38 Studio loan default makes for strange bedfellows


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occupy prov 38As legislative leaders draw criticism for only inviting one perspective to speak today about defaulting on the 38 Studios loan, Occupy Providence, an activist collective, and the Stephen Hopkins Center, a libertarian group, have joined forces to sponsor an event that offers a pretty good diversity of opinion.

WJAR’s Bill Rappleye will moderate a panel debate at the State House today at 2:30. Panelists include Gary Sasse, former executive director of the RIPEC and senior adviser to Governor Don Carcieri, RI Future contributor Tom Sgouros, Bob Cusack a former public finance investment banker, John Chung, a Roger Williams law school professor and Elaine Heebner, for a citizen’s perspective.

Both Occupy Providence and the Hopkins Center oppose repaying the loan. And this isn’t the only example of atypical political allies on this issue: both the Rhode Island Republican Party and the Rhode Island Progressive Democrats don’t want to repay the loan either.

“The key leaders in RI government are showing poor priorities if they bail out Wall Street and keep historically low tax rates for the rich, when we could be stabilizing transit funding and making education more affordable,” said Randall Rose, a longtime leader of the local Occupy movement.

Brian Bishop of the Hopkins Center added that his organization “would prefer lower taxes for everybody, including the rich. But our common ground with Occupy Providence is an objection to cutting the voters out of their constitutional role in approving debt. This sham technique in which the state does not directly borrow the money, but is perceived to be on the hook because of risk to its credit rating and fiscal reputation, must end. Legislators should stand up for taxpayers over Wall Street on this issue.”

But, they still thought it was important to have a robust debate on the issue. “We have specifically invited state leaders who support the bailout to defend their position,” said the press release. “This will fill a need for fair, thoughtful debate on the subject.”

I think this issue is shining a light on a new kind of political division in Rhode Island.

Occupy Prov Protests 38 Studios Bond Payment


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Calling it the “latest example of corporate welfare,” Occupy Providence is advocating that the state not pay the bondholders who helped finance 38 Studios failed relocation to Rhode Island. The group will hold a protest today at the State House to drive this message home as the House Finance Committee debates a bill that would prevent Rhode Island from repaying the non-binding bond.

“Although no taxpayer money has been spent on 38 Studios so far, investors did make a loan of $75 million to the RI Economic Development Corporation (EDC) which was used to finance 38 Studios,” said a press release sent out this morning. “The $75 million loan was guaranteed by a private insurance company, which is obligated to make sure that lenders get paid. Now that 38 Studios is bankrupt and can’t repay the loan, Governor Chafee and other politicians want to use taxpayer money to bail out the wealthy lenders to 38 Studios.”

Not repaying the moral obligation bond (Editor’s note: in the parlance of high finance “moral obligation” means you don’t have to do it!) is an idea that has gained momentum on both the left and the right. It’s still unclear who purchased these bonds and how not paying them would affect the state’s ability to borrow money in the future.

On a recent episode of WPRI’s Newsmakers, Rep. Patty O’Neill said the bonds were purchased by the 1 percent of the 1 percent and the state should consider default as a financial strategy. The General Assembly has been very kind to Wall Street in recent years. It passed a law two years ago that demands bondholders be repaid before other creditors when a local municipality can’t afford its bills.

Governor Chafee and General Treasurer Gina Raimondo, in a rare recent example of agreement, have both advocated for paying the bond owners, even though it is unclear if either knows exactly who purchased the bonds or how default would affect our credit rating.

Raimondo has come under fire recently for protecting a “moral obligation” to Wall street but advocating against a “moral obligation” to public sector retirees.

Occupy Providence Featured In The Sociological Quarterly


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Mike McCarthy leads an Occupy Providence march in 2011. (Photo by Bob Plain)

The Sociological Quarterly has an entire section devoted to the Occupy Movement in its Spring 2013 volume. You can read it for free at the Wiley Online Library.

While the whole section includes articles from the likes of former president of the American Sociological Association Frances Fox Piven and independent journalist Sarah Jaffe, and all of it is very interesting, Rhode Islanders will be more interested in the “Afterwards” part, specifically “Lessons from Occupy Providence” by Robert Wengronowitz. It’s a remarkable piece of transparency and openness you’re unlikely to see… well, from anyone; as former occupier Mike McCarthy tells the tale of how Occupy Providence eventually decamped from Burnside Park in the winter of 2011-2012 and discusses de facto leadership as an issue within a “leaderless” movement.

I’ve written already about my thoughts on the Occupy movement, so I’ll leave those aside and suggest you read some sociological writing.

A Eulogy for #Occupy


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If you’re busy, don’t read much further. Wait until you have a lunch break or are home or something. Because Quinn Norton’s “A Eulogy for #Occupy” is that good.

Contained within is all the hope, the pain, and the ultimate end of the Occupy Movement as we knew it. You find things like this about hostility to media:

…I witnessed people at Occupy Oakland body-tackle and subdue a screaming, running woman. I took a picture.

