Showing posts with label Defend The Occupy Movement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Defend The Occupy Movement. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Let Us Solemnly Commemorate OWS On September 17th Each Year- And Move On- Radical Writer Joshua Lawrence Breslin Pulls The Hammer Down On The Occupy Movement

Markin comment:

“…The Occupy movement has now declared unequivocally that it is a movement of generals without an army. And likes it that way ”- from an article, "Whither Occupy?”- by Joshua Lawrence Breslin in the East Bay Other, December 22, 2011.

Note that Brother Breslin ( I will explain that bond in a minute) did not say that the Occupy movement was an army without generals. Josh’s finely-tuned sense of which way a movement is heading and why picked that nugget out long before this writer in early spring had to concede the point, a sense he has developed, by the way, over forty years of writing for half the unread ( just kidding , Josh), and in some cases unlamented , radical and progressive journals and newspapers in this country. Brother Breslin always had shape antennae for the ebb and flow of social movements going back to the 1960s when he saw the ebb of those high heaven movements fall apart around the 1969 “Days Of Rage” at a time when I did not see the ebb until the 1971 May Day Tribe attempts in Washington, D.C. to shut the government down over the ever-continuing Vietnam War. So Josh Breslin is somebody I listen to.

Back in December I, as usual, dismissed his remarks as so much bad air as a result of having been burned by some of his experiences on the West Coast (his base for many years, although he resides now mostly near his old home town of Olde Saco up in Maine) and at the Occupy Boston site at Dewey Square. I, in what now seems like a fit of hubris, defended the movement as just about the best thing since sliced bread. Oh sure I had my fair share of criticisms, criticisms from a socialist perspective about the “no demands” demands and the like. However I saw most of the stuff that I disliked as “growing pains” and particularly held out hope for the General Assembly idea as the embryo of an alternative form of government in our new world a-borning .

Josh, if he is honest, will admit that he too shared some of my “generation of ‘68” hopes that this new movement would be the place where we passed on the torch the next generation (really the next next generation, there is a “missing generation (roughly the Occupy kids’ parents). Now those hopes have dissolved in the spring air and that son of a bitch proved right again.

Why have I spilled so much cyberspace “ink” on the august opinions of an old-time radical writer? Simply put because I recently was approached by a “true believer,” a self-described socialist ‘true believer” in the Occupy mission to answer some questions about my take on what socialists contributed (or didn’t ) to the movement and other questions along those lines. Naturally when such questions are raised I turn to my old comrade Josh for his opinions, suggestions, etc. Josh and I have shared many a picket line duty, many a lonely vigil, many a forlorn march for some underpublicized cause, and many a rally for some aspect of the world’s ills so our bonds of brotherhood run deep, even if we seldom agree on political perspectives. I have placed his answers to that true believer’s questions below. To finish up though let me quote his closing remark which has been telegraphed in the headline to this piece. “Let’s solemnly commemorate September 17th each year-and move on.” Pure Josh Breslin. But, damn him, he’s right-again.
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[Markin: I have deleted questions that Josh, for his own reasons, did not answer. My answers will form part of that true believer’s essay so I have not included them here. ]

Socialists in the Occupy Movement (Massachusetts)

I'm trying to keep this Massachusetts specific, but feel free to refer to national events when applicable.

Feel free to send this to other socialists who may be interested in answering questions.

Feel free to skip any questions that are not applicable by writing N/A.

Share links to relevant articles where appropriate.

1. Your name? Or if you prefer to use a pen-name for this interview, please write it down.

Joshua Lawrence Breslin (my by-line name but just Josh in mixed company, mixed being political and non-political)

2. What socialist organization are you a part of? Or if you are an independent socialist, do you have some other affiliation (journal, union, etc.)?

Independent Radical-East Bay Other , Real Paper, The Barb, Boston Phoenix, Rolling Stone, Green Weekly, and too many other papers and journals to mention

3. How would you describe yourself ideologically?

Traced from youth- Catholic Worker etched-liberalism (same as Markin except that his was Irish mine Gallic-derived) , Cold War social democracy, communist fellow traveler radical –League Of California Radicals, now for many years, an independent radical

4. When did either you or your organization get involved in the Occupy Movement (specifically in Massachusetts)?

I attended the pre-encampment meetings before September 30th, had a writing assignment at Occupy Oakland for most of October and early November, came back and worked at Dewey Square from then on.

5. Did you or anyone from organization camp out in an Occupy encampment?

Are you serious? No. Old men do not “camp out” on the highway. And young people shouldn’t either.

