single-issue campaign or party politics.

By using consensus as it’s method for decision making, OWS has built a movement with a very diverse group of speakers, and has made it hard to be co-opted by external forces. Consensus has of course been used for years, especially by worldwide anarchist movements; it was not an invention of OWS (despite some claims I’ve heard). It has simply highlighted these tools of horizontal organizing and made them more accessible to anyone who is interested, but maybe never considered themselves anarchists or joined any anarchist organizations. The occupations are doing a great job of teaching people consensus, although there have been a lot of issues in the way consensus has actually been used (more on this later). Most important, OWS is showing that consensus decision making, as a form of direct democracy, is successful. For years critics of consensus have claimed that it is simply inefficient, and just doesn’t work. But in this case, the consensus model helped spawn a worldwide movement. So it clearly can work despite the fact that it is “not easy,” as some would say.

It is also worth noting the exceptional amount of media coverage garnered by these protests. It would be a mistake to attribute this to a brilliant media campaign by occupiers, with tons of outreach to the mainstream media. Rather, these major media sources simply haven’t been able to ignore it. This goes hand in hand with the quick dissemination of information through the various occupations’ websites. It has captured the public imagination. It is a “story” that people want to hear. This demand has outweighed the disgusting amount of corporate influence over the media, and they have more or less, been forced to cover it. The success of the movement in general with good messaging has generated the media response, not necessarily a calculated “media strategy.”

Finally, a beautiful synthesis is underway with the occupation of public space and using it for direct democracy and movement building. Public space was once the cornerstone of building movements. It gave people real-live (not virtual) space to meet in and discuss the issues of the day. The ruling class has strategically eliminated these spaces, to make it more difficult to engage in dissent. Furthermore, they have criminalized in the most basic human activities in the remaining public spaces, such as outlawing sleeping in public parks. The effects are most noticeable for members of the houseless community perhaps, but one cannot help but feel alienated by the overwhelming amount private property that surrounds them in the heart of modern cities. Even a public restroom, is a rare thing. This is a movement about transforming our public space, and this adds to the very inviting nature of the occupy movement that welcomes people from all over to come to public squares and organize.

So the Occupy movement has done some things right, and it has come on the heels of a number of exciting uprisings in the world. The inspiration for the original call-out to OWS made by the magazine Adbusters was no doubt inspired by the Arab Spring: the series of uprisings that occurred and still are developing in the Middle East. Egypt is the most notable example of a public square occupation having led to a revolution. When Hosni Mubarek stepped down the whole world saw that this type of organizing could indeed work.

However, there are some key differences between what happened in Tunisia, Egypt, Lybia, and the rest of the Middle East and Occupy Wall Street. First off (and the mainstream media loves to point this out), the occupations of the Arab Spring had clear goals: they wanted to remove their despotic rulers and have democratic elections. This is distinctly different from the American movement. There have been no calls for Obama or any members of his cabinet to step down. Thus, the mainstream media has consistently portrayed the movement as disorganized and without a central goal. In some ways this is true, in other ways not. The lack of verbalized goals reflects the incredible diversity within the movement and the fact that hopefully, this is just the beginning of what’s to come.

But with diverse politics also comes much disagreement about what to do with the movement. So, we’re against the banks, but what are we for? Some people want to see more reforms, while others are distinctly revolutionary. Some people want to stop specific Wall Street practices while others are contemplating the total destruction of capitalism replaced with a more cooperative society. Besides the consensus model, many of the more radical ideas being put forth by the Occupy movement are being brushed aside. More compromises are being sought with ruling institutions so that these occupations can face less pressure to disband by the ruling elite.

This reformist rhetoric is nothing new and they do have some clear demands. People are looking to have social services restored. They want to fund education and healthcare. They want to prosecute Wall Street executives, and perhaps put them in jail. They want to stop the big banks for foreclosing on people’s houses and forcing them out on the street. And yeah, CEOs make too much money.

Yet, reformist campaigns rarely succeed in actually changing society, which must take place if we are to save our communities and our environment. A major cause of this failure is due to the over-reliance on representative government. It is becoming increasingly clear that our representatives cannot accurately and justly represent us. People in power rarely give in to our demands unless they are forced to do so. History has shown that real uprisings need teeth, and can’t give into weak compromises if they are to succeed. Thus, we need more than a reformist movement. We need a revolutionary one, and we need to take on our unjust economic system: capitalism.