Three people came over from the tackle and menaced me, a few inches from my face. I stood and stared at them. I told them they should tell me why they tackled her. They just told me to get out or else, and I waited for them to do something to me. While the woman screamed in the background, a very large man took me aside and said that in the recent arrests some protesters’ psych meds were taken away and not returned. He explained that the woman was one of them. The camp had tried to get the meds back from police, but were ignored. They were doing the best they could to take care of the mentally ill as they lapsed back into their diseases.

On the importance of libraries:

The libraries in every camp were treated as sacred, and they were. They were all open and well-stocked with how-to and educational books, political tracts across the spectrum, novels and literature.

They were true libraries, trusting and trusted places. They were well-lit and quiet, kept as warm as possible through the fall and into winter. You could feel in the air how much the people loved the libraries. In Toronto, when the eviction came, they chained themselves around the library. In DC during the eviction, the librarians accepted being locked in for hours without food or water or bathrooms just to protect their library.

On the failure of the General Assembly:

Because the GA had no way to reject force, over time it fell to force. Proposals won by intimidation; bullies carried the day. What began as a way to let people reform and remake themselves had no mechanism for dealing with them when they didn’t. It had no way to deal with parasites and predators. It became a diseased process, pushing out the weak and quiet it had meant to enfranchise until it finally collapsed when nothing was left but predators trying to rip out each other’s throats.

On the inability to critique itself:

There was no critique in Occupy, no accountability. At first it didn’t matter, but as life grew messy and complicated, its absence became terrible. There wasn’t even a way to conceive of critique, as if the language had no words to describe the movement’s faults to itself. There was at times explicit gagging of Occupy’s media teams by the camp GA, to prevent anything that could be used to damage the movement from reaching the wider media. Self-censorship plagued those who weren’t gagged, because everyone was afraid of retaliation. No one talked about the systemic and growing abuses in the camps, or the increasingly poisonous GAs.

On how the police felt:

The police would quietly tell stories of their own to me. Never attributable, never usable in the normal course of journalism. They were the terrible things that go on in dark places in America, the things that hurt them, that turned their assumptions about other people so dark. They talked of picking up the same junkies again and again, of returning beaten girls to their tormentors, powerless to stop the sickening cycle of violence. One told me he’d covered up a disturbing sex crime. I looked at him questioningly, and he explained that the powerlessness of the victim meant the best he could do was let them escape into the night. We were both distressed, but him with a gun, and me with a pen, were both powerless. On TV, police were supposed to have near-magical technology, able to fix all the problems of society in an hour with room for commercial breaks. The media also represented their culture to them as one of torturers: sadistic men doing whatever to get the job done, whether it was via 24 or the news out of Gitmo. In real life, they often felt frustrated and angry. Many, though never all, had forgotten the role of mercy within power.

On where it goes next:

We don’t read about Occupy a lot in the wider media anymore. The pain from within the camps, and even more, the destruction from outside gutted much of the movement we called Occupy Wall Street. But the spirit is still stirring. In dozens of foreclosure defenses across the country, in the Rolling Jubilee, and in the ongoing story of Occupy Sandy, where many of those who had practiced in the parks managed to outperform the infrastructure of disaster. Organizations like FEMA, the National Guard, and the Red Cross failed to help a lot of people in New York in the wake of the hurricane. In many cases, it was the occupiers who got food and clothes to those who needed them, doctors to victims in the field, who comforted the lost, wounded, and broke, just as they always had.

I’m of two minds about Occupy. On one hand, I’ll never forget feeling that its anarchic bureaucracy was just as alienating as any bureaucracy I’ve seen in the corporate or government worlds. The inability to take criticism is especially hard for me, which is what led me to write things like this about the movement. On the other hand, what stung about that alienation was that I was involved in Occupy Providence’s early moments, however cautiously. The questioning of traditional/established institutions that Occupy engaged it, the critiques of power, the reaching out for each other, and the hope for a better world… I sincerely doubt I could’ve written anything like this without Occupy.

The danger of Occupy is that it may have left many bitter at its failures. The victory of Occupy is that those people are devoted to winning success.

One-Year Anniversary for Occupy Providence


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Occupy Providence march on October 15, 2011. (Photo courtesy of WPRO)

It was a year ago today that well more than 1,000 people closed downtown streets with a huge march through the Providence and some of them capped the event by setting up a tent city. And with the band of income inequality activists known as Occupy Providence began its over 100-day stay in Burnside Park.

“It was like riding a wave,” said a post on the group’s Facebook page yesterday. “You think you see a swell like Egypt, the Tarsands or Wisconsin, then OWS rose us up so we paddled like crazy until tomorrow a year ago…We rode it for some months and it played out by rock and coral and such…we were lucky to have been in the water at that time I suppose.”

Those activists will mark the anniversary today with a gathering in Burnside Park today at 11 to remember the good old days.

“Something amazing happened tomorrow – a year ago in Providence,” said a Facebook event page inviting people the honor the anniversary. “We want to celebrate it with a gathering in Burnside aka The People’s Park…drum circles and just a reunion of folks who may have not seen each other in a long time.”

As it did around the country, the Occupy Wall Street movement captivated the attention of Rhode Island for the next several weeks. The local activists remained in the park until the end of January when they negotiated a homeless day center with the city in exchange for leaving the downtown park near Kennedy Plaza. Unlike some of the more high-profile Occupy encampments, the local group and the Capital City had a reputation for working well together.

