The Occupy Wall Street protest movement began in New York City’s Zuccotti Park in September of 2011. The movement has grown and spread throughout the country. On their website, they describe the movement as a non-violent fight, “against the corrosive power of major banks and multinational corporations over the democratic process, and the role of Wall Street in creating an economic collapse that has caused the greatest recession in generations.”
This library guide was created as an informational tool on the continuing movement. We decided to include mostly material that contains frequently updated aggregated media updates. While we would like to offer you the best information available, we cannot claim that some of these are not free of bias so please peruse the following information with a critical eye. If you feel an important resource may have been overlooked, please let us know and we will consider adding it to the list.
From the Movement
Occupy Wall Street: Frequently updated webpage
We Are the 99%: Photos and descriptions from those supporting the movement
Common Dreams: Occupy USA Coverage: News, video and twitter updates as they occur
Related Groups
Occupy Together: Aggregates Occupy Wall Street events and other events in solidarity with the movement
Occupy Global: Unifying vision for Occupy movements
Interoccupation Communication: Enables communication among Occupy movements
Beginners Guide Video from Bristol, UK: Occupy movement in the UK
Local Group Sites
Occupy Baltimore
Occupy D.C.
News Outlets
New York Times: Topic page updated with the latest developments and linking to other New York Times content
DNAinfo.com: Manhattan Local News: Local New York news outlet
Salon: Topic page updated with the latest stories
News Articles in Academic Search & MasterFILE: TU Community –Login to view News articles through the databases
Images
Associated Press: Photographs of the Occupy Movement: TU Community –Login to view News articles through the databases
Flickr: More photographs from the Occupy Movement
Charts, Graphs & Statistics
Occupy Wall Street Overview: An Infographic
Who is Occupy Wall Street?: An Inforgraphic
Occupy Design: Building a Visual Language for the 99 Percent: Grassroots project connecting designers with on-the-ground demonstrators in the Occupy Together movement
Wealth, Income, and Power in the U.S.: An Infographic
Wealth & Income Inequality: From Mother Jones
Social Media
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube –OccupyTVNY
Miscellaneous Items
Gallup Poll on Occupy Wall Street from October 18, 2011: U.S. opinion of Occupy Wall Street
EPI (Economic Policy Institute) Report on Occupy Wall Street from October 26, 2011
Pew Research Center on Occupy Wall Street from October 19, 2011
Internet Archive: Occupy Wall Street: Collection of media about Occupy Wall Street and related movements
Podcast: What is Occupy Wall Street?: From NPR
Ways to Teach about OCW: From the New York Times blog
Inequality.org: Portal for data, analysis, and commentary on wealth and income disparity from the Institute for Policy Studies
Opposing View Points
The Heritage Foundation: The Conservative’s Guide to the Occupy Wall Street Protests: Research and educational institution for conservative public policies
We Are the 53%: Photos and descriptions from those against the movement
Townhall.com: Conservative news, politics, opinion, breaking news analysis, and commentary.
"Progressive" is not an iconic moniker for a sectarian perspective, "Progressive" is the continuity of the Universe to move from crude toward subtle, a momentum innate in and substantially exalted through the sublimity of human evolution.
This is Progressive Utilization, for flourishing the wellbeing and happiness of all, in every realm of life. Explore this magnanimous paradigm through the dedicated postings below and the menu and links to your right.
Showing posts with label Occupy Movement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Occupy Movement. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Voices of the Occupation: What they'll take away
On Tuesday, in the hours before Occupy L.A. was ejected from the grounds of City Hall, Margot Roosevelt photographed participants and interviewed them about what had brought them to the protest and what message they hoped people would take away from it. Their statements have been edited for length.
Allen Lasley, 26
Anaheim HillsMy mother was a single parent for me and my sister. When I was young, she was going to college and working two jobs — at McDonald's and at a dry cleaners. She still had to steal food. I was 4 years old when I realized something was seriously wrong.
Every experience I've had since then has been struggling to survive. I went into the Marine Corps when I was 17. I did two tours in Iraq. I came back realizing how messed up this country is, how we fight unjust wars for political assets.
