Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Let's Get This Christmas Party Started

You all know of my love of all things Amy Winehouse. Dug up this Christmas song from 2008. Hope you like it. It is live, so you know Amy's been on the bottle a wee bit!

I Saw Mummy Kissing Santa Claus

The Vigilante Gardner

This is a cool piece, in two parts. H/T to AMERICAblog.

Part 1



Part 2

Monday, November 28, 2011

Friday, November 25, 2011

Freddie Mercury, 20 Years And We Still Miss You






I cried when Freddie died, 20 years ago yesterday. I remember where exactly I was when I heard it on the car radio, and had to pull over and just ball my eyes out.

When I first heard Killer Queen, I was hooked on this band. Went out and bought the "album" and even made a reel-to-reel recording of it for posterity!

The band who became known for probably the most stadium anthems across the board for all sports. How fitting.

I still love you, Freddie, and play your music not often enough, damn it!



Fat Bottom Girls


Radio Gaga


Going to leave you with probably one of their most famous pieces - Bohemian Rhapsody.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

What Are You Thankful For?

Fitting comic metaphor for the state of our country this Thanksgiving.

What I am thankful for, after the past year of drama?

First on my list, is the fact that I will see my grandson this Christmas, and he will be home for a week. Although he is staying at the moment in Chicago, let's be clear that he calls where his mom lives "home."

Second, I am thankful for being gainfully employed, and our prospects for the future do not have "closure" of our firm as an option. So, I will not be joining the ranks of the unemployed in the near future. Very much thankful for that.

Third, I am thankful that I earn sufficiently to have a roof over my head and put food on the table. With the rate of poverty, homelessness and hunger at an all time high in this country, which weighs heavy on my heart, I am thankful that I am capable of taking care of myself and my family.

Fourth, I am thankful that I can help others through my non profit charity, Santa's Elves. Although initially envisioned to help underprivileged families by providing them with refurbished electronics, we as an organization have shifted to providing this equipment to shelters. I have an abundance of cell phones that we will be donating to women's shelters, as obviously, the first thing the abusive partner takes away from the woman is her ability to communicate. These phones when we clean them up (remove old SIM cards, delete memories, check batteries, etc.) are a gateway for the women to contact loved ones and not feel so alone. In addition, we refurbish DVD players, sound systems (Ipods and other CD players) televisions, computers (laptops and PC's). All of these products are helpful to those operating all the various types of shelters in Los Angeles, from domestic abuse and family shelters, to homeless shelters. People are generous with food, clothes and toys at Christmas time, but there is a dramatic need for cell phones, computers, televisions and other assorted electronics to assist not only the shelters in their day-to-day business, but also to be used as learning tools for those needing to acquire skills, i.e. computer! I am proud to have thought of this idea, and am thankful for my partners in this venture, and that we can give back to the community in this fashion.

I am thankful for my belief in God. Without that, I do not think, given what I have gone through this past year, coupled with the direction the world is going, (and my age), I would feel like "waking" up every day. Without faith and belief, what else is left in today's world?

Last, but certainly not least, I am thankful for my family and friends. Family have been supportive in the dispute over my grandson such that the days of constant crying are almost a distant memory. I am thankful that I had a wonderful eight and one-half years to become very close to my grandson, such that nothing that occurs in Chicago will have any impact on my relationship with him. I am thankful for my daughter's success at school, and her drive to be a better person. It has manifested itself in better communication between us, and our ability to actually be in the same room for longer than 15 minutes without fighting (LOL, but true!)

I hope that each and every one of you who read my blog have a truly drama free Thanksgiving day today, and take the time out to appreciate what you have.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Shepard Fairey's New Hope Poster

Final version.


Original version before input.

For those not familiar with Mr. Fairey, he became associated with the famous 2008 Obama Hope poster.

Occupy LA Wins Concessions From City Council - Or Not?

UPDATE: 9/24/11

It appears that the Los Angeles City Council and Mayor Villaraigosa have gone back on their word to the Occuply LA group, and now plan to evict them within the next 72 hours.
Los Angeles officials want Occupy L.A. protesters to ditch their City Hall encampment by next week so the city can begin restoring the 1.7-acre park where the group has been living for nearly two months.

