Showing posts with label Activism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Activism. Show all posts

Tuesday, 25 October 2011

WILL YOU HELP "SHUT IT DOWN" ON OCT. 28TH?


These actions are always kinda cute but I never have really thought that they accomplish much. The PTB are so huge that this is barely, if at all, a blip on their radar. It is kind of a feelgood sort of thing. And the only way it can feel good, IMHO, is that it can be a conversation opener to the uninitiated and maybe open up a few more eyes, get the real momentum for change in gear.  

People in the Occupy movement, for example, rely greatly on their gadgets. The uninitiated rely greatly on their communication gadgets. Even if they DO go without for a day, they will make up in consumption just tweeting or whatevering about it as soon as time is over!

The written word is always more noticed by politicians and their ilk, or those whom we boycott, than an email. Work on and send hard copy on your topic of choice to the people who you feel need the message. One person who actually uses snail mail is said to represent hundreds who don't say a word....

It is on the level of spending the day writing peace and love slogans on the sidewalk to stop international wars and aggression....
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But it does feel good so get out and do it. Perhaps if you stand around watching those chemtrails being laid down someone will ask what you are doing and you can talk about it.....

Besides, any excuse (not that you need one) is a good excuse if it gets you out into the autumn air.

October 24, 2011

A call to disengage from the military, industrial and congressional complex (as it was originally called by Eisenhower) for a full day has gone out for this Friday, October 28th. It's an outgrowth of the Occupy Revolution and it has wheels. Call in sick to work, turn off all the media and appliances you can, get out of the banks, close credit cards, initiate new lifestyle changes, whatever you can do or stop doing. And don't buy a corporate thing.  (See transcript below video)

And then go sing in the rain, walk in the woods, meditate, play with the kids (who you kept home from school), count the chemtrails and realize how pathetic these thugs are, hug someone and just rejoice in the fact that you are OCCUPYING!

COOL?

The more people who get provoked to take action and insubordinate action, in any way they can, the greater the momentum we can all lend to this expression of disdain for how the world is being manipulated and the suppression of the knowledge of who we truly are.

We overcome by being who we really are
and by not participating in their games.
That's how the spell is broken.

We're here. We're alive. We're not going to hide and conform and fear as they're trying to program us. We're going to thrive. We're going to be obvious and in your face apparent and so full of conviction of the reality of the power of love and truth it's going to bring their frikking control system to its knees!

IDEA ~  CHIME IN!



How about writing up what you did on, and what happened in your world, after Friday? 

Wouldn't it be cool to see the fruits of this? 

You can post them everywhere; facebook, youtube, twitter, your favorite sites who'll certainly help. 

Here on BIN we have the Protests and Demonstrations section which many are using, but use something.

But let's get some feedback and fill the airwaves! 

It's going to be a rush...just the anticipation of this will cause more action!

Happy non-participation! 

Stay with it...they can't survive without us.

Love always, Zen

Saturday, 22 October 2011

DAVID ICKE: SPOT ON: THE TRUTH ABOUT OWS


On the streets of Europe (In this case Brussels):

Protestors demonstrate near the European Central Bank (ECB) in downtown Frankfurt, central Germany Saturday Oct. 22, 2011. Police spokeswoman Isabell Neumann said Saturday the Occupy Frankfurt protesters marched peacefully through the city. Organizers of the protest ~ which is inspired by New York's Occupy Wall Street movement ~ said turnout was about 6,000. Some protesters have been camping out in front of the European Central Bank's office tower in Frankfurt since a demonstration of around 5,000 there last week. Several hundred protesters criticizing banks and capitalism as a whole also took to the streets in Berlin, where about 4,000 had turned out last Saturday.

Meanwhile, behind closed doors, (also in Brussels)
these monsters just don’t get it.
Business as usual.

International Monetary Fund (IMF) President Christine Lagarde (R) and outgoing European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet attend an EU finance ministers meeting in Brussels October 22, 2011. The Eurogroup of euro zone finance ministers has approved the payment of the next tranche of 8 billion euros ($11 billion) under Greece's EU/IMF bailout programme ~ pending approval from the International Monetary Fund, the ministers said in a statement on Friday.