In my head, as a kid, I thought if you work hard, you can achieve the American dream. I'd worked my entire life. But now I spend 12 hours a day filling out applications. I go to the unemployment office. My resume is on Monster.com. I've never been called to an interview. Not one time. I've lived at homeless shelters even though I get some military benefits.
I came to be a part of changing humanity for the better. When I first came down here I stayed up all night. I wanted to see what kind of people were here. The most intelligent people I ever met reside here. Everybody has the same story of getting screwed over by the government. Many veterans have gone through what I have and can't find work. That is the No. 1 thing for most people. There are just no jobs. I came here and these people gave me hope for humanity I had never felt before.
What people should take away is that we the people are the powers that be.
I believe power should be used to create equality. We want a level playing field. We don't want a small percentage of people to control everything going on around us.
Matt Wegner, 53
Lake Arrowhead
I was foreclosed on. That is partly why I'm here. I'll never own again. I refused to renew my [real estate] broker's license after seeing people foreclosed on and pushed into the street. I can no longer ethically practice real estate.
I've been wearing this sign on my back: “Greed is a Disease.” It is a sickness. It is destroying the lives of people. What is the opposite? Generosity. We have to stop taking and start giving. That is the mind shift I am trying to bring to the world.
I was hoping Villaraigosa would be the first mayor to say, “We are on your side,” rather than sending police to say, “Oh, we are going to evict you.” You can't evict an idea. You can't handcuff the truth.
Allen Lasley, 26
Anaheim HillsMy mother was a single parent for me and my sister. When I was young, she was going to college and working two jobs — at McDonald's and at a dry cleaners. She still had to steal food. I was 4 years old when I realized something was seriously wrong.
Every experience I've had since then has been struggling to survive. I went into the Marine Corps when I was 17. I did two tours in Iraq. I came back realizing how messed up this country is, how we fight unjust wars for political assets.
In my head, as a kid, I thought if you work hard, you can achieve the American dream. I'd worked my entire life. But now I spend 12 hours a day filling out applications. I go to the unemployment office. My resume is on Monster.com. I've never been called to an interview. Not one time. I've lived at homeless shelters even though I get some military benefits.
I came to be a part of changing humanity for the better. When I first came down here I stayed up all night. I wanted to see what kind of people were here. The most intelligent people I ever met reside here. Everybody has the same story of getting screwed over by the government. Many veterans have gone through what I have and can't find work. That is the No. 1 thing for most people. There are just no jobs. I came here and these people gave me hope for humanity I had never felt before.
What people should take away is that we the people are the powers that be.
I believe power should be used to create equality. We want a level playing field. We don't want a small percentage of people to control everything going on around us.
Matt Wegner, 53
Lake Arrowhead
I was foreclosed on. That is partly why I'm here. I'll never own again. I refused to renew my [real estate] broker's license after seeing people foreclosed on and pushed into the street. I can no longer ethically practice real estate.
I've been wearing this sign on my back: “Greed is a Disease.” It is a sickness. It is destroying the lives of people. What is the opposite? Generosity. We have to stop taking and start giving. That is the mind shift I am trying to bring to the world.
I was hoping Villaraigosa would be the first mayor to say, “We are on your side,” rather than sending police to say, “Oh, we are going to evict you.” You can't evict an idea. You can't handcuff the truth.
Kern Masser, 18
Originally from Bakersfield, but then moved to his sister's place in Eureka
A lot of things are wrong. I tried to get a job after high school and no one would hire me because I had never had a job before. It is an endless cycle. I applied for 20 jobs in six months. I can't go to school because there's no way I could pay for the tuition. I'd like to learn. I like gardening but don't know how to do it.
But change can happen. People are trying to fight the 1%. People will look back at how bad things are now and say, “I'm glad we did that.”
Originally from Bakersfield, but then moved to his sister's place in Eureka
A lot of things are wrong. I tried to get a job after high school and no one would hire me because I had never had a job before. It is an endless cycle. I applied for 20 jobs in six months. I can't go to school because there's no way I could pay for the tuition. I'd like to learn. I like gardening but don't know how to do it.
But change can happen. People are trying to fight the 1%. People will look back at how bad things are now and say, “I'm glad we did that.”
San Diego
What made me join [Occupy L.A.] was to find a place where I could have a conversation about social, political and economic injustice in this country. Our system favors the 1%. That is not sustainable for the citizens of the U.S. It's good to know you have other people that feel the same way.