An aide to Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa would not say what day the city plans to close the park — or exactly how much warning protesters will be given. But during a meeting Wednesday with several protesters, the aide, Deputy Chief of Staff Matt Szabo, said they would receive "ample notice."

[snip]

Officials earlier this week offered the protesters work space in a city building, along with a package of other incentives to encourage them to peacefully abandon their camp, according to [Jim] Lafferty. But he said city officials wavered on that offer Tuesday.
So, now what?

This from Crooks and Liars:
LA Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa ran virtually unopposed for his second term and still only got 55 percent of the vote. Between a sex scandal involving a member of the press - to wide reports of his all around hesitancy to do actual work - he's not well liked in Los Angeles. In fact, just the most basic tiny improvements to the city like planting a million trees or making a major thoroughfare a one-way during rush hour have failed during his tenure. Politically it's the end for Mayor V, he's not going to run for higher office. He's done.

So now as he's really accomplished little in his two terms to help a city whose unemployment is 12.2 percent - whose crumbling infrastructure is highlighted in car commercials as an obstacle course - Villaraigosa's next move is to give the boot to Occupy LA.

Yeah, as an aside, that "iconic" bridge that is featured in just about every car commercial made, is to be no longer. They are not even going to attempt to create a structure that resembles this bridge. It is simply going to be torn down and replaced with a 21st century designed bridge. Sad.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We don’t hear a whole lot about #OccupyLA because the City Council has been so cool about it. But now, after nearly two months of the City Hall lawn being used as a campground, the city leaders would like to politely move the protest off the grounds while also supporting its continued work.

The solution, which has yet to be accepted but which we think is genius for all involved, is to “rent” some downtown office space the city has (10,000 square feet) to #OccupyLA for a ceremonial $1 per year. (The huge commercial space is in something called the “Los Angeles Mall” literally next door to City Hall.) And all the homeless who have come to the camp recently? They will be provided with housing. Oh yeah, and farmland will be provided to the group, so that it can be self-sufficient as far as growing food.

With an office space connected to public transit and near to City Hall, the protest movement can become a full-time revolutionary council. It can advocate for the homeless, for the people facing eviction, for those being pushed out by property speculators, for the unemployed and underemployed, for the whole 99%. Actions can be arranged against the corporations, against the military, against all the evildoers.

Read the rest here. And for all you OTHER Occupy cities contemplating what to do, take note of how Los Angeles is treating this movement.

Poop Flinging Monkeys, Pepper Spray And Megyn Kelly

There has been a lot of dismissive talk on the television as of late regarding the "pepper spraying" incident at UC Davis. In fact, the cop has become a famous meme now!

A lot has taken off from the now infamous Megyn Kelly Fox News program statement that "pepper spray" is essentially a "food product."

However, this piece from Daily Kos caught my eye, with this funny analogy.

Fox's Megyn Kelly has been taking some heat (hi-yo!) for what looks like her dismissal of the seriousness of the UC Davis pepper spraying incident and other similar incidents around the country by asserting that pepper spray, "is a food product, essentially." And that's undoubtedly an idea that deserves to be slapped down, so it's no surprise that it has been, with actual science, no less.

The ridicule has been plentiful, of course. (Mustard gas is a condiment! Bullets are nutritional supplements!) But if you watch the entire video, Kelly actually comes off as being at least within spitting distance of reasonable. Though it should be said that a poop-flinging monkey could likely do the same if he was sitting opposite Bill O'Reilly, who goes out of his way to imply both that the pepper spraying is OK because UC Davis is a liberal campus, and that say that people "don't... have the right to Monday morning quarterback the police." [my emphasis]

Read the rest here.

11/22/63


48 years ago, we lost a president to a bullet. In hindsight, many controversies have arisen, not only as to how and by whom he was killed, but whether he was, or could have been, the greatest president ever.

Writer Robert Stein has this to say on his blog today:

After November 22, 1963 I wrote an editorial attempting to define the deep grief over his shocking death-—that beyond his attractiveness and intelligence, there was the loss of a leader “who was still growing—-in understanding, in skill, in compassion, in commitment."