Days before the local occupation began, the group of activists released this mission statement. Click here for a great story on the march that occurred in downtown Providence a year ago today.

Occupy Activist On All-Night State House Protest


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Photo submitted by Occupy Providence

Here’s a dispatch from Jim Daly, one of the Occupy Providence activists who spent the the night protesting in front of the State House:

On September 16th and 17th Occupy is protesting outside of the State House. Over those two days Occupy Providence is supporting the Chicago Teachers’ Union strike and the anniversary of Occupy Wall Street. We are focusing on how those national issues are reflected locally. We are demanding that the Providence school board be elected and not appointed. We are focusing on how an austerity-driven budget will cause cuts to the Department of Labor and Training that will reduce unemployment claims to online customer claims only. These educational and economic issues are just examples of why the fights in Chicago and New York are national issues.

When we moved in there was a dispute with the state police about whether or not the sidewalk in front of the State House was state or city property. The state police were not going to let us protest overnight.  We decided to stand our ground and stay in front of the State House. After speaking with our lawyer the state police agreed to let us remain outside of the state house. We held working group meetings planning our march which will happen today at 6pm from the State House to the URI building on Washington Street.

About 12 people stayed up until 3am in the morning talking about political issues and singing songs. After about 3am five people stayed outside the State House to protest overnight. We had a new member join us. Jennifer Goldman saw the Providence Journal article on us, found us on Facebook and became part of the overnight occupation. She is an Rhode Island native just coming back from Massachusetts. She was glad that Occupy Providence is still going strong. She felt the night by the State House, under the stars, was beautiful, and she felt safe knowing that law enforcement was congenial and not threatening.

Today’s rally will focus primarily on the Chicago Teachers’ Union strike. Updates are happening throughout today on the status of the strike, and direct action (protest planning) meetings will take place throughout the day leading up to the march which will take place at 6pm today (Monday) We are hoping to see as many people as possible.

Progress Report: Anti-Choice Agenda Fares Well in Primary; Happy Birthday Occupy Movement; Chicago Still on Strike


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Anti-choice crusaders Rhode Island Right to Life was one of the most successful PACs on primary night, reports the ProJo. How DINO is that! On the other hand, Political Scene also gives some love to Planned Parenthood and the public sector unions for having a successful primary.

38 Studios will be the issue local candidates don’t want associated with their name, says Dan McGowan. Don’t forget, Don Carcieri said the only way legislators didn’t know he was considering the new loan guarantee money on Curt Schilling is if they weren’t paying attention to the news.

One year ago today, activists in New York City began the unrewarding but effective process of changing the political debate in America when they set up a protest camp in Zuccotti Park. Say what you will about the Occupy movement but we are talking about income inequality and corporate greed today because of them, issues that are defining the 2012 election.

Here in Rhode Island, Occupy Providence planned to spend the night at the State House to stand in solidarity with the anniversary. In New York, about 250 people marched and an unspecified number of arrests occurred.

But Occupy isn’t the biggest direct action in the nation this September … that honor goes to the Chicago Teachers’ Strike. Last night, the teachers’ rejected a proposal causing Mayor Rahm Emanuel to go to court today to try to force them back to work. Please remember, the two sides aren’t arguing over money – they’ve agreed on compensation – the breakdown is over how much reform Emanuel can embed into their contracts.

Here is Rhode Island, where it’s popular to pretend that people are leaving the state to find a better tax rate, researchers have actually proven a much larger theory: there’s less life on earth than initially thought.

Yesterday I was chided on Twitter for quoting Taegen Goddard as saying Elizabeth Warren is “pulling away” in polls from Scott Brown as they battle for the hotly contested Mass. Senate race. Today, Goddard writes that she is “surging” after going from 5 percentage points behind to 2 ahead. All political analysis aside, Liz Warren is simply more in line with Bay State voters and at the end of the day this will matter most. Just ask Bill Weld.

Occupy Providence Rallies at State House Today


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To mark the both the one-year anniversary of the start of the Occupy Wall Street movement and the continued economic morass here in Rhode Island, Occupy Providence is holding a “round the clock occupation at the State House” starting today.

The Providence Journal covers the action, the one year anniversary and the evolution of Occupy Providence today on its front page.

Here are the details from the activist’s email listserv:

Occupy Providence is holding a round-the-clock occupation at the State House, on the 1-year anniversary of the start of the Occupy movement.

From Sunday September 16th to Monday the 17th, Occupy Providence will protest the damage to Rhode Island’s economy caused by state leaders.  Property taxes on the 99% have been rising, while the 1%’s income taxes are much lower than in the past. State officials hike college tuition, making  it harder for Rhode Islanders to get educated and achieve high-quality employment.

Rhode Island has had a persistently high unemployment rate  for years, but the state government has cut back on the Department of Labor  and Training, making it harder for unemployed people to find jobs. And as government cuts services for the 99%, state leaders continue to waste taxpayer money to benefit well-connected people like Curt Schilling.  State politicians are still promising to use taxpayer money in the future to cover any leftover unpaid debt from Schilling’s 38 Studios, even though  the taxpayer is not legally obligated to cover this unpaid debt to Wall  Street.

