Skip to search.

Breaking News Visit Yahoo! News for the latest.

×Close this window

gangboxnews · gangbox

The Yahoo! Groups Product Blog

Check it out!

Group Information

  • Members: 36
  • Category: Labor
  • Founded: Mar 27, 2007
  • Language: English
? Already a member? Sign in to Yahoo!

Yahoo! Groups Tips

Did you know...
Hear how Yahoo! Groups has changed the lives of others. Take me there.

Messages

Advanced
Messages Help
Messages 4668 - 4698 of 4838   Oldest  |  < Older  |  Newer >  |  Newest
Messages: Show Message Summaries Sort by Date ^  
#4668 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Fri Jul 15, 2011 5:15 pm
Subject: Fw: LONGSHORE WORKERS GET SERIOUS
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 

Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®


From: SpewNYC@...
Date: Fri, 15 Jul 2011 11:46:07 -0400 (EDT)
To: <SPEWNYC@...>
Subject: LONGSHORE WORKERS GET SERIOUS

Marty Goodman 7/15/11
 
Another union turns up the heat on union busters (see below). Will this be the year labor makes a come-back? How about it TWU?  
 

- Unions.Org Blog - http://www.unions.org/home/union-blog -

Longshoremen Go To Jail Fighting For Their Jobs

Posted By Mike Maddy On July 14, 2011 @ 9:23 am In Union Opinions | No Comments

Tweet [1]
Share [2]

[3]About 100 union dock workers, including union leaders, were arrested Monday afternoon after they tore down a chain-link gate and protested inside the EGT grain terminal at the Port of Longview.

In one of the boldest labor demonstrations in recent memory, members of the Longview-based International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 21 stormed the terminal to protest EGT’s use of non-union labor to handle grain in the testing phase of the new $200 million facility. Authorities said the gate appeared to have been pulled down with a pickup, and protesters blocked EGT employees from working in the terminal.

About 20 law enforcement vehicles swarmed to the east end of the port just after 3 p.m. Sheriff’s deputies and other officers from the Longview and Kelso police departments moved freely among the protesters, who were sometimes loud, but not violent.

“By far this is the most intense labor event that I can remember,” said Cowlitz County Sheriff Mark Nelson, who stood at the crowd’s center at one point discussing the situation with the union’s leadership.

Tensions have been rising between EGT executives and ILWU since contract talks broke down about three months ago. The company’s officials have said they plan to open the terminal this summer with about 50 workers, likely non-union.

“We are going to fight for our jobs in our jurisdiction. We have worked this dock for 70 years, and to have a big, rich corporation come in and say, ‘We don’t want you,’ is a problem,” Dan Coffman, Local 21 president, said Monday as he waited for police to issue him a citation.

“We’re all together. We’re all going to jail as a union.”

Law enforcement officers took the protesters aside one by one, issued them citations for second-degree trespassing, photographed them, handcuffed them and loaded them into patrol cars and a corrections department van. Nelson said the protesters were taken to the Cowlitz County fairgrounds and released. The idea, he said, was simply to get them away from the protest.

Additional charges may be filed against those who pulled down the fence if they can be identified, Nelson said.

EGT is owned by St. Louis-based Bunge North America, Japan-based Itochu Corp. and Korean shipper Pan Ocean STX. Later this summer, officials from the ILWU’s San Francisco-based headquarters plan to meet with Itochu and Pan Ocean officials in Asia.

Monday’s protest, which included ILWU leaders from Portland and Vancouver, was the latest of four large-scale demonstrations the ILWU has held in the last two months. On June 3, more than 1,000 ILWU supporters from Washington to California rallied outside EGT’s headquarters in downtown Portland.

Union officials have pinpointed the EGT grain terminal as a major battleground along the West Coast. If EGT succeeds in operating the terminal with non-union labor, ILWU officials say they fear other grain companies would follow suit.

This was the first time that the ILWU, one of the region’s most powerful labor unions, is known to have resorted to trespassing and damaging EGT’s property, Nelson said.

EGT officials said Monday they will protect their workers, and they haven’t finished hiring.

“The safety of our employees and service providers is our top priority. And actions by any group that threaten their safety will not be tolerated,” Larry Clarke, EGT’s president and CEO, said in a written statement.

After pulling down the gate, the protesters first gathered inside a large building, then moved to a fenced-off area just outside, Nelson said. Nelson said he offered to let the protesters go without arrests if they agreed to walk away peacefully.

“They chose to stay,” Nelson said. “Everybody’s trying to make a statement here.”

At around 4 p.m., a deputy announced over a loudspeaker that everyone on EGT’s property was under arrest for second-degree trespassing, a misdemeanor. The protesters broke out in shouts of “ILWU! ILWU!”

Union men scaled two grain cars behind the fence, waving ILWU signs and chanting. At one point, the protesters briefly locked arms.

Asked if he worried the situation between the longshoremen and the grain terminal could escalate this summer, Nelson said, “In a word, yes.”

Ken O’Hollaren, director of the Port of Longview, said port officials were discussing Monday whether they need to beef up security around the site. The damaged fence belongs to EGT, which is leasing the 38-acre site from the port, he said.

“It’s an unfortunate turn of events here. We’re still very hopeful that a resolution can be found. This is not the kind of thing that we hope to see or condone,” O’Hollaren said.

Most of the protesters were ILWU members, and leaders of area woodworkers’ and construction trade unions also showed up outside the fence to show their support.

EGT “isn’t a good neighbor. They’re not going to be a good neighbor,” said Dave Myers, president of the Longview Kelso Building Trades Council.

Union officials say EGT has violated their contract with the port, which stipulates that all longshore work on port property must be conducted with Local 21 labor.

In January, EGT sued the port in federal court, arguing that the company was not bound by the port’s contract with ILWU local 21. EGT attorneys said union labor would increase their annual costs of operating the elevator by $1 million. Coffman said the added labor costs are only a fraction of EGT’s total costs.

Nelson, the sheriff, said he understood what the union was trying to accomplish even though he didn’t agree with its tactics Monday.

“Bless their hearts,” Nelson said. “These are our neighbors too. These are our folks. This is our community.”

Share and Enjoy:

#4669 From: laborink@...
Date: Wed Jul 20, 2011 12:37 am
Subject: Barack Obama The Nations First Tea Party President
laborink
Send Email Send Email
 
Barack Obama The Nation's First Tea Party President
7-14-11 New Economic Perspectives by Marshall Auerback
http://neweconomicperspectives.blogspot.com/2011/07/barack-obama-nations-first-tea-party.html

For all its talk of the importance of averting a debt default, Barack Obama.is increasingly signaling that major deficit reduction has become more than just a bargaining chip to bring Republicans aboard a debt deal. He actually believes that cutting entitlements and reducing the deficit are laudable goals, which would mark "transformational" moments in his President. Let's face it: the man is not a progressive in any sense of the word; he's a Tea Party President through and through.
Marshall Auerback is a portfolio strategist and hedge fund manager.

#4670 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Thu Jul 21, 2011 5:14 pm
Subject: Fwd: Attention - Sewage Release Notice
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 




-----Original Message-----
From: Riverkeeper <info1@...>
To: gregoryabutler <gregoryabutler@...>
Sent: Thu, Jul 21, 2011 1:03 pm
Subject: Attention - Sewage Release Notice

 
convio e-mail wrapper - important notice
NYC Sewage Treatment Plant Dumping Raw Sewage into Hudson After Fire

Since 5:15 p.m. yesterday, the North River Wastewater Treatment Plant, at 135th Street in New York City, began discharging untreated sewage into the Hudson River following a four alarm fire that caused severe damage and the shutdown of the plant.  Riverkeeper is relieved that no one was seriously injured in the fire or subsequent evacuation of Riverbank Park, and fully supports the Department of Environmental Protection’s (DEP) efforts to bring the treatment plant back online as soon as possible.  However, we are concerned that the city’s efforts to notify the public have been inadequate and potentially confusing, and do not fully inform the public as to the risks posed by such a massive discharge of sewage into the Hudson. 

For example, the DEP and New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene have issued a combined statement that focuses primarily on official swimming beaches and provides a very vague warning about recreating in the river, ignoring the fact that thousands of New Yorkers recreate on the Hudson from riverfront parks and boats, often far from designated public beaches such as Jones Beach.  Riverkeeper considers the entire Hudson River estuary a “beach” during the boating and swimming season – New York City should do the same, to ensure that all New Yorkers are protected from the potential health effects of sewage discharges like this one. Any discharge of sewage is unacceptable and must be prevented at all costs.

“When accidents like this happen, it is critical that NYC officials speak with one voice, and provide the public with accurate, consistent information about the public health risk and environmental impacts that result,” said Phillip Musegaas, Hudson River Program Director at Riverkeeper.  “New Yorkers use the entire Hudson, New York Harbor and East River for recreation, not just Jones Beach.  The city’s public notification effort must reflect that fact, and ensure that all New Yorkers who want to enjoy the city’s “Sixth Borough” can do so with the best information available.” 

Given the large number of organized boating events scheduled over the next few days in NYC, it is critical that the Health Department update this advisory and provide the public with better information on the geographic scope of sewage contamination in the Hudson River, and the risk to public health it represents.  
 
The North River plant is located on the Hudson River, west of the West Side Highway from 137th Street to 145th Street and provides wastewater treatment for the hundreds of thousands of people who live and work in or visit the west side of Manhattan, from Bank Street in Greenwich Village to Inwood Hill at the island’s northern tip.  North River has the capacity to treat 140 million gallons of sewage per day, but it is unknown how much has been dumped into the Hudson since yesterday afternoon.  Based on its capacity, it is likely that millions of gallons of sewage have been discharged.

Riverkeeper will continue to provide updates as more information becomes available.

For information about Riverkeeper’s Water Quality Testing Program, visit: www.riverkeeper.org/water-quality/hudson/.

JoinRiverkeeper is a member-supported watchdog organization dedicated to defending the Hudson River and its tributaries and protecting the drinking water supply of nine million New York City and Hudson Valley residents. Contribute to this vital work, become a member today.

Forward this message
  -  Log in to update your profileUnsubscribe

If you have received this e-mail from a friend, sign up now and receive Riverkeeper news in your in box!

#4671 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Fri Jul 22, 2011 12:30 am
Subject: Fw: Protest FEDEX union busting, tax dodging: Sat. 7/23
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 

Sent on the Sprint Now Network from my BlackBerry


From: Todd Eaton <toddeaton@...>
Sender: nyprotest-owner@...
Date: Thu, 21 Jul 2011 20:05:26 -0400
To: *NYPROTEST EVENT ANNOUNCEMENT LISTSERV*<NYPROTEST@...>
ReplyTo: nyprotest-editor@...
Cc: <BronxGreens@YAHOOGROUPS.COM>; <manhattangreens@yahoogroups.com>; <nycgreens-discussions@yahoogroups.com>; <ruthsantana@...>; <adam@...>; <dan@...>
Subject: Protest FEDEX union busting, tax dodging: Sat. 7/23

Details:  http://usuncut.org/actions/554
Sat Jul 23 at   1:00pm
Meeting at Fedex/Kinkos Copyshop - 21 Astor Place btw Broadway & Lafayette/4th Av.
Contact ny@... 617-283-9108
www.SocialistAlternative.org

NATIONAL DAY OF ACTION:

Do you pay your fair share in taxes? You probably pay more than your fair share for wars, bank bailouts, and corporate givebacks. FedEx, on the other hand, dodges taxes left and right, contributing to budgets being slashed for education, health care, transit, jobs, and benefits.

U.S. Uncut states, When it comes to paying their fair share of taxes, FedEx simply does not deliver. When FedEx made $1.9 billion in profits, they managed to pay less than .0005% of it in taxes by using 21 tax havens. FedEx also spent 42 times (4200%) more on lobbying Congress than they did in taxes.

While FedEx has cut thousands of jobs, they paid the FedEx Ground CEO David Rebholz over $4.5 million in compensation last year. What did he do to deserve this reward? Keep wages low and bust unions drives. FedEx Ground package handlers make less than $11,000/year, wages so low they qualify for food stamps and government medical assistance while doing grueling physical labor with no breaks, no sick days, and poverty wages.

FedEx Ground package handlers in Brockton, Massachusetts are standing up and fighting back. They deserve our support. FedEx management has called the police on these workers while they were organizing a union off of company property. Despite this intimidation, Brockton workers filed for an election with the National Labor Relations Board to form a union represented by Teamsters Local 653.

Show solidarity with the heroic FedEx workers in Brockton, MA, who are standing up for livable wages, sick days, and breaks by forming a union. Show the workers in Brockton that the whole country is fighting with them, and show FedEx that we are all watching and ready to act!

Oppose tax dodging? Hate union busters? Angry about corporate domination? Help us organize FedEx workers into unions across the country. Join us for this National Day of Action, July 23.

Meeting place   Fedex/Kinkos Copyshop - 21 Astor Place
Time to meet    1:00pm
Contact details         
ny@...
617-283-9108
www.SocialistAlternative.org
usuncut@... [twitter.com/usuncut] [facebook.com/usauncut]
Report a bug/problem with this website















        =   =   =  
Check NY Activist Calendar frequently: http://nycal.mayfirst.org



#4672 From: laborink@...
Date: Fri Jul 22, 2011 12:21 pm
Subject: Policing School Districts: The New Separate but Equal
laborink
Send Email Send Email
 
Policing School Districts: The New Separate but Equal
7-12-11 The Black Institute
The school district in Swarthmore, PA is ranked 26th, out of the 543 school districts in Pennsylvania. Less than 5 miles down the road, and I mean that literally, if you stay on Chester Road in Swarthmore and go South, in less than 5 miles, you will be in Chester, Pennsylvania. The Chester-Upland School District is ranked 524th out of the 543 school districts in Pennsylvania. In less than 5 miles a child can go from obtaining one of the best educations in the state, to one of the worst. This is one scenario but examples such as this one can be found in every region of this country.
 
Swarthmore is an affluent, predominantly white community and Chester is an impoverished, predominantly Black community. The residents of Swarthmore pay exorbant taxes to keep their schools in the condition that they are in, whereas the average household in Chester is struggling to meet their basic needs, much less pay the taxes that would be necessary to pull their schools out of the gutter. So despite our free, public education system which promises that all children will receive a quality education, children are still only receiving the best education that they and their families can afford.
 
We tell parents to send their children to the public school within the confines of where they pay taxes under the guise that it's just as good as the district on the other side of the town, when we know that's not the truth. Does any of this sound familiar?

#4673 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Mon Aug 8, 2011 6:36 am
Subject: Fw: VERIZON STRIKE SUPPORT tnt. Mon. 8/8
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 
Sent on the Sprint Now Network from my BlackBerry

-----Original Message-----
From: Todd Eaton <toddeaton@...>
Sender: nyprotest-owner@...
Date: Mon, 08 Aug 2011 01:15:44
To: *NYPROTEST EVENT ANNOUNCEMENT LISTSERV*<NYPROTEST@...>
Reply-To: nyprotest-editor@...
Subject: VERIZON STRIKE SUPPORT tnt. Mon. 8/8

[more announcements at http://snipurl.com/nyprotest or
  http://nycal.mayfirst.org || Unsubscribe info at bottom.]

[directions added at bottom -t.]   Date: Sun, 07 Aug 2011 20:07:58
-0400 From: gbran289@...
Subject: Support Verizon Workers Tomorrow, Mon 8/8

Verizon Workers are on Strike!
Teachers, Parents, Students, Community Members
Let's show our support and join them on the picket line.
Their struggle is our struggle!

Tomorrow, Monday, August 8 at 5:00PM
Bring signs, banners, and energy!
<http://www.cwa-union.org/>
<http://usuncut.org/targets/verizon>


Company Refuses to Bargain Seriously, Verizon Proposals Would Take
Workers Back Decades
Washington, D.C. -- More than 45,000 workers are on strike today at
Verizon Communications. Bargaining continues. Since bargaining began
on June 22, Verizon has refused to move from a long list of
concession demands. As the contract expired, nearly 100 concessionary
company proposals remained on the table.
As a result, CWA and IBEW have decided to take the unprecedented step
of striking until Verizon stops its Wisconsin-style tactics and
starts bargaining seriously.
Even at the 11th hour, as contracts were set to expire, Verizon
continued to seek to strip away 50 years of collective bargaining
gains for middle class workers and their families.
CWA and IBEW members are prepared to return to work when management
demonstrates the willingness to begin bargaining seriously for a fair
agreement. If not, CWA and IBEW members and allies will continue the fight.
Verizon financials
2011 annualized revenues are $108 billion and annualized net profits
are $6 billion.
Verizon Wireless just paid its parent company and Vodaphone a $10
billion dividend.
Verizon's top five executives received compensation of $258 million
over the past four years.
The contract covers 45,000 members of CWA and the International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers from New England to Virginia.
Read updates at www.cwa-union.org/verizon
    == = = =
directions added
TRANSIT to Verizon HQ 140 West St. btw Vesey St. & Barclay St., just
NW of WTC: PATH train to WTC (at Vesey & West Broadway); E train to
WTC (exit to Vesey or Barclay); #2, 3 to Park Pl. (west exit,
furthest from Brooklyn, to Church St.); A, C to Chambers St. (south
exits along Church); R (either direction) to City Hall (at Murray &
Broadway); R (northbound trains only) to Cortlandt St. (at Church);
#4, 5 to Fulton St.; N train never stops in Lower Manhattan below
Canal before 10pm;
M22 BUS via East Broadway & Chambers; M20 via 7th Av. South/Varick
St. & WFC; M5 via Broadway & Trinity Pl./Church St.;
MAP: http://ow.ly/5XedL



   <http://groups.google.com/group/Grassroots-Education/subscribe?hl=en_US>,
   <mailto:Grassroots-Education+subscribe@googlegroups.com>




          =   =   =
Check NY Activist Calendar frequently: http://nycal.mayfirst.org






   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~
     ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~

See unsubscribe instructions at bottom.

