Showing posts with label Occupy the Courts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Occupy the Courts. Show all posts

Monday, January 23, 2012

Occupy the Courts: Bangor

More than 50 people rallied at the Margaret Chase Smith Federal Building in Bangor to mark the second anniversary of the Citizens United decision. Protestors included nine "supreme court judges" in black robes, five of which also sported sashes bedecked with corporate logos.

Occupy groups in Bangor, Ellsworth and Blue Hill organized the event, including Alliance member Starr Gilmartin and AfD vice co-chair Bonnie Preston. Bonnie spoke on the need to eliminate all corporate access to constitutional rights, and the importance of defending the right to pass local rights-based ordinances to claim sovereignty of people over corporations, as has been done in some towns in Maine and New Hampshire to protect water from exploitation by bottlers, and to defend farm-to-table food sales and local farms in five Maine towns last spring.

The keynote speaker was Rob Shetterly, an artist from Brooksville who's painted a series of portraits, Americans Who Tell the Truth. Rob travels all over the country to speak in schools and libraries about his portraits, and picks a small group of paintings, which generally have a unifying theme, to take to each talk. Here's what he said at the rally:

You may know about the huge lion that waddled into the Fat Cats restaurant & sat down & yelled at the waiter, “I’ll take the zebra! Don’t cook it. Bring me the whole thing.” So, the waiter dragged over the zebra carcass & the lion went to work, gnawing, ripping, tearing, & gulping down the muscles and organs, the head, the eyes & ears, the hooves, & finally chewing up & swallowing all the bones. Then the lion, blood dripping still from his jaws, motioned to the waiter. When the waiter came over, the lion belched & said, “Well, if you are what you eat, I must be a zebra now!” And then he laughed so hard at his own joke, he fell off his chair.

This is exactly what has happened to democracy in this country, and the fat cats are still laughing. Capitalism swallowed democracy and claimed that a vanished democracy is capitalism. That capitalism, an exploitative economic system, not democracy, an egalitarian political system, is what guarantees our rights and fulfills our dreams. But it did not have to be that way, and it doesn’t now. As Ashley Sanders, one of the Occupy Movements organizers & theoreticians says, Capitalism is not inevitable. Poverty is not inevitable. In other words, they’re fallible. They can be fought, resisted. In that sense, Occupy is not an occupation, but a giant exercise in decolonization. It’s a battle to oust the false masters of our minds.

Back in the 1930s after an economic boom & bust eerily similar to the cycle we are in now, the great Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis said, “You can have democracy, or you can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of the few. You cannot have both.”

Why is that true? It’s true because great wealth translates into power, the power of control and influence, the power that buys the major media and shapes the message to its benefit making democracy impossible --- a people who aren’t informed of the truth by objective media are incapable of being good citizens. It’s the power that bribes both political parties and creates a system subservient to it; it’s a power in the banking industry and on Wall Street that gambles with people’s money to the benefit of the banks and the detriment of the people. It’s the power to control the history our children are taught, the power to commodify every aspect of our lives including our children’s dreams and imaginations so that all of our sacred contracts we make with the future in order to perpetuate the health of our minds, our bodies, and our communities are exchanged for contracts for profit taking. It’s the power to ensure that there is no real accountability for the crimes of that wealth, the crimes that decimate landscape, eliminate species, promote wars, exploit people and resources and poison the environment, and lastly, it’s the power to write the laws to protect that wealth’s power behind impregnable walls of special interest legal mumbo jumbo.

As Howard Zinn said, The rule of law does not do away with the unequal distribution of wealth and power, but reinforces that inequality with the authority of law. It allocates wealth and poverty in such calculated and indirect ways as to leave the victim bewildered.

It’s the kind of absurd mumbo jumbo that made the stealing of an election legal in 2000, that allows corporations to privatize profit and socialize cost, register in the Cayman Islands & pay no tax, and pervert the Constitution so that they have the rights of full personhood and their money has free speech. Giving a corporation personhood is like having your body invaded by an insidious disease, a disease which replicates and infiltrates every system of your body --- your heart, your brain, your lungs --- and then the disease says to you, You can see how powerful I am, how integrated I am into your well being, I think you better defer to me on all future decisions if you know what’s best. And instead of taking a huge dose of antibiotics, you say, Right, of course, you are a lot stronger and more powerful than I am, I’ll name you my executor right now.

Richard Grossman, who died in November, and worked for many years at the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund, & who understood how dangerous legalized corporate power is, how it annuls democratic rights, said, You want sanity, democracy, community, an intact Earth? We can't get there obeying Constitutional theory and law crafted by slave masters, imperialists, corporate masters, and Nature destroyers. We can't get there kneeling before robed lawyers stockpiling class plunder precedent up their venerable sleeves. So isn't disobedience the challenge of our age? Principled, inventive, escalating disobedience to liberate our souls, to transfigure our work as humans on this Earth.