Today's contenders for the Presidency are, in contrast, overwhelmed by challenges. For all our sakes, we can only hope that whoever wins next year can attain ultimately the stature John F. Kennedy did in the thousand days he spent in the White House.

Another Example Of The 1% Gig

When Pfizer cut its research budget this year and laid off 1,100 employees, it was not because the company needed to save money.

In fact, the drug maker had so much cash left over, it decided to buy back an additional $5 billion worth of stock on top of the $4 billion already earmarked for repurchases in 2011 and beyond.

The moves, announced on the same day, might seem at odds with each other, but they represent an increasingly common pattern among American corporations, which are sitting on record amounts of cash but insist that growth opportunities are hard to find.

[snip]

There has been a steady drumbeat of other companies laying off workers even as they have disclosed plans to buy back more stock. On June 23, Campbell Soup said it would buy back $1 billion in stock; five days later it announced plans to eliminate 770 jobs. Hewlett-Packard announced a $10 billion stock repurchase in July, and jettisoned 500 jobs in September after it discontinued its TouchPad and smartphone product lines.

Read more here. So, if you are wondering why the Occupy movement is so concentrated on the 1%, stories like this should jog your brain a bit. It also helps identify certain products not to buy anymore, like Campbell's soup! Spending one billion dollars in stock buy backs for its shareholders and officers, at the expense of 770 real people who no longer have a job with that company, now there's a grand American gesture, and a lesson in how the rich stay rich.

And, in another bit of irony, the law firm that became famous over Halloween for their office party (the firm specialized in foreclosures, and the theme of the office party was, well, being homeless after you lost your house in foreclosure) had to close their doors thanks to all the fun publicity!

A law firm that had become a lightning rod in the controversy over mortgage-foreclosure practices has shut down, costing 89 employees their jobs.

The Steven J. Baum P.C. law firm, which has offices in Amherst, N.Y., and Westbury, N.Y., has filed papers with government agencies notifying them that it plans to close. It made the filings under a federal law requiring employers to provide notice before mass layoffs.

[snip]

...the firm’s fortunes worsened this month after The New York Times published photos of a Halloween party at the Baum firm showing employees wearing costumes mocking people who had lost their homes.

After those photos surfaced, the mortgage giants Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae cut off the Baum firm, forbidding servicers of their mortgages from using Mr. Baum and his colleagues. That effectively served as the firm’s death knell.


For more pictures, see here.

And you wonder why the 99% are angry? You still think this class war thing is non-existent? What mentality has to prevail such that a firm that makes its living out of kicking people off their property, hosts a party whose theme is to mock the very people they've made homeless? Apparently, in an email to the guy at the NYT that broke the story, Mr. Baum himself had this to say:

“Mr. Nocera — You have destroyed everything and everyone related to Steven J. Baum PC,” said the letter. “It took 40 years to build this firm and three weeks to tear down.”

Bravo!

Monday, November 21, 2011

"I'll Be Home For Christmas" Grandson Style!

It won't be in our dreams! My grandson will be coming home for Christmas (huge smile)! Tree, presents, ornaments, stockings, candles, love and friends, just like it should be. My grandson wants to come HOME for Christmas, and fortunately, he is getting his way.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Police Brutality Toward The Occupy Movement Picks Up Speed On University Campuses

I've written a few posts here and here about OWS/Occupy Your City, police brutality and the reaction of the 1%.

Now that the movement has taken hold on university campuses, campus police are at the forefront of the "beat the shit out of the protesters," bringing to mind the police and college police actions toward protestors of the Viet Nam war (my era).

When a 70 year old, former Poet Laureate (Robert Hass) and his wife get billy clubbed by the campus police at UC Berkeley's Occupy, especially since he was there just as an observer and not even a participant, you know the U.S. is seriously a police state, no better than Libya, Syria and others.

LIFE, I found myself thinking as a line of Alameda County deputy sheriffs in Darth Vader riot gear formed a cordon in front of me on a recent night on the campus of the University of California, Berkeley, is full of strange contingencies. The deputy sheriffs, all white men, except for one young woman, perhaps Filipino, who was trying to look severe but looked terrified, had black truncheons in their gloved hands that reporters later called batons and that were known, in the movies of my childhood, as billy clubs.