8. How would you characterize Occupy's relation/reception to socialists ideas? Good? Bad? Indifferent? –

Indifferent but a studied indifference to any ideas beyond the mush of “ideas” that held the camp together. I once commented that for a political movement that then held the public center of attention there was less political discussion at Occupy than I had run into off-handedly in various pre-Occupy rallies and marches in which I had participated. That observation has only gotten stronger as the movement has fallen apart.

11. Were you a part of any Occupy working groups? Which ones and your assessment?

Socialist Caucus-short-lived, not well-attended and mainly a “mail-drop” and endorsement vehicle for other actions, including those which I supported and sought endorsements for. The caucus I believe pretty accurately reflected the weaknesses of the non-academic socialist movement in Boston (and probably more generally the radical milieu) as far as numbers go, desire for an all-inclusive socialist organization where groups and individuals could fight out their politics while doing the necessary united front work that has to drive the movement in this period, and general post-Soviet demise indifferent and/or hostility to socialism beyond the endlessly prattled passive poll figure that the younger generations now have a more positive attitude toward socialist ideas and do not want to shoot every socialist on sight.

Action for Peace-mainly the same observations as for the Socialist Caucus except that it really was kind of redundant to Veterans for Peace and UNAC organizational efforts reflecting the composition of the members of the group. Most successful action was as part of the February Hands Off Iran rally but that event, a real united front rather than Occupy event, demonstrates the redundant nature of the group. As a general observation about the working groups I would note that pre-Occupy organizations, for a time, found it worthwhile, and rightly so, I think, to work under the Occupy umbrella. Of late I note that most groups now work under their previous individual organizational forms and not under the Occupy umbrella.

General Strike OB- planning for May Day 2012. The best group I worked with, again too small for the task, the general strike task that originally animated its formation. Made up of a core of anarchists who were very hard-working but who also (as I did) kept some distance from OB GA (except for dough). To the extent that it might help you I have placed my May 2012 reflections here.
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May Day 2012

I have noted on several previous occasions that due to the recent absence of serious left-wing political struggle (prior to the events at Occupy Boston in Dewey Square from October to December 2011anyway) that our tasks for May Day 2012 in Boston centered on reviving the international working class tradition beyond the limited observance by revolutionaries, radicals and, in recent years, immigrants. This effort would thus not be a one event, one year but require a number of years and that this year’s efforts was just a start. We have made that start.

The important thing this year was to bring Boston in line with the international movement, to have leftist militants and others see our struggles here as part of an international struggle even if our actions were, for now, more symbolic and educational than powerful blows at the imperial system. I believe, despite the bad weather and consequently smaller than anticipated numbers on May Day 2012, we achieved that aim. Through months of hard outreach, especially over the past several weeks as the day approached, we put out much propaganda and information about the events through the various media with which we have access. The message of this May Day, a day without the 99%, got a full hearing by people from the unions, immigrant communities, student milieu and other sectors like the women’s movement and GLBQT community. The connections and contacts made are valuable for our further efforts.

Some participants that spoke to me on May Day (and others who had expressed the same concerns on earlier occasions) believed that we had “bitten off more than we could chew,” by having an all-day series of events. While I am certainly open to hear criticism on the start time of the day’s events (7:00AM does stretch the imagination for night-owlish militants) the idea of several events starting with that early Financial District Block Party and continuing on with the 11:00 AM Anti-Capitalist March which fed into the noontime rally at Boston City Hall Plaza and then switching over to the immigrant community marches and rally capped off that evening by the sober, solemn and visually impression “Death Of Capitalism” funeral procession still seems right to me. Given our task –introducing (really re-introducing) May Day to a wider Boston audience we needed to provide a number of times and events where people could, consciously, contribute to the day’s celebration. Maybe some year our side will be able to call for a one event May Day mass rally (or better a general strike) but that is music for the future.

Needless to say, as occurs almost any time you have many events and a certain need to have them coordinated, there were some problems from technical stuff like mic set-ups to someone forgetting something important, or not showing at the right time, etc. Growing pains. Nevertheless all the scheduled events happened, we had minimum hassles from the police, and a couple of events really stick out as exemplars for future May Days. The Anti-Capitalist March from Copley Square, mainly in a downpour, led by many young militants and which fed into the noontime City Hall rally was spirited and gave me hope that someday (someday soon, I hope) we are going to bring this imperial monster down. The already mentioned funeral procession was an extremely creative (and oft-forgotten by us) alternative way to get our message across outside the “normal” ham-handed, jack-booted political screed.

