occupied washington times: volume 1, issue 3
Post on 05-Apr-2018
217 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
-
8/2/2019 Occupied Washington Times: Volume 1, Issue 3
1/4
Inside
Wethe
99%
McPherson SQ. Washington, D.C. Vol 1 Issue 1 Year 2011
THE OCCUPIED
Washington Times
3What the 1%should have said
Occupy DC responds to
Republican strategist on
how to discuss Occupy.
2
Occupy levels
climate blameCommon environmentarguments charged by
Occupy energy, organizaon.
3Professors andprotesters align
Acadmics, protesters lend
suport across disciplines
4Its here! Itsfnally here!
Occupy DC General
Assembly approves
Declaraon - graphic on 4.
Vol 1 Issue 3 Year 2011
Funding
The Occupied
Washington Times
is funded through
individual donaons,
and contribuons
from the Occupy DC
General Assembly fund.
Please help sustain our
publishing eorts by
vising...
www.OccupyDC.org/
Newspaper
DONATE ONLINE AT
Occupy DCDeclarationapproved,assertspurpose ofmovement
Ofcial recovery leaves jobs behind
Jubilation erupted
on the night of Nov. 30
when the Washington, D.C.
General Assembly (GA)
unanimously consented
upon The Declaration ofOccupy DC. Friends old and
new hugged and strangers
shook hands before moving
on to Post Pub to celebrate.
It had been a long time
coming.
During the rst week
of Occupy DC the Occupy
Wall Street declaration
was read aloud in unison.
The document focused on
corporations, the economy
and the government. After
the recitation of Occupy
Wall Streets declaration, the
decision was made to make
one for Occupy DC that
would focus on government,
corporate power, and the
disenfranchisement of the
District of Columbia.
The GA then chartered
the creation of a Declaration
Committee, which was
made up of approximately
55 diverse individuals, with
attendance that uctuated
from meeting to meeting. A
submissions box was set up
in McPherson Sq. on Oct.
11, to solicit feedback on
what grievances should be
included in the declaration.Over 200 suggestions were
received within a week.
Following this, the
Declaration Committee then
met on an almost daily basis,
using a leaderless consensus
process, to condense all 200
suggestions into what is now
By Drew Veysey
Occupiers stand rm at Battle of the Barn
Occupiers engage in civil disobedience by refusing to abandon a wooden structure erected in the early morning hours at
McPherson Square on Sunday, Dec. 4. Police ordered that the structure be vacated and dismantled. (Photo by Craig Hudson)
On Sunday, Dec. 4, Oc-
cupy DC had its rst major
confrontation with police.
D.C. Metropolitan Police
and U.S. Park Police came
to order the removal of a
wooden structure that had
been built overnight. The
10-hour standoff resulted in
the arrest of 31 occupiers.
Between midnight and 2
a.m. occupiers had erected a
wooden structure from pre-
fabricated pieces. Alternate-
ly referred to as the Peoples
Pavilion or just The Barn,
it was to be used for General
Assemblies,meetings, and as
an emergency sleeping shel-
ter as needed, said organiz-
ers. At 11 a.m. the Metro-
politan Police Department
and U.S. Park Police ordered
the removal of the structure.
Were here to stay,
were here to ght. Thatsthe message Antoinette (last
name withheld), 23, a recent
college graduate in criminal
justice, said she was hop-
ing to convey by submitting
to her rst ever arrest on
Sunday. Were just build-
ing ourselves up, were still
growing.
Joel Northam, 24, said
the action left him invigo-
rated. He also believes that
press coverage will challenge
perceptions and attract new
people to the movement.
Its fun being in my suit and
tie, seeing someone reading
about us in The Examiner
and telling them Oh, hey!
I was the second person ar-
rested!The day after [the in-
cident] we had people from
different occupies show
up in McPherson Square,
Northam continued. Even
if its just to show other
occupations were not stag-
nant, its worth it.
The proposal for the
structure was carefully con-
sidered, explained Paul (last
name withheld), the archi-
tect of the structure. We
took it to a lot of commit-
tees, he adds, everyone
was enthused with it.The proposal was, how-
ever, defeated when initially
brought to the General As-
sembly (GA), the open fo-
rum, decision-making body
of Occupy DC. A conten-
tious debate centered on
concerns about legal conse-
quences and the possibility
of police confrontation.
We had to break up
the rst GA, said Antoi-
nette, who felt arguments
over legality were irrelevant.
From day one weve been
occupying illegally here.After a day of reection, the
proposal passed at a second
GA, on Nov. 7.
