Direct Action
Occupy DC
Occupy New Haven
Food Tent
New Haven Green Occupation
Comfort and Medic tent
Occupy New Haven began on the upper portion of the green, near College Street Saturday, October 15 at 12 noon.
According to the National Priorities Project, New Haven taxpayers will pay $84 million for FY2011 in total Iraq and Afghanistan war spending—or $1,766 per household. Yet 26.7% of New Havens’ residents lived below the poverty level in 2009. 31.1% of the children in New Haven live below poverty level. This is unacceptable.
Come to New Haven. Let your voice be heard!
http://www.nhregister.com/articles/2011/10/05/news/new_haven/doc4e8ce866dd685280416743.txt
https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=232388430152288
http://www.city-data.com/poverty/poverty-New-Haven-Connecticut.html
Occupy Wall Street
OCCUPY WALL STREET started September 17, when 5,000 Americans descended on to the financial district of Lower Manhattan, held a people’s assembly and set up an encampment in Zuccotti Park on Liberty Street, a stone’s throw from Wall Street and a block from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
http://www.adbusters.org/campaigns/occupywallstreet

Keystone XL Pipeline Protest at White House Keystone XL Pipeline Protest at the White House Washington, DC November 6, 2011 Photograph by Emma Cassidy
Thursday, January 19, 2012 – We wanted to share with you the news: this afternoon the Obama Administration announced that they are denying the permit for the Keystone XL pipeline. You did good work, against some of the longest possible odds.
For years, the knock on the President Obama was that he backed down too easily in the face of opposition. Not here. When Republicans in Congress forced the issue again by passing a 60-day time limit on the President’s final decision, he stood strong and denied the permit. And that was despite the most explicit threats from Big Oil: that they would exact ‘huge political consequences’ if he did the right thing on Keystone. Make no mistake—this is a brave decision.
And make no mistake about this either—Big Oil will do everything it can to overturn that decision, because they are not used to losing. They have one weapon—money. They’ve used it to buy the allegiance of many Representatives and Senators and now they’ll use Congress to try and get their dirty work done. That’s what happened when the President delayed the permit last November, and we should expect them to try again now.
That’s why we’re going to Congress and Big Oil, beginning next Tuesday the 24th. If you can join us, we’re meeting at noon on the West Lawn, and you should wear a referee’s shirt. We’re going to ‘blow the whistle’ on the corruption that passes for business as usual on Capitol Hill, where people take money from companies whose interests they vote on. If this happened at the Super Bowl it would be a national scandal; we’ve got to make sure it’s seen that way in our political life too. We know it’s short notice, but we hope we can get at least 500 people there. Not to get arrested, at least not this time, but to make quite a noise.
If you can make it, click here to join the action in DC.
If you can’t make it (or even if you will be there) can you help us spread the word about the good news, and the action next week?
We’ll be fighting to prevent Keystone, but we’ll also be fighting to shut off the flow of handouts to the oil, gas, and coal industries, and to take away their right to use the atmosphere as an open sewer into which to dump their carbon for free. This industry, simply because it is rich, has been cosseted too long. Time to fight back.
What you’ve done these past eight months is quite amazing—and against all the odds. We’ve won no permanent victory (environmentalists never do) but we have shown that spirited people can bring science back to the fore. Blocking one pipeline was never going to stop global warming—but it is a real start, one of the first times in the two-decade fight over climate change when the fossil fuel lobby has actually lost.
Rest assured they’ll fight like heck—their world-record profits depend on it. We better fight just as hard, because the world depends on it.
-Bill McKibben 350.org
November 6th: Tar Sands Action Returned to DC
One year from the next election, Tar Sands Action return to DC to encircle the White House to ask President Obama to reject the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline. They were worried they wouldn’t have enough people; instead they were 5 deep!!!
http://www.tarsandsaction.org/
LOCAL ACTIONS
CCSU November 8, 2011
Demonstration against former Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates when he spoke at Central CT State University
Published on Tuesday, May 24, 2011 by CommonDreams.org
Over Two Thousand Six Hundred Activists Arrested in US Protests
Since President Obama was inaugurated, there have been over two thousand six hundred arrests of activists protesting in the US. Research shows over 670 people have been arrested in protests inside the US already in 2011, over 1290 were arrested in 2010, and 665 arrested in 2009. These figures are certainly underestimate the number actually arrested as arrests in US protests are rarely covered by the mainstream media outlets which focus so intently on arrests of protestors in other countries. (more) https://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/05/24
















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