Some people have taken the Take Back or Occupy America movement to even more personal levels as with this group in Chicago. Here we see civil disobedience in action with a very precise set of demands and grievances that speak volumes about what is being protested against around the world.
These people went and faced the banking thieves and ended up arrested. Eventually, more ordinary people will begin to take these actions. Occupy Wall Street, or Take Back America, no matter what happens now, have awakened the ordinary American, the ordinary citizens of the world, to the tyranny they are under and for this, we must be grateful. People are beginning to say"
WE WON'T SIT BY AND LET THIS HAPPEN WITHOUT STRUGGLE
October 17, 2011
“There comes a time when silence becomes betrayal,” proclaimed
Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. as he took a risk and spoke out forcefully
against the War in Vietnam.
As more Americans debate whether to leave the sidelines and join
the Occupy Wall Street movement, we should heed Dr. King’s words.
Our individual silence is a form of acquiescence, and we speak
volumes not only through our action but also through our lack of it.
Silence signals that we are okay with what’s happening, or that
we have simply given up.
While Occupy Wall Street has inspired a new level of
consciousness in America, we have only just scratched the surface of what will
be needed to shift the political economy of our country.
For activists new to the struggle as well as those who have been
hitting the streets since the financial crisis began, this may mean taking on
new risks.
As he spoke from the pulpit of Riverside Church in 1967, Dr.
King said,
“The truth of these words is beyond doubt, but the mission to which they call us is a most difficult one.”
Breaking silence entails risk because it means facing one’s fear
of ridicule, embarrassment, failure and more. It is easier and safer to remain
silent.
But as we’ve seen over the last few years, our collective
silence has come with its own set of costs in the form of lost jobs, homes and
pensions.
Last Tuesday, members of Southsiders Organized for Unity and
Liberation (SOUL), an affiliate of National People’s Action, the community
organizing network that I direct, took their risk-taking to the next level,
with personal courage born of outrage.
Sixteen members of SOUL, supported by 150 witnesses, were
arrested at the annual convention of the Mortgage Bankers of America as they
called on the big banks to reduce principal on millions of underwater home
loans and pay their fair share of taxes.
The action was part of a series of events organized by Take Back
Chicago
Says Will Tanzman, co-executive director of SOUL, which is based
on Chicago’s South Side:
“The big banks have completely disrupted life in our community. They have created a full-on crisis for the families who have been forced from their homes and for neighbors stuck living next to the scores of bank-owned foreclosed properties on each block. They have repeatedly ignored our pleas to put a halt to the foreclosure crisis, and that is why we were called to bring the crisis to them.”
With this as their goal, SOUL members erected a makeshift house
in the hotel hosting the mortgage bankers’ conference. As she was being carried
into the police van, Shani Smith proclaimed,
“I want to stay in my home. I want to stay in my home.”
Ms. Smith is fighting to save her home from foreclosure and help
stabilize her community.
Said Ms. Smith after she was released:
“My home is in jeopardy, our community is in peril. I’m the president of my block club and we have a saying: Your block today, my block tomorrow. The foreclosure crisis is spreading to more and more communities and we must all fight back.”
To get a sense of what the foreclosure crisis looks like in Ms.
Smith’s Calumet Heights neighborhood, see the map below. Within a mile of her
home, over 500 foreclosures have been filed over the last eighteen months.
Neighborhoods to the southwest of hers, such as Ashburn, have been hit even
harder, with over 1000 foreclosures filed during the same period.
Please enlarge. It looks as if the entire neighbourhood is simply targeted for extinction. This is exactly what happened in Detroit which has since become a ghost town of empty lots and feral abandoned pets.
As divinity student Neil Ellingson was carted off by police, he
asked, “What would Jesus do?”
Meanwhile the crowd chanted,
“You are arresting the wrong people.”
The chant raises an important point further brought to light by
acts of civil disobedience. Over the last month alone over 100 people have been
arrested while protesting foreclosures, while no one from Wells Fargo, Bank of
America, Goldman Sachs or JPMorgan Chase has been fully held to account for
their role in the foreclosure crisis.
SOUL’s action Tuesday underscores the fact that the foreclosure
crisis is reaching catastrophic levels in communities nationwide. The impact on
communities of color is especially alarming, with often two to three times the
number of vacant bank-owned properties as white neighborhoods.
Three years ago arrests at protests to stop foreclosures were
incredibly rare, but homeowners have been arrested by the dozens in efforts
organized by Right to the City in Boston, ACCE in Los Angeles and others over
the last few weeks.
Together with Occupy Wall Street and the tar sands protests at
the White House, this represents an emerging movement toward rediscovering the
principles of nonviolent civil disobedience that were so central to Dr. King’s
work.
Says Ms. Smith:
“We are really at a critical stage in America where corporate greed has taken over. Right now we are under the soles of the shoes of Wall Street, and if we want to change that we have to take risks. For me, this act of civil disobedience was done on behalf of my faith, my family and my community.”
Thanks to so many people, like Ms. Smith, who have taken to the
streets over the last few weeks, many more are joining the fight to create a
more just and sustainable economy.
But, getting there won’t be easy, and it won’t be comfortable.
With yesterday’s dedication of the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
National Memorial, we should consider how and when each of us will break our
silence, and turn up the volume.
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