WHAT: Occupy LA - Nov. 5 & Nov.6 Teach-In and More!
WHERE: Occupy LA - City Hall
WHEN: Saturday, November 5, 2011 and Sunday, November 6, 2011
Occupy LA - Nov.5 & Nov.6 Teach-In and More! is a weekend of actions, speakers, panel discussions and more created to educate, mobilize, unify and inspire people in regard to issues surrounding this amazing moment in history and the global Occupy movement. The teach-in is designed to discuss the existing conditions and systems which have led to the housing collapse,"recession", the corporate control of our legislature, courts, media and regulatory agencies. It also continues the dialogue on organizing movements for social and economic justice and sustainable alternatives for people and the planet. There will be further discussions on how the wealthiest individuals and corporations have dominated other aspects of life.
Saturday, Nov.5
2:30 - Introductory Remarks
2:45 - Robert Reich (Professor of Public Policy at UC Berkeley and former US Labor Secretary)
3:15 - Robert Scheer (Executive Editor, Truthdig.org, author of The Great American Stick Up:
How Reagan Republicans and Clinton Democrats Enriched Wall Street While Mugging Main Street)
3:30 - 5:00 - Economics Panel:
William Black (professor of Economics and Law at the
Joel Rogers (professor of Law, Political Science, Public Affairs and Sociology at the
Michael Hudson - (via livestream) President of The Institute for the Study of Long-Term Economic Trends (ISLET), a Wall Street
Financial Analyst, Distinguished Research Professor of Economics at the University of Missouri, Kansas City.
Robert Scheer (Executive Editor of Truthdig.org) - Moderator
5:00- Carol Wells (Executive Director of Center for the Study of Political
Graphics)
5:15 - George Lakoff - (via livestream) - (Professor of cognitive linguistics at UC Berkeley and author of Don't Think of an Elephant! Know Your Values and Frame the Debate
5:30 - Closing Speaker TBA
6:00 - Music - Performers TBA
8:00 pm - Sneak Preview of "Heist: Who Stole the American Dream?" Directed by Donald Goldmacher and Frances Causey - a documentary film which reveals how American corporations orchestrated the dismantling of middle-class prosperity through rampant deregulation, the outsourcing of jobs, and tax policies favoring businesses and the wealthy and gave rise to corporate power. The Director will present the film.
Sunday, Nov.6
11:00 - Opening Speaker TBA
11:30 - 1:00 - Organizing and Civil Disobedience Panel:
Madeline Janis - Executive Director of LAANE
Kent Wong - Director of the Center for Labor and Research at UCLA
Erick Huerte - Organizer at Dream Team
Peggy Mears - Organizer of the Home Defenders program for ACCE, the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment
Jill Furillo -
Peter Drier - Chair of the Urban and Environmental Policy Department at
1:00 - lunch
1:30 - Sustainable Living Panel
Frank Tamborello - Hunger Action LA
Autumn Rooney - Echo Park Time Bank
South Central Farms
Open Neighborhoods
Joan Stevens -
Gatherings and the 2011 SoCal Permaculture convergence.
3:00 - American Civil Liberties Union - speaker TBA
3:15 - Iraq Veterans Against the War - speaker TBA
3:30 - 5:00 - Corportacracy Panel
Alex Caballero - Brave New Foundation
Tracy Rosenberg - president, Media Alliance
Mary Beth Fielder - Organizer Move to Amend
Derek Cressman - Common Cause, director of Campaign to Reverse Citizens United
Lauren Steiner - Local political activist, - Moderator
5:00 - Jim Lafferty of National Lawyers Guild
5:15 - David DeGraw - Organizer at
Additional speakers/updates to be announced.
The Occupy LA Education and People's University will also be holding workshops at various times of the day to discuss some of the topics addressed for those who are interested. http://www.olapeoplescollectiveuniversity.org/
Actions:
Bank Transfer Day/ Move Your Money
March Through Financial District - Rally begins at 10:30am at
To see the most up to date schedule, please visit www.occupylosangeles.org. (This will be updated soon.)
Search the Facebook event page: Nov.5 & Nov.6 Occupy LA - Teach-In and More!
-- Michael Moore on the Rachel Maddow Show, Thursday, November 3rd, 2011
Bank Transfer Day is Brainchild of Echo Park Gallerist
27-year-old Kristen Christian lives in Echo Park. Her Facebook cry to "move your money" from corporate banks to community-oriented financial institutions went viral, and created a global day of action.
Around the world, irate customers will move their money from so-called "faceless" for-profit banks to smaller, community-oriented ones like credit unions and regional banks.
In Los Angeles supporters will rally in the financial district at 10:30 a.m. for a march to City Hall and speeches, including one from Robert Reich, Labor Secretary during the Clinton administration.
It's the stuff of legend, but the now global day of action began as a musing on Facebook.
ECHO PARK GALLERIST STARTED BANK TRANSFER DAY
Echo Park resident Kristen Christian was that muser says the Los Angeles Times.
The owner of an independent art gallery, she was angry about the new $5 a month ATM fee Bank of America was imposing.