  *HELP SAVE THIS PROJECT: ASK ABOUT OUR
   FIVE MINUTE PER DAY VOLUNTEER GIG *

~ Send progressive event announcements to
   <nyprotest@...>. ALSO enter
   them at <http://nycal.mayfirst.org>. Or
   remember to look up "NY Activist Calendar"
   and "NYPROTEST".  No subscriptions needed
   to post on either calendar.  If you enter
   anything on the N.Y.A.C. web calendar, it
   will usually make its way to this NYPROTEST
   listserv.  But in the other direction,not
   always.  So please use both, & thanks!

~ Read searchable event listings on the web
   http://lists.riseup.net/www/arc/nyprotest
   or http://snipurl.com/NYPROTEST And please
   send a friend that link.   No subscription
   needed to read these public, instant archives.

~ Clicking "reply" to any message will
   not reach that event's organizers.
   at

~ Ask me to switch your subscription to one
   msg per day or to no mail/website
   only. Or get a password reminder, & then
   switch it yourself at:

  http://lists.riseup.net/www/suboptions/nyprotest

~ For TRANSIT info & MAPS try these sites:
   onnyturf.com transit: http://is.gd/nv3a
   hopstop.com NYC transit:  http://is.gd/nv3r
   safer bike routes: http://ridethecity.com/
   NJ Transit Trip Planner http://njtransit.com
   Lower Manhattan map http://ow.ly/5or1N
   Manhatttan bus http://is.gd/yOeLlm-/
   Columbia Campus http://bit.ly/acAUcs
   Barnard Map http://is.gd/liB8oi-/
   Hunter Main Campus http://is.gd/1Zlu5V
   Subway http://is.gd/JV7X9o-/
   Brooklyn Bus http://is.gd/PgQ8Qs-/
   http://is.gd/8tGpDI-/
   More bus maps http://mta.info

~ Organizers post their own announcements.
   You have NOT been subscribed to any
   sender's list.  This is Todd's NYPROTEST.

~ U N S U B S C R I B E   U N S U B S C R I B E
    U N S U B S C R I B E   U N S U B S C R I B E
   Send a blank message to:
   nyprotest-unsubscribe@...
   then check mail for a confirmation msg from
   Sympa.  Read & reply to that confirmation.
   OR visit:
   http://lists.riseup.net/www/signoff/nyprotest

   If all else truly fails, ask me to do it for you.

   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~
     ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~

#4674 From: "wilsoncharless" <chasmn@...>
Date: Mon Aug 15, 2011 12:02 pm
Subject: Buffett, "Stop Coddling the Super-Rich
wilsoncharless
Send Email Send Email
 
Buffett, "Stop Coddling the Super-Rich"
8-15-11 (Reuters) -
 
Billionaire Warren E. Buffett urged lawmakers to raise taxes on the country's super-rich to help cut the budget deficit, saying such a move will not hurt investments.
 
"My friends and I have been coddled long enough by a billionaire-friendly Congress. It's time for our government to get serious about shared sacrifice," The 80-year-old "Oracle of Omaha" wrote in an opinion article in The New York Times.
 
Buffett, one of the world's richest men and chairman of conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway Inc , said his federal tax bill last year was $6,938,744.
 
"That sounds like a lot of money. But what I paid was only 17.4 percent of my taxable income - and that's actually a lower percentage than was paid by any of the other 20 people in our office. Their tax burdens ranged from 33 percent to 41 percent and averaged 36 percent," he said.
 
Lawmakers engaged in a partisan battle over spending and taxes for more than three months before agreeing on August 2 to raise the $14.3 trillion U.S. debt ceiling, avoiding a U.S. default.
 
"Americans are rapidly losing faith in the ability of Congress to deal with our country's fiscal problems. Only action that is immediate, real and very substantial will prevent that doubt from morphing into hopelessness," Buffett said.
 
Buffett said higher taxes for the rich will not discourage investment.
 
"I have worked with investors for 60 years and I have yet to see anyone - not even when capital gains rates were 39.9 percent in 1976-77 - shy away from a sensible investment because of the tax rate on the potential gain," he said
 
"People invest to make money, and potential taxes have never scared them off."
(Reporting by Santosh Nadgir; Editing by David Holmes)

#4675 From: laborink@...
Date: Thu Aug 18, 2011 11:45 pm
Subject: Consumer Inflation 11.21% Unemployment 22.7% GDP -2.60%
laborink
Send Email Send Email
 
8-18-11
Consumer Inflation (CPI)
July 11.21%
June 11.13% May 11.15 % April 10.69% March 10.20% February 9.62% January 9.07% December 8.91%  November 8.54%  
Alternate Consumer Inflation Measures. Adjusted to pre-Clinton (1990) methodology. The SGS-Alternate Consumer Inflation Measure, which reverses gimmicked changes to official CPI reporting methodologies back to 1980, is 11.21 %  In general terms, methodological shifts in government reporting have depressed reported inflation, moving the concept of the CPI away from being a measure of the cost of living needed to maintain a constant standard of living. Further definition is provided in our CPI Glossary. Further background on the SGS-Alternate CPI M3 series is available in the Archives in the August 2006 SGS newsletter.
8-8-11
Unemployment 22.7%
July Unemployment U3 9.1% U6 16.1% SGS 22.7%
June Unemployment U3 9.2% U6 16.2% SGS 22.7%
May Unemployment U3 9.1% U6 15.8% SGS 22.3%
April Unemployment U3 9.0% U6 15.9% SGS 22.3%
March Unemployment U3 8.8% U6 15.7% SGS 22.0%
February Unemployment U3 8.9% U6 15.9% SGS 22.1%
The seasonally-adjusted SGS Alternate Unemployment Rate reflects current unemployment reporting methodology adjusted for SGS-estimated long-term discouraged workers, who were defined out of official existence in 1994. That estimate is added to the BLS estimate of U-6 unemployment, which includes short-term discouraged workers.

4-29-11
GDP Growth 2011q1  -2.60%
2010q4 -2.21  2010q3 -1.44% 
The SGS Alternate-GDP estimate for first-quarter 2011 is an annual contraction of -2.60% versus the official estimate of a 2.28% gain, more-negative than the alternate 2.21 % annual contraction (2.78% official gain) estimated in the fourth-quarter (see the Alternate Data tab). The SGS-Alternate GDP reflects the inflation-adjusted, or real, year-to-year GDP change, adjusted for distortions in government inflation usage and methodological changes that have resulted in a built-in upside bias to official reporting.
 
Numbers from Shadow Government Statistics,
American Business Analytics & Research LLC.

#4676 From: "Millwright Ron" <millwrightone@...>
Date: Mon Aug 22, 2011 9:25 am
Subject: Solidarity
millwrightone
Send Email Send Email
 
Solidarity
The most important word in the language of the working class is "solidarity".
Millwright Ron
www.unionmillwright.com

#4677 From: "Millwright Ron" <millwrightone@...>
Date: Mon Aug 22, 2011 5:49 pm
Subject: Union Millwrights:
millwrightone
Send Email Send Email
 
Union Millwrights:
"Union Millwrights are often described as Masters Of All Trades as they are
expected to install, maintain and repair all types of machinery in almost any
industry."
Do It The Wright Way
Millwright Ron
www.unionmillwright.com

#4678 From: SIUHIN@...
Date: Sun Aug 28, 2011 2:59 pm
Subject: Fall 2011 National Immigrant Solidarity Network Monthly News Alert!
borderactions
Send Email Send Email
 
Fall 2011 National Immigrant Solidarity Network  Monthly News Digest and
News Alert!
National Immigrant Solidarity  Network
No Immigrant Bashing! Support Immigrant Rights!

URL:  http://www.ImmigrantSolidarity.org
e-mail:  Info@...
Information about the Network:  FLYER

Washington D.C.: (202)595-8990
New York: (212)330-8172
Los  Angeles: (213)403-0131
Chicago:  (773)942-2268

====================================
Every Donation  Counts! Please Support Us!
Send check pay to:
National Immigrant  Solidarity Network/AFGJ

National Immigrant Solidarity Network
P.O. Box  751
South Pasadena, CA 91031-0751
(All donations are tax  deductible)
====================================

Fall 2011 U.S.  Immigrant Alert! Newsletter
Published by National Immigrant Solidarity  Network

Please Our Newsletter:
http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Newsletter/Fall11.pdf
[Requires Adobe  Acrobat, to download, go: http://www.adobe.com]


Activist Says: Obama  skewers the immigrant justice movement!

In This Issue:
1) Obama  skewers the immigrant justice movement (Pg 1)
2) Obama Puts Bandage on Broken  Immigration System  (Pg 2)
3) Obama's new deportation policy is PR  spin  (Pg 3)
4) Immigration Appeals  (Pg 4)
5) Immigration and  Mass Incarceration in the Obama Era  (Pg 4)
9) Updates, Please Support  NISN! Subscribe the Newsletter! (Pg 6)

Please download our latest  newsletter:
http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Newsletter/Fall11.pdf


=====================================================

VOICES:  Obama skewers the immigrant justice movement

Kung Li
August 28,  2011

The Obama administration announced last week it will be reviewing  pending
immigration deportation cases in order to prioritize people with  criminal
records for deportation over "low-priority" immigrants. Individuals  eligible
for the DREAM Act, veterans, and victims of crime who are currently in
deportation proceedings will, if the reviews are done as promised, have their
cases stayed.

The announcement was made in response to sustained,  well-organized
pressure by immigrants, Latinos and allies critical of the  President's
deportation
policies in general and the controversial Secure  Communities (S-Comm)
program in particular. Three hundred people walked out of  an S-Comm Task Force
hearing in Los Angeles on Monday, Aug. 15. Two days later,  in Chicago, Task
Force members were again confronted by an audience angry at the
President's use of S-Comm to ramp up deportations. As in Los Angeles, an 
undocumented
youth leader asked the Task Force members to resign, and led a walk  out
from the hearing. Blocking an exit ramp from the I-94 freeway, six
undocumented youths were arrested.

Apparently startled by the  forcefulness of the protests, the Obama
administration scrambled a conference  call on Aug. 18 to announce the
case-by-case
reviews. Though modest, it is a  concrete step to stopping the deportation
of DREAM Act-eligible students and  victims of crimes. Women like
20-year-old Isaura Garcia, who testified during  the Los Angeles hearing about
calling
police for help and ending up in  deportation proceedings, will have their
cases stayed. A sweetener: some  individuals whose cases are closed will be
able to apply for work  authorization.

Determined, direct action by courageous and creative  organizers --
undocumented youth in particular -- has forced the Obama  administration to make
a
real move.

And so the chess game  begins.

How is Obama going to play this? This White House blog post by  Cecilia
Muñoz, uploaded in the hours between the L.A. and Chicago hearings,  gives a
clue. Muñoz boasts of "a dramatic increase in the number of criminals
deported from the United States," and credits S-Comm for enhancing Immigration 
and
Customs Enforcement's (ICE) ability to deport people who have committed
crimes. The administration's strategy hinted at in this blog post is this:
split  immigrants into non-criminals and criminals, and insist that those being
  deported are criminals, not immigrants. Or mothers, or long time
residents, or  uncles, or co-workers, or neighbors, or friends. Labeling people
"criminals"  erases every other part of their being.

It is a cynical and aggressive  strategy that bolsters ICE and
de-legitimizes anyone who continues to oppose the  President's deportation
policies.
Those policies will, Muñoz said during the  Aug. 11 conference call, continue
at the same frenzied pace as these past two  years, with no change in the
overall number of deportations.

If this is  indeed Obama's overall strategy, it becomes clear that by
responding as he did  to criticisms over S-Comm, the President is setting up a
skewer move. In chess,  the skewer is an offensive move that is made possible
when two pieces are lined  up with a more valuable piece -- let's say the
queen -- in front of a less  valuable one, like the knight or rook. When the
piece in front is threatened,  the player must move it aside, sacrificing the
other piece.

The only  defense to a skewer move is to not put yourself in the position
of being  skewered in the first place. That can only be done by rejecting
wholesale the  premise that some people are less valuable than others because
they have a  criminal record.

Cristian is young, undocumented, and unfailingly polite.  He has a criminal
record. He was sleeping in a friend's car when he was woken up  by a police
officer and charged with underage drinking. He falls within the  priority
category of "criminal."

Jean Montrevil and his wife Jani are the  parents of four beautiful
children. Jean came to the U.S. in 1986 as a teenager,  with a green card, from
Haiti. Jean has a criminal record. When Jean was 20, he  was busted on a
cocaine charge. The judge sentenced him to 27 years -- an  extraordinarily long
sentence -- of which he served 10. Since his release, Jean  has built up a van
service in Brooklyn, became a member of Families for Freedom,  and
co-founded the New Sanctuary Coalition of NYC. Even though Jean is a legal
resident, he is still considered a "criminal alien" and falls under the high
priorities for deportation.

Aleida is a single mother of the three U.S.  citizen children, the youngest
being 6 months old. She has a criminal record.  Aleida was arrested in New
Orleans for domestic violence after defending herself  from a woman visiting
her cousin's home. Under the guidelines, Aleida is a  "criminal" rather
than a victim, and a priority for deportation.

How long  is this list of people who are not protected by the promised
stays? John Sandweg  of the Department of Homeland Security said that over 94%
of S-Comm deportations  last year met their "priority" criteria. No complex
math necessary here -- the  reality is that the overwhelming majority of
people who are facing deportation  will still be deported. Only now, they will
be deported to the sound of the  Obama administration crowing about how they
are "deporting  criminals."

The resistance to S-Comm and the criminalization of  immigrants has built
both momentum and moral power over these past two years.  Holding DHS to its
word and insisting on a stay of proceedings for every  eligible person will
-- and should -- be the gratifying, immediate next move by  the advocates
and organizers that forced the administration to act.

But  to then get drawn into an argument over what constitutes a "serious"
crime and  what does not, or whether certain types of crimes should be
excluded or  included, would be playing directly into Obama administration's
strategy.

Every statistically-based analysis of the criminal justice  system shows it
is deeply racially biased at each stage, and more oriented  towards
policing and convicting people who are poor than those who are  dangerous.
Contact
with such a criminal justice system is no way to decide who  should or
should not be deported.

Just as illegitimate is the Obama  administration's insistence on enforcing
immigration laws that it has  acknowledged need to be changed. Change the
laws first, to give immigrants who  have been here more than five years and
want to remain a reasonable way to do so  legally. Halt deportations in the
meantime. Enforcing laws that need to be  changed before changing those laws
makes no sense. Using a rapacious,  racially-biased criminal justice system
to carry out -- and justify -- that  enforcement turns mere senselessness
into cruelty.


=====================================================

Immigration and  Mass Incarceration in the Obama Era: The New Operation
Wetback

James  Kilgore - Center for African Studies, The University of Illinois
August 4,  2011

Last week Representative Luis Gutierrez (D-IL) joined a  demonstration in
Washington D.C. to protest the refusal of President Obama to  use his
executive powers to halt the deportations of the undocumented.  Gutierrez’
arrest
came only two days after Obama had addressed a conference of  the National
Council of La Raza. Conveniently forgetting the history of the  civil right
struggles that made his Presidency a possibility, Obama reminded  those
attending that he was bound to “uphold the laws on the books.”

With  over 392,000 deportations in 2010, more than in any of the Bush
years, many  activists fear we are in the midst of a repeat of notorious
episodes
of the past  such as the “Repatriation” campaign of the 1930s and the
infamous Operation  Wetback of 1954, both of which resulted in the deportation
of hundreds of  thousands of Latinos.

But several things are different this time around.  A crucial distinction
is that we are in the era of mass incarceration. Not only  are the
undocumented being deported, many are going to prison for years before  being
delivered across the border. While the writings of Michelle Alexander and 
others
have highlighted the widespread targeting of young African-American males  by
the criminal justice system, few have noted that in the last decade the
complexion of new faces behind bars has been dramatically changing. Since the
turn of the century, the number of blacks in prisons has declined slightly,
while the ranks of Latinos incarcerated has increased by nearly 50%,
reaching  just over 300,000 in 2009.

A second distinguishing feature of the current  state of affairs is the
presence of the private prison corporations. For the  likes of the industry’s
leading powers, Corrections Corporation of America (CCA)  and the GEO Group,
detaining immigrants has been the life blood for reviving  their financial
fortunes.

Just over a decade ago their bottom lines were  flagging. Freshly built
prisons sat with empty beds while share values  plummeted. For financial year
1999 CCA reported losses of $53.4 million and laid  off 40% of its workforce.
Then came the windfall – 9/11.

In 2001 Steven  Logan, then CEO of Cornell Industries, a private prison
firm which has since  merged with GEO, spelled out exactly what this meant for
his sector :

“I  think it’s clear that with the events of Sept. 11, there’s a
heightened focus on  detention, both on the borders and within the U.S. [and]
more
people are gonna  get caught…So that’s a positive for our business. The
federal business is the  best business for us. It’s the most consistent
business
for us, and the events  of Sept. 11 are increasing that level of business.”

