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For the past several weeks, clusters of citizens have been protesting the opportunistically named "fiscal cliff" budget cut talks. Even though the "fiscal cliff" is really more of a fiscal curb or fiscal slope, conservative lawmakers have seized upon the media-generated panic surrounding the doomsday January 1 cutoff date as an excuse to inflict further cuts and steer the conversation away from ending tax breaks for the one percent.
For the past several weeks, clusters of citizens have been protesting the opportunistically named "fiscal cliff" budget cut talks. Even though the "fiscal cliff" is really more of a fiscal curb or fiscal slope, conservative lawmakers have seized upon the media-generated panic surrounding the doomsday January 1 cutoff date as an excuse to inflict further cuts and steer the conversation away from ending tax breaks for the one percent.
The push back from citizens began when activists from ACT UP protested the possible inclusion of cuts to AIDS funding during the negotiations. Activists arranged a table and chairs outside Senator John Kerry's home in Boston as part of a mock Thanksgiving meal during which they put pill bottles on plates instead of food, saying they want Kerry to fight to fully fund AIDS programs during the negotiations.
The following week, three AIDS activists from Vocal-NY were arrested after they stripped naked in the outer office of House Speaker John Boehner.

"We wanted to strip away the rhetoric of the fiscal cliff," the director, Sean Barry, told The Washington Post, adding that the cuts could leave tens of thousands without the ability to treat their disease.
In Tennessee, protesters say they are preparing to gather in downtown Jackson in order to support the Obama administration's request to put pressure on Republicans.
"He asked us to be behind him, the same message that got him elected. He needs supporters," said resident Alma Jones to an ABC affiliate.
The federal budget fight also has a local component for Tennessee residents, who have been watching their own state government wage a budget battle in the Capitol. Residents have written hundreds of letters to Congress, demanding a bill that extends tax cuts for the middle class and raises taxes on households that make more than $250,000 a year.
Anne Nesse, a former Democrate candidate for Idaho's Senate District 4, delivered a letter to Senator Mike Crapo's office as part of a nationwide move pushed by MoveOn.org to oppose the GOP's effort to extend the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy and cut Social Security (which does not contribute to the deficit), Medicare and Medicaid.
Nesse wrote:
By a ratio of roughly 9 to 1: voters of all income levels here do not believe in "trickle down economics". Voters here understand that unless the wealthy are actually creating jobs at which citizens can make a livable wage, that giving a tax cut to this group does NOT help our economy, or help to pay off our federal deficit that we owe primarily to ourselves in entitlements like medicare and social security.
In Maryland, activists protested Congressman Andy Harris.
"Andy Harris has never done a vote for the Eastern Shore," said Carl Widell, regional leader for Organizing For America Eastern Shore. "He's never done a vote for the Chesapeake Bay. He's never done a vote for the middle class. He doesn't live here, he doesn't understand us [and] he doesn't really represent us very well."
Harris' office responded with the tired "raising taxes on the wealthy stifles job creation" soundbite. Corporations have been enjoying tax breaks and exploiting tax loopholes for decades, and they're still outsourcing labor and shutting down factories to ship operations overseas, so clearly tax cuts aren't inspiring them to keep hiring American.
Protesters in Wisconsin lined the sidewalk outside Congressman Sean Duffy's office last week in response to looming cuts. Wisconsin Action's press release stated their action was meant to "send a clear message: put the middle class ahead of millionaires and end tax breaks for the top 2 percent."
"I'm here today and I've been coming to Duffy since he got elected," said protester Joel Lewis to WEAU. "I'm very concerned about the disparity of wealth in our country and I think a lot of the GOP's policies have led to that over time."
Duffy's spokesman John Gentzel responded that the congressman has always supported "limiting deductions especially for higher income earned," but "the Democrats have to put real, immediate spending cuts on the table, too."
Over the weekend in New York, activists from labor, community, student and faith organisations called on the US House members to end tax cuts for the rich.
"We want a clear statement from US Representative Michael Grimm," the Strong Economy For All Coalition, one of the groups involved in the protest, stated on its website. "Will you stand up for regular New Yorkers who need help? Or do you stand with the millionaires and billionaires?"
The Hill asked a "source close to the White House" if Obama will anger his base by compromising on "entitlements" and the source responded, "So what? He will do what's best for the country, period. He did that with healthcare. He'll do it again here."
