You are browsing the archive for Useful Links.

Avatar of Yeshua

by Yeshua

General Assembly 3.17.2012 + Discussion Theme + Upcoming Events

03/17/2012 in Anti-Oppression, Direct Action WG, Education & Empowerment WG, Facilitation WG, Media / Press, Next GA location & agenda, Solidarity Actions!, Trainings & Skill Shares, Useful Links

…apologies for the length of this message… there is a lot to announce! 

REMINDER: Occupy Central VT’s General Assembly is this Saturday 3/17 from 3-5PM at the Kellogg-Hubbard Library (Hayes Room, upstairs) in Montpelier. This week is an alternating “Discussion Theme” week, so the first hour will be discussion followed by a short 1-hour GA.

This week’s discussion: Higher Education and Rising Student Debt
As a follow-up to the Goddard conference, we’ll discuss the cause of rising education costs, impact of growing student debt, and the social purpose of higher education. Background materials are available on the blog: http://www.occupycentralvt.org/2012/03/14/discussion-topic-for-318-higher-education-and-rising-student-debt/

Agenda for 3/17 GA:
* Introduction
* Working Group Reports Back
* Goddard Report Out, Statewide General Assembly Debrief/Discussion, and Next Steps (see proposals below) ***
* Working Group Proposals/Feedback
* Direct Action WG: Incubator of DA’s
* Facilitation WG: Proposal Process – define our decision-making process
* Announcements/New WG Formations
* Soap Box

*** NOTE: We welcome you to read the minutes from the First Statewide General Assembly: http://www.occupycentralvt.org/2012/03/15/310-first-statewide-ga-notes/

At the Statewide GA at Goddard College, three proposals were introduced and agreed upon provisionally, with the understanding that these proposals would go back to the local GA for discussion, clarification, amendments, and consensus.

————–
UPCOMING EVENTS!!!
OCVT has been very busy, and hasn’t had a chance to announce several upcoming events, but please take note and mark your calendars!
Retirement Party for Vermont Yankee
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21 from 5-6PM at the Statehouse, Room 10, Montpelier
following the weekly action at the Statehouse from 4-5PM
Entergy Your TIme is UP! 
THURSDAY, MARCH 22 from 11AM-6PM at the Brattleboro Town Common and March to Entergy Headquarters
SPECIAL TEACH-IN: Strategies & Tactics (with the VT Workers’ Center)
SATURDAY, MARCH 24 from 1-3PM at City Hall, Council Chambers, in Montpelier
TEACH-IN: Capitalism: Change from Within & Without (part 2 of economic series)
SUNDAY, MARCH 25 from 7-9PM at the Unitarian Universalist Church, 130 Main Street in Montpelier
TEACH-IN: A Sacred Economy with Charles Eisenstein
SATURDAY, MARCH 30 from 1-3PM at the Trinity Methodist Church, 137 Main Street, Montpelier
99% Spring Trainings
SATURDAY, APRIL 14 from 12-3PM via VT Interactive Television (12 Statewide Locations)

OCVT Discussion Theme 2/18: Diversity of Tactics

02/12/2012 in Education & Empowerment WG, Useful Links

REMINDER: On Saturday 2/18, the OCVT-GA will start with a 1-hour Discussion at 3PM, followed by a 1-hour General Assembly at 4PM.

The THEME for discussion is “Diversity of Tactics within Occupy” (non-violence, black bloc tactics, etc.). Members of the Education & Empowerment Working Group will present the topic, followed by a briefly synthesized overview of NVDA (non-violent direct action) and Black Bloc (a tactic that has raised controversy within Occupy), then we’ll open up stack for Full Group Discussion.