On Oct. 4, she urged her Facebook friends to leave corporate banks and outrageous fees behind, and created a Facebook "event" to spread the word.
Within 72 hours, nearly 8,000 had pledged to join her.
OCCUPY MOVEMENT EMBRACES IDEA
The event was widely posted on Occupy Movement walls and made Christian a bit of a media star.
As of late Friday night, almost 81,000 people had pledged to make the move on the Bank Transfer Day Facebook event, with nearly 48,000 "liking" the Transfer Day Facebook page.
Christian herself has made that move already. The Christian Science Monitor says that she's got her money in two different credit unions in advance of Nov. 5.
And she's probably not the only one: a trade organization representing the credit unions estimates the non-profit cooperatives have picked up about 650,000 new customers nationally.
There's no credit union based in Echo Park, though union members may have that option.
COMMUNITY BANKS, CREDIT UNIONS ALTERNATIVES
But here's an idea: Los Angeles National Bank.
Based in Buena Park, the bank has just four branches, one in Echo Park, in the Citibank building on Sunset Boulevard, just behind the new Pazzo Gelato.
Branch manager Juan Sandoval is a big friend of the community and is active in the Echo Park Chamber of Commerce.
The bank regularly supports local events and institutions with donations and free checking accounts.
When Echo Park Patch stopped by this week, we learned the bank hadn't yet opened an unusually high number of accounts.
But that could change at any time.
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A few years back Representative Barney Frank coined an apt phrase for many of his colleagues: weaponized Keynesians, defined as those who believe “that the government does not create jobs when it funds the building of bridges or important research or retrains workers, but when it builds airplanes that are never going to be used in combat, that is of course economic salvation.”
Right now the weaponized Keynesians are out in full force — which makes this a good time to see what’s really going on in debates over economic policy.
What’s bringing out the military big spenders is the approaching deadline for the so-called supercommittee to agree on a plan for deficit reduction. If no agreement is reached, this failure is supposed to trigger cuts in the defense budget.
Faced with this prospect, Republicans — who normally insist that the government can’t create jobs, and who have argued that lower, not higher, federal spending is the key to recovery — have rushed to oppose any cuts in military spending. Why? Because, they say, such cuts would destroy jobs.
Thus Representative Buck McKeon, Republican of California, once attacked the Obama stimulus plan because “more spending is not what California or this country needs.” But two weeks ago, writing in The Wall Street Journal, Mr. McKeon — now the chairman of the House Armed Services Committee — warned that the defense cuts that are scheduled to take place if the supercommittee fails to agree would eliminate jobs and raise the unemployment rate.
Oh, the hypocrisy! But what makes this particular form of hypocrisy so enduring?
First things first: Military spending does create jobs when the economy is depressed. Indeed, much of the evidence that Keynesian economics works comes from tracking the effects of past military buildups. Some liberals dislike this conclusion, but economics isn’t a morality play: spending on things you don’t like is still spending, and more spending would create more jobs.
But why would anyone prefer spending on destruction to spending on construction, prefer building weapons to building bridges?
John Maynard Keynes himself offered a partial answer 75 years ago, when he noted a curious “preference for wholly ‘wasteful’ forms of loan expenditure rather than for partly wasteful forms, which, because they are not wholly wasteful, tend to be judged on strict ‘business’ principles.” Indeed. Spend money on some useful goal, like the promotion of new energy sources, and people start screaming, “Solyndra! Waste!” Spend money on a weapons system we don’t need, and those voices are silent, because nobody expects F-22s to be a good business proposition.
To deal with this preference, Keynes whimsically suggested burying bottles full of cash in disused mines and letting the private sector dig them back up. In the same vein, I recently suggested that a fake threat of alien invasion, requiring vast anti-alien spending, might be just the thing to get the economy moving again.
But there are also darker motives behind weaponized Keynesianism.
For one thing, to admit that public spending on useful projects can create jobs is to admit that such spending can in fact do good, that sometimes government is the solution, not the problem. Fear that voters might reach the same conclusion is, I’d argue, the main reason the right has always seen Keynesian economics as a leftist doctrine, when it’s actually nothing of the sort. However, spending on useless or, even better, destructive projects doesn’t present conservatives with the same problem.
Beyond that, there’s a point made long ago by the Polish economist Michael Kalecki: to admit that the government can create jobs is to reduce the perceived importance of business confidence.
Appeals to confidence have always been a key debating point for opponents of taxes and regulation; Wall Street’s whining about President Obama is part of a long tradition in which wealthy businessmen and their flacks argue that any hint of populism on the part of politicians will upset people like them, and that this is bad for the economy. Once you concede that the government can act directly to create jobs, however, that whining loses much of its persuasive power — so Keynesian economics must be rejected, except in those cases where it’s being used to defend lucrative contracts.
So I welcome the sudden upsurge in weaponized Keynesianism, which is revealing the reality behind our political debates. At a fundamental level, the opponents of any serious job-creation program know perfectly well that such a program would probably work, for the same reason that defense cuts would raise unemployment. But they don’t want voters to know what they know, because that would hurt their larger agenda — keeping regulation and taxes on the wealthy at bay.
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