Finally, a word or two on organization. The Occupy-May Day Coalition personnel base was too small, way too small even for our limited goals. We need outreach early (early next year) to get enough organizer-type people on board to push forward. More broadly on outreach I believe, and partially this was a function of being too small an organizing center, we spent too much time “preaching to the choir”-going to events, talking to people already politically convinced , talking among ourselves rather than get out into the broader political milieu. For next year (which will not be an election year) we really need union and community people (especially people of color) to “smooth” the way for us. We never got that one (although we want more than one ultimately) respected middle-level still militant union official or community organizer that people, working people, listen to and who would listen to us with his or her nod. Radical or bourgeois politics, down at the base, you still need the people that the people listen to. Forward to May Day 2013.

12. Did you or your organization bring any proposals to a General Assembly? How were those proposals received?

As noted the General Strike proposals, in line with the national and international thrust for May Day were well-received, including for money. I would note that during the post-encampment period GA served as more of a “mail drop” and endorsement vehicle similar to the working groups I was involved with. If couched in the right language and sufficiently genetic (read; noncontroversial) most proposals that I was associated with passed with a minimum of friction. The main point though is to trace the political demise of GA from an October “people’s voice” operation to a “rump” in the post encampment period. Its writ did not run very far (and maybe never did except in the political winds). That was highlighted by May Day where the central Occupy struggle event (the Financial District Block Party) fizzled, fizzled badly. As I said back in December “we are generals without an army.” People, including political genius Markin, thought I was crazy when I first said that, but as usual, my political antennae were very sharp.

13. What do you or your organization perceive as the weaknesses of Occupy? Please elaborate.

See most of above. I will just outline here as a summary. Too attached to the camp idea beyond its usefulness. Too caught up in camp details once it became a “homeless shelter” toward the end of October. A studied lack of serious political discussion beyond platitudes. No demands which ordinary people could organize around and fight for. And desperately need to fight for too. Too wedded to the almost politically infantile ideas that formed the movement (mic check, endless GA prattle, absolute consensus, non-representative assemblies, moral blocks). Too many marches and rallies without purpose other than to proclaim 99%-dom. Too wedded to a purely social media concept of revolution in the U.S. and not taking into consideration the differences between here and let’s say, in Egypt. No links, other than formal and those tenuous, to organized labor, blacks, Latinos, working women, non-radicalized students, ordinary working people, hard-pressed suburban home-owners, etc. Unwillingness, incapacity, or even awareness of political timing of the need to shift perspective as the movement fell apart in winter and spring. Too wedded to the “leaderless” leader concept. In short all the problems that one should have expected of a movement that “had” it for a political minute last fall and essentially squandered it. That is a hard thing to swallow for me. Harder still it is not something that can really be addressed (at least for Boston) at this late date.

14. Any campaigns that you/organization have been involved in? (ex. Occupy the T). In what way?

See above.

15. Where do you see the Occupy movement going from here?
As I said above -… “we are generals without an army.” From all appearances of late that looks like the situation for the future as well. I would note that from the declining number of active working groups, smaller size of those groups, and the rather cult-like actions of the remnant of OB GA it is not good. We should have a solemn commemoration for the OWS movement every September 17th- and move on.

Wednesday, April 04, 2012

Thursday, March 22, 2012

From The Archives Of The Socialist Caucus Occupy Boston (SCOB)-International Women’s Day 2012-Remembering the struggles & victories of women workers

Click on the headline to link, via the Socialist Caucus Occupy Boston Facebook page, to the presentation noted in the title.

Markin comment:

Defend the Occupy movement! Hands Off All Occupy Protestors!

From Archives Of The Socialist Caucus Occupy Boston (SCOB)-Protest MBTA Fare Hikes, Service Cuts & Layoffs on March 14

Click on the headline to link, via the Socialist Caucus Occupy Boston Facebook page, to the presentation noted in the title.

Markin comment:

Defend the Occupy movement! Hands Off All Occupy Protestors!

From Archives Of The Socialist Caucus Occupy Boston (SCOB)-Occupy Boston Live- Occupy the T

Click on the headline to link, via the Socialist Caucus Occupy Boston Facebook page, to the presentation noted in the title.

Markin comment:

Defend the Occupy movement! Hands Off All Occupy Protestors!

From Archives Of The Socialist Caucus Occupy Boston (SCOB)-Occupy Boston Live: Veterans for Peace

Click on the headline to link, via the Socialist Caucus Occupy Boston Facebook page, to the presentation noted in the title.