I worked at HSBC [Bank] in the accounting department for three years. They let us go because they needed to outsource the jobs. So how do I pay my bills? I'm not going to wait until I'm homeless on the streets to fight for change.
Government power is an illusion. We placed them there. We can always take it away from them. Occupy is trying to figure out how. I'm a Republican — but a radical Republican. I don't like high taxes, but if you pay taxes, you want to know it is going to the betterment of people. You want to know it is going toward things like health insurance. I don't have health insurance. It is too expensive.
Joseph Thomas, 50
Los Angeles
I was raised political. My mother adored Robert Kennedy. My father hated Richard Nixon. We talked about politics over dinner. My parents made clear to me: If you take social justice seriously, you have to be political. I'm here because I see our world is being broken. My generation has a responsibility to do something about it. I'd like to think even if I were living in a mansion in Bel-Air, I would come here.
The message? It's that politics matters. It is not peripheral. If you want to build a better world, you have to engage in the political process. We need to build a kinder, gentler world. I'd like to see a change in U.S. foreign policy. The U.S. has a dismal record in supporting brutal people across the globe. I'd like to see the Occupy movement be a force for democracy and social change.
Vivian Ortiz, 19
Grand Junction, Colo., attending photography school in North Hollywood
After I came here to school and went into debt, I found out my school is unaccredited. It is part of a corporate chain. They were good at making themselves seem like a legitimate school. But now I'm stuck.
A lot of people say, “The economy sucks, and I'm not going to do anything about it.” I'm here to hopefully make a change. I want to have a more stable future than what I'm having right now. I want people to look back on [Occupy L.A] with a positive light. Everyone came with their own issues. But the major thing is that something is wrong with society. People want their voices to be heard. Me personally? I want to get a proper education and not be in debt forever because of it.
Carina Clemente, 24
Inglewood
I went to Cal State Long Beach. I graduated with a major in psychology and theater. I was laid off a year ago. I've been trying to find work since then. I've spent five or six hours a day filling out applications and looking for work. But I only got contract jobs teaching theater classes and doing temp administration work.
I came out of curiosity. I didn't have an initial plan. The first day there were different focus groups. We came up with the idea of the People's Collective University. We held classes around political, social and economic justice, sustainability and community needs. We are making plans to expand into neighborhoods. The idea is to provide an alternative education model. We are focusing on the ideas of Paulo Freire, the Brazilian educator. He came up with a “popular education” based on mutual respect and using the personal experiences of students.
My experience through the collective university is that we have knowledge to share and can educate each other. We don't have to rely on the repressive education system. We can build together. We had classes on nonviolent direct training, on working-class unity, on healthcare inequality, on ending racism and white privilege, on addressing the role of patriarchy. Just having honest discussions, people were able to get a different perspective. People got a chance to understand each other.
One message is, we have the power to provide for ourselves. We are intelligent and capable enough to do so, regardless of formal institutional education.
Gabriel Marantz, 25
Venice
I came as a response to corporate greed and social, political and economic injustice. It is time for us to restore our democracy and have real representation for reasonable taxation. This movement gives a sense of hope in our ability to make change. Going to the ballot box is not enough. Until we change and reform the corruption of the political system at its core, we can't have a government that represents us. By volunteering [in the campaigns of Barack Obama and Dennis Kucinich], I was [able to] have an effect in getting someone elected, but getting one elected official into office is not enough. We are not a true democracy anymore. The disparity in wealth is saddening. To do nothing is just not an option for my soul.
We should abolish private financing in all federal elections and get rid of perks and gifts to politicians. We need a constitutional amendment that says corporations are not people and money is not free speech. I want a lot of things, [including] serious electoral reform. [We should] abolish the electoral college. Elections should be on national holidays so everyone can get there without restrictions. [We need to] make government more representative.
Rachel Bulisky, 29
Recent transplant to Los Angeles from New Jersey
I have an accessory line, http://www.trashriot.com/. I do necklaces. But I haven't made anything lately because I'm homeless. I have a BA in fine arts from Montclair State in New Jersey. Now I'm $20,000 in debt and I'm on the street. I majored in artistic welding. But you need electricity and a blowtorch. So now I do wire wrapping in my tent. I used to sell in Venice, [but the store] got shut down.