Logan was right. The  Patriot Act and other legislation led to a new wave
of immigration detentions.  By linking immigrants to terrorism, aggressive
roundups supplied Latinos and  other undocumented people to fill those empty
private prison cells. Tougher  immigration laws mandated felony convictions
and prison time for cases which  previously merited only deportation.
Suddenly, the business of detaining  immigrants was booming. PBS Commentator
Maria
Hinojosa went so far as to call  this the new “Gold Rush” for private
prisons.

The figures support  Hinojosa’s assertion. While private prisons own or
operate only 8% of general  prison beds, they control 49% of the immigration
detention market. CCA alone  operates 14 facilities via contracts with ICE,
providing 14, 556 beds. They have  laid the groundwork for more business
through the creation of a vast lobbying  and advocacy network. From 1999-2009
the
corporation spent more than $18 million  on lobbying, mostly focusing on
harsher sentencing, prison privatization and  immigration.

One significant result of their lobbying efforts was the  passage of SB
1070 in Arizona, a law which nearly provides police with a license  to profile
Latinos for stops and searches. The roots of SB 1070 lie in the halls  of
the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), a far right grouping that
specializes in supplying template legislation to elected state officials. CCA
  and other private prison firms are key participants in ALEC and played a
major  role in the development of the template that ended up as SB 1070.

For its  part, GEO Group has also been carving out its immigration market
niche. Earlier  this year they broke ground on a new 600 bed detention center
in Karnes County,  Texas. At about the same time the company bought a
controlling interest in BI  Corporation, the largest provider of electronic
monitoring systems in the U.S.  The primary motivation for this takeover was the
five year, $372 million  contract BI signed with ICE in 2009 to step up the
Bush initiated Intense  Supervision Appearance Program. (ISAP 11). Under
this arrangement the Feds hired  BI to provide ankle bracelets and a host of
other surveillance for some 27,000  people awaiting deportation or asylum
hearings.

Sadly, the Obama  presidency has consistently provided encouragement for
the likes of CCA and GEO  to grow the market for detainees. While failing to
pass immigration reform or  the Dream Act, the current administration has
kept the core of the previous  administration’s immigration policy measures
intact. These include the Operation  Endgame, a 2003 measure that promised to
purge the nation of all “illegals” by  2012 and the more vibrant Secure
Communities (S-Comm). Under S-Comm the Federal  government authorizes local
authorities to share fingerprints with ICE of all  those they arrest. Though
supposedly intended to capture only people with  serious criminal backgrounds,
in reality S-Comm has led to the detention and  deportation of thousands of
people with no previous convictions.

At the  National Council of La Raza’s Conference Obama tried to console the
audience by  saying that he knows “very well the pain and heartbreak
deportation has caused.”  His words failed to resonate. Instead Rep. Gutierrez
and
others took to the  streets, demonstrating that “I feel your pain”
statements and appeals to the  audacity of hope carry little credibility these
days. It is time for a serious  change of direction on immigration issues or
pretty soon, just as Michelle  Alexander has referred to the mass incarceration
of African-Americans as the New  Jim Crow, we may hear people start to call
the ongoing repression of Latinos a  “New Operation  Wetback.”

=====================================================

National  Immigrant Solidarity Network
No Immigrant Bashing! Support Immigrant  Rights!
webpage: http://www.ImmigrantSolidarity.org
e-mail:  info@...

New York: (212)330-8172
Los Angeles:  (213)403-0131
Washington D.C.: (202)595-8990
Chicago:  (773)942-2268

Please consider making a donation to the important work of  National
Immigrant Solidarity Network

Send check pay to:
National  Immigrant Solidarity Network/AFGJ

National Immigrant Solidarity  Network
P.O. Box 751
South Pasadena, CA 91031-0751
(All donations are  tax deductible)

*to join the immigrant Solidarity Network daily news  litserv, send e-mail
to: isn-subscribe@...

=======================================================

#4679 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Tue Aug 30, 2011 4:57 pm
Subject: Fwd: Tomorrow: RALLY IN SUPPORT OF LOCKED OUT SEIU LOCAL 32BJ SUPERS AT FLATBUSH GARDENS
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 




-----Original Message-----
From: gregoryabutler <gregoryabutler@...>
To: gangboxnews <gangboxnews@yahoogroups.com>; gangbox <gangbox@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Tue, Aug 30, 2011 12:51 pm
Subject: Fwd: Tomorrow: RALLY IN SUPPORT OF LOCKED OUT SEIU LOCAL 32BJ SUPERS AT FLATBUSH GARDENS





-----Original Message-----
From: New York City Central Labor Council <peoplepower@...>
To: GREGORYABUTLER <GREGORYABUTLER@...>
Sent: Tue, Aug 30, 2011 11:58 am
Subject: Tomorrow: Solidarity Rally to Support Locked-Out Brooklyn Workers

Dear Gregory A. ,
Over months of negotiations, Renaissance Equity Holdings, owner of Flatbush Gardens in Brooklyn, refused to bargain in good faith with workers. *Renaissance insisted on cutting workers' wages by more than a third and slashing benefits. It even demanded the right to lay off and replace the entire workforce. *
On Nov. 29, 2010, Renaissance locked out more than 70 building service workers to undercut the bargaining process and force workers to agree to these extreme demands. *To this day, almost nine months later, these workers are proudly standing together to stop the abuses committed by Renaissance Equity Holdings. *
*A solidarity rally will be held tomorrow at 5 p.m. to support the Flatbush Gardens workers. Here are the details:*
Wednesday, Aug. 31 at 5 p.m.
Flatbush Gardens, Brooklyn
3301 Foster Ave.
Corner of Foster & New York Avenue [ http://maps.google.com/maps?q=3301+Foster+Avenue&amp;oe=utf-8&amp;rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&amp;client=firefox-a&amp;um=1&amp;ie=UTF-8&amp;hq=&amp;hnear=0x89c25b50e5651b4f:0x26ff0aef03c9099a,3301+Foster+Ave,+Brooklyn,+NY+11210&amp;gl=us&amp;ei=P6pWTtbBLZKy0AHT2-izDA&amp;sa=X&amp;oi=geocode_result&amp;ct=title&amp;resnum=1&amp;ved=0CBkQ8gEwAA ]s
Join the New York City Central Labor Council, SEIU 32BJ and all of the NYC labor movement at *Flatbush Gardens at 5 pm Wednesday, Aug. 31* An Attack on ONE is an Attack on ALL.
"For more information, please call Brendan Griffith at 212-604-9552. To print out a flier for distribution, click here. [ http://www.nycclc.org/Solidarity%20Rally%20Flyer%20FB%2008-31-11.pdf ]"
In Solidarity,
New York City Central Labor Council
*****
To find out more about the AFL-CIO, please visit our website at www.aflcio.org.
*****
Click here to unsubscribe:
http://act.aflcio.org/c/18/p/salsa/supporter/unsubscribe/public/?Email=GREGORYABUTLER@...&email_blast_KEY=51130&organization_KEY=4001

#4680 From: "wilsoncharless" <chasmn@...>
Date: Thu Sep 1, 2011 12:22 pm
Subject: Report: 25 Corporations Paid More in CEO Pay Than Taxes
wilsoncharless
Send Email Send Email
 
Report: 25 Corporations Paid More in CEO Pay Than Taxes
8-31-11 by The Associated Press
Twenty-five of the 100 largest U.S. corporations paid their chief executives more last year than they paid in federal income taxes, according to a report released Wednesday.
The nonprofit Institute for Public Accuracy says the 25 CEOs averaged $16.7 million in salary and other 2010 compensation.
 
Most of the companies they ran, meanwhile, came out ahead at tax time. They collected tax refunds that averaged $304 million, based on a review of public filings. The think tank says the 25 firms that paid out more in CEO compensation than U.S. taxes reported average global profits of $1.9 billion.
 
The institute, based in San Francisco, describes itself as a national consortium of independent analysts and activists with progressive views who work with social movements to challenge corporate influence and military power.
Executive Excess 2011: The Massive CEO Rewards for Tax Dodging
8-30-11 IPS Report
Corporations don't dodge taxes, the people who run corporations do. And these CEOs are reaping awesomely lavish rewards for the tax dodging they have their corporations do.
In fact, corporate tax dodging has gone so out of control that 25 major U.S. corporations last year paid their chief executives more than they paid Uncle Sam in federal income taxes.
Article with individual corporate info at: http://www.ips-dc.org/campaigns/tax-dodging-ceos/index.php

40 Years Since "Powell Memo" Laid out Corporate Agenda
August 30, 2011 IPA
In 1971, Lewis F. Powell, then a corporate lawyer and member of the boards of eleven corporations, wrote a memo to his friend Eugene Sydnor, Jr., the director of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, titled "Attack of [sic] American Free Enterprise System." The memorandum was dated August 23, 1971, two months prior to Powell's nomination by President Nixon to the U.S. Supreme Court.
 
The Powell Memo did not become available to the public until long after his confirmation to the Court. It was leaked to Jack Anderson, syndicated columnist, who stirred interest in the document when he cited it as reason to doubt Powell's legal objectivity. Anderson cautioned that Powell "might use his position on the Supreme Court to put his ideas into practice [on] behalf of business interests.
 
JEFF MILCHEN, Jeff at ReclaimDemocracy.org
Milchen is a board member of ReclaimDemocracy.org. He said today: "Under the guise of defeating attacks on `free enterprise,' Lewis Powell's memo to the U.S. Chamber clearly outlined a comprehensive framework by which corporate interests could create long-term shifts in culture, law and ultimately policy to consolidate corporate power and minimize the risk of democracy interfering with their agenda. Groups embracing Powell's strategy have indeed fundamentally altered our nation. The 1978 First National Bank of Boston v. Bellotti ruling (creating a corporate right to influence ballot questions) to the 2010 Citizens United v. FEC ruling (allowing unlimited corporate electioneering) are among the notable results, but most legal and political victories resulted from decades of patient work to shift popular opinion and culture.
 
"Foundations, organizations and citizens who believe in representative democracy have much to learn from the Powell Memo. In stark contrast to Powell's call for long-term vision and movement-building, most public interest and pro-democracy groups focus incessantly on damage control and short-term battles, even as they lose repeatedly. The myopic focus on election outcomes, at the expense of changing the electoral process, is just one symptom of this lack of strategic vision.
 
"Thankfully, the Citizens United ruling may have been a wake up call. Coalitions like Move to Amend, Free Speech for People and others focused on Constitution-level change are gaining momentum, and groups like the American Independent Business Alliance, Business Alliance for Local Living Economies and Sustainable Business Council are building grassroots support for and among independent businesses that underpin our economy in contrast to the corporatization agenda of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce."

#4681 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Thu Sep 22, 2011 3:44 am
Subject: Fwd: Georgia killed Troy Davis
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 




-----Original Message-----
From: Amnesty International USA <alerts@...>
To: Gregory A. Butler <GREGORYABUTLER@...>
Sent: Wed, Sep 21, 2011 11:40 pm
Subject: Georgia killed Troy Davis

Amnesty International
 
The state of Georgia has executed Troy Anthony Davis.
 
Dear Gregory A. ,

I've been down here at death row, and we just heard the horrific news.

After a torturous delay of more than 4 hours, the state of Georgia has just killed Troy Anthony Davis.

My heart is heavy. I am sad and angry. The state of Georgia has proven what we already know. Governments cannot be trusted with the awful power over life and death.

Today, Georgia didn't just kill Troy Davis, they killed the faith and confidence that many Georgians, Americans and Troy Davis supporters worldwide used to have in our criminal justice system.

Wende, on our Abolish the Death Penalty Campaign team, met with Troy Davis yesterday to convey the support that he has had from all of you. He asked us to deliver this message back to you:

"The struggle for justice doesn't end with me. This struggle is for all the Troy Davises who came before me and all the ones who will come after me. I'm in good spirits and I'm prayerful and at peace."

Let's take a moment to honor the life of Troy Davis and Mark MacPhail. Then, let's take all of our difficult feelings and re-double our commitment to abolition of the death penalty.

Please pledge to continue this fight because it is far from over.

This Friday at 7 pm EST, please join us for a special call to discuss Troy Davis' case, what your work means for the death penalty abolition movement as a whole and what we can do next.

I am Troy Davis. You are Troy Davis. We will not stop fighting for justice.

Thank you for everything you have done to make your voice heard.

In Solidarity,
Laura Moye
Director, Death Penalty Abolition Campaign
Amnesty International USA

 
  Not in my name

The state of Georgia may have taken one life tonight, but they cannot stop our struggle for all the Troy Davises of the world.





Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
 
 

© 2011 Amnesty International USA | 5 Penn Plaza, New York, NY 10001 | 212.807.8400  


Remove yourself from this mailing.

Remove yourself from all mailings from Amnesty USA.

#4682 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Thu Sep 22, 2011 5:54 pm
Subject: Fwd: The execution of Troy Davis
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 




-----Original Message-----
From: Socialist Equality Party <sep@...>
To: gregoryabutler <gregoryabutler@...>
Sent: Thu, Sep 22, 2011 1:27 pm
Subject: The execution of Troy Davis


World Socialist Web Site

The execution of Troy Davis

22 September 2011
Kate Randall
The WSWS urges its readers to write in to the WSWS with comments. You can also share this article on Facebook and Twitter. For more information on joining the Socialist Equality Party, click here.
The world looked on in horror Wednesday night as death row inmate Troy Davis was executed by lethal injection at the state prison near Jackson, Georgia.
The state-sanctioned murder was the final grisly episode in a judicial travesty that spanned more than two decades. It stands as a damning indictment of the entire political system and a shameful episode in the history of the United States.
The death of Davis was ensured after the US Supreme Court rejected a last-minute appeal for a stay at about 10:20 pm. At 10:53, a sedative was injected into his veins, rendering him unconscious. A second injection paralyzed all muscles, causing suffocation. The final injection induced a massive heart attack, causing death at 11:08 pm.
The barbarism of the process reached its epitome Wednesday night. In the hours before the lethal concoction was delivered, originally scheduled for 7:00 pm, Davis remained strapped to the gurney, while the high court deliberated. Fa mily members and supporters stood in agony outside prison walls, waiting for news. The ruling came in the form of a one-line denial, without explanation or dissent.
It would have taken only five justices' votes to stop the killing going forward. In the end, even this temporary measure was rejected by the black-robed executioners.
Peaceful protesters outside the prison, at one point numbering in the thousands, were surrounded by hundreds of police officers, some decked out in riot gear, while helicopters circled overhead. Earlier in the evening several demonstrators who crossed the road running past the prison were arrested and taken away.
Davis issued a written statement before his execution, which read: "The struggle for justice doesn't end with me. This struggle is for all the Troy Davises who came before me and all the ones who will come after me."
His case had attracted the attention of millions of people throughout the country and around t he world. A petition urging clemency was signed by over 600,000 people. His senseless and needless murder without doubt struck something deep within the public psyche--something that will not be forgotten and will serve to further discredit and undermine a barbaric, relentless and remorseless system.
The American political establishment for the most part reacted with indifference. Particularly noteworthy was the cowardly silence of President Barack Obama, who refused to intervene in the case. Press Secretary Jay Carney stated blithely Wednesday that the president had "worked to ensure accuracy and fairness in the criminal justice system," but that he would not weigh in on Davis's case because it was a "state prosecution."
Obama is on record supporting the death penalty, a practice banned by the vast majority of industrialized nations.
This is of a piece with the policies of the entire political establishment in America--Democratic and Republican--whic h condones targeted assassinations, torture, secret prisons and the right to subjugate sovereign nations through the use of air strikes, invasions and occupations.
Just days before Troy Davis was injected with lethal chemicals, Obama spoke before the United Nations, hailing the imperialist war against Libya as a great victory for democracy.
Wednesday's execution was the fourth and final appointment with death faced by Davis, a man who has spent 22 years on death row protesting his innocence. His execution had been scheduled on three previous occasions, two of these halted within only hours of the planned injection.
Since Davis's arrest in connection with the killing of off-duty police officer Mark McPhail in 1989, authorities at every level of the state have carried out an assault on his basic rights. The legal case has been marred by prosecutorial misconduct, denial of due process and discrimination.
There is a great deal of evidence that poi nts to Troy Davis's innocence. But the state parole board denied him clemency Tuesday despite the fact that seven out of nine witnesses in his trial recanted their testimony, citing police intimidation, and jurors publicly repudiated their opinions.
Davis was not provided with legal representation during the state appeals process. A federal district judge acknowledged that even though the recantations of key witnesses cast doubt on Davis's conviction, he was not granted a new trial. On the day of his execution, prison officials refused the condemned man's request to undergo a polygraph test to prove his innocence.
The legal lynching of Troy Davis brings into focus the remorseless brutality of American society in the 21st century. He was one of the estimated 3,251 prisoners who languish on death rows across the United States, and the 35th person to be executed in 2011.
The US has the largest prison population in the world, both in numbers and as a perc entage of population. The latest figures available show some 2.3 million people incarcerated, a rate of about 750 prisoners for every 100,000 US residents. The nation's prisons are also disproportionately filled with members of racial and ethnic minorities.
Troy Davis, an African-American, was 22 years old at the time of his trial. Cases similar to his are played out every day in police stations and courtrooms across the US. As of 2009, 1 in 10 black males aged 25-29 was in prison or jail.
No doubt one factor behind the high court's decision not to intervene in the end was concern that raising questions about the justice of Davis's execution would cast doubt upon the entire system of state repression in the United States.
The backdrop to this apparatus is a society plagued by poverty and a growing chasm between the vast majority of the people and a small, obscenely wealthy elite. Some 26 million Americans are jobless, with more than 6 million in the r anks of the long-term unemployed. While corporate profits and CEO salaries continue to soar, there are no government programs to address the jobs crisis or the accompanying scourges of poverty, hunger, homelessness and the lack of decent education or medical care for tens of millions.
The legal murder of Troy Davis underscores the fact that there is no constituency within the American political establishment for basic principles of democracy. An end to the cruel and sadistic practice of capital punishment, along with the defense of democratic rights in general, depends on the development of an independent political, socialist movement of the working class.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To be unsubscribed from the SEP Supporters mailing list, simply click on the link below:
Unsubscribe gregoryabutler@...