So why revolution? Why capitalism? The short answer is to stop the end of the world. Look around at the state of our society: our communities, our environment, our livelihoods, are all on the verge of annihilation from the global economic machine. We’ve reached peak oil and Climate Change is becoming a reality endangering the survival of communities all across the world. The daily level of consumption by developed nations is simply not sustainable, while poverty, famine, and hunger plague the Global South. As resources become fewer and more valuable, the ruling class will try to seize them from the public until there are none left. The economic system they use to enact these travesties is capitalism. There is no point in fighting corruption, unfair fiscal policies, and extortion unless we also challenge the system that enables them. As radical as this sounds to some, the OWS movement supports a lot of this through its own messaging. The front page of http://occupywallst.org displays the slogan: “the only solution is World Revolution.”

So if OWS wants to live up to its claims as a “world revolution,” the reformist rhetoric should be converted to more radical demands. Alongside these demands people should start building their own alternatives. This has happened on a small-scale at each occupation, with camps providing meals, free education, free clothes, free healthcare, babysitting, etc. Yet, this new economic model needs to spread outside the occupation and become institutionalized in neighborhoods around the world. This has the potential to disarm the capitalists, because people will begin to rely on them less and less for basic services.

We also need to draft strategies for cutting off corporate power. Occupy Oakland has certainly been the most successful with this. The General Strike on November 2nd, which ended with a temporary shutdown of the Port of Oakland, was a clear victory for the movement. The call-out for a total west coast port shutdown on 12/12 will continue this trend. Then, Occupy Wall Street attempted to delay the opening of the stock exchange on the November 17, the two-month anniversary of the occupation. They failed (mostly because of the police), but the attempt displayed an effective tactic to challenge the ruling class nevertheless.

Another action aimed at direct confrontation was the national Bank Transfer Day on November 5th, when almost a million people took their money out of big banks and put it into local credit unions. While there has been a lot of debate over whether or not putting your money into credit unions actually negatively affects the banks, it clearly gave them a scare and caused a change in bank policy (e.g. Bank of dropped its fee for using debit cards to appease customers). This is another strategy that should be expanded. The more money we can remove from the big banks the better.

Challenging the banks goes hand in hand with challenging the concept of “representative” government. The “democracy” we live in lacks any real representation of even vaguely progressive politics. This should be clear to most folks who voted for Obama, who has only continued Bush-era neo-liberal policies and wars. Yet, the anti-elections idea has made little headway inside the camps. With the upcoming election in November, 2012, activists involved with Occupy need to organize against all the major political parties. Most importantly, OWS must not EVER endorse politicians, even those who claim to represent the policies of the movement. This is a quick way to disarm the movement. Rather, discrediting representative government will only further empower the movement by showing people that we can use direct democracy to undermine the ruling class politicians. There is also still lot of time until the elections, which gives the movement an advantage in that there is time to do all sorts of actions against representative government before the elections. The movement should take full advantage of this.

A newer trend in the OWS movement is the reclaiming of buildings and the solidarity with tenants and homeowners who are being evicted from their homes by banks. This is very promising. Occupations should align themselves strongly with tenants’ rights organizations in their communities (and with most progressive community organizations for that matter). Many of these groups have been working on housing issues for years and have been fighting the big banks. They are crucial allies in this struggle. Also, with their support, the Occupy movements can begin to revitalize neighborhoods through initiatives to improve public spaces, create gardens, open free-schools, and fix up distressed buildings.

Reclaiming buildings for the movement is also beginning to happen. Yet again, activists in Oakland were the first to do so, but the trend has spread to other cities including Chapel Hill, Washington DC, and Seattle. Squatting needs to be put on the table at all occupations as a crucial step forward to achieve revolution. Particularly in northern climates, where people might freeze to death this winter if they try to live in tents, getting indoor space for the movement is essential. (It is important to realize that houseless people are at the forefront of this, as they could benefit the most from permanent indoor housing this winter). Occupying buildings would also be a more symbolic step towards revolution as it is a total denial of the notion of “private property,” which is central to the capitalist machine.