[snip]

Once the cordon formed, the deputy sheriffs pointed their truncheons toward the crowd. It looked like the oldest of military maneuvers, a phalanx out of the Trojan War, but with billy clubs instead of spears. The students were wearing scarves for the first time that year, their cheeks rosy with the first bite of real cold after the long Californian Indian summer. The billy clubs were about the size of a boy’s Little League baseball bat. My wife was speaking to the young deputies about the importance of nonviolence and explaining why they should be at home reading to their children, when one of the deputies reached out, shoved my wife in the chest and knocked her down.

[snip]

My wife bounced nimbly to her feet. I tripped and almost fell over her trying to help her up, and at that moment the deputies in the cordon surged forward and, using their clubs as battering rams, began to hammer at the bodies of the line of students. It was stunning to see. They swung hard into their chests and bellies. Particularly shocking to me — it must be a generational reaction — was that they assaulted both the young men and the young women with the same indiscriminate force. If the students turned away, they pounded their ribs. If they turned further away to escape, they hit them on their spines.

NONE of the police officers invited us to disperse or gave any warning. We couldn’t have dispersed if we’d wanted to because the crowd behind us was pushing forward to see what was going on. The descriptor for what I tried to do is “remonstrate.” I screamed at the deputy who had knocked down my wife, “You just knocked down my wife, for Christ’s sake!” A couple of students had pushed forward in the excitement and the deputies grabbed them, pulled them to the ground and cudgeled them, raising the clubs above their heads and swinging. The line surged. I got whacked hard in the ribs twice and once across the forearm. Some of the deputies used their truncheons as bars and seemed to be trying to use minimum force to get people to move. And then, suddenly, they stopped, on some signal, and reformed their line. Apparently a group of deputies had beaten their way to the Occupy tents and taken them down. They stood, again immobile, clubs held across their chests, eyes carefully meeting no one’s eyes, faces impassive. I imagined that their adrenaline was surging as much as mine.
I suggest reading the entire piece.

An ugly picture, to say the least:



This video is difficult to watch. It starts off with one officer full on spraying the handful of protestors just sitting and doing nothing. In the end of the video, the police finally leave, but not before they actually aim guns at the crowd, and one officer has two cans of pepper spray that he keeps shaking (I guess to get it up to snuff) as if he's going to simply spray it into the crowd (this is after they had already taken away the ten or so protesters that were originally sprayed). This is at UC Davis.



In New York, this is actually quite astonishing. Two churches have offered a place for the OWS group to stay and have shelter. Now, generally, churches are a sanctuary for just about anyone. But not in New York! Bloomberg and his goons keep sending in plain clothes police officers (which, by the way, have not fooled anyone, church personnel nor the protestors), but come on! Infiltrating churches now?

With Mayor Michael Bloomberg (I) ratcheting up police crackdowns on Occupy Wall Street this week, the New York Times reports that several churches in New York City are sheltering protesters who can no longer stay in Zucotti Park. About 46 protesters spent Wednesday night in the United Methodist Church of St. Paul and St. Andrew. However, instead of respecting the sanctuary, police in plainclothes are entering churches to monitor their conduct.

According to church officials, two police officers (one later identified as belonging to the intelligence division) asked to use the bathroom but instead “entered the sanctuary, one remaining near the door while the other advanced down the aisle, apparently counting the demonstrators in the pews.” Then, one officer went downstairs to a homeless women’s shelter and “asked for information about who was sleeping there” without identifying himself or showing his badge. The church’s Rev. James Karpen called the police actions “invasive.”
Read more at Think Progress.

Another from Think Progress, regarding police and their attempt to use undercover officers to infiltrate the Occupy movement, as if they will uncover come dirty secret, much like the right wingers and their news machines (yeah, FOX, I'm pointing my finger at you) that the Occupy movement is a liberal, Democratic organized movement, funded by, you guessed it, George Soros! Yeah, right. (shaking head)
Across the country, police have used undercover and/or plainsclothed police officers to monitor occupations and protests that are a part of the 99 Percent Movement. Earlier today, the Tennessean published excerpts from emails sent by the Tennessee Highway Patrol that confirmed not only that police were infiltrating Occupy Nashville but that they were hoping for the movement’s demise.