#4683 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Fri Sep 23, 2011 3:27 am
Subject: Fwd: [clnews] Rally to Save America’s Postal Service on Tues. Sept. 27
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 




-----Original Message-----
From: Admin CLNews <Admin@...>
To: CLNews List Serve <clnews@...>
Sent: Thu, Sep 22, 2011 11:18 pm
Subject: [clnews] Rally to Save America’s Postal Service on Tues. Sept. 27


Rally to Save America’s Postal Service on Tues. Sept. 27
What’s the real story behind the postal crisis?
By Michael G. Plaskon, Executive Vice President, NALC Branch 84,
Pittsburgh, PA.
In every Congressional District across America, Postal Service unionists
are organizing rallies to be held on Tuesday, September 27, 2011. The
National Association of Letter Carriers is collaborating with the American
Postal Workers Union, National Postal Mailhandlers Union, and the National
Rural Letter Carriers Association to hold rallies at every elected
representative’s office to make the point that only Congress can fix the
financial difficulties facing the United States Postal Service (USPS).
Congress passed a law in 2006 placing the postal service in its current
fiscal situation, and it is only Congress that can solve the problem by
enacting H. R. 1351.
Neither workers nor our unions caused this crisis.
In 2006, Congress passed the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act.
This law requires the Postal Service to do something that no other
business or government agency has to do--pre-fund its FUTURE retiree
health care benefits. This is a 75 year liability that has to be paid in
10 years. The Postal Service makes a payment of approximately $5.5
billion on September 30 at the end of every fiscal year to meet this
obligation. The Post Office has been paying these benefits the past four
years into a trust fund for employees who have not even been born yet.
This is the burden that is creating the “financial crisis” for the Post
Office. The recession that has gripped America the past few years has
undoubtedly affected the Postal Service, but even in the worst economic
times since the great depression, the USPS has had a net profit of $611
million dollars. Unfortunately, the red ink associated with the post
office is the mandated pre-funding since 2006.
We can solve the problem without eliminating jobs and services.
This onerous payment is barely being reported in the media. Another fact
not being widely circulated is that independent agencies and the
government itself have concluded that the USPS has overpaid into its two
retirement systems. The Post Office has excessively funded the Civil
Service Retirement System by at least $50 billion dollars, and the Federal
Employees Retirement System around $7 billion dollars. This gives
Congress an opportunity to fix the problem by passing H.R 1351, the United
States Postal Service Pension Obligation Recalculation and Restoration Act
of 2011. This bill, among many introduced in Congress, is the only one
that will address the pressing financial concerns of the post office in a
responsible manner without eliminating jobs and services to the American
public. The bill introduced by Rep. Stephen Lynch has 211 co-sponsors.
This will not be a bailout or cost the citizens of the United States a
single penny in taxes. It will simply transfer the overpayments in the
retirement system into the future retiree health care obligation. If this
law is passed there will be no other company in the United States that can
claim two fully funded pensions and a fully funded current and future
retiree health care benefits plan.
Why the gloom and doom?
So why all the gloom and doom? There cannot be a claim that “legacy
costs” or “benefits” are destroying the USPS. Productivity and
reliability can’t be a factor. The Post Office adds a million new
delivery points each year and has simultaneously reduced the number of
employees nationwide from over 700,000 three years ago to about 590,000
today. On time delivery service standards are at an all time high. The
Postal Service has been named the most trusted government agency six years
running. So why does Postmaster General Patrick Donahue insist on a plan
that eliminates a day of mail delivery service, closes over 3,000 Post
Offices and more than half the mail processing plants in the country, and
guts the collective bargaining rights of its organized employees by
redefining the retirement and health care benefit plans? Disaster
Capitalism!
A manufactured crisis
If you have read Naomi Klein’s book “The Shock Doctrine,” then you know
what I am talking about. It is almost as if Congress and the USPS
headquarters are treating it like a page out of a playbook--manufacture a
financial crisis and insist drastic measures must be taken immediately
before any facts and public input can get in the way. Seize the
opportunity to break the unions and dismantle a reliable public service so
the capitalists can let the free market perform what the government
couldn’t do--but for a profit. That is what the Postmaster General’s
proposals will accomplish--eliminate Saturday delivery and open the door
to private competitors. Once that advantage is gone and revenues decline,
then why not eliminate Tuesday mail delivery service, then Thursday mail
delivery, and so on?
USPS has plans to eliminate over 100,000 jobs and 3,000 post offices.
But how will the private sector respond? Will they have universal pricing
and service? Of course not. Those who have a mail box at the end of a
dirt road or live in a community that is not affluent will not be
profitable, and the service will not be affordable. These are the folks
who need the Postal Service the most. The plan to eliminate half the mail
processing centers nationwide will delay the time it takes to deliver
first class mail. The USPS is planning on lowering its service standards
by a day or two once the plan is implemented. What company in their right
mind intentionally “plans” on lowering its standards unless they are
trying to fail? The closures of an additional 3,000+ post offices will
diminish the purpose of the service that binds the nation together.
Americans will be inconvenienced to use the USPS and the trust will
deteriorate. Changing the retirement and health benefit plans
fundamentally alters the collective bargaining agreements. These plans
will eliminate over 100,000 jobs at a time when this country cannot afford
that kind of blow to the economy. It is unfortunate and hypocritical that
the Obama administration has advocated the elimination of Saturday
delivery service as part of the deficit-reduction package while insisting
on the need for job creation. The U.S. Postal Service is critical to our
economy. We deliver mail, medicine, and packages on time and for good
price.
Rally with us on September 27!
I hope all unionists across America, who appreciate the hard work of their
brothers and sisters in the Postal Service, will support them by attending
the rallies on Tuesday, September 27. Bring some friends who rely on the
USPS. Let your voice be heard; advocate for H. R. 1351!
Rally Locations and Times.
For details on rally locations and more information, please go to
http://www.saveamericaspostalservice.org/ or the National Association of
Letter Carriers web-site at http://www.nalc.org/ This legislation will
address the immediate concerns of the adverse effects the burden of health
care places on the Postal Service.
NALC seeks continued support and passage of single payer, HR 676.
But, like all labor organizations faced with the health care dilemma, the
ultimate long term goal of the NALC is the continued support and passage
of single payer. The Postal Service would not have to fund retiree health
care benefits, let alone future employee benefits, if single payer,
specifically H. R. 676, were the law.
I hope to see you on September 27th.
Distributed by:
All Unions Committee For Single Payer Health Care--HR 676
c/o Nurses Professional Organization (NPO)
1169 Eastern Parkway, Suite 2218
Louisville, KY 40217
(502) 636 1551
Email: nursenpo@...
http://unionsforsinglepayerHR676.org
9/22/11
To STOP receiving these emails reply with REMOVE in subject line
_______________________________________________
You are subscribed to Single Payer News from Unions for Single Payer Health Care HR 676
Subscription options are available at http://unionsforsinglepayerhealthcare.org/mailman/listinfo/singlepayernews
-- Community Labor News
http://clnews.org/

#4684 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Fri Sep 23, 2011 4:08 am
Subject: Fwd: [NYCLAW] We Are All Troy Davis!
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 




-----Original Message-----
From: NYCLAW
To: LaborAgainstWar <laboragainstwar@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Thu, Sep 22, 2011 11:39 pm
Subject: [NYCLAW] We Are All Troy Davis!



http://nodeathpenalty.org/news-and-updates/we-are-all-troy-davis

We Are All Troy Davis!
A statement from the Campaign to End the Death Penalty
Thursday, September 22, 2011

- - - - - - - -
"In honor of Troy Davis and his family, we will continue stand up and build the struggle against the death penalty and the whole INjustice system!"
- - - - - - - -


The Campaign to End the Death Penalty is deeply horrified and grief stricken at the murder of Troy Davis by the State of Georgia on September 21, 2011 at 11:08 PM -- despite a worldwide movement of unprecedented numbers of people calling for a halt to the execution.

We are left asking how it could be that seven of nine witnesses can recant and change their testimonies from Troy's trial, yet the courts still refused to grant him any relief. There was no physical evidence tying Troy to the 1989 shooting Savannah, Georgia police officer Mark Allan MacPhail -- no DNA evidence, no murder weapon, no fingerprints. He was convicted based solely on the testimony of these witnesses.

How could it be that Troy was found guilty based on the testimony of these witnesses, yet they had no credibility when they later came forward to say that the police coerced and even threatened them into saying that Troy was guilty?

Troy spent 22 years on death row for a crime he did not commit. We strongly believe that Troy was innocent. As he maintained during his final words in the execution chamber, "I'd like to address the MacPhail family. Let you know, despite the situation you are in, I'm not the one who personally killed your son, your father, your brother, I am innocent."

We are appalled and disgusted that the parole board, the courts in Georgia, and the U.S. Supreme Court all denied Troy the relief that he so clearly deserved.

But we are not surprised -- we have learned the hard way that innocence does not matter within our justice system. The U.S. Supreme Court itself has stated that innocence is not enough when seeking relief from the courts in death penalty cases.

Barring the court system -- could anyone else have stepped in for Troy?

President Barack Obama declined to speak on the case, stating through his Press Secretary Jay Carney, that the he "has worked to ensure accuracy and fairness in the criminal justice system" and that, "it was not appropriate for the President of the United States to weigh in on specific cases like this one, which is a state prosecution."

We disagree. The President is one of the most powerful people in the world -- he has the authority to force change within the criminal justice system. He should have something to say when a state is about to execute an innocent person.

Even with all the evidence of his innocence, Troy was called a criminal, strapped down to a gurney, where he waited for hours while the courts deliberated -- and then he was finally killed.

We recognize that this gruesome act is not an unusual occurrence in a system of capital punishment that does not care about the racism and bias against the poor which is endemic in it. We know that the people who maintain the system of capital punishment are so desperate to keep it that they aren't willing to admit when they have made a mistake.

Troy's case may not be unique in this sense -- but in another way it is different than the vast majority of executions that have happened over the years. Troy's case generated the biggest outpouring of solidarity, support and activism witnessed against a death penalty case in modern times.

Truly, the whole world was watching Georgia these last few days. As Martina Correia, Troy's sister and champion, put it, "Troy Davis has impacted the world. They say 'I am Troy Davis' in languages he can't speak."

From the close to 1 million petition signatures sent to the Georgia Parole Board to spare Troy's life, to the many thousands of people who joined Facebook pages and tweeted for Troy, to the thousands who demonstrated all over the world over the last week -- the scale of activism for Troy was something many of us in the abolition movement have never witnessed before.

Last week members of the CEDP traveled to Atlanta, Georgia where we participated in a march and rally for Troy. Over three thousand others rallied to demand that the execution be stopped.

Campaign member and former prisoner Mark Clements gave a heartfelt speech on behalf of Troy.

"I spent 28 year in prison for a crime that I did not commit, I know how Davis is feeling, he's scared, that's why I am here, because I know how he feels, I feel his pain, I have witnessed men facing execution and they are scared," Clements told the crowd.

Fighting hard to control his emotions, he went on to state that the NEW JIM CROW is about people like Troy, confined inside of prisons for crimes they never committed, and they need us! We the people to help them like never before."

There were rallies all over the world for Troy on Wednesday evening. Outside the Jackson prison, waiting to hear whether Troy would live or die, hundreds of people gathered and chanted "You say death row, we say HELL NO!"

That is the spirit we have to go forward with now. The fight is not over, despite the worst of the worst taking place last night. It was Troy's last wish that his family and friends continue to fight even after his death.

As Troy told his supporters in a letter,

"There are so many more Troy Davis'. This fight to end the death penalty is not won or lost through me but through our strength to move forward and save every innocent person in captivity around the globe. We need to dismantle this Unjust system city by city, state by state and country by country."

Troy Davis, who contributed so much to our movement and to the Campaign to End the Death Penalty, will be sorely missed and deeply grieved.

In a touching moment yesterday, Troy's sister Martina, assisted by others, stood up out of her wheelchair, saying, "I'm going to stand here for my brother."

In honor of Troy Davis and his family, we will continue stand up and build the struggle against the death penalty and the whole INjustice system!


#4685 From: SF Bay View <editor@...>
Date: Sat Sep 24, 2011 1:31 am
Subject: Re: Fwd: [NYCLAW] We Are All Troy Davis!
sfbayview94124
Send Email Send Email
 
Early yesterday I dropped everything and posted a story you sent, and I wanted to thank you for it:

The execution of Troy Davis

Mary Ratcliff
SF Bay View
(415) 671-0789
www.sfbayview.com

On 9/22/2011 9:08 PM, GREGORYABUTLER@... wrote:
 





-----Original Message-----
From: NYCLAW
To: LaborAgainstWar <laboragainstwar@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Thu, Sep 22, 2011 11:39 pm
Subject: [NYCLAW] We Are All Troy Davis!



http://nodeathpenalty.org/news-and-updates/we-are-all-troy-davis

We Are All Troy Davis!
A statement from the Campaign to End the Death Penalty
Thursday, September 22, 2011

- - - - - - - -
"In honor of Troy Davis and his family, we will continue stand up and build the struggle against the death penalty and the whole INjustice system!"
- - - - - - - -


The Campaign to End the Death Penalty is deeply horrified and grief stricken at the murder of Troy Davis by the State of Georgia on September 21, 2011 at 11:08 PM -- despite a worldwide movement of unprecedented numbers of people calling for a halt to the execution.

We are left asking how it could be that seven of nine witnesses can recant and change their testimonies from Troy's trial, yet the courts still refused to grant him any relief. There was no physical evidence tying Troy to the 1989 shooting Savannah, Georgia police officer Mark Allan MacPhail -- no DNA evidence, no murder weapon, no fingerprints. He was convicted based solely on the testimony of these witnesses.

How could it be that Troy was found guilty based on the testimony of these witnesses, yet they had no credibility when they later came forward to say that the police coerced and even threatened them into saying that Troy was guilty?

Troy spent 22 years on death row for a crime he did not commit. We strongly believe that Troy was innocent. As he maintained during his final words in the execution chamber, "I'd like to address the MacPhail family. Let you know, despite the situation you are in, I'm not the one who personally killed your son, your father, your brother, I am innocent."

We are appalled and disgusted that the parole board, the courts in Georgia, and the U.S. Supreme Court all denied Troy the relief that he so clearly deserved.

But we are not surprised -- we have learned the hard way that innocence does not matter within our justice system. The U.S. Supreme Court itself has stated that innocence is not enough when seeking relief from the courts in death penalty cases.

Barring the court system -- could anyone else have stepped in for Troy?

President Barack Obama declined to speak on the case, stating through his Press Secretary Jay Carney, that the he "has worked to ensure accuracy and fairness in the criminal justice system" and that, "it was not appropriate for the President of the United States to weigh in on specific cases like this one, which is a state prosecution."

We disagree. The President is one of the most powerful people in the world -- he has the authority to force change within the criminal justice system. He should have something to say when a state is about to execute an innocent person.

Even with all the evidence of his innocence, Troy was called a criminal, strapped down to a gurney, where he waited for hours while the courts deliberated -- and then he was finally killed.

We recognize that this gruesome act is not an unusual occurrence in a system of capital punishment that does not care about the racism and bias against the poor which is endemic in it. We know that the people who maintain the system of capital punishment are so desperate to keep it that they aren't willing to admit when they have made a mistake.

Troy's case may not be unique in this sense -- but in another way it is different than the vast majority of executions that have happened over the years. Troy's case generated the biggest outpouring of solidarity, support and activism witnessed against a death penalty case in modern times.

Truly, the whole world was watching Georgia these last few days. As Martina Correia, Troy's sister and champion, put it, "Troy Davis has impacted the world. They say 'I am Troy Davis' in languages he can't speak."

>From the close to 1 million petition signatures sent to the Georgia Parole Board to spare Troy's life, to the many thousands of people who joined Facebook pages and tweeted for Troy, to the thousands who demonstrated all over the world over the last week -- the scale of activism for Troy was something many of us in the abolition movement have never witnessed before.

Last week members of the CEDP traveled to Atlanta, Georgia where we participated in a march and rally for Troy. Over three thousand others rallied to demand that the execution be stopped.

Campaign member and former prisoner Mark Clements gave a heartfelt speech on behalf of Troy.

"I spent 28 year in prison for a crime that I did not commit, I know how Davis is feeling, he's scared, that's why I am here, because I know how he feels, I feel his pain, I have witnessed men facing execution and they are scared," Clements told the crowd.

Fighting hard to control his emotions, he went on to state that the NEW JIM CROW is about people like Troy, confined inside of prisons for crimes they never committed, and they need us! We the people to help them like never before."