In 1963, in front of the Lincoln Memorial, Martin Luther King, Jr., defined the American Dream. He didn’t measure that dream in quantities of consumption, or in enemies vanquished. He didn’t tout American entitlement nor defend Manifest Destiny. Dr. King defined the Dream in terms of the “riches of freedom and the security of justice.” You see, the wealthy and powerful would have us today lavish praise on Dr. King, but turn his words inside out, invert them so that our Dream should be the freedom of riches and the justice of security. If you aspire to the freedom of riches, then you also believe that exploitation is necessary. Not everyone can share equally in that freedom. Some are more worthy than others. And you want to instruct your court system to solidify that freedom of riches into law. And if you believe in the justice of security, you believe in fear, that anything that keeps you safe --- more war, more torture, more secrecy, more spying, more fear, more suspicion --- is good. The security of justice keeps you secure because it guarantees the same justice for everyone. The justice of security is the frightened privileged building walls around their huge slice of pie.

What is so important and powerful about the Occupy Movement is that it demands the Dream that Dr. King envisioned. It understands what Thoreau meant when he said, The law will never make men free, it is men who have got to make the law free. The Occupy Movement understands what Frederick Douglass meant when he said, Find out what any people will quietly submit to, and you have found out the exact measure of injustice and wrong that will be imposed on them. We have submitted for so long to corporate domination, to courts promulgating a system of justice appropriate for oligarchy not democracy, that it’s almost embarrassing to have to come into the streets to insist on the basic ideals we thought we all believed in. But it’s the only way. There is the power of wealth, and then there is the power of people. There is the power of the Supreme Court giving unlimited anonymous, free speech to billionaires, and then there is the power of us here today. There is the power of the drone and the ethic of collateral damage, and then there is the power of the recognition of the inestimable value of every life. When the people have the courage to inhabit their own power, they win, always.

Terry Tempest Williams said, The eyes of the future are looking back at us and they are praying for us to see beyond our own time. You in the Occupy Movement are the eyes of the future. You are already looking back from a future we know is the right place to be, the place based in justice and living in harmony with nature. We all learned in biology class about the web of nature, how every species, no matter how big or small, how more or less evolved, is equally and mysteriously important in the health and survival of the entire web. Law is like that, too. It’s impossible to dictate that any powerful institution in a society has only one obligation and that is to make money for its investors. To believe in the rightness of a law like that is to live in the fantasy that acts to do not have consequences, that poison belched into the air only affects poor people, that torture is justified when you do it, and that a child’s primary function is as a profit center for selling food dangerous to her health and as a target for media crippling to her imagination. It’s to live in the fantasy that a corporation, like a giant pathological robot, deserves the same rights as fragile, mortal humans. That’s a fantasy we are here to end. One zebra can’t teach a fat cat that lesson, but hundreds can. One zebra is a martyr, a democracy of zebras can occupy a despoiled land and make it flourish. We are the eyes looking back from the future, we have seen the occupation, and it is good.

Our next step must be to amend the Constitution, to strip corporations of personhood and free speech rights, to make every election a fair, publicly funded election --- no personal or corporate funding, to ensure that every citizen at age 18 is registered automatically to vote, to make election day a holiday, and to return the public airwaves to the public so that all candidates receive equal and free airtime.

That’s good for the first step. The next will be to reintegrate our lives with nature’s laws. That’s the tough one.

Thank you.

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Occupy the Courts: Boston

In Boston, Occupy the Courts inspired more than 200 people to come down to the waterfront and rally at the Joseph J. Moakley Courthouse. After a fife and drum fanfare, they heard from AfD member and Greater Boston Move to Amend affiliate coordinator John Hill, state Representative Cory Atkins, and Pam Wilmot of Common Cause. Rounding out the rally, a skit in which a certain famous monopolist auctioned off free speech, the White House, the 2012 elections and Congress to a bunch of eager corporations until the ignored 99% took charge and put him under citizens arrest.

North Bridge chapter members brought three carloads of demonstrators and volunteers from the greater Concord area, where they were joined by folks from the north and south shores as well as Cape Cod. The rally was co-sponsored by several local organizations including Alliance for Democracy, Clean Water Action of Massachusetts, Coffee Party USA, Common Cause Massachusetts, Community Labor United, Corporate Accountability International, Greater Boston Coffee Party, The LEAH Advocacy Group, Massachusetts Senior Action, MassVOTE, Progressive Democrats of America, and the Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Andover. Occupy Boston stood in solidarity with us, and Operation Woof, the canine contingent of Occupy Boston, also turned out to remind us that if we need to know what human is, we should ask a dog.

Video of the event isn't online, but the local Univision affiliate provided some good coverage here. You can see some pictures of the event here.