Continues on 4Crowds of protestors, bystanders, and media surround the Occu-Barn. Aer a 10-hour stando
between protestors and police, it was demolished with a forkli. (Photo by Craig Hudson)
Wells Fargo is the prin-
cipal investor in the GEO
Group, the nations second
largest private prison corpo-
ration. In 2001, with back-
ing from Wells Fargo, the
GEO Group erected the
for-prot Rivers Correc-
tional Institution in Winton,
North Carolina. According
to NPR, Rivers is the na-
tions largest federal prison.
Despite being over 200
miles away from the city, it
currently incarcerates over
1,000 D.C. residents.
Individuals and groups
advocating for prisoner
rights say that private pris-
ons in general are nefarious.
The GEO Group seems to
t the bill. Its track record
of mistreatment in its for-
prot prisons, mental health
facilities, and juvenile deten-
tion centers includes sexual
abuse and assault by staff
and guards. Their doctors
have been sued for malprac-
tice and have also abused in-
For Wells Fargo,prisons pay
Continues on 2
Continues on 2
By AmeliaAshmall-Liversidge
Corporate prots havemore than doubled from the
depths of the recession to
$1.5 trillion today, accord-
ing to the St. Louis Federal
Reserve. Bureau of Labor
Statistics data for Novem-
ber report unemployment
at 8.6 percent, the lowest
since the ofcial end of the
recession. It looks like a re-
covery on paper, but the of-
cial statistics hide the fact
that the jobs situation has
hardly improved for most
Americans.
When someone stops
searching for work entirely,
they are counted by the Bu-
reau of Labor statistics ashaving left the labor force
but not as unemployed.
The November em-
ployment report said
120,000 jobs were created
last month, but 300,000
people left the labor force
in October, said Univer-
sity of Maryland political
economist Gar Alperovitz.
Thats whats really been
dropping the unemploy-
ment rate, he said.
The bottom line is
that the ofcial rate does
not adequately describe the
true level of suffering. If
you take people who have
stopped looking, or wouldlike to work full time in-
stead of part-time, youre at
25 percent unemployment,
said Alperovitz. Many
economists say were going
to be stuck with this for a
decade, and the idea that it
may be permanent is grow-
ing as well.
Jobless Americans are
also spending more time out
of work than ever. In 2011,
the average unemployed
worker spent 41 weeks out
Continues on 4
By Andrew Breiner
By Karina Stenquist
www.OccupiedWashingtonTimes.org
-
8/2/2019 Occupied Washington Times: Volume 1, Issue 3
2/4
2 December 12, 2011
OPINION
Park regulations state
that temporary structures
may be erected for the pur-
pose of symbolizing a mes-
sage or meeting logistical
needs. Although sturdy and
made of wood, the Occupy
structure was designed foreasy assembly and disman-
tling. It was raised in under
two hours and was intend-
ed to be disassembled and
moved as needed, to avoid
violating regulations.
The Park Police could
not be reached for comment
on the designers claimed
temporary nature of the
structure, or on their inspec-
tors decision to label the
structure: Dangerous.
I was insulted, said
Paul, who has an M.A. in
Architecture from Catholic
University. He said he hasbeen working construction
since he was 12 years old
with his father, with whom
hes built over 100 houses.
Despite the care that
went into designing the
easy-to-dismantle structure,
police arriving on Sunday
morning, quickly cordoned
off the structure, and or-
dered those inside to leave
under threat of arrest.
At that point, police
informed occupiers that
they would have to take the
structure down, and get a
permit to rebuild it. We felt
that [getting a permit] was
unlikely, said Gecko De
LaDouche, 25, who was lat-
er arrested, so wed occupy
and defend it instead.
The decision displeased
some. I almost left, said
Melinda Butler, 22, who hasbeen staying at McPherson
since Nov. 3. She continued,
I didnt want to be seen as
one of those people who
antagonizes police, refer-
ring to them as fellow blue-
collar 99% workers.
Police didnt display the
type of heavy handedness
witnessed at U.C. Berkeley
or U.C. Davis, where images
of nightsticks and pepper
spray have become infa-
mous. However, arrested
occupiers did report some
rough treatment.
Im a buck fty, said
Steve Hartwell, 23, refer-
ring to his slight, 150-pound
frame, and they took four
or ve guys to take medown....It felt like I got hit
by a truck.
After being dragged
over concrete and through
manure left by ofcers
horses, Hartwell says they
made his handcuffs extra
tight before shutting him
in the paddy wagon. They
were very emotionally in-
volved, Hartwell comment-
ed, They werent behaving
professionally.