Once we occupy buildings the horizon expands. We can make community centers, free housing, childcare, free-schools, health clinics, free-stores, community store houses (for excess goods), food pantries, workshop spaces, libraries, art and cultural centers, performance space, radical media workspaces, and spaces for general assemblies. The possibilities are literally endless. These institutions will also help the movement grow in every neighborhood they are in by giving them a tangible, public face.

Another strategy that is only starting to be put on the table is to spread the assemblies into the neighborhoods. Perhaps because of the centrality of many of the camps in the heart of cities, little thought or initiative has gone to moving the assemblies to each neighborhood, to engage a wider audience in the conversation and to tackle specific needs of each community. Of course, various neighborhood assemblies would also need to coordinate and meet with each other at some downtown location from time to time. This would decentralize the movement, so that if the camps are taken down, there are already important decisions being made in each neighborhood.

Neighborhood Assembly initiatives have begun popping up. Many cities have Occupy the Hood movements, which arose out of mostly black communities to deal with neighborhood issues, and are not focused on the mostly white and middle-class constituency of central occupations. Also, Ocuppy El Barrio, has similarly focused on Latino/a communities. A new website was recently started for rural occupations too. It is important that rural communities begin to address their concerns and begin to have solidarity with their urban counterparts. The relationship between rural areas and cities will be crucial in the future, because most food is produced in rural areas and most people live in and around cities, so when the heavily fossil-fuel dependent capitalist food system collapses, we will have an alternative system already in place. Still, these centralized occupations have not pushed forth the idea of neighborhood assemblies, and it has been lacking from the overall strategy of a movement, which has tended to put its energy into specific camps and large-scale actions.

Another major issue with the Occupy movement is its reliance on these big actions to carry its message, while discrediting smaller, often more confrontational ones. Of course, groups all over the country have carried out small, autonomous actions, but these receive little recognition within the movement. In fact, there has been a sentiment of distrust from the occupations about autonomous small-scale actions. There have been proposals to ban them from the movement. The main concern is that these actions, if done in solidarity with an occupation, would give the camp bad press, or even get them raided. This is absurd. First off, the press already uses random occurrences of violence in a city (even if they are only “near” an occupation) as a condemnation of the movement (using “public safety” as its justification). Would we rather be evicted because someone in the area was assaulted or would we be willing to take the chance of eviction for taking actions against the system? The occupations must endorse or at least re-open the option of taking small-scale direct action as part of the overall campaign. Individuals who decide to engage in these actions must have support and solidarity from the camps.

Along with the dismissal of autonomous actions, the Occupy movement has become entangled in the ceaseless attempt by some activists to label the movement as explicitly “non-violent.” This does more harm than good, and wastes a lot of time creating a dichotomy that, by in large, doesn’t exist. In Boston, the occupation I’ve been most involved in, a diversity of tactics statement was endorsed near the start of the occupation, supporting a variety of forms of resistance. Many longtime activists brought this proposal from the radical community. Yet, now, six weeks later the debate is still dominating general assemblies. A new proposal to outright ban all acts that might be perceived as violence against “all beings” was recently brought to the GA. This proposal had a very broad definition of “violence” and has for the moment been blocked. It did not propose a way to deal with “violent” individuals, or indicate who would decide if they were and were not being violent. This dispute points to a crucial difference between the OWS movement and the Arab Spring uprisings. Despite the incorrect assumptions of some who claim that the Egyptian uprising was nonviolent, protestors in the Arab world, who face daily retribution for everything they do, were forced to defend their camps with force. Why? Because if they didn’t their movement wouldn’t have succeeded. They would’ve been crushed by police and the military and driven out of public squares.

The ideology of nonviolence comes absolutely from a place of privilege. Most people in the US have a lot to lose right now. The middle class, which makes up much of the occupy movement, is still concerned about its own property, its own financial well being, and is inevitably still tied to these capitalist ideas. Thus, they are intensely afraid of the pot boiling over—of real conflict between the ruling class and the 99%. Even acts of nonviolent civil disobedience have been condemned by people who are afraid to create a volatile situation. Yet, if we continue undermine those willing to take risks, the movement will fail.

One issue that is often glossed over at most violence/non-violence debates is the idea of self-defense. In many ways, this puts the perceived dichotomy of these two concepts into question. How would someone react if an individual was being sexually assaulted in the camp and had to defend themselves? Should they react non-violently to an aggressor? I think not.