Occupy Providence’s occupation this weekend is an effort to strike back against state leaders’ policies, which have damaged the state economy  and will do more damage to Rhode Island unless the 99% win a larger role.

This election season was chosen by Occupy Providence as the time for  the Statehouse occupation, because no matter who wins the fall elections,  our politicians will still damage Rhode Island by favoring the 1%. The
Occupy movement, now celebrating its first anniversary this weekend during the Statehouse protest, is one of many efforts by the 99% to win back a  share in decision-making and restore the people’s voice.

Occupy Providence will also be supporting the teachers of Chicago in  their efforts to fight cuts to education and resist undemocratic  corporate-run charter schools.

The location of the occupation will be on the Smith St. sidewalk in front of the State House.

Schedule:

Sunday September 16th

12pm – Rally in Burnside Park
1pm – Move in march to the State House
2pm – Picket outside the State House. People’s soap box
4pm – Teach-in time
6pm – General Assembly
8pm – Working Groups

Monday September 17th

10am – Wake up
12pm – Working Groups
4pm – Teach-in
6pm – March in solidarity with OWS and the CTU strike.
8pm – People’s soap box, wrap up discussion
10pm – Clean up and leave

Occupy Providence’s main Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/OccupyProvidence

The event page for the Statehouse occupation:
http://www.facebook.com/events/224331451029829/

 

Occupy Providence Returns


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Artemis Moonhawk, left, and two other occupy Providence activists re-attach their banner to the statue of General Burnside. (submitted)

Occupy Providence is back in Burnside Park. But there are a couple of things different about this incarnation of the local 99 Percent movement.

One difference is they aren’t camping this time around. Not yet, anyways. But they have been meeting daily in what activists call the People’s Park for a little over a week now.

And for another, they aren’t getting along as well with Providence police as they did the first time around.

“A police officer shoved me,” said Artemis Moonhawk, who was a strong presence with the first incarnation of Occupy Providence and who has been organizing events and meet-ups throughout the winter, spring and summer in anticipation of the second one.

She said seven activists met in the park Thursday and attached the iconic Occupy Providence banner to a fence. Officers asked them to take it down saying there is a new rule banning signs in Burnside Park. Instead they attached it to some chairs and another officer came by and was a little more aggressive with his request. Moonhawk said he was angry the banner was still up and that she was shoved when she got up to remove it.

“This is the first time we have ever had any problems with the Providence police,” she said. “This opened up a big can of worms.”

Police confiscated the banner, she said. But activists plan to get it back from police tomorrow. They’ve organized a march from Burnside Park to the police station to retrieve it. Police said they could have it back.

There will also be a sidewalk occupation in front of the former home of 38 Studios starting at 2 p.m. on Saturday. Activists plan to meet at Burnside and march to the office building on Empire Street. On Monday, there is a vigil in Roger Williams Memorial Park on South Main Street from noon to 6 p.m. and again on Tuesday from noon to 5.

Across the nation, Occupy groups have been rekindling their protest against corporate greed and income inequality. On September 17, Occupy Wall Street plans a large, sit-in in front of the New York Stock Exchange on the one-year anniversary of the first night of camping in Zuccotti Park.

No Shield Against the Results of Public Speech


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So the other day I received this email shortly after an article I wrote appeared in RI Future (I’ve only edited it due to some sentence breaks:

Sam;

Publishing the contents of the OP discussion list serve on -line with links at RI Future blog is a violation of our safety/security policies.

Of course, anyone is free to criticize OP, publicly or on the list itself, but exposing the discussion list to the public is not acceptable.

Unfortunately, this is seen by OP as a serious infraction.of our rules for the list. We have had to ask members of the press to leave the list for that exact reason – they wouldn’t respect OP confidentially on its’ list..

We’re requesting that you remove yourself from the OP discussion list.

solidarity;

[Name Redacted]

Well, I’m a good sport, so I fired back this:

I’m sorry, I thought Occupy was committed to a higher level of openness and communication; you know, that the 99% should be able to see the 99%’s list. I’m sorry that’s not the case. Go ahead and remove me.

