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Shut Down the Corporations! Occupy Groups Target ALEC
Over 70 cities are participating today in a national day of action called by Occupy Portland to "Shut Down the Corporations." The group calls for non-violent direct action 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."
The group explains the action on its website:
Occupy Portland calls for a national day of non-violent direct action to reclaim our voices and challenge our society’s obsession with profit and greed by shutting down the corporations. We are rejecting a society that does not allow us control of our future. We will reclaim our ability to shape our world in a democratic, cooperative, just and sustainable direction.
We call on the Occupy Movement and everyone seeking freedom and justice to join us in this day of action.
There has been a theft by the 1% of our democratic ability to shape and form the society in which we live and our society is steered toward the destructive pursuit of consumption, profit and greed at the expense of all else.
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. They used it to create the anti-labor legislation in Wisconsin and the racist bill SB 1070 in Arizona among so many others. They use ALEC to spread these corporate laws around the country.
In doing this we begin to recreate our democracy. In doing this we begin to create a society that is organized to meet human needs and sustain life.
On February 29th, we will reclaim our future from the 1%. We will shut down the corporations and recreate our democracy.
Protestors post foreclosures signs on a #WellsFargo bank. Bank rep runs outside to tear them down. #F29
— Occupy Congress (@Re_Occupy) February 29, 2012
Sara Jerving further explains ALEC on the Center for Media & Democracy:
ALEC is best described as a “bill mill” for corporate special interest legislation. Through ALEC, corporations vote behind closed doors with state legislators on changes to the law they desire that often directly benefit their bottom line. Along with right-wing legislators from across the country, corporations are given “a voice and a vote” on “model” bills to change the law in almost every area affecting people’s rights. Corporations sit on all nine ALEC task forces. They fund almost all of ALEC’s operations. They have their own corporate governing board. They vote as equals with legislators to pre-approve legislation. Participating politicians then bring these bills home and introduce them in statehouses across the land as their own brilliant ideas and important public policy innovations—without disclosing their origins in ALEC. ALEC boasts that it has over 1,000 bills introduced by legislative members every year, with one in every five of them enacted into law. ALEC describes itself as a “unique,” “unparalleled” and “unmatched” organization. It is as if a state legislature had been reconstituted, yet corporations had pushed the people out the door. This is not what democracy is supposed to look like.
Today, we are here to shut down #ALEC - the American Legislative Exchange Council. #OWS #F29 #ShutDownTheCorporations
— Occupy Wall Street (@OccupyWallStNYC) February 29, 2012
David Moberg looks at Occupy Portland's plan to target Verizon in In These Times:
In Portland, as part of the day of actions, Jobs With Justice (JWJ) is targeting Verizon, which is an ALEC board member. The company currently is demanding concessions from its unionized land-line employees in the eastern half of the country and is fighting the organization of mobile telephone workers, including those in Portland.
Meanwhile, it pushes for government subsidies and tax breaks and promotes legislation harmful to workers and consumers, says Madelyn Elder, a Communications Workers of America local president and board member of JWJ. ALEC has slowly been building a presence, but Democratic control of the Senate has constrained its influence, says Common Cause Oregon executive director Janice Thompson.
Their planned protest "is about the 1 percent being greedier than ever while the 99 percent suffer unemployment, underemployment and cutbacks," Elder says. "It's all of the same piece. Labor sees that. And Occupy is the best thing that ever happened to labor."
Dear @monsantoco: today is just the first time #occupyaustin is paying you a visit. Take this as a warning. Expect us. #oatx #f29
— OccupyAustin (@OccupyAustin) February 29, 2012
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Show AllThough responsible (with Lynn Margulis) for the brilliant Gaia theory others have developed into a useful and revolutionary science, recently he has been putting out as much nonsense as Freeman Dyson. No one can predict the future; he is not an active scientist or one who has any serious contact with the data being used to generate various ranges of projections, and should not be listened to on this subject.
No one knows when we will pass the point of no return. Certainly great suffering is unavoidable at this point, and we know that for certain because great suffering is already going on as a result of climate change. 27 million climate refugees, 150,000 dead a year, and this data is a few years outdated. But fast and great action on renewables, combined with reforestation and organic permaculture could not only stop emissions but sequester carbon already in the atmosphere the only way we know it can be done, the way Gaia has been doing it since before the Carboniferous Period.
As for Occupy, lighten up. First you stand up, then you walk.
The reality that many US citizens will not face is that the longer action is delayed the greater the hunger and death. They presently discuss it politely, occupy parks in tents or wear funny hats while bearing wisecracks in front of the cameras.
Laughable really, being the real reason why the US is not great in that the citizens cannot see greatness, for greatness is founded on generosity, not selfishness.
Like its grasping sibling Israel, the place has to go; an eventuality that can now be seen, for a corporatocracy is not a country.