Background information and links to articles of interest are listed below, for those that want to do a little (or a lot) of reading prior to the discussion…

———————–

BACKGROUND – DIVERSITY OF TACTICS (excerpts from: http://www.ohlj.ca/archive/articles/41_23_Conway.pdf)

In the name of creativity, resistance, and democracy, many antiglobalization activists advocate “respect for diversity of tactics” as a nonnegotiable basis of unity. Solidarity with the full range of resistance has meant that no tactics are ruled out in advance and that activists refrain from publicly criticizing tactics with which they disagree. However, embracing diversity of tactics is not without ambiguity and risk: both strategically in terms of provoking repression and losing public support, but also in terms of democratic practice and culture within the movement itself where it may damage any prospect for broad coalition politics. …

Respect for diversity of tactics as an ethical framework presupposes the existence of “affinity groups” as the unit of organization and democratic decision making. … The decisive feature of respect for diversity of tactics is an ethic of respect for, and acceptance of, the tactical choices of other activists. …

Respect for diversity of tactics is a code that is both strategic and ethical. Many proponents are themselves implicitly or explicitly non-violent. Respect for diversity of tactics does not necessarily imply engaging in or even agreeing with the full range of tactics; rather, it holds that everyone has the right and the responsibility to identify their own thresholds of legitimate protest and to make their own political, strategical, and ethical choices, while also allowing others to do so free from public criticism or censure.

More info on Diversity of Tactics: http://wagingnonviolence.org/2011/10/what-diversity-of-tactics-really-means-for-occupy-wall-street/

—————-

ARTICLES AND RESOURCES OF INTEREST:

The Cancer in Occupy, by Chris Hedges: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the_cancer_of_occupy_20120206/

To Be Fair, He Is a Journalist: A Short Response to Chris Hedges on the Black Bloc, by Don Gato: http://www.revolutionbythebook.akpress.org/to-be-fair-he-is-a-journalist-a-short-response-to-chris-hedges-on-the-black-bloc/

Concerning the Violent Peace-Police: An Open Letter to Chris Hedges, by David Graeber: http://nplusonemag.com/concerning-the-violent-peace-police

Debating Tactics: Remember to ask, “What works?”:  http://woborders.wordpress.com/2012/02/13/debating-tactics-remember-to-ask-what-works/

Activists and Anarchists Speak for Themselves at Occupy Oakland, by Susie Cagle: http://www.truth-out.org/occupy-oakland/1328726021

Occupy Wall Street’s Commitment to Nonviolence, by Nathan Schneider: http://wagingnonviolence.org/2011/11/occupy-wall-streets-commitment-to-nonviolence/

Against Hedges on the Black Bloc: http://pink-scare.blogspot.com/2012/02/against-hedges-on-black-bloc.html

Interview With Chris Hedges About Black Bloc, by J.A. Myerson: http://www.truth-out.org/interview-chris-hedges-about-black-bloc/1328799148

Occupy Chicago Adopts the “Chicago Principals” of Non-Violence: (video) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aYP_Str434Q&feature=youtu.be

How Non-Violence Protects the State, by Peter Gelderloos: http://zinelibrary.info/files/How%20Nonviolence%20Protects%20The%20State.pdf

Cleveland OH City Council passes resolution supporting the Occupy movement.

12/08/2011 in Uncategorized, Useful Links

http://www.myfoxal.com/story/16194998/city-council-occupy-cleveland-resolution

Attached is the text of the Cleveland City Council’s resolution of support. Cleveland-City-Council-Occupy-Movement-RESOLUTION

Avatar of Jeremy

by Jeremy

A Petition to Support the Saving American Democracy Amendment

12/08/2011 in Useful Links

Sen. Bernie Sanders has proposed a constitutional amendment that would overturn the Supreme Court decision in a case called Citizens United vs. FEC.

The Saving American Democracy Amendment states that:

  • Corporations are not persons with constitutional rights equal to real people.
  • Corporations are subject to regulation by the people.
  • Corporations may not make campaign contributions.
  • Congress and states have the power to regulate campaign finances.

Please sign the petition here.

Avatar of Jeremy

by Jeremy

GA Week in Review Links (11/26/2011)

11/26/2011 in Media / Press, Useful Links

From OWS:
“OWS calls for national day of action on Dec 6th on the foreclosure crisis”
“Occupy the Highway group arrived in DC this week.  Super-committee fail= OWS win.”