I was on a bus. I saw all these tents. I got off to see what was going on. Someone asked if I needed a place, and gave me a tent. At the same time, these people were protesting all the things I hate. The government is totally messed up. Everybody here can agree on one thing: Things are not right. There are a lot of frustrated people and nowhere to go with that. There's a lot of energy. It's not like we all say the same thing. It is a meeting ground and a shelter where we can all throw around ideas.
There have been a lot of beautiful moments. It's been a meeting place of brilliant minds. At least in one place, we're trying to work it out. I learned how to crochet here. We started a crochet circle. We were making handbags out of scraps of materials. It was a lot of fun.
J.D. Mcconnell, 33
Recently moved to Las Vegas from Los Angeles
I came to get money out of politics. We have a system of legalized bribery and political puppeteering. Before, I was not feeling like I had a political voice. This is the first time I've felt like I had a voice. If you get enough people together, you really can be heard.
What made me join [Occupy L.A.] was to find a place where I could have a conversation about social, political and economic injustice in this country. Our system favors the 1%. That is not sustainable for the citizens of the U.S. It's good to know you have other people that feel the same way.
I worked at HSBC [Bank] in the accounting department for three years. They let us go because they needed to outsource the jobs. So how do I pay my bills? I'm not going to wait until I'm homeless on the streets to fight for change.
Government power is an illusion. We placed them there. We can always take it away from them. Occupy is trying to figure out how. I'm a Republican — but a radical Republican. I don't like high taxes, but if you pay taxes, you want to know it is going to the betterment of people. You want to know it is going toward things like health insurance. I don't have health insurance. It is too expensive.
Joseph Thomas, 50
Los Angeles
I was raised political. My mother adored Robert Kennedy. My father hated Richard Nixon. We talked about politics over dinner. My parents made clear to me: If you take social justice seriously, you have to be political. I'm here because I see our world is being broken. My generation has a responsibility to do something about it. I'd like to think even if I were living in a mansion in Bel-Air, I would come here.
The message? It's that politics matters. It is not peripheral. If you want to build a better world, you have to engage in the political process. We need to build a kinder, gentler world. I'd like to see a change in U.S. foreign policy. The U.S. has a dismal record in supporting brutal people across the globe. I'd like to see the Occupy movement be a force for democracy and social change.
Vivian Ortiz, 19
Grand Junction, Colo., attending photography school in North Hollywood
After I came here to school and went into debt, I found out my school is unaccredited. It is part of a corporate chain. They were good at making themselves seem like a legitimate school. But now I'm stuck.
A lot of people say, “The economy sucks, and I'm not going to do anything about it.” I'm here to hopefully make a change. I want to have a more stable future than what I'm having right now. I want people to look back on [Occupy L.A] with a positive light. Everyone came with their own issues. But the major thing is that something is wrong with society. People want their voices to be heard. Me personally? I want to get a proper education and not be in debt forever because of it.
Carina Clemente, 24
Inglewood
I went to Cal State Long Beach. I graduated with a major in psychology and theater. I was laid off a year ago. I've been trying to find work since then. I've spent five or six hours a day filling out applications and looking for work. But I only got contract jobs teaching theater classes and doing temp administration work.
I came out of curiosity. I didn't have an initial plan. The first day there were different focus groups. We came up with the idea of the People's Collective University. We held classes around political, social and economic justice, sustainability and community needs. We are making plans to expand into neighborhoods. The idea is to provide an alternative education model. We are focusing on the ideas of Paulo Freire, the Brazilian educator. He came up with a “popular education” based on mutual respect and using the personal experiences of students.
My experience through the collective university is that we have knowledge to share and can educate each other. We don't have to rely on the repressive education system. We can build together. We had classes on nonviolent direct training, on working-class unity, on healthcare inequality, on ending racism and white privilege, on addressing the role of patriarchy. Just having honest discussions, people were able to get a different perspective. People got a chance to understand each other.
One message is, we have the power to provide for ourselves. We are intelligent and capable enough to do so, regardless of formal institutional education.