There were rallies all over the world for Troy on Wednesday evening. Outside the Jackson prison, waiting to hear whether Troy would live or die, hundreds of people gathered and chanted "You say death row, we say HELL NO!"

That is the spirit we have to go forward with now. The fight is not over, despite the worst of the worst taking place last night. It was Troy's last wish that his family and friends continue to fight even after his death.

As Troy told his supporters in a letter,

"There are so many more Troy Davis'. This fight to end the death penalty is not won or lost through me but through our strength to move forward and save every innocent person in captivity around the globe. We need to dismantle this Unjust system city by city, state by state and country by country."

Troy Davis, who contributed so much to our movement and to the Campaign to End the Death Penalty, will be sorely missed and deeply grieved.

In a touching moment yesterday, Troy's sister Martina, assisted by others, stood up out of her wheelchair, saying, "I'm going to stand here for my brother."

In honor of Troy Davis and his family, we will continue stand up and build the struggle against the death penalty and the whole INjustice system!


#4686 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Sat Sep 24, 2011 1:43 am
Subject: Re: Fwd: [NYCLAW] We Are All Troy Davis!
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 
You're welcome, sister!

Too bad we couldn't save Troy - I hope he's the last brother we have to lose like that!

Sent on the Sprint Now Network from my BlackBerry


From: SF Bay View <editor@...>
Sender: gangboxnews@yahoogroups.com
Date: Fri, 23 Sep 2011 18:31:24 -0700
To: <gangboxnews@yahoogroups.com>
ReplyTo: gangboxnews@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [gangboxnews] Fwd: [NYCLAW] We Are All Troy Davis!

Early yesterday I dropped everything and posted a story you sent, and I wanted to thank you for it:

The execution of Troy Davis

Mary Ratcliff
SF Bay View
(415) 671-0789
www.sfbayview.com

On 9/22/2011 9:08 PM, GREGORYABUTLER@... wrote:
 





-----Original Message-----
From: NYCLAW
To: LaborAgainstWar <laboragainstwar@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Thu, Sep 22, 2011 11:39 pm
Subject: [NYCLAW] We Are All Troy Davis!



http://nodeathpenalty.org/news-and-updates/we-are-all-troy-davis

We Are All Troy Davis!
A statement from the Campaign to End the Death Penalty
Thursday, September 22, 2011

- - - - - - - -
"In honor of Troy Davis and his family, we will continue stand up and build the struggle against the death penalty and the whole INjustice system!"
- - - - - - - -


The Campaign to End the Death Penalty is deeply horrified and grief stricken at the murder of Troy Davis by the State of Georgia on September 21, 2011 at 11:08 PM -- despite a worldwide movement of unprecedented numbers of people calling for a halt to the execution.

We are left asking how it could be that seven of nine witnesses can recant and change their testimonies from Troy's trial, yet the courts still refused to grant him any relief. There was no physical evidence tying Troy to the 1989 shooting Savannah, Georgia police officer Mark Allan MacPhail -- no DNA evidence, no murder weapon, no fingerprints. He was convicted based solely on the testimony of these witnesses.

How could it be that Troy was found guilty based on the testimony of these witnesses, yet they had no credibility when they later came forward to say that the police coerced and even threatened them into saying that Troy was guilty?

Troy spent 22 years on death row for a crime he did not commit. We strongly believe that Troy was innocent. As he maintained during his final words in the execution chamber, "I'd like to address the MacPhail family. Let you know, despite the situation you are in, I'm not the one who personally killed your son, your father, your brother, I am innocent."

We are appalled and disgusted that the parole board, the courts in Georgia, and the U.S. Supreme Court all denied Troy the relief that he so clearly deserved.

But we are not surprised -- we have learned the hard way that innocence does not matter within our justice system. The U.S. Supreme Court itself has stated that innocence is not enough when seeking relief from the courts in death penalty cases.

Barring the court system -- could anyone else have stepped in for Troy?

President Barack Obama declined to speak on the case, stating through his Press Secretary Jay Carney, that the he "has worked to ensure accuracy and fairness in the criminal justice system" and that, "it was not appropriate for the President of the United States to weigh in on specific cases like this one, which is a state prosecution."

We disagree. The President is one of the most powerful people in the world -- he has the authority to force change within the criminal justice system. He should have something to say when a state is about to execute an innocent person.

Even with all the evidence of his innocence, Troy was called a criminal, strapped down to a gurney, where he waited for hours while the courts deliberated -- and then he was finally killed.

We recognize that this gruesome act is not an unusual occurrence in a system of capital punishment that does not care about the racism and bias against the poor which is endemic in it. We know that the people who maintain the system of capital punishment are so desperate to keep it that they aren't willing to admit when they have made a mistake.

Troy's case may not be unique in this sense -- but in another way it is different than the vast majority of executions that have happened over the years. Troy's case generated the biggest outpouring of solidarity, support and activism witnessed against a death penalty case in modern times.

Truly, the whole world was watching Georgia these last few days. As Martina Correia, Troy's sister and champion, put it, "Troy Davis has impacted the world. They say 'I am Troy Davis' in languages he can't speak."

>From the close to 1 million petition signatures sent to the Georgia Parole Board to spare Troy's life, to the many thousands of people who joined Facebook pages and tweeted for Troy, to the thousands who demonstrated all over the world over the last week -- the scale of activism for Troy was something many of us in the abolition movement have never witnessed before.

Last week members of the CEDP traveled to Atlanta, Georgia where we participated in a march and rally for Troy. Over three thousand others rallied to demand that the execution be stopped.

Campaign member and former prisoner Mark Clements gave a heartfelt speech on behalf of Troy.

"I spent 28 year in prison for a crime that I did not commit, I know how Davis is feeling, he's scared, that's why I am here, because I know how he feels, I feel his pain, I have witnessed men facing execution and they are scared," Clements told the crowd.

Fighting hard to control his emotions, he went on to state that the NEW JIM CROW is about people like Troy, confined inside of prisons for crimes they never committed, and they need us! We the people to help them like never before."

There were rallies all over the world for Troy on Wednesday evening. Outside the Jackson prison, waiting to hear whether Troy would live or die, hundreds of people gathered and chanted "You say death row, we say HELL NO!"

That is the spirit we have to go forward with now. The fight is not over, despite the worst of the worst taking place last night. It was Troy's last wish that his family and friends continue to fight even after his death.

As Troy told his supporters in a letter,

"There are so many more Troy Davis'. This fight to end the death penalty is not won or lost through me but through our strength to move forward and save every innocent person in captivity around the globe. We need to dismantle this Unjust system city by city, state by state and country by country."

Troy Davis, who contributed so much to our movement and to the Campaign to End the Death Penalty, will be sorely missed and deeply grieved.

In a touching moment yesterday, Troy's sister Martina, assisted by others, stood up out of her wheelchair, saying, "I'm going to stand here for my brother."

In honor of Troy Davis and his family, we will continue stand up and build the struggle against the death penalty and the whole INjustice system!


#4687 From: SF Bay View <editor@...>
Date: Sat Sep 24, 2011 1:49 am
Subject: Re: Fwd: [NYCLAW] We Are All Troy Davis!
sfbayview94124
Send Email Send Email
 
Amen!
Mary Ratcliff
SF Bay View
(415) 671-0789
www.sfbayview.com

On 9/23/2011 6:43 PM, GREGORYABUTLER@... wrote:
 

You're welcome, sister!

Too bad we couldn't save Troy - I hope he's the last brother we have to lose like that!

Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®


From: SF Bay View <editor@...>
Date: Fri, 23 Sep 2011 18:31:24 -0700
Subject: Re: [gangboxnews] Fwd: [NYCLAW] We Are All Troy Davis!

Early yesterday I dropped everything and posted a story you sent, and I wanted to thank you for it:

The execution of Troy Davis

Mary Ratcliff
SF Bay View
(415) 671-0789
www.sfbayview.com

On 9/22/2011 9:08 PM, GREGORYABUTLER@... wrote:
 





-----Original Message-----
From: NYCLAW
To: LaborAgainstWar <laboragainstwar@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Thu, Sep 22, 2011 11:39 pm
Subject: [NYCLAW] We Are All Troy Davis!



http://nodeathpenalty.org/news-and-updates/we-are-all-troy-davis

We Are All Troy Davis!
A statement from the Campaign to End the Death Penalty
Thursday, September 22, 2011

- - - - - - - -
"In honor of Troy Davis and his family, we will continue stand up and build the struggle against the death penalty and the whole INjustice system!"
- - - - - - - -


The Campaign to End the Death Penalty is deeply horrified and grief stricken at the murder of Troy Davis by the State of Georgia on September 21, 2011 at 11:08 PM -- despite a worldwide movement of unprecedented numbers of people calling for a halt to the execution.

We are left asking how it could be that seven of nine witnesses can recant and change their testimonies from Troy's trial, yet the courts still refused to grant him any relief. There was no physical evidence tying Troy to the 1989 shooting Savannah, Georgia police officer Mark Allan MacPhail -- no DNA evidence, no murder weapon, no fingerprints. He was convicted based solely on the testimony of these witnesses.

How could it be that Troy was found guilty based on the testimony of these witnesses, yet they had no credibility when they later came forward to say that the police coerced and even threatened them into saying that Troy was guilty?

Troy spent 22 years on death row for a crime he did not commit. We strongly believe that Troy was innocent. As he maintained during his final words in the execution chamber, "I'd like to address the MacPhail family. Let you know, despite the situation you are in, I'm not the one who personally killed your son, your father, your brother, I am innocent."

We are appalled and disgusted that the parole board, the courts in Georgia, and the U.S. Supreme Court all denied Troy the relief that he so clearly deserved.

But we are not surprised -- we have learned the hard way that innocence does not matter within our justice system. The U.S. Supreme Court itself has stated that innocence is not enough when seeking relief from the courts in death penalty cases.

Barring the court system -- could anyone else have stepped in for Troy?

President Barack Obama declined to speak on the case, stating through his Press Secretary Jay Carney, that the he "has worked to ensure accuracy and fairness in the criminal justice system" and that, "it was not appropriate for the President of the United States to weigh in on specific cases like this one, which is a state prosecution."

We disagree. The President is one of the most powerful people in the world -- he has the authority to force change within the criminal justice system. He should have something to say when a state is about to execute an innocent person.

Even with all the evidence of his innocence, Troy was called a criminal, strapped down to a gurney, where he waited for hours while the courts deliberated -- and then he was finally killed.

We recognize that this gruesome act is not an unusual occurrence in a system of capital punishment that does not care about the racism and bias against the poor which is endemic in it. We know that the people who maintain the system of capital punishment are so desperate to keep it that they aren't willing to admit when they have made a mistake.

Troy's case may not be unique in this sense -- but in another way it is different than the vast majority of executions that have happened over the years. Troy's case generated the biggest outpouring of solidarity, support and activism witnessed against a death penalty case in modern times.

Truly, the whole world was watching Georgia these last few days. As Martina Correia, Troy's sister and champion, put it, "Troy Davis has impacted the world. They say 'I am Troy Davis' in languages he can't speak."

>From the close to 1 million petition signatures sent to the Georgia Parole Board to spare Troy's life, to the many thousands of people who joined Facebook pages and tweeted for Troy, to the thousands who demonstrated all over the world over the last week -- the scale of activism for Troy was something many of us in the abolition movement have never witnessed before.

Last week members of the CEDP traveled to Atlanta, Georgia where we participated in a march and rally for Troy. Over three thousand others rallied to demand that the execution be stopped.

Campaign member and former prisoner Mark Clements gave a heartfelt speech on behalf of Troy.

"I spent 28 year in prison for a crime that I did not commit, I know how Davis is feeling, he's scared, that's why I am here, because I know how he feels, I feel his pain, I have witnessed men facing execution and they are scared," Clements told the crowd.

Fighting hard to control his emotions, he went on to state that the NEW JIM CROW is about people like Troy, confined inside of prisons for crimes they never committed, and they need us! We the people to help them like never before."

There were rallies all over the world for Troy on Wednesday evening. Outside the Jackson prison, waiting to hear whether Troy would live or die, hundreds of people gathered and chanted "You say death row, we say HELL NO!"

That is the spirit we have to go forward with now. The fight is not over, despite the worst of the worst taking place last night. It was Troy's last wish that his family and friends continue to fight even after his death.

As Troy told his supporters in a letter,

"There are so many more Troy Davis'. This fight to end the death penalty is not won or lost through me but through our strength to move forward and save every innocent person in captivity around the globe. We need to dismantle this Unjust system city by city, state by state and country by country."

Troy Davis, who contributed so much to our movement and to the Campaign to End the Death Penalty, will be sorely missed and deeply grieved.

In a touching moment yesterday, Troy's sister Martina, assisted by others, stood up out of her wheelchair, saying, "I'm going to stand here for my brother."

In honor of Troy Davis and his family, we will continue stand up and build the struggle against the death penalty and the whole INjustice system!


#4689 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Mon Oct 3, 2011 5:17 am
Subject: Fw: Rally for locked out Teamsters at Sotheby`s: today Mon. 10/3
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 
Sent on the Sprint Now Network from my BlackBerry

-----Original Message-----
From: Todd Eaton <toddeaton@...>
Sender: nyprotest-owner@...
Date: Mon, 03 Oct 2011 00:34:58
To: *NYPROTEST EVENT ANNOUNCEMENT LISTSERV*<NYPROTEST@...>
Reply-To: nyprotest-editor@...
Cc: <adam@...>; <BronxGreens@YAHOOGROUPS.COM>;
<dan@...>; <manhattangreens@yahoogroups.com>;
<nycgreens-discussions@yahoogroups.com>; <ruthsantana@...>;
<theatersagainstwar-discussion-EDITOR@...>;
<ufpj_arts@...>
Subject: Rally f/ Locked Out Sotheby`s Workers: today Mon. 10/3

[more announcements at http://snipurl.com/nyprotest or
  http://nycal.mayfirst.org || Unsubscribe info at bottom.]

RALLY TODAY FOR LOCKED OUT SOTHEBY'S WORKERS
Monday October 3rd at 5:30pm
820 5th Avenue (btwn 63rd and 64th) [TRANSIT:  N, Q, R train to 5 Av.
(east exit to 60th); F (not M) to Lexington (at 63rd); #4, 5, 6 to 59
St.(at Lex); Q to 57 St.-7 Av.; buses via 5th Av. or Madison or 59th;
M66 bus from W. 65th via E. 68th; Q32 from Jackson Hts. via
Queensboro Bridge/Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge; 57th St. buses -t.]
    = = =
Date: Sun, 02 Oct 2011 20:12:20 -0700 (PDT)
From: Allison Brown <allioop630@...> From: Nate Franco
<natefranco@...>
Sent: Sunday, October 2, 2011 10:24 PM
TOMORROW @ 5 PM: RALLY FOR LOCKED OUT SOTHEBY'S WORKERS

Just wanted to let you know about a rally TOMORROW in support of
locked-out Sotheby's workers.  Forty three members of Teamsters 814
at Sotheby's have been locked out for going on 9 weeks now.  The
company made over $680 million last year in profit, and they are
demanding that we waive our right to any retirement benefits and
agree that all new hires be non-union!  They want to make them work
harder for less.

So, needless to say, we feel this is a crucial fight, with many
implications for other unions and working people gnerally in NYC in
New York.  If a private employer, who is highly profitable and
doesn't need concessions can get them anyway, then what does that
mean for the rest of us!?  Local 814 is now planning a major rally
with other Teamster locals, our allies from the trades, and other new
york unions in front of the home of Sotheby's biggest clients as well
as some of their execs and board members (YES, many of them live in
the same 5th avenue townhouse..WHAT A SHOCK!).

Please spread the word and join us as we assemble at the doorstep of
New York's wealthy, and demand justice for the workers at Sotheby's.

The info for this rally is as follows:

RALLY FOR LOCKED OUT SOTHEBY'S WORKERS
Monday October 3rd @ 530pm
820 5th Avenue (btwn 63rd and 64th)

please wear t-shirt or something to identify your union or organization!





          =   =   =
Check NY Activist Calendar frequently: http://nycal.mayfirst.org





   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~
     ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~

See unsubscribe instructions at bottom.

  *HELP SAVE THIS PROJECT: ASK ABOUT OUR
   FIVE MINUTE PER DAY VOLUNTEER GIG *

~ Send progressive event announcements to
   <nyprotest@...>. ALSO enter
   them at <http://nycal.mayfirst.org>. Or
   remember to look up "NY Activist Calendar"
   and "NYPROTEST".  No subscriptions needed
   to post on either calendar.  If you enter
   anything on the N.Y.A.C. web calendar, it
   will usually make its way to this NYPROTEST
   listserv.  But in the other direction,not
   always.  So please use both, & thanks!

~ Read searchable event listings on the web
   http://lists.riseup.net/www/arc/nyprotest
   or http://snipurl.com/NYPROTEST And please
   send a friend that link.   No subscription
   needed to read these public, instant archives.

~ Clicking "reply" to any message will
   not reach that event's organizers.
   at

~ Ask me to switch your subscription to one
   msg per day or to no mail/website
   only. Or get a password reminder, & then
   switch it yourself at:

  http://lists.riseup.net/www/suboptions/nyprotest

~ For TRANSIT info & MAPS try these sites:
   onnyturf.com transit: http://is.gd/nv3a
   hopstop.com NYC transit:  http://is.gd/nv3r
   safer bike routes: http://ridethecity.com/
   NJ Transit Trip Planner http://njtransit.com
   Lower Manhattan map http://ow.ly/5or1N
   Manhatttan bus http://is.gd/yOeLlm-/
   Columbia Campus http://bit.ly/acAUcs
   Barnard Map http://is.gd/liB8oi-/
   Hunter Main Campus http://is.gd/1Zlu5V
   Subway http://is.gd/JV7X9o-/
   Brooklyn Bus http://is.gd/PgQ8Qs-/
   http://is.gd/8tGpDI-/
   More bus maps http://mta.info

~ Organizers post their own announcements.
   You have NOT been subscribed to any
   sender's list.  This is Todd's NYPROTEST.

