Peace Revolution episode 041: The Ultimate History Lesson with John Taylor Gatto / Hour 1 + Commentary subscribing http://peacerevolution.podomatic.com/player/web/2011-10-09T13_37_14-07_00
Peaceful Revolution lyrics
"Peaceful Revolution"
Its good to be alive in the peaceful revolution
An honor to observe the beautiful solution
I tip my hat to we the people in order to form a more perfect world
This shall come to pass
The beginning of the end
Of the ignorance that once could sin
The tyrant to power
His day is done
In the worldwide revolution
Yeah, the peaceful revolution
All around this small world
Now the people demand to listen
These truths self-evident
Philosophical evolution
As the old die out
The young see a better way
Human rights guaranteed to all
Without regard to race, I say
[ Lyrics from: http://www.lyricsmode.com/lyrics/0-9/311/peaceful_revolution.html ]
The beginning of the end
Now the people vote, we will not sin
The tyrant to power
His day is done
In the worldwide revolution
In the peaceful revolution
I see the last frontier and the peaceful revolution
World peace is merely a product of social evolution
The conquest lies in accepting different peoples
And thinking right here at home
In the suns kingdom
The beginning of the end
And of the tolerance that once could sin
The tyrant to power
His day is done
In the worldwide revolution
In the peaceful revolution
Its the peaceful revolution
Its the peaceful revolution
An honor to observe the beautiful solution
I tip my hat to we the people in order to form a more perfect world
This shall come to pass
The beginning of the end
Of the ignorance that once could sin
The tyrant to power
His day is done
In the worldwide revolution
Yeah, the peaceful revolution
All around this small world
Now the people demand to listen
These truths self-evident
Philosophical evolution
As the old die out
The young see a better way
Human rights guaranteed to all
Without regard to race, I say
[ Lyrics from: http://www.lyricsmode.com/lyrics/0-9/311/peaceful_revolution.html ]
The beginning of the end
Now the people vote, we will not sin
The tyrant to power
His day is done
In the worldwide revolution
In the peaceful revolution
I see the last frontier and the peaceful revolution
World peace is merely a product of social evolution
The conquest lies in accepting different peoples
And thinking right here at home
In the suns kingdom
The beginning of the end
And of the tolerance that once could sin
The tyrant to power
His day is done
In the worldwide revolution
In the peaceful revolution
Its the peaceful revolution
Its the peaceful revolution
Going strong!
Published on 10 October 2011
Please come join us anytime of any day. General Assembly works too.
#OccupySF
California's Jerry Brown says it's ok to vaccinate kids without parental consent.
http://annedachel.com/2011/10/09/sacramento-bee-ca-governor-oks-vaccines-without-parents-permission/
http://occupysf.com/
Excerpt:
Reach us at 510-619-4378
Join us any hour of day or night at the Federal Reserve Bank, 101 Market St, San Francisco. Bring your friends!
Join a working group on the ground, become an occupier!
We are looking for teachers, experts, talented folks, to bring their skills to our space. Teach a skill-share class or help us with a project!
Donate goods and materials. Some things we need:
- Food donations; please prioritize prepared foods for meals and ready to eat snacks, deliver at any time. Call us to see what we need beforehand.
- Safe houses in SF for campers to nap, recharge and shower
- Occupier-friendly bathrooms in the immediate area.
- PRIORITY NEEDS LIST FOR PHYSICAL DONATIONS (no order):
- Prepaid cell phones (Metro PCS works)
- Laptops
- A comfy bicycle for our bicycle-power generator
- Signmaking materials!! (signs, posts, markers)
- Blankets, blankets, blankets
- Car batteries
- Umbrellas
- Sleeping pads
- Clipper and BART cards
- Yoga mats
- Sewing machines
- Fabric to make our own clothes (fair trade preferred)
- Portable cd players and headphones and batteries
- A, AA, AAA batteries
- Sticker paper
- A large truck or pickup trucks
- Use of a car
- Take our food donations offsite and turn them into a prepared dish!
- Services! (all important!)
- Medics
- Seamstress, stitching
- Acupuncture
- Massage
- Printing/copying services – help us make stickers, posters!
- Office space near campsite
- IT people (website currently covered but we want to do podcasts of our workshops….)
- Educate: help start Occupy University on Saturdays…
At the very best, please come. Meet your friends in the 99%!
Thanks and Love,
Occupy SF
http://sfappeal.com/news/2011/10/sf-shoots-scenes-from-occupysf-slideshow.php
Excerpt:
SF photographer and Appeal reader Kevin Malmgren has been covering the happenings at Occupy SF, and sent along this slideshow of some of the images he's accumulated.
Be warned, the second-to-last photo in the set may be NSFW (there's a bare butt), and another photo contains a cat, so if you're ailurophobic, brace yourself.
Have you recently taken a San Francisco-set shot you'd like to see here? Send it to us at sfshoots@sfappeal.com, with your name and how you'd like to be linked to, date and where you took it, and any other text you'd like to see accompany it.
http://www.knickledger.com/2011/10/ualbany-students-occupy-university-hall-seeking-answers-from-administrators/
Excerpt:
Hundreds of UAlbany students took part in a rally Wednesday afternoon to participate in what is being considered a national walkout entitled #OccupyColleges.
Inspired by the #OccupyWallStreet movement, #OccupyColleges aims on bringing issues of higher education tuition and efficiency into the public’s light. The group organizing the protests, New York Students Rising, came from a movement started last year at the University at Albany campus entitled, “Save Our SUNY,” in response to last fall’s program cuts.