Sincerely,
Sam
Which lead to this reply that I’ve since sat on:
Sam; I hope this is just a misunderstanding. When people post to the OP discussion list, they have to have a certain level of trust that their posts will not be published in the [public] media (certainly not without their prior permission). That’s just common sense. In the past, people have been targeted by the government, employers (lost jobs), and been the subject of harassment for belonging to social protest movements like Occupy. For instance: there’s currently a war on public education, a war on women, and a war on the middle class, designed, engineered and promulgated by both parties – a broad austerity and state security agenda that we’re opposed to. We have teachers, students, and working people in our movement – people who could be targeted and hurt from exposure. In case you haven’t noticed, the US is not really a ‘free’ society anymore. Publishing the contents of emails from the OP list is wrong on so many levels and has nothing to do with any perceived ‘higher openness’. That’s not the same thing as publicly criticizing OP’s tactics or ideas. The right wing does that all the time and we’re perfectly capable of publicly defending our ideas and tactics, but we draw the line at intentionally opening up our people to potential harassment, intimidation, and reprisals. We don’t really want you to leave the list, but do need your promise that you will not publish or publicly expose posts, discussions, threads, etc.from the OP list. If you will make that commitment and agree not to in the future, we’re perfectly happy to have you stay on the list and participate in OP activity. If you feel that you can’t agree to this, then we will have to agree to disagree and you will be removed.
There’s a lot to unpack in that statement. There’s a lot I agree with. I mean, honestly I didn’t need to share this list. As long as I could quote people (even if it’s anonymously) Occupy Providence benefits. The more I can see and read what they’re thinking, the more they benefit. And I’m with the writer on a number of points; austerity is the best example.
But there’s a lot I disagree with here. First, that the United States “is not really a ‘free’ society anymore.” I disagree. That’s a philosophical, personal disagreement, but I think the experience of Occupy sort of proves that. Police have not been hunting down its members. Occupy members have not been disappeared. Certainly, many were infiltrated by police, and the Department of Homeland Security was involved in coordinating crackdowns. But frankly, if police officers are competent, the police already have the names of everyone who ever signed on to Occupy Providence’s email list (enough people were getting those initial emails that it seems impossible to maintain security. Besides which, Occupy Providence ended with a negotiated decampment when the city was within its legal rights to forcibly clear it away.
The other thing is this break from the past and even from the present. This large disconnect about civil disobedience. Occupy often claims to draw inspiration from sources as varied as the Civil Rights Movement or the Arab Spring. But what it reminds me of is Take Back NYU. If you don’t remember it, or haven’t heard about it, here’s the embedded student reporter giving his thoughts after it ended. There’s also a good “7 Errors” post. From the slogans (e.g., “Occupy Everything”) to the tactics, to the organization, TBNYU is far more Occupy’s predecessor than any Arab Spring Revolution or Civil Rights Movement.
In the past, yes, social movements have been subjected to government and private harassment, intimidation, and reprisals. But you know what: they faced those down. Otherwise, this doesn’t happen. Or this. Or this (warning: contains filmed murder). See, a social movement lays down its life in pursuit of a higher goal. In fact, every time an act of intimidation happens, you protest it. If a member is fired due to their political beliefs, you go and protest their workplace and draw attention to it. If government harasses your members, you protest the department harassing them. Or you do something drastic.
You also have to be protesting the right thing. The day after 38 Studios went bankrupt and the state announced a criminal investigation, I went and visited the Occupy table to learn if they meant literal “bailout” or if they meant paying back the loans. A protestor assured me that it was a bailout situation, and that Governor Lincoln Chafee was completely behind a bailout and had indeed wanted to bring 38 Studios to Rhode Island. News, I’m sure, to the Governor, who is on record opposing both the initial deal and any potential bailout. The other “protestor” didn’t know what we were talking about.
It infuriates me. Right now, other Occupy movements are blocking the fraudulent mass foreclosures on people’s homes. American labor is marching and organizing to defend their hard-won rights. There are movements in Canada and Chile protesting in support of education (the Canadian one has really begun to focus on debt). Arab nations are or have been in full-scale civil war over the lack of democracy in their nations. And what was the most recent thing that Occupy Providence did: setup an occupation across the street from a conference of lefty bloggers (although admittedly, they did turn out to protest on behalf of the tax equity bill). I think the really ironic part of the occupation was that though it was aimed at Netroots Nation, they were sleeping next to the Providence Journal‘s building; which is seeking $5 million from the city (Netroots Nation was estimated to bring in $3.5 million to the local economy). If Occupy Providence had turned to face the other direction, they would’ve looked prescient.
If Occupy Providence wants to eject journalists from reading its listserv, alright. Privacy is fine and good. But don’t expect me to sympathize with your members who are protesting social injustice if they don’t understand they’re going to be subjected to that injustice. Every time I write for RI Future, I make a decision; is speaking my mind more important than protecting my ability to be hired or to do a job? I’ve always said “yes, it is.” I’m fortunate enough to have an employer that respects that. But there is no guarantee that in the future I won’t be applying to jobs where the people don’t respect that; where my well-broadcast opinions will become liabilities. I’ve made that decision, and I understand that there is no possibility of going back.
Every time we go out into the public square to protest, we are making a statement: my individual fate is nothing compared to the fate of my friends, family and the society in which I live, and I accept the consequences of these actions. Those who try to mitigate this statement by attempting to shield themselves from the consequences create dying movements. Those who have the integrity to embrace it embrace a better future.

Occupy Prov Plans Sidewalk Protest During Netroots


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Occupy-Providence

Occupy-ProvidenceNetroots Nation won’t be the only progressive group taking Providence by storm this weekend. Occupy Providence, the activists that protested economic inequality by turning Burnside Park into a tent city in 2011, plans to re-occupy the city in honor of Netroots.

Local poet and activist Jared Paul, one of the original organizers of Occupy Providence, said the group plans a four-day, three night occupation of the sidewalks near the Convention Center during Netroots starting Thursday and lasting through Sunday.

“We believe our occupation will show that the voice of the 99 percent is present and active at this political convention,” he said. Besides, he added, the action will make a good alternative to those “who don’t have the money for the registration fee.”

