General Assembly, Zuccotti Park, Sept. 30, 2011
OWS labor solidarity rally, Oct. 5, 2011
Occupy Wall Street People’s Library
OWS Good Neighbor Policy
OWS labor table
General Assembly, Zuccotti Park, Sept. 30, 2011
OWS labor solidarity rally, Oct. 5, 2011
Occupy Wall Street People’s Library
OWS Good Neighbor Policy
OWS labor table
Reposted from TWU Workers’ Rights are Human Rights page.
Delivering ponchos and posters to Occupy Philly, October 2011
As the Occupy Wall Street movement celebrates its one month anniversary, it’s a good time to pause and reflect on the larger meaning of the movement. Where did it come from? What do supporters want? Where is it headed?
Occupy Philly, October 2011:

Occupy Philly kitchen fed three meals a day to all comers
Occupy Philly General Assembly
We are living through a critical and inspiring moment in history, as ordinary people around the country and the globe, many for the first time, are stepping up in movements like Occupy Wall Street and Occupy Philly and Occupy DC and Dallas and Bridgeport and Miami and San Francisco and on and on, and the indignados movements in Spain and Latin America, and the anti-austerity movements in the rest of Europe. They are all using the human mic to say “NO!” with one voice to a world of corporate greed, where the richest 1%, who have everything, have used that power only to create unemployment, inequality, homelessness, environmental devastation, and an overwhelming sense of powerlessness and alienation on the part of ordinary people everywhere.
Occupy Philly, October 2011
People are through waiting, and are moving themselves to create a new world in which the 99% have a voice, in which human rights are more important than property interests. And they are saying, in essence, “we will occupy our public spaces and we will carry out direct actions and build a new democratic community until we believe that new world is being born.”
Who would have thought a month ago that a tiny band of young people in New York would have inspired such an inspiring worldwide mobilization? And who would have thought that TWU would play such a critical role in sparking this movement, lending the legitimacy and power of the labor movement at a key moment in its development? If we take a look back, it’s not surprising.
Photo: Roger Toussaint; Occupy SF, October 12, 2011
Since March, the WR=HR e-news has been telling the story of how the richest 1%, many of them bailout beneficiaries who are enjoying record profits, have tried to blame organized workers and the most vulnerable members of our society for the economic crisis the 1% themselves created. We have reported how this 1% are refusing to pay their fair share of taxes and trying to make those who had nothing to do with creating the mess shoulder all the burden of paying for the crisis.
We have reported on how the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision in January 2010 opened the floodgates of corporate spending in politics, underwriting the Tea Party and drowning the November 2010 mid-term elections in corporate cash. We have reported how this lead to the takeover by the far right of the U.S. House of Representatives, 638 state legislative seats and control of both state legislature and the Governor’s mansion in 21 states.
Occupy DC, October 3, 2011 (Freedom Plaza)
We have reported how the extreme right then chose Wisconsin as the launching pad for the most vicious all-out nationwide assault on organized workers in the public and private sector in our lifetimes. We told the inspiring story of how students led the Capitol occupation there, prefiguring the OWS movement in their attempt to build the kind of community they are fighting for in the midst of that very struggle.
We have reported on the outpouring in Ohio, where 1.3 million residents, with the help of TWU members statewide, demanded a “citizens’ veto” of the union-busting SB 5 bill championed by right wing favorite Gov. John Kasich.
We have reported on how the political puppets of the 1%, egged on by the Tea Party, held the U.S. economy and our global competitiveness hostage and even shut down the FAA in support of demands to cut trillions from essential programs that the 99% depend on, such as Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.
We have reported how even so-called excluded workers, such as foreign students here on cultural exchange programs, are organizing and fighting back against brutal exploitation by companies like Hershey, recreating before our eyes the very idea of what it means to be a union.
We have reported on the demands of young people and immigrants and people of color and excluded workers and women and the unemployed to reclaim and remake the labor movement in a way that meets their needs and their vision for a more humane future.
We have reported on the Occupy Wall Street movement from the time it was just a gleam in the eyes of a tiny handful of young activists.
And we were there to tell the story when TWU proudly led the rest of the labor movement into supporting this struggle at a critical moment in its development, helping spark its global growth.
All these events and more combined to create the conditions for the success—so far— of the Occupy Wall Street movement. It is now time to translate the popular sentiment that movement has generated into concrete gains for the 99%.