NYSR is responsible for a number of sister movements across the state taking place at Stony Book in Long Island, New Paltz, Purchase, and other SUNY colleges.
At UAlbany, a group of nearly 300 students organized at the entrance to the university’s Uptown campus at the Academic Podium, looking for answers from UAlbany administrators including President George M. Philip.
http://sfappeal.com/news/2011/10/sf-shoots-scenes-from-occupysf-slideshow.php
Excerpt:
SF Shoots: Scenes From #OccupySF (Slideshow)
SF photographer and Appeal reader Kevin Malmgren has been covering the happenings at Occupy SF, and sent along this slideshow of some of the images he's accumulated.
Be warned, the second-to-last photo in the set may be NSFW (there's a bare butt), and another photo contains a cat, so if you're ailurophobic, brace yourself.
Have you recently taken a San Francisco-set shot you'd like to see here? Send it to us at sfshoots@sfappeal.com, with your name and how you'd like to be linked to, date and where you took it, and any other text you'd like to see accompany it.
http://www.knickledger.com/2011/10/ualbany-students-occupy-university-hall-seeking-answers-from-administrators/
Excerpt:
UAlbany students occupy University Hall, seeking answers from administrators
Posted by Ledger Newsroom on October 5, 2011 · Leave a Comment
Hundreds of UAlbany students took part in a rally Wednesday afternoon to participate in what is being considered a national walkout entitled #OccupyColleges.
Inspired by the #OccupyWallStreet movement, #OccupyColleges aims on bringing issues of higher education tuition and efficiency into the public’s light. The group organizing the protests, New York Students Rising, came from a movement started last year at the University at Albany campus entitled, “Save Our SUNY,” in response to last fall’s program cuts.
NYSR is responsible for a number of sister movements across the state taking place at Stony Book in Long Island, New Paltz, Purchase, and other SUNY colleges.
At UAlbany, a group of nearly 300 students organized at the entrance to the university’s Uptown campus at the Academic Podium, looking for answers from UAlbany administrators including President George M. Philip.
http://www.boston.com/Boston/metrodesk/2011/10/boston-mayor-says-sympathizes-with-protesters-but-they-can-tie-the-city/GFmOU1qwApiGhBNsNSzMIL/index.html
Excerpt:
Police arrest scores of Occupy Boston protesters
http://occupyboston.com/
Excerpt:
AP – Raw Video: Occupy Boston Protesters Arrested
Reply
Boston police arrested 141 people during Occupy Boston demonstrations. The early morning arrests were made for trespassing and unlawful assembly. After almost 15 hours in custody, finally all of the peaceful demonstrators the Boston Police Department arrested have been released as of 6:00pm October 11th. Occupy Boston has many eye witness accounts and video evidence of police misconduct.
As written in the Boston Globe:
http://ceasesilence.tumblr.com/post/11317293036/boston-police-brutally-assault-occupy-boston
Excerpt:
Boston Police Brutally Assault Occupy Boston
As written in the Boston Globe:
Urszula Masny-Latos (executive director of the National Lawyers Guild’s Northeast regional office) said no protesters fought with police. She said police could have employed a technique routinely used at other protests – police approach a protester, tell them they are violating the law, and the protester then submits to being taken into custody – and still achieved their goal of clearing the area.
“They really attacked,’’ Masny-Latos said of police. “They used force that was completely unnecessary. … It was just brutal. I have no idea why they arrested us with such force’’ (Boston.com).
http://ceasesilence.tumblr.com/post/11317293036/boston-police-brutally-assault-occupy-boston
Excerpt:
Boston Police Brutally Assault Occupy Boston
At 1:30 this morning hundreds of police in full riot gear brutally attacked Occupy Boston, which had peacefully gathered on the Rose Kennedy Greenway. The Boston Police Department made no distinction between protesters, medics, or legal observers, arresting legal observer Urszula Masny-Latos, who serves as the Executive Director for the National Lawyers Guild, as well as four medics attempting to care for the injured.
Earlier in the day, an estimated ten thousand union members, students, veterans, families, men, and women of all ages marched from the Boston Common to Dewey Square, and then to the North Washington Bridge to demand economic reform on Wall Street and the end of special interest influence in Washington.
Following this massive outpouring of public support, dozens of police vans descended on the Greenway, with batons drawn, assaulting protesters and arresting more than one-hundred people. Members of Veterans for Peace carrying American flags were pushed to the ground and their flags trampled as the police hauled them away.
Following the raid, Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis made no mention of veterans, organized labor, students, or families, nor did he issue an apology for his department’s aggressive tactics. Since the beginning of its occupation, Occupy Boston has worked tirelessly and successfully to maintain a positive working relationship with city officials. Today’s reprehensible attack by the Boston Police Department against a movement that enjoys the broad support of the American people represents a sad and disturbing shift away from dialogue and towards violent repression.
Despite the city’s attempt to silence us, Occupy Boston remains, and bears no ill-will towards the men and women of the Boston Police Department who were simply following orders. We hope that someday the peaceful pursuit of economic justice will not provoke the beating of elderly veterans and the arrest of medics and legal observers. We encourage everyone who continues to feel as strongly as we do about limiting the influence of Wall Street on our democracy to join us tomorrow, and in the future, down in Dewey Square.
“We will occupy. We are the 99 percent and we are no longer silent.”