And now for a Spot on analysis of the OWS by David Icke. 
His perspective, as always, 
is refreshing and jostles the bobble heads. 

Real change comes from individual action. 

Where we stand as a species, 
is on the precipice of complete extinction.

We need to change our own habits
and it does not require a PhD in Quantum Physics 
to understand what has to be done.

Just keep it peaceful, 
the beasts are slavering for violence 
to justify their existence to their NWO masters.

Not to mention their insatiable lust for blood.

DAVID ICKE: SPOT ON, OUR TRUTH ABOUT THE OWS



MUSICAL INTERLUDE: 
REVOLUTION 
by JOHN LENNON (rare acoustic version)



You say you want a revolution
Well, you know
We all want to change the world 

You tell me that it's evolution
Well, you know
We all want to change the world 

But when you talk about destruction
Don't you know that you can count me out 

Don't you know it's gonna be all right
all right, all right

You say you got a real solution
Well, you know
We'd all love to see the plan 

You ask me for a contribution
Well, you know
We're doing what we can 

But when you want money
for people with minds that hate
All I can tell is brother you have to wait 

Don't you know it's gonna be all right
all right, all right
Ah ah, ah, ah, ah, ah...

You say you'll change the constitution
Well, you know
We all want to change your head 

You tell me it's the institution
Well, you know
You better free you mind instead 

But if you go carrying pictures of chairman Mao
You ain't going to make it with anyone anyhow
Don't you know it's gonna be all right 

all right, all right
all right, all right, all right
all right, all right, all right

Sunday, 16 October 2011

WILLIAM COOPER DISCUSSES OWS (OCCUPY WALL ST.)

Once again, the late great William Cooper is ahead of the game even today over a decade after his assassination.

Simply put, Wall Street aside which is barely mentioned, this is one of William's best interviews ever. And that is saying a LOT. Listen to his words on transhumanism, psychopaths, JFK, Atlantis and our hidden history. All neatly packed in a 10 minute video.




Saturday, 15 October 2011

OWS WRAPPING THE PLANET

My favourite image so far. Yes to the home team!

VANCOUVER, CANADA: Protesters wear pig masks and business suits at the Vancouver Art Gallery as thousands of people participate in the Occupy Vancouver protest on October 15, 2011 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
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October 15, 2011

All over the globe people are rising up and demanding their rights in a worldwide rally of discontent as protests inspired by the Occupy Wall Street movement spread around the world on Saturday.
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Hundreds of people raise their hands at the Culture square in San Jose, Costa Rica, on October 15, 2011, during a worldwide demonstration against corporate greed and government cutbacks

The website for the international movement says 951 cities in 87 countries are ready to “Unite for Global Change” ~ the official slogan of the rally.

“It’s time for us to unite.
It’s time for them to listen.
People of the world,
rise up!” calls the site.

And indeed, there is a lot to protest against in every part of the world.  While social and economic inequality, corporate greed, poverty and hardship are key grievances in every country, each continent lends its own special flavor to the rallies.   

About 200 people have marched outside Tokyo Electric Power Company, which operates the tsunami-hit Fukushima plant, showing their dissatisfaction over handling of the nuclear disaster. 

Their slogans also targeted a US-led free trade bloc that Japan is considering joining.  

Japan, Tokyo: A masked protestor holds a sign during a rally “Occupy Tokyo” as part of a worldwide protest inspired by the “Occupy Wall Street” protest in Tokyo on October 15, 2011.

Around 300 people took to the streets of the Australian cities of Melbourne and Sydney. The country’s indigenous issues and government problems were among their grievances.  

In Manila, about 100 members of various groups under the Philippine left-wing umbrella group, Bayan, marched on the US Embassy, according to Associated Press. Amongst other things, demonstrators chanted “US troops, out now!”  ~ a reference to the presence of hundreds of US soldiers involved in training Filipino troops.
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Demonstrators protest in downtown Santiago, on October 15, 2011, after a worldwide demonstration against corporate greed and government cutbacks. We have much to learn about solidarity from our South American brothers and sisters. Getty Images.