Markin comment:

Defend the Occupy movement! Hands Off All Occupy Protestors!

From Archives Of The Socialist Caucus Occupy Boston (SCOB)-Practicing the Politics of the Impossible

Click on the headline to link, via the Socialist Caucus Occupy Boston Facebook page, to the presentation noted in the title.

Markin comment:

Defend the Occupy movement! Hands Off All Occupy Protestors!

From Archives Of The Socialist Caucus Occupy Boston (SCOB)-Oktoberklub - Resolution of the Communards

Click on the headline to link, via the Socialist Caucus Occupy Boston Facebook page, to the presentation noted in the title.

Markin comment:

Defend the Occupy movement! Hands Off All Occupy Protestors!

From Archives Of The Socialist Caucus Occupy Boston (SCOB)-SPEAK OUT AGAINST LAYOFFS @ HARVARD!!

Click on the headline to link, via the Socialist Caucus Occupy Boston Facebook page, to the presentation noted in the title.

Markin comment:

Defend the Occupy movement! Hands Off All Occupy Protestors!

From Archives Of “Boston Occupier” –Newspaper Of “Occupy Boston” (OB)-Saint Patrick's Peace Parade -March 18, 2012

Click on the headline to link to the Boston Occupier Archives.
Markin comment:

Defend the Occupy movement! Hands Off All Occupy Protestors!

From Archives Of “Boston Occupier” –Newspaper Of “Occupy Boston” (OB)-Issue Number Five-February 2012

Click on the headline to link to the Boston Occupier Archives.
Markin comment:

Defend the Occupy movement! Hands Off All Occupy Protestors!

From Archives Of “Boston Occupier” –Newspaper Of “Occupy Boston” (OB)-Issue Number Four- January 18, 2012

Click on the headline to link to the Boston Occupier Archives.
Markin comment:

Defend the Occupy movement! Hands Off All Occupy Protestors!

From Archives Of “Boston Occupier” –Newspaper Of “Occupy Boston” (OB)-Issue Number Three-December 21, 2011

Click on the headline to link to the Boston Occupier Archives.
Markin comment:

Defend the Occupy movement! Hands Off All Occupy Protestors!

From Archives Of “Boston Occupier” –Newspaper Of “Occupy Boston” (OB)-Issue Number Two- December 5, 2011

Click on the headline to link to the Boston Occupier Archives.
Markin comment:

Defend the Occupy movement! Hands Off All Occupy Protestors!

From Archives Of “Boston Occupier” –Newspaper Of “Occupy Boston” (OB)-Issue Number One-November 18, 2011

Click on the headline to link to the Boston Occupier Archives.
Markin comment:

Defend the Occupy movement! Hands Off All Occupy Protestors!

Tuesday, March 06, 2012

From The Socialist Caucus Occupy Boston (SCOB)-From Occupy to Workers Control Panel: Video 2 of 4

Click on the headline to link, via the Socialist Caucus Occupy Boston Facebook page, to the presentation noted in the title.

Markin comment:

Defend the Occupy movement! Hands Off All Occupy Protestors!

Saturday, February 25, 2012

From The Pages Of "Workers Vanguard"-"No Illusions in Police “Reform”—For Workers Revolution!"-Poltical Lessons For Those In The Occupy Movement Who Are Looking For The Way Forward

Click on the headline to link to the International Communist League website.

Workers Vanguard No. 996
17 February 2012

Spartacist Speaker at Occupy Oakland Forum

No Illusions in Police “Reform”—For Workers Revolution!

OAKLAND—The city administration and Oakland Police Department (OPD), backed by the local bourgeois media, have been on a campaign of arrests, smears and intimidation against Occupy Oakland protesters. Following the arrest of 409 people at a January 28 protest, a dozen activists have been charged with a combination of felonies and misdemeanors. “Stay away” orders bar them from being within 300 yards of City Hall and Frank Ogawa Plaza (renamed Oscar Grant Plaza by protesters in remembrance of the young black worker killed by a BART transit cop in 2009).

At least one activist, a black man known as Truth, has been in jail since his arrest the night of the November 2 mass protest at the Oakland port. Marcel Johnson, a black homeless man better known as Khali who was part of the Occupy Oakland encampment, has been incarcerated since his arrest on December 16 and could face a life sentence under California’s draconian “three strikes” law. Free Truth, Khali and all Occupy protesters! Drop all the charges!