Fox News:
“‘Occupy’-Inspired Campaign Urges Boycott of Black Friday”
“Weapons Cache Found During Zuccotti Park Cleanup, Sources Say”
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/11/23/weapons-cache-found-during-zuccotti-park-clean-up-sources/

New York Magazine:
“U.S. Cities Have Spent $13 Million on Occupy Wall Street So Far”
http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2011/11/occupy-wall-street-cost-13-million-so-far.html
“Pepper Spray Officers at UC Davis Put on Leave; University Launches 90-Day Investigation”
http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2011/11/uc-davis-pepper-spray-officers-katehi-protests.html

CBS News:
“‘Mic check’: Occupy protesters interrupt Obama”
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-57329652-503544/mic-check-occupy-protesters-interrupt-obama/

CNN:
“Will Occupy follow tea party’s path?”
http://www.cnn.com/2011/11/21/opinion/zelizer-occupy-future/index.html

Huffington Post:
“We Are the 99% Aims too Low”
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/25/opinion/we-are-the-99-9.html
“Occupy Y’all Street: OWS Movement Takes Shape in Gainesville”
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/23/occupy-gainesville_n_1110084.html

Useful link: Occupy Winning

11/17/2011 in Useful Links

http://occupywinning.com/

This site has some good information on organizing and outreach for Occupy groups.

Burlington Occupation camp lock out video

11/12/2011 in Burlington Occupation, Useful Links

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-EvaX7zIF6s

We talked about this in out GA today, here is a link to a short video that documents the unfolding of events that lead to the Occupy Burlington group being invited into City Hall and then locked out of the park while in there. We were joined by a member of the Burlington group today and had an interesting discussion of what happened within the group during the unfolding. Look for more information in the GA notes which will be posted soon.

AN OPEN LETTER TO THE CITIZENS OF OAKLAND FROM THE OAKLAND POLICE OFFICERS’ ASSOCIATION

11/10/2011 in Useful Links

Discussion from Oakland….food for thought.

http://www.opoa.org/uncategorized/an-open-letter-to-the-citizens-of-oakland-from-the-oakland-police-officers%E2%80%99-association/

1 November 2011 – Oakland, Ca.

We represent the 645 police officers who work hard every day to protect the citizens of Oakland. We, too, are the 99% fighting for better working conditions, fair treatment and the ability to provide a living for our children and families. We are severely understaffed with many City beats remaining unprotected by police during the day and evening hours.

As your police officers, we are confused.

On Tuesday, October 25th, we were ordered by Mayor Quan to clear out the encampments at Frank Ogawa Plaza and to keep protesters out of the Plaza. We performed the job that the Mayor’s Administration asked us to do, being fully aware that past protests in Oakland have resulted in rioting, violence and destruction of property.

Then, on Wednesday, October 26th, the Mayor allowed protesters back in – to camp out at the very place they were evacuated from the day before.

To add to the confusion, the Administration issued a memo on Friday, October 28th to all City workers in support of the “Stop Work” strike scheduled for Wednesday, giving all employees, except for police officers, permission to take the day off.

That’s hundreds of City workers encouraged to take off work to participate in the protest against “the establishment.” But aren’t the Mayor and her Administration part of the establishment they are paying City employees to protest? Is it the City’s intention to have City employees on both sides of a skirmish line?

It is all very confusing to us.

Meanwhile, a message has been sent to all police officers: Everyone, including those who have the day off, must show up for work on Wednesday. This is also being paid for by Oakland taxpayers. Last week’s events alone cost Oakland taxpayers over $1 million.

The Mayor and her Administration are beefing up police presence for Wednesday’s work strike they are encouraging and even “staffing,” spending hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars for additional police presence – at a time when the Mayor is also asking Oakland residents to vote on an $80 parcel tax to bail out the City’s failing finances.

All of these mixed messages are confusing.

We love Oakland and just want to do our jobs to protect Oakland residents. We respectfully ask the citizens of Oakland to join us in demanding that our City officials, including Mayor Quan, make sound decisions and take responsibility for these decisions. Oakland is struggling – we need real leaders NOW who will step up and lead – not send mixed messages. Thank you for listening.