Santiago demonstrator and the water weapons. Is that a Palestinian flag I see?

In South Korea, though, protesters stressed they are not rallying against their government but had come out entirely in support of the Occupy Wall Street movement.   

While the situation in Asia is not catastrophic, recent financial reports suggest this part of the world is not immune to contagion from the deteriorating economic conditions in the West. And recession is very likely to hit Asia eventually.

The protests are sure to be embraced enthusiastically in Europe. Demonstrators are expected to focus on unemployment and austerity cuts imposed in exchange for EU and IMF bailouts.

OCCUPY UK

RT’s Ivor Bennett reports from London that protests there are passing off peacefully.

Participants carrying bags of food, tents and sleeping bags have taken their protest to central London’s financial district where they will rally outside the Stock Exchange, the Bank of England and St. Paul’s Cathedral.  

The demonstrators have not been able to reach the site they intended to occupy as Paternoster Square has been sealed off by police and private security.

The protests have been organized via pages on Facebook and Twitter which between them have picked up more than 15,000 followers.

 
FRANKFURT AM MAIN, GERMANY: A protester demonstrating against the influence of bankers and financiers holds a placard reading 'Wir sind alle Griechen' ('We Are All Greek') in front of Deutsche Bank towers on October 15, 2011 in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. Thousands of people took to the streets today in cities across Germany in demonstrations inspired by the Occupy Wall Street protests in the United States.

“Five thousand people have confirmed they are attending the event,” Spyro Van Leemnen, who is taking part in the protest, told RT.

“This movement will grow and grow, as in the United States,” journalist and writer Afshin Rattansi also told RT.

As RT’s correspondent reports, people “are very serious” and they plan to stay here for a long time.  

“We are planning to stay here as long as it takes to see the government respond to people’s calls. Until we see some change really,” Van Leemnen said. 

He also said that what was happening on Wall Street had been very inspiring for people, especially in the UK.

Ivor Bennet also reports that the current demonstrations in London are something different from the protests the city faced a few months ago.

“This is a peaceful protest with a very clear message about the democratization of the global finance system. And as taxpayers continue to bail out banks, they are calling for banking executives to pay back their bonuses.”

Meanwhile, the Guardian reports that “the mood of the protest has changed dramatically as riot police move in to kettle the demonstrators.”  

A masked man protests at Revolution Park in Guadalajara, Mexico on October 15, 2011, after a worldwide demonstration against corporate greed and government cutbacks 

The paper quotes Mark Townsend, who tweeted: 
“St Paul’s completely kettled. First arrests. Legal observers cannot access to ‘prevent breach of peace.’ Rapid mood change.”
The Press Association news agency cites a source in Scotland Yard as saying people have been arrested at the London protest for assaulting police officers.

As RT’s Ivor Bennett reports, Julian Assange attempted to join up with the protesters but was unable to as a result of the police cordon.  He would later address the demonstrators via the steps of Saint Paul’s Cathedral.  

Earlier reports of Assange’s arrest proved unfounded, though he was briefly detained for refusing to take off a mask.

Ivor Bennett also told RT that while addressing reporters, Assange lashed out at the banks, saying that a small minority of the rich are hiding their assets from the population.  He went on to claim that London, one of the world’s main financial centers, was the biggest culprit.

Things got messy in Italy. A shame because the violence shown is just what the OWS is trying to avoid. Damage of the businesses of the people, not the banks being protested against.


OCCUPY ITALY

In Rome, peaceful demonstration against the government’s economic policy descended into violent chaos when groups of angry protesters set cars on fire, smashed windows and attacked shops.


ROME, ITALY: Police protect themselves during riots with demonstrators during an 'Occupy' protest on October 15, 2011 in Rome, Italy. Protesters set fire to a government building, torched cars and smashed bank windows in Rome in the worst violence of the worldwide demonstrations against corporate greed and government cutbacks. Tens of thousands took to the streets of the Italian capital for a march that turned violent and equal numbers rallied in Madrid and Lisbon.