~ U N S U B S C R I B E   U N S U B S C R I B E
    U N S U B S C R I B E   U N S U B S C R I B E
   Send a blank message to:
   nyprotest-unsubscribe@...
   then check mail for a confirmation msg from
   Sympa.  Read & reply to that confirmation.
   OR visit:
   http://lists.riseup.net/www/signoff/nyprotest

   If all else truly fails, ask me to do it for you.

   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~
     ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~

#4690 From: laborink@...
Date: Sat Oct 8, 2011 2:56 am
Subject: Unemployment 23.1% - Inflation 11.35% - GDP -2.83%
laborink
Send Email Send Email
 
Unemployment 23.1% - Inflation 11.35% - GDP -2.83%
10-7-11
Unemployment 23.1%
September Unemployment U3 9.1% U6 16.5% SGS 23.1%
August Unemployment U3 9.1% U6 16.2% SGS 22.8%
July Unemployment U3 9.1% U6 16.1% SGS 22.7%
June Unemployment U3 9.2% U6 16.2% SGS 22.7%
May Unemployment U3 9.1% U6 15.8% SGS 22.3%
April Unemployment U3 9.0% U6 15.9% SGS 22.3%
March Unemployment U3 8.8% U6 15.7% SGS 22.0%
February Unemployment U3 8.9% U6 15.9% SGS 22.1%
The seasonally-adjusted SGS Alternate Unemployment Rate reflects current unemployment reporting methodology adjusted for SGS-estimated long-term discouraged workers, who were defined out of official existence in 1994. That estimate is added to the BLS estimate of U-6 unemployment, which includes short-term discouraged workers.
8-18-11
Consumer Inflation 11.35%
August 11.35%
July 11.21% June 11.13% May 11.15 % April 10.69% March 10.20% February 9.62% January 9.07% December 8.91%  November 8.54%  
The SGS-Alternate Consumer Inflation Measure, which reverses gimmicked changes to official CPI reporting methodologies back to 1980, is 11.35 % The Alternate Consumer Inflation Measures are adjusted to pre-1990 methodology. In general terms, methodological shifts in government reporting have depressed reported inflation, moving the concept of the CPI away from being a measure of the cost of living needed to maintain a constant standard of living. Further definition is provided in our CPI Glossary. Further background on the SGS-Alternate CPI M3 series is available in the Archives in the August 2006 SGS newsletter.

9-29-11
GDP Growth
2011q2 -2.83%
2011q1  -2.60% 2010q4 -2.21  2010q3 -1.44% 
The SGS Alternate-GDP estimate for second-quarter 2011 is an annual contraction of -2.83% versus the official estimate of a 1.63% gain, more-negative than the alternate 2.60 % annual contraction (2.24% official gain) estimated in the first-quarter (see the Alternate Data tab). The SGS-Alternate GDP reflects the inflation-adjusted, or real, year-to-year GDP change, adjusted for distortions in government inflation usage and methodological changes that have resulted in a built-in upside bias to official reporting.
 
Numbers from Shadow Government Statistics,
American Business Analytics & Research LLC.

#4691 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Tue Oct 11, 2011 4:43 am
Subject: Fwd: [clnews] On its 6th Birthday, Wither Change to Win?
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 



-----Original Message-----
From: Steve Early <lsupport@...>
To: portside <portside@...>; labor <labor@...>; steve zeltzer <lvpsf@...>; clr-endorsers <clr-endorsers@...>; ualeindiv <ualeindiv@...>; CLNews List Serve <clnews@...>; Solidarity Labor list <solid-labor@...>; Members <Members@...>
Sent: Tue, Oct 11, 2011 12:14 am
Subject: [clnews] On its 6th Birthday, Wither Change to Win?


WORKING IN THESE TIMES, MONDAY OCT 10, 2011 

Whither Change to Win?

BY STEVE EARLY
Joe Hansen, international president of the United Food and Commercial Workers and current chair of Change to Win, speaks at the organization's founding convention in 2005.  (Photo from UFCW.org)
Most six-year-olds like to have a big birthday bash, with lots of games, presents, balloons, sugary cake, and as much noise as possible.
But Change to Win, the new kid on labor's block born in 2005, has opted for a quieter approach, much in contrast with the celebratory and self-aggrandizing scene at its festive founding convention in St Louis. On that occasion, CTW founders like Tom Woodruff, currently its executive director, talked about spending $750 million a year on new organizing drives similar to those launched by the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) in the 1930s. Then UNITE-HERE President Bruce Raynor (recently drummed out of SEIU for alleged expense account fiddling) gave a radical-sounding speech calling for the imprisonment of corporate bosses who stole workers’ pension fund money.

Six years after these rhetorical fireworks, only four of the seven unions that broke away from the AFL-CIO to form CTW remain in the latter camp. The union coalition that sociologist Ruth Milkman (and others) once touted as “labor’s best hope—maybe its only hope—for revitalization” is rarely seen or heard from. At the International Brotherhood of Teamsters (IBT) convention in Las Vegas in late June, leaders of the two largest CTW affiliates—James Hoffa, president of the host union, and Mary Kay Henry, president of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU)—lathered much praise on each other. But neither ever mentioned the words “Change to Win,” in 40 minutes worth of speechifying about the close working relationship between SEIU and the IBT.
On its own website, CTW recently gave itself a downgrade. It now describes the alliance of SEIU, IBT, United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW), and the tiny United Farm Workers (UFW) as a “Strategic Organizing Center,” not a new labor federation. The participating unions are working on just four “innovative organizing campaigns in the private sector economy” —involving farm labor, port trucking, warehousing, and Wal-Mart. (All four groups of workers were a membership recruitment focus of the UFW, IBT, and/or UFCW respectively long before they left the AFL-CIO and linked up together.) This modest re-conception of Change to Win’s role is a far cry from earlier claims to be a dynamic, fast-growing alternative to a labor federation forever hobbled by its own dysfunctional bureaucracy and internal protocol.

The common denominator of CTW seems to be its affiliates' shared interest in continuing to pay lower per capita dues than the national AFL-CIO requires (now 65 cents per member per month); the four “Strategic Organizing Center” participants pay about half what other cash-strapped unions contribute to the federation now led by Rich Trumka, former president of the United Mine Workers. If the CTW defectors had remained in the main “House of Labor,” AFL programs and staff would have received an estimated $150 million more in dues and special assessments since 2005.

The second coming of the CIO?

At the time of its birth, skeptics argued that CTW was more about the money (as in paying less), than a different kind of union functioning. (At most, CTW recalled the short-lived Alliance for Labor Action, an odd-coupling of the Chemical Workers, Teamsters, and Auto Workers formed in the late 1960s when the UAW and IBT were both on the outs with the AFL-CIO.) Critics saw the CTW union defections as a self-serving dues revolt, dressed up as a principled parting of ways between a recalcitrant “old guard” (then personified by one-time progressive hero John Sweeney) and Sweeney’s frustrated and impatient former backers—Bruce Raynor, John Wilhelm, then co-president of UNITE-HERE, and Andy Stern, now “president emeritus” of SEIU.

In the parched landscape of American labor, circa 2004-5, CTW shimmered briefly as an oasis in the desert. But its journalistic and campus cheerleaders, like CUNY Professor Milkman, failed to see that it was a mixed bag at best, more mirage than real, and hardly the second coming of the CIO. Within its ranks were the Carpenters, already estranged from the AFL-CIO and detested by other building trades unions for poaching on their turf and undermining industry standards. (See this story I wrote back in September 2009.) 
Carpenters president Douglas McCarron was George Bush’s closest friend in the labor movement and, thus, not the best example of the new approaches to politics ostensibly favored by CTW. Teamster president Hoffa, another unlikely “reformer,” professed no interest in realigning union jurisdiction in the ideal fashion favored by Stern, Raynor, and Wilhelm.

Those “Ivy League Amigos”—as I call them in my recent book, The Civil Wars in U.S. Labor—were the driving force behind the “New Unity Partnership” (NUP) that preceded the seven union split from the AFL-CIO. It was an article of faith among them that top-down structuring, assisted by union mergers, was the panacea for labor. Before his departure, Raynor insisted that the AFL-CIO’s 50-plus affiliates should consolidate into just 10 to 15 mega-unions, with less overlapping jurisdiction and a better focus on “core industries.”

A Change to Win divorce

To demonstrate how progressive unions could supersize themselves overnight and grow faster, Raynor and Wilhelm formed the 440,000-member UNITE HERE. Within five years, however, this much applauded “marriage of equals” foundered on the rocks of a messy divorce that proved costly and disruptive for both hotel and garment workers. The meddlesome third party in that troubled relationship was none other than CTW founding father Andy Stern. In early 2009, while simultaneously laying waste to his own hospital worker base in California, Stern wooed a rump group from UNITE HERE, led by Raynor, into SEIU.

The CTW civil war between UNITE HERE and the SEIU-affiliated “Workers United” proved to be a carnival of organizational cannibalism. Eighteen months and tens of millions of dollars later, SEIU—by then headed by Mary Kay Henry—sued for peace (and, not long afterwards, got rid of Raynor).
As Daily News columnist Juan Gonzalez explained it all to Democracy Now! listeners, “the reformers that were supposed to be the Change to Win unions have become so torn by internal division and attempts by SEIU to dominate the American labor movement that, in essence the Change to Win federation is dead.” As Gonzalez predicted, UNITE HERE, followed by the Laborers, soon re-affiliated with the AFL-CIO, following the Carpenters out the door of CTW (an embarrassing return to independent union status that CTW took more than a year to acknowledge).

In its current downsized condition, CTW is still dominated by SEIU, its largest financial backer. Although UFCW president Joe Hansen has replaced now retired SEIU secretary-treasurer Anna Burger as chair of the group, three of its seven “leadership council” members are SEIU officers or executive board members. One of them, SEIU EVP Woodruff doubles as “executive director” of CTW. My information requests for this article were initially fielded by Bob Callahan, a veteran SEIU operative involved in Stern’s disastrous 2009-11 trusteeship over United Healthcare Workers-West; he failed to provide any requested data about CTW’s current budget, staffing, or dues structure.

When asked to assess the state of Change To Win today, one longtime union staffer likened its current functioning to that of a single AFL-CIO headquarters department, the Food and Allies Services Trades (FAST) group, before the split. Like CTW today, FAST helped coordinate corporate campaigns and organizing by some of the same national unions. After its key affiliates defected to CTW, FAST was disbanded and its talented corporate campaign staff dispersed elsewhere. Younger labor activists who gravitated toward CTW for field staff jobs, after the split, often ended up disillusioned—and laid off as well.
As one ex-CTW political campaigner told me, “Change to Win was a husk of a federation and always has been. There was not a whole lot there and it was a constant battle to get anyone to work together. It hasn’t succeeded by its own measures, or anyone else’s.”

In the early years of CTW, only SEIU displayed much of the promised membership growth CTW was supposed to foster. Between 2006 and 2008, it added 300,000 workers to its ranks. But, in 2009 and 2010—thanks largely to the labor civil warfare unleashed by Stern—SEIU’s average annual growth slowed to 55,000, even with the addition of disputed members of UNITE HERE.

Sandy Pope, the Teamster reformer from New York who is running against incumbent IBT leader James Hoffa, has long been critical of CTW and wary of SEIU influence on her union. If she defeats Hoffa in the mail ballot vote that began October 6, Pope pledges to work for greater labor unity. In her view, Change to Win has done little to promote the kind of bottom up, cross-union solidarity, at the rank-and-file level that embattled unions need.

Six years after its founding, only a handful of the “5.5 million workers” who, according to the CTW website, “united to create Change to Win” even know what it is or why they are in it. In the 1930s, it was the just the opposite: the CIO brand was so strong that even workers unsure about their own union’s acronym proudly identified with the broader industrial union movement.
In today’s very different environment, similar brand loyalty is not likely to arise from an overblown inside-the-Beltway concoction like Change To Win. As union activists learned from the WTO battle in Seattle in 1999, the mass strike activity over immigrant rights in 2006 and this year’s occupations of the Wisconsin state capitol and Wall Street, putting real movement back in the labor movement requires an upsurge from below—not just reshuffling the deck chairs on a second (and even smaller) Titanic.

Steve Early spent 27 years as a New England staff member of the Communications Workers of America, an AFL-CIO affiliate that opposed the Change to Win split in 2005. He is the author, most recently, of 
The Civil Wars in U.S. Labor (Haymarket Books, 2011) which chronicles the subsequent implosion of labor’s progressive wing. He can be reached at Lsupport@....



#4692 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Thu Oct 13, 2011 6:57 pm
Subject: Fwd: Evicting Occupy Wall Street
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 



-----Original Message-----
From: Justin Ruben, MoveOn.org Civic Action <moveon-help@...>
To: Gregory A Butler <GREGORYABUTLER@...>
Sent: Thu, Oct 13, 2011 2:56 pm
Subject: Evicting Occupy Wall Street

Dear MoveOn member,
Unless we act now, tomorrow morning could mark the end of the occupation of Wall Street.
Mayor Bloomberg has ordered the NYPD to clear Zuccotti Park at 7 a.m. tomorrow. Protesters would only be allowed back in under new rules that would make it impossible to continue the occupation.1 But this is our city, our park, and our mayor, so as New Yorkers, we can put a stop to this.
If you can, come to Zuccotti Park tomorrow morning at 6 a.m. to stand with the protesters at the moment when they need us most. They've put everything on the line to stand up against Wall Street greed and the corruption of our democracy. Tomorrow morning it's time to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with them.
And right now put in a call to your City Council member and tell them to put a stop to the mayor's eviction of the Occupy Wall Street protesters. Click here to find the contact information for your council member.
Mayor Bloomberg claims the shutdown is necessary for "cleaning operations," but this tactic has been used to end protests before. And the new rules explicitly prohibit tarps, sleeping bags, and even "lying down."
This "operation" is not about cleaning, it's about trampling on the First Amendment rights of protesters to speak out against economic injustice and gather peaceably to petition the government. It could damage the movement that has been spreading across the country.
So come to the park Friday morning at 6 a.m. to stand with the protesters.
And right now put in a call to your City Council member and tell them to put a stop to the mayor's eviction of the Occupy Wall Street protesters. Click here to find the contact information for your council member.
Thanks for all you do.
–Justin, Carrie, Michael, Anna, and the rest of the team
Sources:
1. "Occupy Wall Street Responds to Bloomberg's Cleaning 'Eviction Notice,'" The New York Observer, October 13, 2011
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=265305&id=&t=6&id=31977-18534173-Q35KWTx&t=4
Notice from Brookfield Real Estate distributed by NYPD, October 13, 2011
http://s3.moveon.org/pdfs/doc-10_13_11%209_39%20am.pdf?id=31977-18534173-Q35KWTx&t=5


Subscription Management:
This is a message from MoveOn.org Civic Action. To change your email address or update your contact info, please visit:
http://moveon.org/subscrip/coa.html?id=31977-18534173-Q35KWTx
To remove yourself (Gregory A Butler) from this list, please visit our subscription management page at:
http://moveon.org/s?i=31977-18534173-Q35KWTx

#4693 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Tue Oct 18, 2011 1:47 am
Subject: Fwd: Mass Workers Response Needed to Wall Street Attacks
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 



-----Original Message-----
From: Nejmeno <pirosszel19@...>
To: DIGILUK <DIGILUK@...>; EDGOETZL <EDGOETZL@...>; cream0406 <cream0406@...>; EVA8747431 <EVA8747431@...>; DFIRSTLIGHT <DFIRSTLIGHT@...>; VICTORNYCTA <VICTORNYCTA@...>; DMOTOR126 <DMOTOR126@...>; PMANIARA <PMANIARA@...>; JM1521 <JM1521@...>; MRNICE114 <MRNICE114@...>; SLAMMER111 <SLAMMER111@...>; farocon <farocon@...>; KOKEFATHER <KOKEFATHER@...>; DRW12396 <DRW12396@...>; DOCONN4445 <DOCONN4445@...>; irasrule <irasrule@...>; PJARDINE04 <PJARDINE04@...>; NAOMISPLACE <NAOMISPLACE@...>; SINGLETON718 <SINGLETON718@...>; JENELLENORIN <JENELLENORIN@...>; WORKINGNAG <WORKINGNAG@...>; verdantgarden <verdantgarden@...>; SREDER2 <SREDER2@...>; DEREKBUSH <DEREKBUSH@...>; CJervisNY <CJervisNY@...>; CHOCLOU661 <CHOCLOU661@...>; JFRAID <JFRAID@...>; audyny <audyny@...>; SOPHIASECRET <SOPHIASECRET@...>; naomisplace <naomisplace@...>; DIZYJOE <DIZYJOE@...>; aldavidoff <aldavidoff@...>; LUGAR <LUGAR@...>; franjrelen <franjrelen@...>; MTAGONZALEZ <MTAGONZALEZ@...>; LTORIN73 <LTORIN73@...>; CDGNPC <CDGNPC@...>; ECOLLINS3 <ECOLLINS3@...>; casanoel <casanoel@...>; AINSR <AINSR@...>; hilomaven <hilomaven@...>; Knix1fan <Knix1fan@...>; MITCH177 <MITCH177@...>; GREGORYABUTLER <GREGORYABUTLER@...>; crinum <crinum@...>; REDABETTY <REDABETTY@...>; CET137St <CET137St@...>; HTORRELLAS <HTORRELLAS@...>; NYAZUCENA <NYAZUCENA@...>; juliuspole <juliuspole@...>; RASHWIN5 <RASHWIN5@...>; ELGUERRA <ELGUERRA@...>; SIMPLYAYNDREA <SIMPLYAYNDREA@...>; MIKALAH1190 <MIKALAH1190@...>; TREICHLER <TREICHLER@...>; EMANWARRIOR <EMANWARRIOR@...>; Gogas69 <Gogas69@...>; MIGGIE594 <MIGGIE594@...>; RASONTIL <RASONTIL@...>; FOUR.TURBANS <FOUR.TURBANS@...>; udin786 <udin786@...>; BUTROS54 <BUTROS54@...>; LADYTEA51 <LADYTEA51@...>; jgiamba1 <jgiamba1@...>; PEAPELAN <PEAPELAN@...>; poncefred <poncefred@...>; SPORTKING100 <SPORTKING100@...>; YUGGY20 <YUGGY20@...>; BlkLion100 <BlkLion100@...>; KIRK_MONTAGuE <KIRK_MONTAGuE@...>; bert46 <bert46@...>; lub7relay <lub7relay@...>; YOLANDADYOLI <YOLANDADYOLI@...>; DOWNS100 <DOWNS100@...>
Sent: Mon, Oct 17, 2011 9:20 pm
Subject: Mass Workers Response Needed to Wall Street Attacks

MASS UNITED ACTION NEEDED: JOBS FOR ALL!