In a video released last month, Oakland Police Officer Fred Shavies was outed as one of these plainsclothed officers at Occupy Oakland.

SHAVIES: I’m a police officer. I’m part of the 99 percent. [...] In the ’60s when people would protest, would gather in order to bring about change, right? Those protests were nonviolent they were peaceful assemblies. They were broken up with dogs, hoses, sticks. [...] It looks like there was a square, and police shot tear gas. That could be the photograph or the video for our generation. That’s our Birmingham. So, twenty years from now this movement could be the turning point, the tipping point, right. It’s about time your generation stood up for something. It’s about time young people are in the streets. [...] Ya’ll don’t need to throw gas canisters into a group of people occupying an intersection.
At least one politician in Washington is paying attention:
“No matter how long protesters camp out across America, big banks will continue to pour money into shadow groups promoting candidates more likely to slash Medicaid for poor children than help families facing foreclosure,” said Deutch in a statement provided to ThinkProgress. “No matter how strongly Ohio families fight for basic fairness for workers, the Koch Brothers will continue to pour millions into campaigns aimed at protecting the wealthiest 1%. No matter how fed up seniors in South Florida are with an agenda that puts oil subsidies ahead of Social Security and Medicare, corporations will continue to fund massive publicity campaigns and malicious attack ads against the public interest. Americans of all stripes agree that for far too long, corporations have occupied Washington and drowned out the voices of the people. I introduced the OCCUPIED Amendment because the days of corporate control of our democracy. It is time to return the nation’s capital and our democracy to the people.”


Rep. Ted Deutch (D-FL), has introduced a bill (cute acronym) called Outlawing Corporate Cash Undermining The Public Interest in our Elections and Democracy (OCCUPIED). This is a push back against the Citizens United decision.

In a memo from a prominent corporate lobbying firm to the American Bankers Association, it appears Wall Street, and Republicans are now afraid that some Democrats might benefit from the Occupy movement.

The memo was authored by lobbyists at the firm Clark Lytle Geduldig Cranford — and there are two key takeaways. The first is that some allies of Wall Street firms see Occupy Wall Street as a potential long term political threat. The second is that they see the Democratic strategy of embracing the populist message of the protests as something that could work, rather than something that is an automatic negative for Dems, as conservatives keep proclaiming is the case.
Read more here.

As we head into the Thanksgiving Holidays, this is an interesting idea from Working America. It's a challenge to "talk turkey" about the Occupy movement.

What's your favorite part of the holidays? Big meals? Mashed potatoes and gravy? Cranberry sauce? Sleeping off your meal over the big football game? How about those never-ending discussions with your family about everything from Dancing with the Stars to Congress?

Well, this holiday season, Working America invites you to embrace that quality family time as an opportunity to help Uncle Dave and Aunt Maggie make sense of what it means to be a part of the 99 percent. We're calling it "Turkey Talk."

How can you take on the "Turkey Talk" Holiday Family Challenge to talk with friends and family in a way that draws out the real issues? Here are some basic strategies and advice, along with some substantive facts and answers that will clear up myths, confusion or spin coming from the 1 percent.

Friday, November 11, 2011

Have A Howling Happy Birthday, Rix!

11/11/11

Let's Really Honor The Vets This Year - Donate




As we remember the fallen veterans that have served this country over the years, let us not forget what the Bush administration has done to our current set of vets coming back from "the war on terror."

The Dover Air Force Base mortuary for years disposed of portions of troops’ remains by cremating them and dumping the ashes in a Virginia landfill, a practice that officials have since abandoned in favor of burial at sea.

The mortuary in Delaware, the main point of entry for the nation’s war dead and the target of federal investigations of alleged mishandling of remains, engaged in the practice from 2003 to 2008, according to Air Force officials. The manner of disposal was not disclosed to relatives of fallen service members.

Courtesy of The Washington Post.

Thousands of veterans returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are finding a grim job market. Veterans who served since 9/11 experience a 12.1% unemployment rate, which is higher than the national average, while one in three male veterans are jobless.

Courtesy of Think Progress.