Gabriel Marantz, 25
Venice
I came as a response to corporate greed and social, political and economic injustice. It is time for us to restore our democracy and have real representation for reasonable taxation. This movement gives a sense of hope in our ability to make change. Going to the ballot box is not enough. Until we change and reform the corruption of the political system at its core, we can't have a government that represents us. By volunteering [in the campaigns of Barack Obama and Dennis Kucinich], I was [able to] have an effect in getting someone elected, but getting one elected official into office is not enough. We are not a true democracy anymore. The disparity in wealth is saddening. To do nothing is just not an option for my soul.
We should abolish private financing in all federal elections and get rid of perks and gifts to politicians. We need a constitutional amendment that says corporations are not people and money is not free speech. I want a lot of things, [including] serious electoral reform. [We should] abolish the electoral college. Elections should be on national holidays so everyone can get there without restrictions. [We need to] make government more representative.
Rachel Bulisky, 29
Recent transplant to Los Angeles from New Jersey
I have an accessory line, http://www.trashriot.com/. I do necklaces. But I haven't made anything lately because I'm homeless. I have a BA in fine arts from Montclair State in New Jersey. Now I'm $20,000 in debt and I'm on the street. I majored in artistic welding. But you need electricity and a blowtorch. So now I do wire wrapping in my tent. I used to sell in Venice, [but the store] got shut down.
I was on a bus. I saw all these tents. I got off to see what was going on. Someone asked if I needed a place, and gave me a tent. At the same time, these people were protesting all the things I hate. The government is totally messed up. Everybody here can agree on one thing: Things are not right. There are a lot of frustrated people and nowhere to go with that. There's a lot of energy. It's not like we all say the same thing. It is a meeting ground and a shelter where we can all throw around ideas.
There have been a lot of beautiful moments. It's been a meeting place of brilliant minds. At least in one place, we're trying to work it out. I learned how to crochet here. We started a crochet circle. We were making handbags out of scraps of materials. It was a lot of fun.
J.D. Mcconnell, 33
Recently moved to Las Vegas from Los Angeles
I came to get money out of politics. We have a system of legalized bribery and political puppeteering. Before, I was not feeling like I had a political voice. This is the first time I've felt like I had a voice. If you get enough people together, you really can be heard.
Allan Eaton, 33
Ontario
The key issue is our economic and financial situation. It is important that we do the most we can to bring attention to it, so future generations won't see the noose getting tighter and tighter around their necks. It seems like a class war. The wealth has been unequally distributed and too many people are losing their homes. Too many are homeless. Too many veterans are coming home from war and not getting the treatment they need.
I gave up a job [to join Occupy L.A.]. I found an occupation. Separating myself from my work life, social life, home life, I see more of who I am. I have separated myself from everything I know. Sometimes it is weird. I'm used to getting up and going to work. Seeing the spectators. Having a social life, going to hear music, bands. Getting beers with friends. Shooting billiards. All those things are of so little significance. This is more important for the future of this country.
The message is economic justice. That is it.
Ontario
The key issue is our economic and financial situation. It is important that we do the most we can to bring attention to it, so future generations won't see the noose getting tighter and tighter around their necks. It seems like a class war. The wealth has been unequally distributed and too many people are losing their homes. Too many are homeless. Too many veterans are coming home from war and not getting the treatment they need.
I gave up a job [to join Occupy L.A.]. I found an occupation. Separating myself from my work life, social life, home life, I see more of who I am. I have separated myself from everything I know. Sometimes it is weird. I'm used to getting up and going to work. Seeing the spectators. Having a social life, going to hear music, bands. Getting beers with friends. Shooting billiards. All those things are of so little significance. This is more important for the future of this country.
The message is economic justice. That is it.
Sunday, November 13, 2011
The New Progressive Movement
By JEFFREY D. SACHS
November 12, 2011
OCCUPY WALL STREET and its allied movements around the country are more than a walk in the park. They are most likely the start of a new era in America. Historians have noted that American politics moves in long swings. We are at the end of the 30-year Reagan era, a period that has culminated in soaring income for the top 1 percent and crushing unemployment or income stagnation for much of the rest. The overarching challenge of the coming years is to restore prosperity and power for the 99 percent.
