Read

User menu

Search form

  • 20 Excuses for Playing Hooky on May Day

    On May 1, the International Worker’s Day holiday, Occupy Wall Street will stage a general strike. Oddly, union workers suffer under the yolk of a piece of 1947 GOP legislation called the Taft-Hartley Act, which requires unions to give 60 days notice for any strike action, and bans a variety of actions like the general strike.

    // Read More

  • Reading (and Misreading) Anonymous

    The media has often framed Anonymous as a threat because the diffuse and leaderless movement has become a potent symbol of popular dissatisfaction with the concentration of political and corporate power in fewer and fewer hands.

    // Read More

  • A Sleepless Night on Occupied Wall Street

    NEW YORK, NY, April 17 – Unseasonably warm air filled the streets of Manhattan as I approached the intersection of Broadway and Wall Street. I glanced to my right and found my comrades on the steps of Federal Hall.

    // Read More

  • The Landscape of May Day in New York

    An Occupy Wall Street organizer I know — one of the original ones, from the planning meetings before the occupation began on September 17 — has a striking banner atop his Facebook Timeline.

    // Read More

  • Student Loan Debt: Wall Street’s Next Bubble?

    Far from being a narcissistic pet issue for the disproportionately young Occupy crowds, student indebtedness in countries without universal education systems is a symptom of the same underlying pathologies that brought down the housing market five years ago - and could soon be the cause of another catastrophic economic contagion.

    // Read More

  • Striking in LA on May 1st? Read This

    For May 1st, Occupy Los Angeles is organizing around a “4 Winds” People’s Power Car and Bike Caravan through the urban sprawl of Los Angeles that will culminate in direct action in and around the financial district of downtown L.A.

    // Read More

  • Reclaiming Ag in Oakland

    On April 22, hundreds marched from an Earth Day rally in Berkeley, California, to help establish a community farm occupation on an empty tract of land in the East Bay. Occupy the Farm is spreading sustainable agriculture to lands otherwise destined for development.

    // Read More

  • We Are All Leaving Goldman Sachs

    We are never going to understand the 1% unless we recognize that its members are for the most part no less morally conscientious than you or me.

    // Read More

  • The Importance of Being Sassy

    Long before Abbie Hoffman dropped dollar bills into the New York Stock Exchange, humor has been used as a potent political weapon, exposing the absurdities and inequities of a consumerist society.

    // Read More

  • Occupy Big Food

    A crucial part of the success of Occupy will also depend on getting Americans to understand corporate control of our food supply and the way in which, over the past sixty years, industrial food has come to dominate our food choices.

    // Read More

Pages

Sign Up