Group in Peoria, Illinois hangs a "fiscal cliff" protest banner over a highway:
Find out more about the CEOs lobbying for austerity cuts, while asking for a lower corporate tax rate.
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
For the past several weeks, clusters of citizens have been protesting the opportunistically named "fiscal cliff" budget cut talks. Even though the "fiscal cliff" is really more of a fiscal curb or fiscal slope, conservative lawmakers have seized upon the media-generated panic surrounding the doomsday January 1 cutoff date as an excuse to inflict further cuts and steer the conversation away from ending tax breaks for the one percent.
The push back from citizens began when activists from ACT UP protested the possible inclusion of cuts to AIDS funding during the negotiations. Activists arranged a table and chairs outside Senator John Kerry's home in Boston as part of a mock Thanksgiving meal during which they put pill bottles on plates instead of food, saying they want Kerry to fight to fully fund AIDS programs during the negotiations.
The following week, three AIDS activists from Vocal-NY were arrested after they stripped naked in the outer office of House Speaker John Boehner.

"We wanted to strip away the rhetoric of the fiscal cliff," the director, Sean Barry, told The Washington Post, adding that the cuts could leave tens of thousands without the ability to treat their disease.
In Tennessee, protesters say they are preparing to gather in downtown Jackson in order to support the Obama administration's request to put pressure on Republicans.
"He asked us to be behind him, the same message that got him elected. He needs supporters," said resident Alma Jones to an ABC affiliate.
The federal budget fight also has a local component for Tennessee residents, who have been watching their own state government wage a budget battle in the Capitol. Residents have written hundreds of letters to Congress, demanding a bill that extends tax cuts for the middle class and raises taxes on households that make more than $250,000 a year.
Anne Nesse, a former Democrate candidate for Idaho's Senate District 4, delivered a letter to Senator Mike Crapo's office as part of a nationwide move pushed by MoveOn.org to oppose the GOP's effort to extend the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy and cut Social Security (which does not contribute to the deficit), Medicare and Medicaid.
Nesse wrote:
By a ratio of roughly 9 to 1: voters of all income levels here do not believe in "trickle down economics". Voters here understand that unless the wealthy are actually creating jobs at which citizens can make a livable wage, that giving a tax cut to this group does NOT help our economy, or help to pay off our federal deficit that we owe primarily to ourselves in entitlements like medicare and social security.
In Maryland, activists protested Congressman Andy Harris.
"Andy Harris has never done a vote for the Eastern Shore," said Carl Widell, regional leader for Organizing For America Eastern Shore. "He's never done a vote for the Chesapeake Bay. He's never done a vote for the middle class. He doesn't live here, he doesn't understand us [and] he doesn't really represent us very well."
Harris' office responded with the tired "raising taxes on the wealthy stifles job creation" soundbite. Corporations have been enjoying tax breaks and exploiting tax loopholes for decades, and they're still outsourcing labor and shutting down factories to ship operations overseas, so clearly tax cuts aren't inspiring them to keep hiring American.
Protesters in Wisconsin lined the sidewalk outside Congressman Sean Duffy's office last week in response to looming cuts. Wisconsin Action's press release stated their action was meant to "send a clear message: put the middle class ahead of millionaires and end tax breaks for the top 2 percent."
"I'm here today and I've been coming to Duffy since he got elected," said protester Joel Lewis to WEAU. "I'm very concerned about the disparity of wealth in our country and I think a lot of the GOP's policies have led to that over time."
Duffy's spokesman John Gentzel responded that the congressman has always supported "limiting deductions especially for higher income earned," but "the Democrats have to put real, immediate spending cuts on the table, too."
Over the weekend in New York, activists from labor, community, student and faith organisations called on the US House members to end tax cuts for the rich.
"We want a clear statement from US Representative Michael Grimm," the Strong Economy For All Coalition, one of the groups involved in the protest, stated on its website. "Will you stand up for regular New Yorkers who need help? Or do you stand with the millionaires and billionaires?"
The Hill asked a "source close to the White House" if Obama will anger his base by compromising on "entitlements" and the source responded, "So what? He will do what's best for the country, period. He did that with healthcare. He'll do it again here."