Thirty years ago, a newly elected Ronald Reagan made a fateful judgment: “Government is not the solution to our problem. Government is the problem.” Taxes for the rich were slashed, as were outlays on public services and investments as a share of national income. Only the military and a few big transfer programs like Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and veterans’ benefits were exempted from the squeeze.
Reagan’s was a fateful misdiagnosis. He completely overlooked the real issue — the rise of global competition in the information age — and fought a bogeyman, the government. Decades on, America pays the price of that misdiagnosis, with a nation singularly unprepared to face the global economic, energy and environmental challenges of our time.
Washington still channels Reaganomics. The federal budget for nonsecurity discretionary outlays — categories like highways and rail, education, job training, research and development, the judiciary, NASA, environmental protection, energy, the I.R.S. and more — was cut from more than 5 percent of gross domestic product at the end of the 1970s to around half of that today. With the budget caps enacted in the August agreement, domestic discretionary spending would decline to less than 2 percent of G.D.P. by the end of the decade, according to the White House. Government would die by fiscal asphyxiation.
Both parties have joined in crippling the government in response to the demands of their wealthy campaign contributors, who above all else insist on keeping low tax rates on capital gains, top incomes, estates and corporate profits. Corporate taxes as a share of national income are at the lowest levels in recent history. Rich households take home the greatest share of income since the Great Depression. Twice before in American history, powerful corporate interests dominated Washington and brought America to a state of unacceptable inequality, instability and corruption. Both times a social and political movement arose to restore democracy and shared prosperity.
The first age of inequality was the Gilded Age at the end of the 19th century, an era quite like today, when both political parties served the interests of the corporate robber barons. The progressive movement arose after the financial crisis of 1893. In the following decades Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson came to power, and the movement pushed through a remarkable era of reform: trust busting, federal income taxation, fair labor standards, the direct election of senators and women’s suffrage.
The second gilded age was the Roaring Twenties. The pro-business administrations of Harding, Coolidge and Hoover once again opened up the floodgates of corruption and financial excess, this time culminating in the Great Depression. And once again the pendulum swung. F.D.R.’s New Deal marked the start of several decades of reduced income inequality, strong trade unions, steep top tax rates and strict financial regulation. After 1981, Reagan began to dismantle each of these core features of the New Deal.
Following our recent financial calamity, a third progressive era is likely to be in the making. This one should aim for three things. The first is a revival of crucial public services, especially education, training, public investment and environmental protection. The second is the end of a climate of impunity that encouraged nearly every Wall Street firm to commit financial fraud. The third is to re-establish the supremacy of people votes over dollar votes in Washington.
None of this will be easy. Vested interests are deeply entrenched, even as Wall Street titans are jailed and their firms pay megafines for fraud. The progressive era took 20 years to correct abuses of the Gilded Age. The New Deal struggled for a decade to overcome the Great Depression, and the expansion of economic justice lasted through the 1960s. The new wave of reform is but a few months old.
The young people in Zuccotti Park and more than 1,000 cities have started America on a path to renewal. The movement, still in its first days, will have to expand in several strategic ways. Activists are needed among shareholders, consumers and students to hold corporations and politicians to account. Shareholders, for example, should pressure companies to get out of politics. Consumers should take their money and purchasing power away from companies that confuse business and political power. The whole range of other actions — shareholder and consumer activism, policy formulation, and running of candidates — will not happen in the park.
The new movement also needs to build a public policy platform. The American people have it absolutely right on the three main points of a new agenda. To put it simply: tax the rich, end the wars and restore honest and effective government for all.
Finally, the new progressive era will need a fresh and gutsy generation of candidates to seek election victories not through wealthy campaign financiers but through free social media. A new generation of politicians will prove that they can win on YouTube, Twitter, Facebook and blog sites, rather than with corporate-financed TV ads. By lowering the cost of political campaigning, the free social media can liberate Washington from the current state of endemic corruption. And the candidates that turn down large campaign checks, political action committees, Super PACs and bundlers will be well positioned to call out their opponents who are on the corporate take.
Those who think that the cold weather will end the protests should think again. A new generation of leaders is just getting started. The new progressive age has begun.
Jeffrey D. Sachs is the director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University and the author, most recently, of “The Price of Civilization: Reawakening American Virtue and Prosperity.”
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)