May 25, 2012
South Africa Re-labels all Imports from the West Bank as "Made in Occupied Palestine"

Fucking awesome…

brosephstalin:

The international effort to boycott products made in Israeli settlements got a boost recently from a formidable quarter. South Africa announced it would label imports from the West Bank not “Made in Israel” but perhaps “Made in Occupied Palestine.”  It seems a small thing. The new regulation stops well short of calling for a boycott on Ahava beauty products and other exports manufactured or grown by Israeli companies on Palestinian land occupied by the Israeli military since 1967.

But the labeling regulation makes such a boycott more feasible, which is one reason Israel is making a big deal of it.  Another reason, of course, is that on the question of moral heft, South Africa ranks as a heavyweight. From the 1960s to the end of the 80s, an international boycott and disinvestment campaign against the Pretoria regime was one of the factors that led to abandoning the apartheid system that long let the white minority rule the black majority.

“It hurts, yes,” says Itzhak Galnoor, a political scientist at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. “It does send a message to the Israeli people and the Israeli government that the stalemate between Israel and the Palestinians is not acceptable. And I think that countries have the right to send the message.”

Galnoor is among the minority of Israelis who have long boycotted settlement products – making a point at the supermarket of not purchasing goods produced by Israeli companies on the Palestinian territory.  Mostly that’s fruits and vegetables – Israeli plantation agriculture has turned the occupied Jordan River Valley into one big truck farm – but also fine wines and other temptations.  To avoid “normalizing” the occupation, some Israelis also refuse to drive on Hwy. 443, a freeway cut into the West Bank for the convenience of Israelis commuting to Jerusalem from the coastal plain. (This can be a real sacrifice: The 443 is the only alternative to the steeper, almost alpine and frequently backed up Hwy 1, which except for a short span on “no-man’s land” lies entirely within Israel’s 1948 sovereign borders). The settlement product boycott is also being debated among American Jews at the urging of author Peter Beinart whose book The Crisis of Zionism  argues that the occupation is endangering Israeli democracy.

(Read More)

(via arielnietzsche)

May 22, 2012
Major protest scheduled in Montreal to mark 100th day of rallies, as hacker group Anonymous downs government websites.

Demonstrations have continued in Canadian city of Montreal despite the introduction of a new law aimed at ending three months of protests against proposed tuition fee increases.

May 14, 2012
"From Fox to Occupy, it seems everyone wants to hear what American Marxist Richard Wolff has to say about economics" - Guardian

April 14, 2012
THE best finished bit on OWS I have seen in the last year. Thanks Jazeera

FINALLY.  Thank you Qatari oil money.

Without question the most fair, professional piece yet.  And certainly useful for teaching, in a way that much footage has not yet been.

It’s 24 mins long.  Please take the time to watch.

At least it’s nice to see that I’m not the only person who can’t talk about the eviction without their voice cracking.

This is for sure the most important forward of the last 3 weeks from me.

April 6, 2012

(Source: fyeahcheguevara)

April 5, 2012
"

In some ways, we’re already living in a post-Obama age. Sure, he may still be president, but except for those running liberal magazines or voting in Republican primaries, few still think he’s waiting to reveal his secret progressive identity for the second term. Like other promise-filled politicians, he had a chance to bring about change, but embraced the comfort of the status quo. Instead of defending the people’s property against fraudulent foreclosures, he’s stood by as banks repossess land they often can’t even prove they own, with an eye not towards working class solidarity, but towards financial market stability.


Turning their backs on the false promise of electoral politics, those who would like change to be more than just a politician’s ad campaign are increasingly turning to direct action. And with camps associated with the Occupy Wall Street movement almost entirely evicted at this point - almost all by Democratic mayors - activists are now spanning out into the cities they were occupying to address the housing crisis that is tearing them apart.


They haven’t all been moral victories, either. This month, government-backed mortgage giant Freddie Mac agreed to allow a resident of Prince George’s County, Maryland, who had been falsely foreclosed upon, stay in her home after activists with Occupy DC took up her cause. Freddie Mac’s announcement was made just an hour after a rally outside its Washington headquarters.

In Minneapolis, community activists rallied to keep Bank of America - a recipient of billions of dollars in federal aid - from evicting 57-year-old Bobby Hull from his home. Sold at foreclosure for under $84,000, roughly a third of the $230,000-plus Hull still owed on the home, the bank yielded to pressure and backed out of the sale, agreeing to negotiate a modification to Hull’s mortgage.

"

http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2012/03/201231313940444494.html

March 23, 2012
AwesomeSign

Awesome
Sign

(Source: myconquestofbread, via fuckyeahmarxismleninism)

March 21, 2012
OWS Marchers Demand Police Commissioner's Resignation

fuckyeahmarxismleninism:

After police arrested dozens of Occupy Wall Street participants over the weekend, protestors marched to New York City Police Department headquarters today to demand the resignation of Police Commissioner Ray Kelly.

Members of the Occupy Wall Street movement marched from Foley Square to One Police Plaza, the Lower Manhattan headquarters of the NYPD.

Besides wanting Kelly to resign, the demonstrators also sounded off about the arrests of about 73 people who clashed with police at Zuccotti Park in Lower Manhattan last weekend.

Police say they cleared Zuccotti because protestors were breaking park rules, but some protestors say those arrested were mistreated and attacked by police.

“On Saturday night, as I simply sat in a park, I was violently arrested with my friends and watched as blood-thirsty cops stomped on their faces, knelt on their necks, pulled them by their hair and slammed them into windows,” said Occupy Wall Street protestor Jen Waller.

March 2, 2012
I particularly like the bank of berlin touch…
occupyallstreets:

Athens, Greece: A woman suffering from the effects of teargas passes a defaced Bank of Greece sign during protests against planned reforms by Greece’s coalition government.
Photo Credit

I particularly like the bank of berlin touch…

occupyallstreets:

Athens, Greece: A woman suffering from the effects of teargas passes a defaced Bank of Greece sign during protests against planned reforms by Greece’s coalition government.

Photo Credit

(via occupyallstreets)

March 1, 2012

growfoodraisehell:

Occupy Austin Guerrilla Gardeners make one new public garden every week.  Some have been destroyed the city, others remain and are sprouting vegetables.  We have had run ins with park staff who are confounded by our activities and threaten us with police who never show up. 

We do this to make people rethink notions of food, of where it comes from, of who produces it.  We do this to make people rethink the use of space and the concept of property.  We do this to make people rethink the concept of labor versus employment.  We do this so you will do it to.

(via socialuprooting)

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