From Eric Josephson, TWU Local 100, Trackworker, Shop Steward. Supporter,Revolutionary Transit Worker.See the proposal below and attached. I hope you will support and sign on to the proposal. Thanks, Eric.


An opportunity for action: an open letter
 
 
We, the undersigned Wall Street protesters and union members, think the response to Occupy Wall Street (OWS) has shown that broad layers of working people are ready to support a movement that stands up to the ongoing attempt to solve the economic crisis on the backs of working-class and poor people. Union solidarity has contributed a growing momentum of protest that we should build on and not let fade away.
 
To that end, we have endorsed the attached motion that calls on the NYC Central Labor Council and other union organizations to build for a march of hundreds of thousands on Saturday, November 5, with the following slogans and demands:
 
Working People Shouldn’t Pay for a Crisis That They Didn’t Make!
No to Layoffs, Budget and Service Cuts!
Create Jobs, Build Infrastructure with a Federal Program of Public Works!
Stop Police Harassment of the Wall Street Occupation!
 
We will be leafleting the next CLC delegates meeting on Wednesday, October 19, starting at 5:30pm at:
IBT Local 237 First Floor Meeting Room
216 West 14th Street (between 8th and 7th avenue)
 
We hope to draw attention to the opportunity for and need for broader action, and to provide an opportunity and focus for those in and outside the unions to agitate for the unions and other organizations to commit themselves to broader action.
 
We ask activists and organizations who see the need for this to:
           endorse this call;
           publicize this motion and letter on websites and through other means;
           raise similar motions in unions and other organizations; and
           help build for the leafleting of the CLC meeting.
 
We wish there was more time to circulate this proposal more broadly than we already have to allow for more discussion and improvement, but the next CLC meeting where we can push for action is just days away on October 19. We trust that activists understand our sense of urgency and support this initiative in the spirit of solidarity that inspires it.
 
For more information or to be listed as endorsing, please e-mail us atWorkers.March.Against.Wall.Street@....
 
Also, when this and related motions are voted on in other unions or organizations, please let us know!
 
 
Whereas, the response to ‘Occupy Wall Street’ (OWS) has shown that broad layers of working people are ready to support a movement that stands up to the ongoing attempt to solve the economic crisis on working and poor people’s backs;
Whereas, unions can best defend their members’ jobs, wages and working conditions by standing up in defense of all working people;
 
Whereas, OWS and trade unions’ solidarity with the protests have created momentum toward a fight-back in defense of working people’s living standards against layoffs and budget cutbacks that should be built on and not allowed to fade;
 
Whereas, it is necessary for our struggles to go forward to bring into action much larger numbers of workers and other people facing the brunt of this economic crisis,
 
We move that:
1.      This body call on its member unions as well as all other unions and community organizations to build a massive march on Wall Street of hundreds of thousands, mobilizing organized and unorganized workers, on November 5, the first Saturday of next month,
2.      That this protest raise demands that can unite all workers, poor people and all those facing the brunt of the crisis:
Working People Shouldn’t Pay for a Crisis That They Didn’t Make!
No to Layoffs, Budget and Service Cuts!
Create Jobs, Build Infrastructure with a Federal Program of Public Works!
Stop Police Harassment of the Wall Street Occupation!
3.      And to this end, we appeal to other union bodies, council and federations around the country to organize similar protest actions across the country on November 5.
 
In Solidarity,
Juan A., SEIU Local 32BJ and Wall Street protester
Wendy B., non-unionized worker and Wall Street protester
Stephen C., student
Ben D., restaurant worker and CUNY student
John Ferretti, Shop Steward, TWU Local 100 and Wall Street protester
Rusty Gilbert
Jason Hicks, TWU Local 100 and Wall Street protester
Eric Josephson, Shop Steward, TWU Local 100 and Wall Street protester
Seth Rosenberg, Shop Steward, TWU Local 100 and Wall Street protester
Michael S., City College student and Wall Street protester
Mark Turner, City College PSC and Wall Street protester
Erik V., Wall Street protester
 
 
 
 
(organizations listed for identification purposes only)

1 of 1 File(s)


#4694 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Tue Oct 18, 2011 5:46 am
Subject: Fw: Mass Workers Response Needed to Wall Street Attacks
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 

Sent on the Sprint® Now Network from my BlackBerry®


From: Nejmeno <pirosszel19@...>
Date: Mon, 17 Oct 2011 18:20:04 -0700 (PDT)
To: DIGILUK@...<DIGILUK@...>; EDGOETZL@...<EDGOETZL@...>; cream0406@...<cream0406@...>; EVA8747431@...<EVA8747431@...>; DFIRSTLIGHT@...<DFIRSTLIGHT@...>; VICTORNYCTA@...<VICTORNYCTA@...>; DMOTOR126@...<DMOTOR126@...>; PMANIARA@...<PMANIARA@...>; JM1521@...<JM1521@...>; MRNICE114@...<MRNICE114@...>; SLAMMER111@...<SLAMMER111@...>; farocon@...<farocon@...>; KOKEFATHER@...<KOKEFATHER@...>; DRW12396@...<DRW12396@...>; DOCONN4445@...<DOCONN4445@...>; irasrule@...<irasrule@...>; PJARDINE04@...<PJARDINE04@...>; NAOMISPLACE@...<NAOMISPLACE@...>; SINGLETON718@...<SINGLETON718@...>; JENELLENORIN@...<JENELLENORIN@...>; WORKINGNAG@...<WORKINGNAG@...>; verdantgarden@...<verdantgarden@...>; SREDER2@...<SREDER2@...>; DEREKBUSH@...<DEREKBUSH@...>; CJervisNY@...<CJervisNY@...>; CHOCLOU661@...<CHOCLOU661@...>; JFRAID@...<JFRAID@...>; audyny@...<audyny@...>; SOPHIASECRET@...<SOPHIASECRET@...>; naomisplace@...<naomisplace@...>; DIZYJOE@...<DIZYJOE@...>; aldavidoff@...<aldavidoff@...>; LUGAR@...<LUGAR@...>; franjrelen@...<franjrelen@...>; MTAGONZALEZ@...<MTAGONZALEZ@...>; LTORIN73@...<LTORIN73@...>; CDGNPC@...<CDGNPC@...>; ECOLLINS3@...<ECOLLINS3@...>; casanoel@...<casanoel@...>; AINSR@...<AINSR@...>; hilomaven@...<hilomaven@...>; Knix1fan@...<Knix1fan@...>; MITCH177@...<MITCH177@...>; GREGORYABUTLER@...<GREGORYABUTLER@...>; crinum@...<crinum@...>; REDABETTY@...<REDABETTY@...>; CET137St@...<CET137St@...>; HTORRELLAS@...<HTORRELLAS@...>; NYAZUCENA@...<NYAZUCENA@...>; juliuspole@...<juliuspole@...>; RASHWIN5@...<RASHWIN5@...>; ELGUERRA@...<ELGUERRA@...>; SIMPLYAYNDREA@...<SIMPLYAYNDREA@...>; MIKALAH1190@...<MIKALAH1190@...>; TREICHLER@...<TREICHLER@...>; EMANWARRIOR@...<EMANWARRIOR@...>; Gogas69@...<Gogas69@...>; MIGGIE594@...<MIGGIE594@...>; RASONTIL@...<RASONTIL@...>; FOUR.TURBANS@...<FOUR.TURBANS@...>; udin786@...<udin786@...>; BUTROS54@...<BUTROS54@...>; LADYTEA51@...<LADYTEA51@...>; jgiamba1@...<jgiamba1@...>; PEAPELAN@...<PEAPELAN@...>; poncefred@...<poncefred@...>; SPORTKING100@...<SPORTKING100@...>; YUGGY20@...<YUGGY20@...>; BlkLion100@...<BlkLion100@...>; KIRK_MONTAGuE@...<KIRK_MONTAGuE@...>; bert46@...<bert46@...>; lub7relay@...<lub7relay@...>; YOLANDADYOLI@...<YOLANDADYOLI@...>; DOWNS100@...<DOWNS100@...>
ReplyTo: Nejmeno <pirosszel19@...>
Subject: Mass Workers Response Needed to Wall Street Attacks

MASS UNITED ACTION NEEDED: JOBS FOR ALL!

From Eric Josephson, TWU Local 100, Trackworker, Shop Steward. Supporter,Revolutionary Transit Worker.See the proposal below and attached. I hope you will support and sign on to the proposal. Thanks, Eric.


An opportunity for action: an open letter
 
 
We, the undersigned Wall Street protesters and union members, think the response to Occupy Wall Street (OWS) has shown that broad layers of working people are ready to support a movement that stands up to the ongoing attempt to solve the economic crisis on the backs of working-class and poor people. Union solidarity has contributed a growing momentum of protest that we should build on and not let fade away.
 
To that end, we have endorsed the attached motion that calls on the NYC Central Labor Council and other union organizations to build for a march of hundreds of thousands on Saturday, November 5, with the following slogans and demands:
 
Working People Shouldn’t Pay for a Crisis That They Didn’t Make!
No to Layoffs, Budget and Service Cuts!
Create Jobs, Build Infrastructure with a Federal Program of Public Works!
Stop Police Harassment of the Wall Street Occupation!
 
We will be leafleting the next CLC delegates meeting on Wednesday, October 19, starting at 5:30pm at:
IBT Local 237 First Floor Meeting Room
216 West 14th Street (between 8th and 7th avenue)
 
We hope to draw attention to the opportunity for and need for broader action, and to provide an opportunity and focus for those in and outside the unions to agitate for the unions and other organizations to commit themselves to broader action.
 
We ask activists and organizations who see the need for this to:
           endorse this call;
           publicize this motion and letter on websites and through other means;
           raise similar motions in unions and other organizations; and
           help build for the leafleting of the CLC meeting.
 
We wish there was more time to circulate this proposal more broadly than we already have to allow for more discussion and improvement, but the next CLC meeting where we can push for action is just days away on October 19. We trust that activists understand our sense of urgency and support this initiative in the spirit of solidarity that inspires it.
 
For more information or to be listed as endorsing, please e-mail us atWorkers.March.Against.Wall.Street@....
 
Also, when this and related motions are voted on in other unions or organizations, please let us know!
 
 
Whereas, the response to ‘Occupy Wall Street’ (OWS) has shown that broad layers of working people are ready to support a movement that stands up to the ongoing attempt to solve the economic crisis on working and poor people’s backs;
Whereas, unions can best defend their members’ jobs, wages and working conditions by standing up in defense of all working people;
 
Whereas, OWS and trade unions’ solidarity with the protests have created momentum toward a fight-back in defense of working people’s living standards against layoffs and budget cutbacks that should be built on and not allowed to fade;
 
Whereas, it is necessary for our struggles to go forward to bring into action much larger numbers of workers and other people facing the brunt of this economic crisis,
 
We move that:
1.      This body call on its member unions as well as all other unions and community organizations to build a massive march on Wall Street of hundreds of thousands, mobilizing organized and unorganized workers, on November 5, the first Saturday of next month,
2.      That this protest raise demands that can unite all workers, poor people and all those facing the brunt of the crisis:
Working People Shouldn’t Pay for a Crisis That They Didn’t Make!
No to Layoffs, Budget and Service Cuts!
Create Jobs, Build Infrastructure with a Federal Program of Public Works!
Stop Police Harassment of the Wall Street Occupation!
3.      And to this end, we appeal to other union bodies, council and federations around the country to organize similar protest actions across the country on November 5.
 
In Solidarity,
Juan A., SEIU Local 32BJ and Wall Street protester
Wendy B., non-unionized worker and Wall Street protester
Stephen C., student
Ben D., restaurant worker and CUNY student
John Ferretti, Shop Steward, TWU Local 100 and Wall Street protester
Rusty Gilbert
Jason Hicks, TWU Local 100 and Wall Street protester
Eric Josephson, Shop Steward, TWU Local 100 and Wall Street protester
Seth Rosenberg, Shop Steward, TWU Local 100 and Wall Street protester
Michael S., City College student and Wall Street protester
Mark Turner, City College PSC and Wall Street protester
Erik V., Wall Street protester
 
 
 
 
(organizations listed for identification purposes only)

1 of 1 File(s)


#4695 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Wed Oct 19, 2011 9:19 pm
Subject: Fw: NYC Friday Evening: Huge Verizon #Occupy March
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 
------Original Message------
From: New York State AFL-CIO
To: Gregory A Butler
ReplyTo: peoplepower@...
Subject: NYC Friday Evening: Huge Verizon #Occupy March
Sent: Oct 19, 2011 3:59 PM

This Friday evening, October 21st, together with Occupy Wall Street, Verizon and
Verizon Wireless workers will march to protest Verizon corporate greed. Please
join us!

RSVP at http://local.we-r-1.org/weareone/events/show/4665 .

We will assemble at 140 West Street between 4:00 and 5:00 p.m., march east on
Barclay Street and then down Broadway. We should arrive at Liberty Plaza around
5:30 pm, and move on towards the Verizon Wireless store at about 6:00 p.m.

As you know, 45,000 Verizon and Verizon Wireless workers have been on the front
lines of the struggle against corporate greed. The battle for a fair contract
continues and bargaining is not going well.

Verizon is the 16th largest corporation in America, with one of the largest
unionized workforces. In the past four years, Verizon made $22.5 billion in
profits and paid its top five executives $258 million, and over the last two
years, they reaped a $1.3 billion federal corporate income tax rebate - yet they
want to eliminate pensions, force workers to pay thousands of dollars more for
health care, slash sick time, and eliminate job security. Their bargaining
stance is that no working person is entitled to decent wages with health care
and retirement security, no matter how profitable the employer.

Occupy Wall Street has focused the world's attention on the destructive power of
corporate greed. Verizon is the poster child for that corporate greed. Together,
we are demanding that the American economy start to work for the 99% again, not
just make the top 1% even richer. Verizon workers are part of the 99%!

Please join us on Friday! We are the 99% and we are fighting back!

RSVP at http://local.we-r-1.org/weareone/events/show/4665 .

Thanks for your help!

Watch Video and Please Pass it On! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2K0snlTHyis

Solidarity in Action - Labor and Community Support for Verizon Workers!

Contact Amy Desjardins at the NY State AFL-CIO at 518-436-8516 x235 or
adesjardins@... .

*****

To find out more about the AFL-CIO, please visit our website at www.aflcio.org.

*****

Click here to unsubscribe:
http://act.aflcio.org/c/18/p/salsa/supporter/unsubscribe/public/?Email=GREGORYAB\
UTLER@aol.com&email_blast_KEY=58543&organization_KEY=4001


Sent on the Sprint Now Network from my BlackBerry

#4696 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Thu Oct 20, 2011 4:05 am
Subject: FOR A WORKERS MARCH AGAINST WALL STREET, Saturday, November 5, 2011
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 

New York
October 18, 2011

An Opportunity for Action

An Open Letter

We, the undersigned Wall Street protesters and union members, think the response to Occupy Wall Street (OWS) has shown that broad layers of working people are ready to support a movement that stands up to the ongoing attempt to solve the economic crisis on the backs of working-class and poor people. Union solidarity has contributed a growing momentum of protest that we should build on and not let fade away.
To that end, we have endorsed the motion shown below that calls on the NYC Central Labor Council and other union organizations to build for a march of hundreds of thousands on Saturday, November 5, with the following slogans and demands:

Working People Shouldn’t Pay for a Crisis That They Didn’t Make!
No to Layoffs, Budget and Service Cuts!
Create Jobs, Build Infrastructure with a Federal Program of Public Works!
Stop Police Harassment of the Wall Street Occupation!