Let's keep Iraq war veteran Scott Olsen in our minds this day, as we begin to understand why the many veterans of Bush's "war on terror" support the Occupy movement.


Wednesday, November 09, 2011

Because It Is Funnier Than Shit - Mike Tyson As Herman Cain!

It Was A Good Day At The Polls Yesterday

When Democrats refused to vote in 2010, the result was a landslide victory in many states electing Republican governors, who promptly went about dismantling the public sector, and enacting laws (many of them illegal). We saw what happened in Wisconsin with the recalls and the Solidarity movement which begat the OWS/99% (and the recall of Walker has started, although a bogus group that supports Walker filed 11/4, while the real group was ready to roll out their petition on 11/15 - the fake group did this so that Walker could start raising unlimited funding for his recall election opposition).

In Ohio, the voters struck down Gov. Kasich's anti-union stripping of collective bargaining by repealing Senate Bill 5 through a voter referendum (Issue 2 on the ballot) by a 2-1 margin. BTW, that appears to be the first time a governor has seen signature piece of legislation rejected by voters in a governor's first year.

In Maine, voters struck down the proposal to end same day registration, which was repealed as soon as their Republican governor Paul LePage and his Republican state congress were in power. Maine has had same day registration for voting for a long time, and this move (as with many other Republican governor's moves) have been a concerted effort to attempt to disenfranchise voters in areas that generally vote Democratic. Glad to see that one go down in flames.

Now, in Mississippi, the "personhood" amendment also went down, and that is especially telling since this state is extremely anti-abortion, and even the right wingers didn't like this bill (which defined that a person starts at the fertilization of the egg). 58% voted that one down.

Many more voting events made news. It's good to see a "fire in the belly" of the electorate pushing back against the Koch controlled governors and their efforts to continue to keep the 1% in control and lock out the 99%.

Monday, November 07, 2011

Obama Is Wall Street

For those that think we should just vote in Obama for a second term, and either hold our noses or point out the old cliche of "who else is there," one really needs to read this, and take it ALL IN CAREFULLY.

The largest banks are larger than they were when Obama took office and are nearing the level of profits they were making before the depths of the financial crisis in 2008, according to government data.

Wall Street firms — independent companies and the securities-trading arms of banks — are doing even better. They earned more in the first 21 / 2 years of the Obama administration than they did during the eight years of the George W. Bush administration, industry data show.

Please continue your support for Occupy Wall Street.

For more in-depth coverage of this issue, read Think Progress' take here.

Fuck Me Once, BP, Fuck Me Twice, U.S. Government

US District court has dismissed over 100,000 lawsuits brought against BP And Transocean to pay for oil spill clean up costs and environmental damages caused to the Gulf of Mexico from the BP Gulf Oil Spill. The court ruled that injury stopped the moment the well was sealed and the Federal Government, aka The US Taxpayer, is now liable for clean up costs along with any damages caused by deficiencies of the cleanup of the Gulf Of Mexico.

Read the rest of the piece here.

Hey, it's not like any of us were fooled into actually believing that BP would be responsible for the damage done to the ecosystem or the lives of those that live in the Gulf Coast region, right?

Just another example of how the 1% get to screw over the 99%, as usual.

Saturday, November 05, 2011

Best Band Ever - Beatles or Fleetwood Mac?

That is really a hard choice. The Beatles left behind a catalogue of music, but the Mac, damn, they lived their music!

We most remember this in the Clinton era, as their theme song, presidential wise.

Newer version of " Don't Stop."



This is a band that was as good as their individuals as they were as their combined components!

Tusk, circa The Dance album.



An epic song ... Go Your Own Way


This was a band with a history that just transcends most bands. Shit, Mick Fleetwood on the drums was awesome. Everyone in that band had mad skills.

Over My Head - Christine McVie


Stevie Nicks

Eva Cassidy ...2-2-63/11-2-96

Very few artists impact me. Eva most certainly did. Get her music, share it, download it, embrace it.

Over The Rainbow

Friday, November 04, 2011

Gutsy Move By Anonymous

UPDATE: 11/5/11

According to New York Daily News:

The hacktavist collective Anonymous has cancelled Operation Cartel after a member that was allegedly abducted by a Mexican drug cartel was released Thursday, the group's longtime public face announced in an online post.
WOW ... that's some fucking power!
- - - - - - - -
"You made a huge mistake by taking one of us. Release him," says a masked man in a video posted online on behalf of the group, Anonymous.