On a larger scale, how should we react when the police come to raid our camp and imprison our friends? Are we okay with them trashing all of our belongings and essentially removing people from their homes? Again privilege has a huge effect. As we decide to let the police evict the camps, those with nowhere else to go are forced back into their extreme poverty. We will only be helping the police force these folks back onto the streets.

It is this same privileged mentality that has negatively impacted the diversity of some camps, and made people who aren’t white, male, and middle-class feel less welcomed there. Fewer and fewer non-males have been staying at the camps because of flagrant sexual harassment and the feeling that they are not safe. Fewer people of color are coming to camps because they sense the same white supremacist tendencies that dominate mainstream society at the camp. Queer and trans folks are often made to feel uncomfortable as well. While the movement has openly addressed some of these issues, there is a sincere need to have working groups actively bringing proposals and enacting strategies to counter these social behaviors. As difficult as this is, it does offer an amazing opportunity for activists, especially from less-privileged communities, to tackle issues of oppression and teach valuable lessons about intersectionality. These camps are microcosms for the world at large. Oppression still exists within them, but if we can start to improve the social dynamics there, perhaps there is hope for the broader community. Furthermore, the lack of involvement from less-privileged communities, who feel endangered or belittled at the camps is already weakening the movement. However, their have been lots of experienced activists attempting to tackle these issues at camps and they deserve credit for their actions.

While dealing with internal issues, it’s also important to see how these dynamics play out in general assemblies. By and large, the general assemblies have been successful at including a wide variety of voices. However, because of often heavy-handed facilitation, and varying degrees of modified consensus, many people have left the assemblies out of frustration. Ultimately, each camp must decide what form of consensus to use, but the more modified and reliant on voting the process becomes, it also become easier to silence people. There have been some outright declarations by facilitators who wish to abandon the consensus model all together. We must make sure this does not happen at our assemblies, or face an increase of hierarchy there.

Furthermore, while the use of consensus has been successfully spreading around the world because of OWS, there is a definite lack of education around the process. This doesn’t just mean teaching people the hand signals, but stepping back and understanding the concepts. There are several consensus guides that offer different, but often tried and tested forms of consensus (Check out Peter Gelderloos, Consensus, for a good example). Radicals should be encouraged to share their favorite consensus guides and resources with facilitators and with the camp at large.

Still, even with all the resources consensus guides have to offer, it is important to look at the situations that consensus is used in. Clearly, general assemblies are a good time for consensus. However, during actions, when momentum is building towards something, forcing people to sit down and do an entire consensus process (often surrounded by dozens of cops) is not strategically a smart idea. This is why it is helpful to have clear goals and tactics before an action, so that people know what to do in certain situations. I think all concerns in the situation should be vocalized, but as soon as people start having an “assembly” in the middle of an action, things de-escalate, and often the action fails because it simply loses momentum.

And momentum after all, is what we are trying to build. Sustaining momentum will be the real test of the Occupy Movement in the months to come. There are some huge challenges to be faced, not only in maintaining the camps and the movement, but in realistically trying to foster a revolution to save the world. And for this we’ll need the 99% on our side. Only by escalating to more revolutionary strategies will people become more involved with real enthusiasm for what’s happening. We cannot stagnate. A change of heart needs to occur inside us all. When we let go of our privileges and prejudices, and realize that we have nothing to lose, our strength will multiply exponentially. Let’s not forget what we want, and not be afraid to catapult human imagination through the walls of our prison, towards a brighter future.

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Wal Mart wants into Humboldt County


the former Gottschalks building in the Bayshore Mall is now owned by the Eureka-based property management company Carrington Co. who, on June 28th submitted a building application permit to the city of eureka for $4.6 million dollars worth of contruction to the building on behalf of its tenant who's name they are withholding.

it is no secret who t...his "mystery tenant" is. The Walmart corporation has attempted to expand into eureka once before on the Ballon track property in 1999 and was banned from the city by the voters.

now its 2011 and 12 years have come and gone and now Walmart is attempting to move into the city in secrecy by signing confidentiality agreements with Pattison Christensen, an asset manager for Carrington Co, and this time they wont need any zoning changes approved like they tried for in 1999 meaning they can just push the people of eureka and the whole county to the side and build as they please.

you maybe wondering why we should be against a walmart expansion here and the answer to that is not a simple one because the damage to communities as well as local and the national economy is so vast. few examples

1.Wal-Mart drives down wages in urban areas, with an annual loss of at least $3 billion dollars in earnings for retail workers.