Paul stressed that Occupy isn’t protesting Netroots Nation – while he said some of the high-level political operatives and beltway Democrats involved with Netroots don’t always have the best interest of the 99 percent in mind, he added, “many of the people there are our allies, and we look forward to making more of them our allies.”

Mary Rickles, a spokeswoman for Netroots, said the annual conference is on the side of the Occupy movement in general and Occupy Providence in particular.

“We stand with the 99 percent too and welcome the conversation they want to have,” she said. “We’ve been supportive of the Occupy movement from the get-go. Last fall, we publicly petitioned Mayor Taveras to not evict the protestors from Burnside Park. And, we’ve got a number of Occupy folks on panels during the conference. We look forward to working with them on pushing out the message that our leaders must stand for the 99 percent.”

Netroots has planned several panel discussions on the Occupy movement, such as: Beyond Occupy: What Does a New Economic System Look Like? on Thursday at 10:30 and That Will Never Work: What Progressives Can Learn from OWS, on Friday at 4:30. Here’s a full list of the OWS-related panel discussions at Netroots.

Outside of the convention, Occupy Providence’s Facebook page says there will be, “Rallies, marches, sign and banner making, workshops, teach-ins, poetry, music, general assembly, working groups, chanting, dancing, art-o-lution, radical games, and more!”

Here’s a link to the full schedule of events for Occupy Providence’s sidewalk protest this week.

In a press release sent out today, Occupy Providence detailed its demands for the sidewalk occupation:

  1. No 38 Studios bailout: The 38 Studios debacle illustrates how our local government recklessly gambled on the notion that the “job creators” are the 1% rather than investing in small business development, micro loans, or the expansion of public works projects that helped pull us out of the last Great Depression. Now, to add insult to injury, Rhode Island taxpayers are being asked to bail out this insider deal or face financial blackmail from Wall Street rating companies that were co-conspirators to begin with.
  2. Tax the 1%:  We need proven solutions not gambles. The top marginal tax rate was increased to 63% during the Great Depression and steadily increased, reaching 94% (on all income over $200,000) in the following decades.  OPVD believes tax rate increase for the wealthiest Americans during the Great Depression set a precedent, and that similar measures are now needed to pull us out of the current crisis that is again the product of Wall Street greed.
  3. Solidarity not austerity, locally, nationally and internationally: The third anti-austerity demand reflects the desire of working people around the world that our governments stop punishing the victims of this Grand Theft by Wall Street and instead hold the perpetrators accountable.

RI Progress Report: Netroots Preview, Myth of Union Power, Abortion Politics, 38 Studios and Scott Walker


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Netroots Nation comes to Providence this week … you can expect a ton of coverage from us, both previewing the big progressive networking event and covering all the action on the panels, the keynote speakers, the parties and the protests. The Phoenix put together a great Netroots preview story last week (still on news stands now) and the Projo has a nice piece this morning … this time, though, the august daily does not put scare quotes around the word progressive.

Scott MacKay dispels the myth that organized labor holds outsized sway at the State House writing, “There was a time when labor had outsize clout at the State House. That would have been 1972, not 2012.” MacKay, who knows the State House as well as anyone, rattles off the litany of losses labor has sustained over the past 30 plus years … It’s sad but true: one can literally chart Rhode Island falling further into economic decline as unions grew less influential during that period. As we’ve written before, anyone telling you organized labor runs Rhode Island is either trying to sell you a right-wing point of view, or has already been sold one.

It’s not just labor that doesn’t have juice at the State House … neither does the women’s rights movement. The Projo has a telling tale in Political Scene that suggests Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed may have sent Gov. Chafee’s EDC nominees, which include Pablo Rodriguez, a pro-choice doctor,  to a committee controlled by conservative Senator Michael McCaffrey rather than the Corporations Committee, chaired by progressive Senator Josh Miller.

Seems the new Miss USA, Olivia Culpo of Cranston, has a bit of a progressive (or libertarian_ streak in her … when asked if she thought a transgender woman could be Miss USA, she said, “This is a free country and to each their own.”

Not only is it Netroots week, it’s also Scott Walker recall week … and it’s looking like he might survive. Either way, Netroots will have a post-mortem on it in Providence on Friday.

Ted Nesi links to a piece by The Hill suggesting that progressive Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse might be a contender to run the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.

A primer on Florida’s Stand Your Ground Law.

Jared Paul and Randall Rose, of Occupy Providence, weigh in on the 38 Studios debacle.

Here’s a lot ripe for redevelopment between the State House and North Main Street:

RI Progress Report: Property Taxes, Jason Pleau, URI Contracts, Gemma, the Mob and Occupy Providence


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Here’s a list of the 19 cities and towns that are considering raising taxes in next year’s budget, according to a great article by Dan McGowan, of GoLocal: Bristol, Charlestown, Cumberland, East Greenwich, Hopkinton, Jamestown, Little Compton, Middletown, Narragansett, New Shoreham, Newport, North Kingstown, North Smithfield, Portsmouth, Richmond, Smithfield, Tiverton, Westerly and Woonsocket.

He quotes conservative mayor Dan McKee of Cumberland as putting the blame squarely on the shoulders of former Gov. Don Carcieri: “The former Governor claimed he needed to cut funding to teach cities and towns a lesson,” McKee told McGowan. “His assumptions were not grounded in fact.”