At a February 1 Occupy Oakland press conference, many of those arrested recounted the horrors they experienced after being trapped and rounded up by police the week before. Dozens were crammed into cells designed to hold five people at most. Several were held for 50 hours or more without charges. Many, including people with HIV, were denied their medication. Meanwhile, the media has joined Democratic mayor Jean Quan and the City Council in accusing protesters of “violence,” particularly targeting anarchists. In a menacing move, the San Francisco Chronicle posted on its Web site the names and addresses of several of those arrested on January 28. What really drove the Oakland city administration and local media crazy was that some protesters had burned an American flag they found inside City Hall. Several Occupy Oakland activists have since taken to carrying American flags at demonstrations in an effort to show their patriotic credentials.

A February 7 City Council meeting was convened to vote on a resolution allowing the use of any “lawful” means to prevent future shutdowns at the port and strengthening police enforcement powers against protesters overall. Representatives of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union spoke against the resolution, pointing out that it would be aimed against the union. The resolution, which failed, had been introduced by Councilman Ignacio De La Fuente, who earlier denounced Occupy Oakland for engaging in “domestic terrorism.”

Addressing the City Council meeting, prominent Occupy Oakland activist Barucha Peller stated: “I know you guys used to be progressive. But right now you’re on the wrong side of history” (San Francisco Chronicle, 8 February). The idea that these capitalist politicians could ever represent anything but the interests of the bourgeoisie is a stark expression of how the populist notion of the “99 percent” promotes illusions in American bourgeois democracy and its representatives.

Under the guise of debating “tactics” for “our movement,” the reformist International Socialist Organization (ISO) treacherously denounced the few dozen protesters who went to City Hall late at night on January 28 after braving hours of police tear gas, flash-bang grenades and rubber bullets. Accusing them of “vandalism” and “stupid and inexcusable” actions, the ISO lectured that “this irresponsible and backward behavior handed city officials and the media a perfect weapon to smear the whole movement” (“The Backlash Against Occupy Oakland,” socialistworker.org, 6 February). In fact, the ISO is handing the bourgeois media and politicians more ammunition by echoing the violence-baiting dished out against protesters.

The brutality of the OPD has become so infamous that a federal judge is threatening to put the department under receivership. This stems from a nearly decade-old settlement of the case of the Oakland “Riders”—a gang of cops unleashed on the West Oakland ghetto. The repeated cop attacks against Occupy Oakland activists have brought increased attention to the OPD, which has been ordered to comply with various “reforms.”

When a Citizens Police Review Board meeting originally scheduled for February 9 was “indefinitely postponed,” Occupy Oakland organized its own “forum on police actions,” which was attended by up to 500 people. A video presentation powerfully showed the brutality meted out to protesters since late October, and many individuals spoke at the end of the forum about the violence they regularly face at the hands of the cops, whether as demonstrators or as residents of Oakland’s ghettos. But the political focus of the event, exemplified by the official speakers, including members of the review board, was how best to “reform” the OPD and bring it under “community control.” Police Chief Howard Jordan was even invited to a “Q&A” session (of course, he did not show). We print below the remarks of a Spartacist League comrade during the “public speaking section” at the end of the forum.

*   *   *

I am speaking for the Spartacist League; some of you may have seen our paper, Workers Vanguard. We are here to say that we defend Occupy Oakland protesters against police repression and demand that everyone who’s been arrested be released and that all charges be dropped. Plain and simple, the cops are the enemy. They’re part of the capitalist state, which exists to defend the interests and rule of the bourgeoisie against the workers and the oppressed. And no amount of civilian review boards, community control or federal oversight or takeover is going to change that. All these things are a sham, designed to whitewash the cops while giving the illusion of accountability. They’re designed to clean up their image so the cops can carry out their repression all the more effectively.

The cops that killed Oscar Grant and terrorize the ghettos are part of the same capitalist system that imprisons over two million people, most of them black and Latino, in this country and wages war abroad. And it doesn’t matter whether it’s a Republican or a Democrat in the White House. When Quan was running, you were sold a bill of goods that she was “progressive.” The same bill of goods was sold about Obama. In fact, Obama’s message to black people is racial oppression. His message to immigrants is deportation. His message to working people is union-busting. His message to the population is to shred our rights. And his message to the world is imperialist war. There’s been a lot of hand-wringing about the flag that was burned outside of City Hall. Well, the truth is, from Haiti to the Philippines, Korea, Vietnam, that flag is dripping with the blood of millions of American imperialism’s victims.