The rally, which was inspired by the “Occupy Wall Street” movement, started at about 12.00 GMT and drew a crowd estimated at 200,000. The iconic Coliseum and Roman Forum were closed down, and four subway stations were shut as well, with 1,500 police officers patrolling the streets and police helicopters circling overhead.  

Rome: Protesters tear down police barricades

Protesters arrived in Rome on trains and an estimated 750 buses from some 80 provinces across Italy, organizers said, as quoted by the Focus news agency.

OCCUPY BELGIUM

Much of the anger about Europe’s financial meltdown has been centered on Brussels, the political heart of the EU, and activists there are determined to make those in power listen.

Protesters in Brussels are marching to the city’s central park from the European Parliament building where they have been holding a rally. They want to set up “an alternative parliament” ~ what they call “a people’s parliament” ~ unlike the one that serves the financial elite, as RT’s Daniel Bushell reports from Brussels.
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 Class in Toronto

The protest comes in the wake of the latest banking outrage when the Belgian bank Dexia was bailed out by the government at an estimated cost to the taxpayer of 5,000 euro per head. People say they no longer want to pay for bankers’ mistakes.

There is a huge police presence here and several roads are closed. The authorities say the meeting of this “alternative parliament” has been banned. To be precise, they have banned the protesters from camping out, due to the absence of running water. The authorities say it is illegal to live outside without proper sanitation facilities. The protesters, for their part, consider the ban as an excuse to move them out.

The event in Brussels has a strong international flavour, with people arriving from as far away as Spain.

OCCUPY SPAIN

In the Spanish capital, Madrid, protesters have been camped out for months in an attempt to persuade their government to find an alternative to austerity measures as a way of tackling the growing crisis.

But as anger towards bankers and corporations grows around the world, the protests here are gaining momentum. People are planning to gather in the center of the capital on Saturday for a major demonstration which is expected to be one of the biggest in months, as RT’s Irina Galushko reports from Madrid.

With one of the highest unemployment rates in the Eurozone, people in this southern European country are angry about lack of opportunity and the government’s severe austerity program. 
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In Toronto

Thousands of people in Spain literally have no hope of renting their own home.

The most energetic section of the Spanish population ~ the youth ~ has been left without job opportunities, which is why they are taking to the streets now to make their voices heard.

And it is not only the capital that is participating in the rallies ~ several dozen towns across the country are joining in too.

And while demonstrations are underway all around the world, protesters in New York’s Lower Manhattan, where the Occupy Wall Street movement began on September 17, are planning a march to Times Square and a rally at JP Morgan Chase Bank. Protesters say they will withdraw all their money and close their accounts.
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In Toronto

People are also preparing to “occupy” parts of several Canadian cities on Saturday.

You can find the full list of cities and countries of Europe, the United States, South America, Asia and Africa joining the worldwide rally on the official website of the global movement 15october.net/

All photos courtesy of Getty Images.

THOUSANDS TURN OUT FOR OCCUPY TORONTO

Photo by Merle Robillard / National Post

Hopefully the police will be better behaved than at the G20 Summit a few years ago. I could be smarmy and ask, "Are those batons in your pants or are you happy to see us, Officers?" but I will restrain myself. 

An uninteresting question: When I lived in this part of the world and walked or cycled through it almost daily, I could not help but feel a chilling of both body and spirit.Has anyone else who visits these larger cities and walked down these shady corridors of power where the sun rarely hits the ground, ever felt that cold shiver of darkness that permeates these areas?

Oct 15, 2011 
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Thousands of people have gathered at St. James Park in the heart of downtown Toronto, where protesters will set up camp for an undetermined length of time to demand changes to global finance.

Injured worker Eddie Tilley at the Occupy Toronto demonstration on Saturday.
Photo by Merle Robillard / National Post
The Occupy Toronto movement, designed to run in concert with similar protests in New York and around the world, began Saturday morning with a march up Bay Street. Some protesters brought food and camping gear, intending to hunker down for the duration at the park near Adelaide and Jarvis streets.
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Brandishing a disparate array of signs and slogans, the assembled are protesting everything from “corporate greed” to the official narrative of 9/11 to a controversial mega-quarry northwest of Toronto.