Interesting blog from Public Assets Inst. re: wellness/wealth indicators

11/08/2011 in Useful Links

http://publicassets.org/blog/measuring-will-help-the-state-manage-2/

Measuring will help the state manage

Recently released Census data are both a wake-up call and a gift for the Shumlin administration and the Legislature.

A wake-up call because the statistics show that middle-income Vermonters are earning less and more of them are slipping into poverty—evidence that things are moving in the wrong direction for Vermonters. Our political leaders need to turn this around through the priorities they set—starting with tax and budget policies—that will shape Vermont’s future.

A gift because the Census data provide the beginnings of a performance measurement system that Vermont desperately needs to rebuild.

Challenges for Change, last year’s efficiency improvement program, held out the promise of better, more effective government at less cost. The effort unraveled, however, when people realized the plan was simply a way to cut the budget. Another problem emerged, though, in the course of trying institute Challenges for Change: the budget cuts in recent years had diminished the state’s capacity to evaluate its own performance. In the effort to reduce the size of government, the state lost many of the data collection and analysis staff and, consequently, its capability to look at how well it serves Vermonters.

Home » Measuring will help the state manage
Measuring will help the state manage

Recently released Census data are both a wake-up call and a gift for the Shumlin administration and the Legislature.

A wake-up call because the statistics show that middle-income Vermonters are earning less and more of them are slipping into poverty—evidence that things are moving in the wrong direction for Vermonters. Our political leaders need to turn this around through the priorities they set—starting with tax and budget policies—that will shape Vermont’s future.

A gift because the Census data provide the beginnings of a performance measurement system that Vermont desperately needs to rebuild.

Challenges for Change, last year’s efficiency improvement program, held out the promise of better, more effective government at less cost. The effort unraveled, however, when people realized the plan was simply a way to cut the budget. Another problem emerged, though, in the course of trying institute Challenges for Change: the budget cuts in recent years had diminished the state’s capacity to evaluate its own performance. In the effort to reduce the size of government, the state lost many of the data collection and analysis staff and, consequently, its capability to look at how well it serves Vermonters.

Until five years ago, we were assessing government effectiveness by measuring—and publicizing—how Vermonters were faring. In the early 1990s, then-Human Services Secretary Con Hogan came up with the novel idea of gauging the performance of the agency not by the size of its caseloads, but by the well-being of Vermont’s citizens. The agency starting tracking indicators like graduation rates and school drop-out rates, college and early education enrollments, teen pregnancies, drug and alcohol abuse, poverty, health care coverage, and much more.

The last Vermont Well-Being report was published in 2006. We need to resurrect that report and develop similar indicators for other agencies and departments of state government. The mission of the Department of Economic Development is “to enhance Vermonters’ quality of life through expanded economic opportunity.” So we all can see how well it’s fulfilling it mission, that department ought to develop quality-of-life measures that it can post on its website. One indicator might be real (inflation-adjusted) median household income, which is readily available from the U.S. Census Bureau.[1] Unfortunately, that would show less than a 4 percent increase over the entire 20 years from 1990 to 2010—hardly enough to enhance the typical Vermonter’s quality of life.

Governor Shumlin has vowed to rebuild Vermont’s middle class. Societies are healthier when economic prosperity is broadly shared, so the governor is focused on the right goal. And he has a big task ahead. Income inequality has been growing here. Vermont’s top 1 percent received about 6 percent of the state’s total income in the mid-1970s. By 2005, its share had tripled, to more than 19 percent, which left less for everybody else. Vermonters deserve to know how the governor plans to reverse this trend, and the governor’s website should provide data people can look at to judge his progress.

No one wants to waste tax dollars, so we shouldn’t be afraid to eliminate public programs or services that are ineffective. By the same token, we need to provide adequate resources—both money and personnel—for those efforts that make Vermont the state we want to live in.

Let’s define that Vermont, design a plan to get there, and start measuring our progress.