After the rally both AfD and Move to Amend supporters participated in a two-day Occupy Boston "Rally and Summit to Unite Citizens for Democracy," featuring panel discussions, trainings and presentations, and a reprise of the auction skit.

We'll be following up with new contacts at a meeting on February 2, at 7 p.m. at the Cambridge YWCA--for more information, please email bostonmta@gmail.com.

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Occupy the Courts: Portland OR

Friday's Occupy the Courts actions hit more than 130 cities, with demonstrations taking place from the steps of the Supreme Court to town greens.

In Portland OR, some 250 people gathered at Pioneer Courthouse Square in the pouring rain and cold to support these two demands in order to restore a democratic nation controlled by We the People, instead of We the Corporations. Alliance for Democracy's Portland, OR, chapter, which was one of the first AfD chapters to start work on building a Move to Amend group in their city, was a major organizer of the event.

AfD co-chair and chapter president David Delk was quoted in this article in the NW Labor Press, and the following people spoke:

Erin Madden, an environmental lawyer in Portland active with Occupy Portland, had this to say:



Raging Grannies kick offs remarks by Adam Klugman, host of "Mad as Hell America" on KPOJ AM 62. For Adam, Citizens United is "a slap in the face of what it means to be human... the miracle of human existence has been reduced in stature to the level of corporations."



Barbara Dudley, the co-founder of the Oregon Working Families Party as well as former head of GreenPeace USA and National Lawyer Guild, also spoke, giving a brief historical background to the decision and corporate hegemony over democracy.



Richard Harisay works with the Democractic Work, lives in Oregon's state capital, Salem, and co-founded Move to Amend Marion/Polk. "We are the people!"



Dr. Atomic's Medicine Show provides the intro to Nate Guley of Common Cause Oregon:


The Oregonian online covered the demonstration here and here , and the Portland Mercury had this to say.

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Monday, January 16, 2012

"A Declaration of Indignation" and a local action for democracy in Pennsylvania

AfD council member emeritus Lou Hammann writes that activists in Gettysburg, PA will be placing the following ad in their local newspaper on January 18 and 21, and will be demonstrating in the Gettysburg town square on the 21st in solidarity with Occupy the Courts.


A DECLARATION OF INDIGNATION

We hold these truths to be 
self-evident:

A corporation is not a person
AND
Money is not speech
Therefore:

We here and now DISAVOW the validity
 of whatsoever authority undertakes to deny 
these self-evident truths!

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Occupy the Courts: Videos to share

Post, tweet and get 'em viral for Friday's Occupy the Courts action and for building the movement.

Jawnzap7 of Occupy Philly demands Reasonable Solutions while providing some good background on Citizens United, political bribery, and how corporations legally masquerade as human beings.



David Swanson will be speaking in Charlottesville, VA, because he's been banned from speaking on Capitol Hill. Here's his take on how how getting rid of "the corporate right to speak by bribing people with money" will help dismantle the military-industrial complex and redirect some federal spending to what the people want.



Lastly, the Coffee Party introduces "Citizens United the Musical," and adds corporate personhood and speech-is-money to the great American song and dance book.

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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

AfD Co-chair on "Occupy the Courts" January 20

AfD co-chair and Portland (OR) president David Delk supports Occupy the Courts on January 20. Be a part of this action. See the Move to Amend website for links to demonstrations in more than 90 cities, as well as talking points, fliers, and info on permitting. Check out the Alliance for Democracy Occupy the Courts page for links to all our organizing material. If you're planning an event, let us know before and after--send notices, pictures, and links to video to afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org.

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Monterey County (CA) AfD holds local Occupy the Courts action

Monterey County Alliance for Democracy will be heading to the San Jose Occupy the Courts event on Friday, January 20, but on Saturday, January 21 they'll be holding a local event starting at 11 a.m. at Windows on the Bay in Monterey. There will be a vigil and street theater in Custom Plaza downtown to protest this disaster for our democracy. Voice your dissent! For info, contact afdmonterey@hotmail.com, and if you want to be part of the street theater, please come to an event prep meeting on 1/16.

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Sunday, January 8, 2012

David Cobb on Move to Amend's Occupy the Court action

Get out and join us! Actions in more than 80 cities at federal district courts--check out MovetoAmend.org.

Help spread the word--repost this video!

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Friday, January 6, 2012

Corporate rule and the environment: Bill McKibben on why you should Occupy the Courts on January 20

In support of the January 20 Occupy the Courts action, here's Bill McKibben on our "money talks" political system, climate change, and the need for environmental activists to be involved in the democracy movement. Get to MovetoAmend.org to find the Occupy the Courts action near you.

Alliance for Democracy is part of the Move to Amend coalition and most AfD chapters are planning or will be involved in Occupy the Courts events. Our local chapter list is here. If you're heading to an action check out material (signs, fliers, bumper stickers) here.

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