Their styles might be different, but the Democrats and the Republicans are capitalist parties and they serve the same capitalist class, and you better remember that when the elections come around and they try to sell you the poison pill of “lesser evilism.” But the “99 percent” populism of Occupy disguises the class nature of the capitalist state and its parties. It is counterposed to the understanding that the fundamental class divide in society is between the working class and the capitalist class. What we need is a workers party to fight for a socialist revolution. What we need is a new ruling class, the workers.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

The Latest From Occupy U/Mass Boston- Defend The Occupation! Hands Off The Occupiers!

Click on the headline to link to the Occupy U/Mass Boston website.

Please sign and share! Tell the administration that the occupation of the ONLY public university in Boston should stay!

Why This Is Important


WE ARE THE 99% at UMass Boston who have seen our fees rise 8% year after year with no end inorder to carry out the 1%’s “Master Plan” for our school. We are the 99% who have had our pay frozen by the administration. We are the 99% who are going to graduate from the only public four-year school in this city with $25,000 in student debt and little prospects. We are the 99% who are tired of watching the privatization of this university. We are the 99% who don’t want our university run by the unelected bureaucrats known as the Board of Trustees. We are tired of the Board of Trustees investing our fees in hidden funds and trusts with no interest in insuring that they do not financially support war profiteers.

We have liberated this space in the campus center from the corporate administrators who control this university. We will no longer recognize their illegitimate authority; we will take the entire university back from the 1% so the 99% can have their university. Non-violent direct action and people power is our weapon against the 1% and it’s plans to corporatize the university.For far too long the 99% have been excluded from the global conversation about the direction of our schools, our neighborhoods, and our world. We are in solidarity with Occupy Wall St., Occupy Boston,Occupy UC Davis, Occupy Berkeley, and all other Occupy movements. We are in solidarity with the student revolt in Chile and those at hundreds of other universities who are holding down a space for the 99% in the conversation about our future. We hope our revolt can bring the 1%’s plan of privatization to a halt. We want the voices of every member of 99% to be heard in creating the 99%’s strategic plan for the university.

Join the conversation:
Twitter – https://twitter.com/OccupyUMB
Youtube – http://www.youtube.com/OccupyUMassBoston
Gmail – OccupyUMB@gmail.com

Tags: OUMB, Occupy UMass Boston,

Friday, January 13, 2012

From "Occupy Quincy"- PROTEST BANK OF AMERICA& MOVE YOUR MONEY DAY SATURDAY JAN. 14th- NOON

BANKS GOT BAILED OUT......WE GOT $OLD OUT!

PROTEST BANK OF AMERICA& MOVE YOUR MONEY DAY SATURDAY JAN. 14™ - NOON

1400 HANCOCK ST. - QUINCY CENTER

STOP HOME FORECLOSURES

BANK OF AMERICA SERVICES OVER 1.1 MILLION HOMES THAT ARE FACING FORECLOSURE AND REFUSES TO MAKE LOAN MODIFICATIONS TO 95% OF THOSE WHO ARE ELIGIBLE.

BANK OF AMERICA IS MAKING OUR NEIGHBORS HOMELESS A\D DESTROYING COMMUNITIES.

STOP CORPORATE GREED

BANK OF AMERICA GOT BAILOUTS AND LOAN GUARANTEES INCLUDING $45 I BILLION IN TARP FUNDS.

THEY USED THIS MONEY TO PAY BONUSES TO THE PEOPLE WHO CAUSED THE MESS, HIRE LOBBYISTS TO OPPOSE; TOUGHER BANK REGULATIONS AND TO FUND ANTI-UNION EFFORTS.

TAX THE RICH

BANK OF AMERICA PAID NO TAXES IN 2009 AND ACTUALLY RECEIVED A NEARLY $2 BILLION TAX BENEFIT FROM THE GOVERNMENT

TWO-THIRDS OF All CORPORATIONS PAY NO FEDERAL INCOME TAX.

GET ORGANIZED

THE OCCUPY MOVEMENT HAS SPARKED A DISCUSSION ABOUT ECONOMIC
IN EQUALITY IN THIS COUNTRY AND GROUPS ARE FORMING IN CITIES AND TOWNS EVERYWHERE TO ORGANIZE THIS MOMENTUM INTO MEANINGFUL CHANGE. GET INVOLVED.

OCCUPYSOUTHSHORE@GMAIL.COM OCCUPYQUINCY.ORG FIND OCCUPY QUINCY & OCCUPY WEYMOUTH ON FACEBOOK