We will be leafleting the next CLC delegates meeting on Wednesday, October 19, starting at 5:30pm at:
IBT Local 237
First Floor Meeting Room
216 West 14th Street (between 8th and 7th avenue)
New York, NY
We hope to draw attention to the opportunity for and need for broader action, and to provide an opportunity and focus for those in and outside the unions to agitate for the unions and other organizations to commit themselves to broader action.
We ask activists and organizations who see the need for this to:
  • endorse this call;
  • publicize this motion and letter on websites and through other means;
  • raise similar motions in unions and other organizations; and
  • help build for the leafleting of the CLC meeting.
We wish there was more time to circulate this proposal more broadly than we already have to allow for more discussion and improvement, but the next CLC meeting where we can push for action is just days away on October 19. We trust that activists understand our sense of urgency and support this initiative in the spirit of solidarity that inspires it. For more information or to be listed as endorsing, please e-mail us at Workers.March.Against.Wall.Street@....
Also, when this and related motions are voted on in other unions or organizations, please let us know!

MOTION for a Massive March on Wall Street

Whereas, the response to ‘Occupy Wall Street’ (OWS) has shown that broad layers of working people are ready to support a movement that stands up to the ongoing attempt to solve the economic crisis on working and poor people’s backs;
Whereas, unions can best defend their members’ jobs, wages and working conditions by standing up in defense of all working people;
Whereas, OWS and trade unions’ solidarity with the protests have created momentum toward a fight-back in defense of working people’s living standards against layoffs and budget cutbacks that should be built on and not allowed to fade;
Whereas, it is necessary for our struggles to go forward to bring into action much larger numbers of workers and other people facing the brunt of this economic crisis,
We move that:
  1. This body call on its member unions as well as all other unions and community organizations to build a massive march on Wall Street of hundreds of thousands, mobilizing organized and unorganized workers, on November 5, the first Saturday of next month,
  2. That this protest raise demands that can unite all workers, poor people and all those facing the brunt of the crisis:
    Working People Shouldn’t Pay for a Crisis That They Didn’t Make!
    No to Layoffs, Budget and Service Cuts!
    Create Jobs, Build Infrastructure with a Federal Program of Public Works!
    Stop Police Harassment of the Wall Street Occupation!
  3. And to this end, we appeal to other union bodies, council and federations around the country to organize similar protest actions across the country on November 5.
Endorsers include the following:
CCNY Chapter of PSC-CUNY
Christine Williams, Executive Board Member, TWU Local 100,* Stations Division*
Juan A., SEIU Local 32BJ* and Wall Street protester
David Abramsky, unemployed actor, Wall Street protester
Austin B. Arrington, Wall Street protester
Paul Armstrong, Ironworkers 433*
Elizabeth B., public interest lawyer, Wall Street protester
Wendy B., non-unionized worker and Wall Street protester
Cesar Luis Brito, Wall Street protester
Gregory A. Butler, Shop Steward, Carpenters Local 157*
Stephen C., student
Ben D., restaurant worker, CUNY student
Bob D., Local 57 carpenters,* Wall Street protester
Sean D., USW 6500*
Naomi Dann, Wall Street protester
Chetram Dhanroy, Wall Street protester
Richard Diaz, Occupy Wall Street*
Barbara Drum, Wall Street protester
Jorden Eck, Boston University student, Wall Street protester
Emma Elbaum, Wall Street protester
Anne Marie Elliott, student, Wall Street protester
Gabrielle Engh, Wall Street protester
John Ferretti, Shop Steward, TWU Local 100,* Wall Street protester
Michael Felisme
Rust Gilbert, CWA/Washtech*
Mike G., Project Manager*
Julim Gashwan, LREI*
Carlos Gomar, Occupy Wall Street*
Marty Goodman, TWU Local 100*
Darryl Goodwine, Wall Street protester
Georgiana Hart, Nurse Practitioner, PLP*
Theint Heinn, Wall Street protester
Jason Hicks, TWU Local 100,* Wall Street protester
Diego Ibanez, Occupy Wall Street*
Eric Josephson, Shop Steward, TWU Local 100,* Wall Street protester
Miranda Kahn, Wall Street protester
Andrew Kelly, photographer, Wall Street protester
Maya Klein, Wall Street protester
Margaret Kwateng, Wall Street protester
Bob Lang, UFT Delegate*
James Leighton, Wall Street protester
Teddy Mapes, L.U. 638*
Yadel Muhigeta, Wall Street protester
Jason McGaughey, Wall Street protester
Anna Mocti, student, Wall Street protester
Michal Nemcok, Wall Street protester
Rick Nensesian, Wall Street protester
Sue P., Wall Street protester
Benjamin Prouse, CEPU Plumbers Union*, Australia
Abdul H. Qumiyn, Wall Street protester
Christina Robohm, Wall Street protester
Penny Rosenblatt, Wall Street protester
Seth Rosenberg, Shop Steward, TWU Local 100,* Wall Street protester
Dave Ryan, artist, Wall Street protester
Keshet S., DC37 Local 2054*
Michael S., City College student, Wall Street protester
Barbara Sher, Wall Street protester
Max Simkins, Bard student, Wall Street protester
Krishna Singh, NYC High School student, Wall Street protester
Elyssa Soto, Wall Street protester
Stefan Superti, Bard College*
Mark Turner, CCNY Chapter of PSC-CUNY,* Wall Street protester
Glenn Jonathan Waldrip III, unemployed, Wall Street protester
Erik V., Wall Street protester
Francis Vazquez, CUNY*
March Young, Wall Street protester
Bob, Boston construction worker, Wall Street protester
* Organizations listed for identification purposes only

#4697 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Fri Oct 21, 2011 3:05 am
Subject: NYC CENTRAL LABOR COUNCIL VOTES FOR MASSIVE MARCH ON WALL STREET Saturday November 5
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 

October 20, 2011

NYC Central Labor Council Votes for Massive March on Wall Street

On October 19, the Delegates Meeting of the New York Central Labor Council (CLC) voted unanimously for New York’s unions to mobilize for a massive march on Wall Street on November 5. The power to act on the delegates’ vote now lies with the CLC Executive Board, which is composed of the city’s local union presidents.
The CLC brings together delegates from the AFL-CIO and other unions in New York City. If its major unions make a serious effort to mobilize their members, we could see a truly massive march on Wall Street that challenges the ongoing efforts to make working-class and poor people pay the price for the economic crisis.
Moved by AFM Local 802 Recording Vice President John O’Connor and seconded by TWU Local 100 Vice President for RTO Kevin Harrington as well as other delegates, the motion concluded:
  1. This body call on its member unions as well as all other unions and community organizations to build a massive march on Wall Street of hundreds of thousands, mobilizing organized and unorganized workers, on November 5, the first Saturday of next month;
  2. That this protest raise demands that can unite all workers, poor people and all those facing the brunt of the crisis:
    Working People Shouldn’t Pay for a Crisis That They Didn’t Make!
    No to Layoffs, Budget and Service Cuts!
    Create Jobs, Build Infrastructure with a Federal Program of Public Works!
    Stop Police Harassment of the Wall Street Occupation!
  3. And to this end, we appeal to other union bodies, council and federations around the country to organize similar protest actions across the country on November 5.  
The idea for the march and motion to the CLC was initiated by transit, janitorial, city and college worker union members and young Wall Street protesters who are supporters of the League for the Revolutionary Party. A big boost for the motion came when an LRP supporter raised the motion at a meeting of the City College Chapter of the PSC union and it was overwhelmingly approved. A petition backing the motion quickly gained the support of other trade unionists and a large number of Wall Street occupiers and protesters, a good number of whom attended the CLC meeting to distribute the motion and speak in favor of it.
The challenge now is to make sure that the union leaders respect the CLC delegates’ vote and really build the march. That won’t be easy.
Since the economic crisis broke out on Wall Street in 2008, this country’s union leaders have barely lifted a finger in opposition to the wasting of trillions of taxpayers’ dollars on bailing out the banks and the terrible wave of layoffs and budget cuts that have followed. Comfortable in their positions of privilege, the union leaders have mostly been concerned with holding onto their power and channeling workers’ anger into the trap of voting for the Democratic Party.
In the CLC Delegates Meeting itself, there were already signs of backsliding. No sooner was the vote being taken than CLC President Vincent Alvarez, while promising to respect the decision, seemed to suggest that the CLC Executive Board might need to be flexible about some of the details of the protest.
Any union leader who takes a real step toward organizing struggles by workers against the attacks on the jobs and living standards will find us and many militant workers ready to join them in that effort. But in our experience, the pro-capitalist, pro-Democratic Party union leaders can be expected to use an inch of “flexibility” to avoid organizing a real fightback against the anti-worker attacks.
In fact the way today’s union leaders avoid organizing struggles by their own members, let alone in conjunction with militant young people like those participating in the Wall Street occupation, came through in the discussion of other topics of the meeting. For example, regarding the struggle going to vote down Ohio Governor Kasich’s vicious union-busting laws, a report was given describing the unions’ almost total reliance on phone-banking and door-knocking and very little on mass worker rallies, let alone strikes. But all experience teaches that to defend their rights, jobs and living standards, workers can only afford to rely on their own power to unite in struggle. In Wisconsin an occupation of the Capitol Building and massive protests against Republican Governor Scott Walker’s union-busting legislation led to growing calls for a general strike. But union leaders wasted that momentum and channeled the struggle into a passive election campaign that was predictably defeated.
So we must make every effort to build further support for the march and to make sure that the city’s union leaders make it happen. Union members should take every opportunity to challenge their representatives, from Shop Stewards to elected office holders, to make sure their union does everything it can build for the march. Motions in support of the march should be raised in every possible union meeting. Organizations and individuals who haven’t already endorsed the march should be encouraged to do so by writing to Workers.March.Against.Wall.Street@... .
Importantly, we must watch out for and denounce any tokenism or lip-service from the union leaders. The unions can send organizers all over to rally support for the march, they can print and distribute leaflets, record and broadcast video and radio messages, send e-mails and phone messages to all their members to build a mighty protest. That’s the sort of real mobilization we need.
The widespread support for the Wall Street protests shows that workers’ bitter sense of injustice is turning toward a recognition of the need for action. This is an important chance to take forward the fightback against the capitalists’ attacks that is so long overdue.

#4698 From: GREGORYABUTLER@...
Date: Sat Oct 22, 2011 6:07 am
Subject: Fwd: March against Wall St. Sat. 11/5
vinniegangbox
Send Email Send Email
 



-----Original Message-----
From: Todd Eaton <toddeaton@...>
To: *NYPROTEST EVENT ANNOUNCEMENT LISTSERV* <NYPROTEST@...>
Sent: Sat, Oct 22, 2011 1:26 am
Subject: March against Wall St. Sat. 11/5

Date: Thu, 20 Oct 2011 00:05:46 -0400 (EDT)
From: gregoryabutler@...
Subject: FOR A WORKERS MARCH AGAINST WALL STREET, Saturday, November 5, 2011

New York
October 18, 2011
An Opportunity for Action
An Open Letter

We, the undersigned Wall Street protesters and union members, think the response to Occupy Wall Street (OWS) has shown that broad layers of working people are ready to support a movement that stands up to the ongoing attempt to solve the economic crisis on the backs of working-class and poor people. Union solidarity has contributed a growing momentum of protest that we should build on and not let fade away.

To that end, we have endorsed the motion shown below that calls on the NYC Central Labor Council and other union organizations to build for a march of hundreds of thousands on Saturday, November 5, with the following slogans and demands:

Working People Shouldn`t Pay for a Crisis That They Didn`t Make!
No to Layoffs, Budget and Service Cuts!
Create Jobs, Build Infrastructure with a Federal Program of Public Works!
Stop Police Harassment of the Wall Street Occupation!

We will be leafleting the next CLC delegates meeting on Wednesday, October 19, starting at 5:30pm at:
IBT Local 237
First Floor Meeting Room
216 West 14th Street (between 8th and 7th avenue)
New York, NY

We hope to draw attention to the opportunity for and need for broader action, and to provide an opportunity and focus for those in and outside the unions to agitate for the unions and other organizations to commit themselves to broader action.

We ask activists and organizations who see the need for this to:
endorse this call; publicize this motion and letter on websites and through other means;
raise similar motions in unions and other organizations; and help build for the leafleting of the CLC meeting.

We wish there was more time to circulate this proposal more broadly than we already have to allow for more discussion and improvement, but the next CLC meeting where we can push for action is just days away on October 19. We trust that activists understand our sense of urgency and support this initiative in the spirit of solidarity that inspires it. For more information or to be listed as endorsing, please e-mail us at Workers.March.Against.Wall.Street@....
Also, when this and related motions are voted on in other unions or organizations, please let us know!

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MOTION for a Massive March on Wall Street
Whereas, the response to ``Occupy Wall Street`` (OWS) has shown that broad layers of working people are ready to support a movement that stands up to the ongoing attempt to solve the economic crisis on working and poor people`s backs;
Whereas, unions can best defend their members’ jobs, wages and working conditions by standing up in defense of all working people;

Whereas, OWS and trade unions` solidarity with the protests have created momentum toward a fight-back in defense of working people`s living standards against layoffs and budget cutbacks that should be built on and not allowed to fade;

Whereas, it is necessary for our struggles to go forward to bring into action much larger numbers of workers and other people facing the brunt of this economic crisis,

We move that:
This body call on its member unions as well as all other unions and community organizations to build a massive march on Wall Street of hundreds of thousands, mobilizing organized and unorganized workers, on November 5, the first Saturday of next month, That this protest raise demands that can unite all workers, poor people and all those facing the brunt of the crisis:

Working People Shouldn`t Pay for a Crisis That They Didn`t Make!
No to Layoffs, Budget and Service Cuts!
Create Jobs, Build Infrastructure with a Federal Program of Public Works!
Stop Police Harassment of the Wall Street Occupation!
And to this end, we appeal to other union bodies, council and federations around the country to organize similar protest actions across the country on November 5.
Endorsers include the following:
CCNY Chapter of PSC-CUNY
Christine Williams, Executive Board Member, TWU Local 100,* Stations Division*
Juan A., SEIU Local 32BJ* and Wall Street protester
David Abramsky, unemployed actor, Wall Street protester
Austin B. Arrington, Wall Street protester
Paul Armstrong, Ironworkers 433*
Elizabeth B., public interest lawyer, Wall Street protester
Wendy B., non-unionized worker and Wall Street protester
Cesar Luis Brito, Wall Street protester
Gregory A. Butler, Shop Steward, Carpenters Local 157*
Stephen C., student
Ben D., restaurant worker, CUNY student
Bob D., Local 57 carpenters,* Wall Street protester
Sean D., USW 6500*
Naomi Dann, Wall Street protester
Chetram Dhanroy, Wall Street protester
Richard Diaz, Occupy Wall Street*
Barbara Drum, Wall Street protester
Jorden Eck, Boston University student, Wall Street protester
Emma Elbaum, Wall Street protester
Anne Marie Elliott, student, Wall Street protester
Gabrielle Engh, Wall Street protester
John Ferretti, Shop Steward, TWU Local 100,* Wall Street protester
Michael Felisme
Rust Gilbert, CWA/Washtech*
Mike G., Project Manager*
Julim Gashwan, LREI*
Carlos Gomar, Occupy Wall Street*
Marty Goodman, TWU Local 100*
Darryl Goodwine, Wall Street protester
Georgiana Hart, Nurse Practitioner, PLP*
Theint Heinn, Wall Street protester
Jason Hicks, TWU Local 100,* Wall Street protester
Diego Ibanez, Occupy Wall Street*
Eric Josephson, Shop Steward, TWU Local 100,* Wall Street protester
Miranda Kahn, Wall Street protester
Andrew Kelly, photographer, Wall Street protester
Maya Klein, Wall Street protester
Margaret Kwateng, Wall Street protester
Bob Lang, UFT Delegate*
James Leighton, Wall Street protester
Teddy Mapes, L.U. 638*
Yadel Muhigeta, Wall Street protester
Jason McGaughey, Wall Street protester
Anna Mocti, student, Wall Street protester
Michal Nemcok, Wall Street protester
Rick Nensesian, Wall Street protester
Sue P., Wall Street protester
Benjamin Prouse, CEPU Plumbers Union*, Australia
Abdul H. Qumiyn, Wall Street protester
Christina Robohm, Wall Street protester
Penny Rosenblatt, Wall Street protester
Seth Rosenberg, Shop Steward, TWU Local 100,* Wall Street protester
Dave Ryan, artist, Wall Street protester
Keshet S., DC37 Local 2054*
Michael S., City College student, Wall Street protester
Barbara Sher, Wall Street protester
Max Simkins, Bard student, Wall Street protester
Krishna Singh, NYC High School student, Wall Street protester
Elyssa Soto, Wall Street protester
Stefan Superti, Bard College*
Mark Turner, CCNY Chapter of PSC-CUNY,* Wall Street protester
Glenn Jonathan Waldrip III, unemployed, Wall Street protester
Erik V., Wall Street protester
Francis Vazquez, CUNY*
March Young, Wall Street protester
Bob, Boston construction worker, Wall Street protester
* Organizations listed for identification purposes only
e-mail: Workers.March.Against.Wall.Street@...






        =   =   =  
Check NY Activist Calendar frequently: http://nycal.mayfirst.org



Messages 4668 - 4698 of 4838   Oldest  |  < Older  |  Newer >  |  Newest
Add to My Yahoo!      XML What's This?

Copyright 2010 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Guidelines NEW - Help