Regardless of police be-
havior, which left him with a
sore back, Northam said he
was not concerned about
treading lightly around law
enforcement.
To me, not pushing
buttons because we dontwant to have bad relations
with the police is counter-
revolutionary, he said.
Their job is to protect the
status quo. Were all here
because of our afnity for
disobedience.
Theyre gonna evict
other camps but were gon-
na be all kinds of creative.
Protestors arrested after 10-hour perchContinued from 1
Protester Joel Northram, 24, smiles as he is handcued and carried away by police ocers for
disobeying a police order. Ten Occupy DC protestors were arrested during the Dec. 4 protest
concerning the constructure of the Peoples Pentagon. (Photo by Craig Hudson)
mates. The conditions are
horrible, says Christopher
Glenn, a former Rivers in-
mate who now works with
University Legal Services in
Washington, D.C.Former inmates are
generally given few oppor-
tunities to get back on track
after being branded as fel-
ons.
According to a report
from the Council for Court
Excellence, nearly 50 per-
cent of D.C. residents with
criminal records are unem-
ployed after release. All are
at high risk of ending up
back in prison,as stigmati-
zation leaves many without
jobs or support.
The private prisonindustry is one of the
driving forces behind the
over-incarceration of youth,
primarily youth of color,
explains Sam Goldberg, a
D.C. attorney and juvenile
justice advocate. [Privati-
zation] has also led to even
worse conditions in prisons,
resulting in severely inad-
equate mental and physi-
cal health care, in addition
to increased accounts of
abuses.
As the rate of incar-
ceration increases, Wells
Fargos prots rise. Inves-
tors, however, do not see the
families and communities
broken apart by the cycle of
imprisonment.
While D.C. residents
continue to be swept up by
the GEO Group, a damag-
ing social blow is inicted
on the city. As thousands
occupy Wall St. to protest
nancial institutions in-
volvement in the economic
collapse, millions more in-
voluntarily occupy private,
securitized jails for the ben-
et of a corporation.
On Friday, December 2,
2011, Occupy DCs Criminal
(In)justice Committee led
an action against the prison-
industrial complex. At 4pm,
100 protestors marched
from McPherson Square
to the Wells Fargo ofce at1901 7th Street NW. The
crowd gathered to block
the entrance of the bank.
They handed out fact sheets
detailing the number of
D.C. residents in GEOs
private prison and the high
value of Wells Fargos
investment in the GEO
Group. Organizers say this
action is only the rst step
in a sustained effort to effect
Wells Fargos divestiture
from the private prison
industry.
With edits and contributions from
Brenda Pearson and Sean Wellock.
Continued from 1
Bank prots tied toprivate prisons
Leading climate experts
from NASA, the Intergov-
ernmental Panel on Climate
Change and the Internation-
al Energy Agency warn that
when it comes to global cli-
mate change and warming,
we have two options. We
can take immediate action to
drastically reduce our emis-
sions of greenhouse gases
by essentially halting our
consumption of fossil fuels
coal, natural gas, and pe-
troleum or we must face
increasingly catastrophic cli-
mate conditions.
Cyclical variations in
earths average temperature
and climate are normal.
However, our heavy use of
fossil fuels has caused the
atmospheric concentration
of heat-trapping greenhouse
gases - particularly carbon
dioxide and methane - to
spike over the last 200 years.
The chemical composition
of our atmosphere can only
be altered so much before
the earths systems of self-
regulation are derailed. If
fossil fuel consumption is
not reduced at this criticalmoment in history, we can
expect to see a dramatic in-
crease in severe and wide-
spread droughts, wildres,
ooding and climate-related
disease epidemics.
President Obama, for
his part, has stated: Un-
less we free ourselves from
a dependence on these fos-
sil fuels and chart a new
course on energy in this
country, we are condemning
future generations to global
catastrophe. He has also
publicly acknowledged that
transitioning to renewable
energy sources such as so-
lar and wind power has the
potential to grow our econ-
omy and create millions of
jobs. Yet his administration
continues to spend billions
on subsidies and tax breaksfor fossil fuel corporations
every year. Legislation aimed
at curbing greenhouse gas
emissions and developing
renewable energy infrastruc-
ture is consistently blocked
in Congress.
Moreover, permits for
destructive extraction proj-
ects like mountaintop re-
moval coal mining, off-shore
petroleum drilling, and natu-
ral gas hydro-fracking are
being granted to multi-bil-
lion-dollar corporations in-
cluding Massey Coal, Shell,
and Halliburton. These
companies fund massive
public relations campaigns
designed to debunk global
warming and advertise their
products as clean. As they
aim to convince the public
that environmentalism willcost U.S. jobs, its no coin-
cidence that average Ameri-
cans remain skeptical of cli-
mate science.