At least if URI professors would have gotten their raises, tuition hikes would pay for something. With salaries now effectively frozen, tuition increases will pay only for the state to not fund state schools. It’s all part of a growing trend to make the University of Rhode Island into the University in Rhode Island.

Almost three months to the day, the Catholic church is closing a day shelter that Occupy Providence won in negotiations with the city in exchange for ending its encampment in Burnside Park. Occupy Providence agreed to leave the park if the city ran a day shelter for the homeless for at least three months.

The question now is whether Gov. Chafee will appeal the Jason Pleau decision to the US Supreme Court. He has 90 days to decide. In the meantime, “it is wrong for the federal government to impose on our state a policy that Rhode Island eliminated more than a century and a half ago,” said Steve Brown of the RI ACLU. “The ACLU and other groups opposed to the death penalty will continue to urge that the federal government drop any plans to proceed with a death penalty case against Pleau, who has already agreed to serve a sentence of life imprisonment without parole.”

Ted Nesi reports that Anthony Gemma will soon be holding a press conference to introduce new staffers … still no word on whether or not Gemma knows what a press conference is or how one is supposed to work.

Don’t tell the local media this, or our shared cultural understanding of this state, but the mafia in Rhode Island is no longer all that influential.

Meanwhile corporate America made a record $824 billion last year as pretty much the rest of the country floundered further into debt.

Congrats to Susan Lusi, the interim superintendent who was just named the permanent head of the Providence school system.

Providence Poised for Annual May Day Holiday


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May Day, it’s the original Labor Day and it’s been celebrated with direct action since the first one in 1886 when more than a quarter million workers across the country went on strike to fight for an eight-hour workday. Tomorrow in Providence, the numbers may well be smaller but the issues are no less important.

“The May Day celebration in Providence will highlight several key issues facing workers today: the ongoing foreclosure crisis plaguing not only Rhode Island, but the nation as a whole; the dismantling of our education system through closings of community schools and firing dedicated teachers; the constant harassment and criminalization of immigrants; the systematic attack on organized labor by corporations; and the senseless cuts to social programs due to harsh austerity measures locally and globally,” according to a press release announcing a march at 3:30 starting at the Dexter Street Training Grounds on the West Side.

Robert Malin, a spokesperson for Occupy Providence put this video together on the local struggle for workers rights:

Locally, there are several events going on:

There will be a march starting at 3:30 at the Dexter Street Training Grounds; Steve Early, a long-time labor activist and author, will be speaking at the Firefighters’ Hall, 90 Printery St., Providence, at 7:30 p.m.; and the Rochambeau Library on Hope Street is hosting a screening of Sergei Eisenstein’s 1925 labor classic “Strike!” projected with 16mm film. “The movie is silent and will be accompanied by LIVE SOUND from Bevin Kelley aka BLEVIN BLECTUM,” according to a press release.

Here’s the press release on the march:

On May 1, 2012, working class women and men will march in Providence to celebrate May Day, or International Worker’s Day. The march will commence at 3:30pm at the Dexter Training Ground between Cranston and Westminster Streets and continue throughout the city, stopping at locations that symbolize the struggles of working class people in Rhode Island and around the world. The May Day event is organized by a coalition of youth, labor, and other local community and faith- based organizations.

The May Day celebration in Providence will highlight several key issues facing workers today: the ongoing foreclosure crisis plaguing not only Rhode Island, but the nation as a whole; the dismantling of our education system through closings of community schools and firing dedicated teachers; the constant harassment and criminalization of immigrants; the systematic attack on organized labor by corporations; and the senseless cuts to social programs due to harsh austerity measures locally and globally.

May Day organizers in Rhode Island and throughout the country are calling for “A Day without the 99%,” asking people to take time during the day to show solidarity and participate in a May Day event. The march and subsequent celebration at Dexter Training Ground will feature speakers and performers. People of all walks of life will march to recognize the sacrifices that working people have made in the past, and to celebrate the hope for a better future through the struggles of today.

“Working people need this May 1st holiday more than ever — for both inspiration and solidarity.” says Mary Kay Harris, Direct Action for Rights and Equality lead organizer and May Day event organizer.

“May Day is a day for workers, a day to remind the banks and corporations that they are nothing without their workers. It is time for them to stop enriching themselves and their shareholders at the expense of workers.” states Martha Yager of the American Friends Service Committee, and May Day organizer.

Occupy Sexism Action Fights ‘Rape Culture’


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Rape culture, says the Women’s Center at Marshall University, is when “sexual violence against women is normalized and excused in the media and popular culture. [It] is perpetuated through the use of misogynistic language, the objectification of women’s bodies, and the glamorization of sexual violence.”

Sound a bit too familiar? Join Occupy Providence and the Rhode Island Anti-Sexism League for their Occupy Sexism event today for “a rally at City Hall Park at noon, and continue with a march ending at the Sarah Doyle Women’s Center at 26 Benevolent Street at 2 PM.,” according to a press release.