Good to see he is drinking Timmy's but that is still a corporation is it not?
By Merle Robillard / National Post

Spontaneous chants of “we are the 99%” broke out, a reference meant to distinguish protesters from “the elite 1%” who control global wealth.
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Sid Ryan, president of the Ontario Federation of Labour, was on hand to endorse the movement.
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“Most of the issues they’re complaining about, we’ve been fighting them for decades,” Mr. Ryan said, citing high unemployment, bank bailouts and the rising debt load for post-secondary students.

A member of Canada's First Nations at Occupy Toronto.
Photo by Merle Robillard / National Post

“People are madder than hell… I think it will become a political movement of sorts,” Mr. Ryan said, noting the specific messages and desired outcomes of Occupy Toronto would become clearer in the coming days.
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Volunteer organizer Nele Michiels said a number of committees had been struck to deal with logistical issues, such as food and setting up camp. It could be days before participants come out with a cohesive message, she noted.

Mike, from London, Ont., plans to camp at the park until Wednesday.  
Photo by Merle Robillard / National Post

“Right now, the priority is getting everyone comfortable in this space,” Ms. Michiels said.
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Throughout the park, the sounds of clapping hands, chanting and drumbeats continued into the afternoon. A smattering of police officers helped guide participants from Bay Street to the park, where estimates of the number of protesters ranged from 2,000 to 3,000.
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A number of volunteers were communicating to the crowd by yelling out messages, which were then repeated in multiple echoes. Volunteers marveled at the larger-than-expected turnout.

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Sherry Vukelic said she came for her son.
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“I’m here to fight for his future,” she said, pointing to the plight of Toronto’s impoverished residents. “There are so many problems out there that need to be fixed… It’s for us to become equal.”
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In an impromptu speech to the assembled, one participant called Occupy Toronto “the biggest movement since the hippie movement,” noting he became frustrated with social inequity after watching a steady stream of people pick through the dumpster outside his apartment for scraps of food and bottles to sell.
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Atticus Saunders called the movement “a great forum for change.”
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“It’s the first time something like this has happened on a national scale,” he said.

Occupy Toronto demonstrators marching down Adelaide.
Photo by Merle Robillard / National Post

Inspired by the Arab Spring, the worldwide occupation movements, which come at a time of global economic turmoil, aim to draw attention to the growing gap between the rich and the poor. 
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But organizers of Occupy Toronto have shied away from clarifying specific goals, calling it a people’s movement.
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Organizers of say their goal is to “stand in unity with the rest of the world to seek and work towards drastic changes to economic systems that are destroying our economy, social fiber, and environment.
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“We are, through entirely non-violent means, sending a message to the financial sector worldwide that banks exist to serve us, not the other way around,” states a message on occupyto.org, urging members of “the 99%” to rise up.

Occupy Toronto in the city's financial district. 
Photo by Merle Robillard / National Post


About 10,000 people have clicked “like” on the OccupyTO Facebook page.
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With last year’s G20 summit and associated fallout ~ including a violent rampage by a small group of Black Bloc protestors and the largest mass arrest in Toronto’s history ~ still fresh on the city’s mind, police say their main goal Saturday is to ensure demonstrations remain peaceful. 
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Spokesman Mark Pugash would not confirm details of the security strategy or how many officers would be monitoring the event.
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“We have put together a plan. The two goals are to protect public safety and facilitate a peaceful protest,” Mr. Pugash said. “We have to plan for a variety of contingencies.”

Thursday, 13 October 2011

TURKISH STUDENTS PELT IMF OFFICIAL WITH EGGS

Yes! Turkish students tell the IMF what they think of the organization.

Armed and dangerous. 

Sadly, I think they only tossed hard boiled eggs. 
Things were far too tidy as the eggs landed.




Tuesday, 11 October 2011

CNN: OCCUPY WALL STREET PROTEST

"THIS ISN'T A JOKE!

MEDIA WOULD BE WELL ADVISED TO TAKE THIS SERIOUSLY"

This is what the mainstream media is starting to say about the OWS movement. The comments from the reader at the end are possibly the most telling. Please accept my apologies for the appearance of Wolf Blitzer….