Group in Peoria, Illinois hangs a "fiscal cliff" protest banner over a highway:
Find out more about the CEOs lobbying for austerity cuts, while asking for a lower corporate tax rate.
For the past several weeks, clusters of citizens have been protesting the opportunistically named "fiscal cliff" budget cut talks. Even though the "fiscal cliff" is really more of a fiscal curb or fiscal slope, conservative lawmakers have seized upon the media-generated panic surrounding the doomsday January 1 cutoff date as an excuse to inflict further cuts and steer the conversation away from ending tax breaks for the one percent.
The push back from citizens began when activists from ACT UP protested the possible inclusion of cuts to AIDS funding during the negotiations. Activists arranged a table and chairs outside Senator John Kerry's home in Boston as part of a mock Thanksgiving meal during which they put pill bottles on plates instead of food, saying they want Kerry to fight to fully fund AIDS programs during the negotiations.
The following week, three AIDS activists from Vocal-NY were arrested after they stripped naked in the outer office of House Speaker John Boehner.

"We wanted to strip away the rhetoric of the fiscal cliff," the director, Sean Barry, told The Washington Post, adding that the cuts could leave tens of thousands without the ability to treat their disease.
In Tennessee, protesters say they are preparing to gather in downtown Jackson in order to support the Obama administration's request to put pressure on Republicans.
"He asked us to be behind him, the same message that got him elected. He needs supporters," said resident Alma Jones to an ABC affiliate.
The federal budget fight also has a local component for Tennessee residents, who have been watching their own state government wage a budget battle in the Capitol. Residents have written hundreds of letters to Congress, demanding a bill that extends tax cuts for the middle class and raises taxes on households that make more than $250,000 a year.
Anne Nesse, a former Democrate candidate for Idaho's Senate District 4, delivered a letter to Senator Mike Crapo's office as part of a nationwide move pushed by MoveOn.org to oppose the GOP's effort to extend the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy and cut Social Security (which does not contribute to the deficit), Medicare and Medicaid.
Nesse wrote:
By a ratio of roughly 9 to 1: voters of all income levels here do not believe in "trickle down economics". Voters here understand that unless the wealthy are actually creating jobs at which citizens can make a livable wage, that giving a tax cut to this group does NOT help our economy, or help to pay off our federal deficit that we owe primarily to ourselves in entitlements like medicare and social security.
In Maryland, activists protested Congressman Andy Harris.
"Andy Harris has never done a vote for the Eastern Shore," said Carl Widell, regional leader for Organizing For America Eastern Shore. "He's never done a vote for the Chesapeake Bay. He's never done a vote for the middle class. He doesn't live here, he doesn't understand us [and] he doesn't really represent us very well."
Harris' office responded with the tired "raising taxes on the wealthy stifles job creation" soundbite. Corporations have been enjoying tax breaks and exploiting tax loopholes for decades, and they're still outsourcing labor and shutting down factories to ship operations overseas, so clearly tax cuts aren't inspiring them to keep hiring American.
Protesters in Wisconsin lined the sidewalk outside Congressman Sean Duffy's office last week in response to looming cuts. Wisconsin Action's press release stated their action was meant to "send a clear message: put the middle class ahead of millionaires and end tax breaks for the top 2 percent."
"I'm here today and I've been coming to Duffy since he got elected," said protester Joel Lewis to WEAU. "I'm very concerned about the disparity of wealth in our country and I think a lot of the GOP's policies have led to that over time."
Duffy's spokesman John Gentzel responded that the congressman has always supported "limiting deductions especially for higher income earned," but "the Democrats have to put real, immediate spending cuts on the table, too."
Over the weekend in New York, activists from labor, community, student and faith organisations called on the US House members to end tax cuts for the rich.
"We want a clear statement from US Representative Michael Grimm," the Strong Economy For All Coalition, one of the groups involved in the protest, stated on its website. "Will you stand up for regular New Yorkers who need help? Or do you stand with the millionaires and billionaires?"
The Hill asked a "source close to the White House" if Obama will anger his base by compromising on "entitlements" and the source responded, "So what? He will do what's best for the country, period. He did that with healthcare. He'll do it again here."
Group in Peoria, Illinois hangs a "fiscal cliff" protest banner over a highway:
Find out more about the CEOs lobbying for austerity cuts, while asking for a lower corporate tax rate.