"We cannot defend ourselves with a weapon … but we can do this with their cars, homes, bars, brothels and everything else in their possession," says the man, who is wearing a suit and tie.

"It won't be difficult; we all know who they are and where they are located," says the man, who underlines the group's international ties by speaking Spanish with the accent of a Spaniard while using Mexican slang.


Apparently, Anonymous is not taking the kidnapping of one of their own lying down.

Earlier today, [Barrett] Brown tweeted: "Just hours into gathering secondary intel, we have the name of a U.S. DA and evidence of his involvement." That was followed by "Requesting the assistance of any journalist who is willing to look into a DA with potential ties to organized crime."
From CNET.

Move Your Money

I don't have a bank account, and haven't in almost ten years. I won't give them the satisfaction of using my money. But for those of you that do, tomorrow is "Move Your Money" day. Just click on the link above for more information.

Tammy Baldwin, My New Hero

Finally, someone with "balls" ready to sock it to the banking industry that has fucked the 99%. H/T to AMERICAblog.

Baldwin's resolution states that any settlement should follow three guidelines: 1) Banks that engaged in fraudulent behavior "should not be granted criminal or civil immunity for potential wrongdoing related to illegal mortgage and foreclosure practices," 2) the federal government and state AGs should "proceed with full investigations into claims of fraudulent behavior by mortgage servicers" and 3) any monetary sum paid by the banks should "appropriately compensate for, and accurately reflect, the extent of harm to all victims."

"We have to do the best we can to make innocent victims whole. But secondly, especially in light of the taxpayer bailout of the biggest banks, we owe taxpayers a solemn effort to do everything we can do to uncover what went wrong and whether laws were broken," Baldwin said in an interview with The Huffington Post. "Part of that is to make certain this won't happen again. That, to me, is one of the most basic responsibilities we have."

Thursday, November 03, 2011

Top 30 Corporations That Paid Zero Income Taxes


H/T to Think Progress.

And Now For Something Completely Different Re OWS

The video speaks for itself.

What Is Up With The Police?

I swear, I am having deja vu moments daily reading about the police beating up the OWS/99% protesters across this country. Back in the Vietnam protest era, it was mostly a generational gap argument. But these current protests span age, gender, race and creed. And the police unions are part of the target of elimination by the 1%, so it is really, really difficult for me to understand the police "rage" that is apparent and directed at the protesters.

Courtesy of the Milwaukee-Wisconsin JS:

Photographer Kristyna Wentz-Graff was covering the rally, which began at noon in a plaza beside UWM's student center. The group left campus on E. Kenwood Blvd., marching westbound in the street and on the sidewalk, chanting and carrying signs.

[snip]

"I can tell you that no one at MPD had any idea (Wentz-Graff) was a journalist until she arrived here at the police station," Schwartz said. "She never identified herself as a journalist to officers."

[snip]

"At no time did Kristyna Wentz-Graff ignore any commands by any officer," Kaiser said. "She came upon the scene to do her job as a photojournalist. She was clearly not part of the protest. She was wearing her Journal Sentinel photo press credential. She was carrying photography equipment while taking photographs of police making arrests when she was grabbed by a police officer and handcuffed. Her arrest was completely uncalled for and violates the First Amendment. No reason for her arrest has been provided."
Then there is this from the San Francisco Chronicle:

A car struck two Occupy Oakland protesters tonight as they marched with a crowd along Broadway, and an angry mob surrounded the car as emergency workers tended to the injured.

The driver, who was not identified, sat in his silver Mercedes-Benz sedan after the 7:30 p.m. incident while hundreds of people screamed at him through his closed windows.

BART police officers who were guarding nearby transit stations responded, questioned the driver and several witnesses, then let the driver leave the scene at 11th Street and Broadway in his car.

Although the tone of violence has lessened since the Oakland police shot a projectile and dramatically injured Iraq Veteran Scott Thomas Olsen, (see video here), I still have no understanding of the police, part of the 99%, and their anger at the 99%.