2.Wal-Mart workers on public assistance programs in California comes at a cost to taxpayers of an estimated $86 million annually

3.one 200-person Wal-Mart store may result in a cost to federal taxpayers of $420,750 per year - about $2,103 per employee

4.at least 59 complaints have been issued by the National Labor Relations Board on the basis that Wal-Mart uses illegal surveillance techniques to monitor union activity inside and outside their stores.

5."Suits Say Wal-Mart Workers Forced To Toil Off The Clock," New York Times, June 25, 2002

6.statisticians estimate that the company underpaid its Texas workers by $150 million over four years by not paying them for the many times they worked during their daily 15-minute breaks

7. in California, a class-action lawsuit potentially involving up to 215,000 current and former Wal-Mart and Sam's Club employees "charges that Wal-Mart deleted thousands of hours of time worked from employees' payroll records by erasing overtime hours"

8.Federal poverty level = $17,650 Wage of average walmart employee = $13,861

9."Wal-Mart will escape criminal sanctions and pay $11 million to settle claims stemming from a federal investigation of illegal workers hired by the company's cleaning contractors"

10.Wal-Mart Realty has a total of 356 buildings for sale or lease, a total of 26,699,678 million square feet of empty stores

sources and more information can be found at
http://www.walmartmovie.com/


the film "the high cost of low prices" can be seen here
http://video.google.com/videoplay?d...
#




Another business is planning to move into the 73,000-square-foot Gottschalks building, but the question is -- which one?

Eureka-based property management company Carrington Co. submitted a building permit application on behalf of its tenant to the city on June 28 but withheld the tenant's name. According to the application, the tenant plans to make about $4.6 million worth of improvements to the building using Dallas-based architect Shade L. O'Quinn. O'Quinn did not return phone calls seeking comment. O'Quinn is listed as submitting site plans for five Wal-Mart stores in North Carolina, according to the North Carolina Department of Environmental Health and Natural Resources.

Wal-Mart declined to comment, replying twice via email that it did not “have anything to confirm or announce at this time.”

Pattison Christensen, an asset manager for Carrington Co., said the business that is moving into the old Gottschalks building is a major retailer, but he declined to disclose the company's name.

http://www.times-standard.com/local...





The not-so-mysterious mystery retailer planning to set up shop at the Bayshore Mall will have a pharmacy, groceries, clothes and dog food, according to North Coast Journal publisher Judy Hodgson.

The old Gottschalks space will be “substantially demolished” to make way for the new tenant, the NCJ confirmed.

Eureka City Manager Dave Tyson knows which big box is coming, but is adding it to the giant pile of secrets he keeps at city hall.

https://humboldtherald.wordpress.com/...





It’s a 73,000-square-foot apparel/grocery/pharmacy big box that looks pretty much like a Walmart, and it’s sailing through permitting at Eureka City Hall

The new $4.6-million-dollar retail store construction project is going through a routine plan check in the Building Department. It already has been approved by the city’s Fire, Engineering and Community Development departments.

Eureka businessman Rob Arkley, who also has substantial commercial real estate holdings, went on KINS radio last week and said the mystery tenant is indeed Walmart. But some people who may be able to confirm the identity of the tenant can’t talk.

Tyson said he “didn’t know who, officially, the occupant of the building would be. We don’t have any plans that have a name on it. We’ve not been told.” And everyone at the Carrington Co., a Eureka-based firm that owns 2 million square feet of commercial space in 23 states including the old Gottschalks, are under a confidentiality agreement not to disclose the tenant’s name, according to Pattison Christensen, Carrington’s asset manager.

Why is the project so expensive if it once held a Gottschalks? Christensen confirmed that the space will be substantially demolished, including the concrete foundation, and rebuilt to install new plumbing and electrical.

Walmart is moving toward smaller-footprint stores to battle its two-year decline in sales, according to press reports. Rather that the 200,000-plus square foot superstores, the company has been opening smaller stores such as the one in Westside Village near Atlanta, which is less than 80,000 square feet. Walmart is also experimenting with “Walmart Express” stores that are 10,000 to 15,000 square feet.

http://www.northcoastjournal.com/bl...