The Occupy movement
is in a position to challenge
Big Oil. Unfortunately,
focus on the nancial sector
has allowed companies like
ExxonMobil - whose 2010
revenue was nearly ten times
that of Goldman Sachs - to
avoided scrutiny. Yet, like
the banksters, fossil fuel
execs are proting through
reckless disregard for the
99%.
Lobbyists for oil giants
Chevron, Koch Industries,
and ExxonMobil, consis-
tently rank among the high-
est industrial spenders on K
Street and Capitol Hill. They
pour hundreds of millionsof dollars into political cof-
fers each year and appear to
have bought a central role in
shaping energy legislation.
In 2002, the National
Resources Defense Council
conducted a study of 13,500
pages of energy policy that
had been released under or-
ders from a federal judge. It
found that Bush adminis-
tration ofcials sought ex-
tensive advice from utility
companies and the oil, gas,
coal and nuclear energy in-
dustries, and incorporated
their recommendations, of-
ten word for word, into the
[national] energy plan.
The Obama administra-
tion has had little success in
reforming Bush era energy
policies, despite some at-
tempts. Given the politicaland nancial clout of the
lobby, the failure is unsur-
prising. Now, though, we
are in position to speak out
against them. We must stop
relying on their products
and buying their lies. Other-
wise, well all pay the highest
price.
The Sustainability Committee
meets on Tuesdays and Thurs-
days at 8pm or after GA.
Occupy Earth: How big money fuels climate changeBy Kelsey Tribble
-
8/2/2019 Occupied Washington Times: Volume 1, Issue 3
3/4
Meet Your Neighbors Professors stand with Occupy protestors
By: Just Regular Folks PR, Inc. We here at the Just Regular Folks PR rm have bailed you 1 percenters out of some
tight spots before. But all of a sudden, the whining index is on the rise. Suddenly, these noisy upstarts think theyre
entitled to something more than a swift kick in the pants. The problem? You 1 percenters are getting sloppy with
language. Remember, not everyone is as intelligent and hard-working as you are. If they were, theyd be making the big
bucks too. Millions of low-class Americans are so dumb, they dont even know how to move a factory to China! Theyre
so lazy, they dont even hire lobbyists! You guys need a primer on how to talk down to these lesser Americans:
3OPINION
At a recent learn-in
for college professors at
McPherson Square, partici-
pants asked how occupiers
and academics could collabo-
rate more effectively. Some
suggested more workshops
delivered at McPherson
Square and elsewhere; others
called for free courses at local
universities. Few noted how
intensively faculty and pro-
testers have already been en-
gaged with each other. While
it may be difcult to measure
the inuence that college
professors have had on the
Occupy protesters, there is
no question that the protest-
ers have had a dramatic im-
pact on many academics.
Sometimes by design
and sometimes serendipi-
tously, Occupy protestersand college professors have
in many ways been joined
at the proverbial hip. Aca-
demics have been following
the movement intently, and
have directed research ef-
forts at its impact. Occupys
inuence on the media, for
example, attracted immedi-
ate attention. A widespread
discussion of inequality and
injustice has suddenly ood-
ed local, national, and inter-
national media, marking one
major accomplishment of
the Occupy protesters.
Professor Peter Dreier
of Occidental College, using
a LexisNexis search of news-
paper articles, found that 409
stories contained the word
inequality in October 2010.
For the next 11 months, that
number hardly changed. In
October 2011, it spiked to
1,269. Similarly, stories with
the word greed uctuated
between 452 and 728 per
month over the same peri-
od, but jumped to 2,285 the
month the Occupy protests
launched. One of Occupys
key phrases - the richest one
percent - appeared between
11 and 32 times each month
before appearing 174 times
this October. We are the 99
percent is a slogan that will
not soon be forgotten.
Academics are appear-
ing more often on the op-ed
pages and being cited more
frequently in news stories in
major newspapers and maga-
zines. Scholars like Robert
Reich, Emmanuel Saez, and
others have been writing
about the nations surging in-
equality for the last 30 years or
longer - and they have found
a much larger global audience
since September. They dis-
cuss the issues that gave rise
to the Occupy movement
on blogs of various political
stripes, television and radio
news, and public affairs talk
shows. They work for labor
unions, community organiza-
tions, and progressive elected
ofcials. In all this work their
messages are informed and
inspired by Occupiers. And
this is not likely to be a short
term phenomenon.