Here’s more:

April 22nd is Occupy Sexism: a day of action in an effort to continue the dialogue around rape culture. Inspired by the International Slutwalk events of 2011, Occupy Sexism carries the conversation one step further to address the pervasive discrimination and violence faced by women, and by persons of every gender on a daily basis. Occupy Sexism is sponsored by the Rhode Island Anti-Sexism League and co-sponsored by the Providence Branch of the International Socialist Organization, and Occupy Providence.

Please join us for a rally, speakers, and workshops that aim to bring awareness to, and discuss ways to fight back against, attacks on women and the LGBT community, reproductive rights, rape culture, sexual assault in the military, sexism in the Occupy movement, sex workers, and more. These issues directly affect your family, your friends, your neighbors and you every day. Come get educated and empowered to fight back against sexism!

 

Martin Luther King Would Have Occupied PVD Today


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In honor of the 44th anniversary of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Occupy Providence will hold a rally today “to carry on the great work of this fallen leader who was cut down in his prime for nothing less than his commitment to a fair and just world for all humanity ,” according to a press release from the group.

The rally will be from 4 to 6 pm today on the steps of Providence City Hall.

According to the release:

“At a time when the majority of Americans realize the injustice and corruption of the current system, it is important to commemorate this legendary organizer who spearheaded our last powerful social movement to stand up to the 1% and their system of social, economic and civil injustice with a unity rally- both as a tribute and as an organizing event. Speakers will address the pressing needs for change that we have today in the areas that MLK fought so hard for- Freedom and Equality, Jobs and Human Needs, Peace and Solidarity.  Pressing Civil Rights issues like the murder of Trayvon Martin and attacks on the 99% that are working people whose services, jobs and rights to organize are under attack and the call for a new system based on non-violent conflict resolution and peaceful co-existence all need to be urgently changed.”

The group put together this video to promote the action:

Occupy PVD to protest Pfizer, ALEC today


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An Occupy Providence protester at an action against Pfizer in Groton Conn. (photo courtesy Occupy Providence)

Occupy Providence crosses state lines today for a protest at a Pfizer facility in Groton, Conn. The action is being endorsed by several Occupy groups from Connecticut and Massachusetts, and will include “protest, street theater, puppetry, teach-ins, speakers, music, food, and more,” according to a press release sent this morning.

“Pfizer feels it is their right to control our government with money, have their interests held above the interests of the people,” according to the press release. “Now it is our time to show them we want our cities, our state, and our country back. Plans are being made to show Pfizer we are no longer silent, and refuse to allow their horrors to continue any longer.”

The protest is part of a national day of action designed to target corporations that are involved with ALEC, the American Legislative Exchange Council. Funded by companies like Pfizer, Exxon Mobil and Koch Industries, ALEC writes and then, through local supporters, advocates for legislation at the state level.

“It is no coincidence that so many state legislatures have spent the last year taking the same destructive actions: making it harder for minorities and other groups that support Democrats to vote, obstructing health care reform, weakening environmental regulations and breaking the spines of public- and private-sector unions,” according to a New York Times editorial earlier this month. “All of these efforts are being backed — in some cases, orchestrated — by a little-known conservative organization financed by millions of corporate dollars.”

The Times wrote that ALEC “had been involved with” writing a bill in Virginia that would “require voters to show a form of identification.” A similar bill passed in Rhode Island last legislative session and its sponsor, Rep Jon Brien, D-Woonsocket, has been identified as one of two state chairmen of ALEC in Rhode Island by SourceWatch.org.

“ALEC that has modeled hideous anti-consumer protection laws, anti-democracy voter suppression laws and even disinformation programs about global warming,” according to the Occupy Providence press release. “We call on people to target corporations that are part of the American Legislative Exchange Council which is a prime example of the way corporations buy off legislators and craft legislation that serves the interests of corporations and not people.”

Occupy Providence and the Right’s Selective Support of the 1st Amendment

Occupy-ProvidenceOccupy Providence has the fringe-right all in a tizzy over an incident in which condoms were dropped on a anti-choice rally at the State House, spawning not one but two diaries calling for criminal charges to protect the religious right from the inconvenience of being confronted with opposing views. Here’s Justin nearly hyperventilating over a list of “possible charges” and the need to criminalize exercising one’s First Amendment rights:

11-45-1 Disorderly conduct. — (a) A person commits disorderly conduct if he or she intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly: … (1) Engages in fighting or threatening, or in violent or tumultuous behavior; … (3) Directs at another person in a public place offensive words which are likely to provoke a violent reaction on the part of the average person so addressed; … (5) Engages in conduct which obstructs or interferes physically with a lawful meeting, procession, or gathering

Clearly, there’s room to suggest that throwing objects during a political assault on such a gathering as the pro-life rally is illegal… unless, of course, the judiciary has effectively nullified these sections of the law or the AG’s office just wants pesky right-leaning bloggers to go away like the mainstream reporters do.

Among the other grievances was a “hair assault” on Rep. Costa. We can only hope the Representative gets the counseling she so desperately needs after her ordeal.

What’s funny is how different the fringe right views these protests depending on whether or not they agree with the sentiment. Who can forget the “disorderly conduct” of the religious right this past holiday season, who interrupted a children’s concert to protest it not being Christian enough. But don’t bother looking over at that other blog for the calls to have those folks arrested. Those laws only apply if they disagree with you.


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