For example, to exam-
ine the lessons of the Oc-
cupy protests for future fair
housing initiatives, a con-
ference will be held at the
John Marshall Law School in
Chicago next year, to be fol-
lowed by a book, both to be
titled From Foreclosure to
Fair Lending: Advocacy, Or-
ganizing, and the Pursuit of
Equitable Access to Credit.
Fair housing and fair lending
activists, lawyers, community
organizers, HUD and Justice
Department ofcials, as well
as scholars who have stud-
ied social justice movements
will come together to identify
next steps in light of the les-
sons of the Occupy protests.
Similar discussions and
projects are taking place
around the globe. Recently,
Cornel West told a George
Washington University audi-
ence that they needed to nd
the courage to be critical. Oc-
cupiers are helping more aca-
demics do just that.
Gregory D. Squires is a Professor
of Sociology and Public Policy and
Public Administration at George
Washington University.
McPherson Sq. Occupiers at a glance
What the 1% should have said
By Gregory Squires
Protestors and bystanders listen to a lecture by Lawrence Lessig, Harvard Law professor anddirector of the Edmund J. Safra Foundation Center for Ethics, at an open teach-in held OCt.
18 in McPherson Square, the site of the Occupy DC movement. (Photo by AJ Mack)
I was prey skepcal about
the Occupy movement before
October 1. I was involved
in various horizontally-run
student acvist groups, which
all collapsed ignominiously in
ts of young white maleness,
and I didnt imagine the people
chilling in Zucco would have
much of an impact on anyone.
On September 30, someone
menoned that Occupy DC
was starng the next day.Someone else scoed and
said it would never work, that
what the American le really
needed was beer messaging.
Someone else said Democrats
just needed to recruit beer
candidates. I wanted to throw
up. Im done pung my faith
in men. I decided to come
down the next day and put my
faith in us.
I am parcipang in the
Occupy movement in DC to
address issues of systemic
racism, misogyny, queerphobia,
ablism and the myriad of other
isms that have informed our
varied percepons of history
as occupiers. As a strong
supporter of the decolonizaon
movement, I rmly believe
that in order for real progress
to occur we must examine the
ways in which we, through
our thoughts, words and
acons, manifest and replicate
the exploitave system thathas rendered invisible the
suering of oppressed people.
Ive learned so much from
seasoned acvists whove
injected amazing energy into
the Occupy/Decolonize DC
and Ive found challenging and
fullling work in the Declaraon
Commiee and the White
An-Racist Allies Caucus. Im
excited to watch the movement
and its members grow, myself
included.
On October 5th, I decided to
stop by Occupy DC aer work
and immediately knew (as
clich as it sounds) that I was
supposed to be there. Ever
since then, I have been very
acve in the Acon Commiee
and helping out wherever I can.
I am involved because we can
no longer sit around waing
for someone else to make the
change that we want to see in
the world. It is empowering to
see women standing strong in
this movement. I encourage
all people to talk with us
and realize we are all in this
together.
Ive been waing for something
like this to happen in the U.S.
all my life. Im from Bolivia,
where the neoliberal model
was imposed by the military-
nancial complex that is now
controlling the U.S government.
Ive seen how this system of
debt peonage works. Now
the vulture has come home
to roost. Im glad America is
waking up and that a peaceful
revoluon is underway.Cecilia
SarahShaw
RobWohl
TateJawdat
Dont talk aboutcareers! People arent
going to have those
anymore. Instead, talk
up the huge revenue
opportunities in selling your
organs and blood.
You arent raisingthe retirement age to 75!
Youre extending job
opportunities to millions of
jobless seniors.
Dont say: Tax cutsfor the wealthy! Call it:
Returning money to its
rightful owners.
Dont use the wordsmillionaire and
billionaire! Its just
upper-middle class.
Dont say capitalism!Say: The only alternative to
mass chaos and starvation.
If someone mentionstaxing the rich, hit back
with: You mean America-
hating bums literally
robbing taxpayers at
gunpoint?
Remember!When theywrote the constitution, only
white male property owners
could vote. So were getting
back to what the framers
intended.
Most important of all,
relax! Youve earned
it! Anyway, here at Just
Regular Folks PR Inc.
were already working
on getting complaining
criminalized.
This will all blow over
soon.
(All photos by Natalie Camou)
(All photos by Craig Hudson)
-
8/2/2019 Occupied Washington Times: Volume 1, Issue 3
4/4
Hidden unemployed, demandfactors create economic drag
The Occupy DC General As-
sembly in McPherson Square
has entrusted a newspaper
working group with the cre-
ation of a newspaper to docu-
ment the social and economic
injustices of our time and
news of the occupation itself.
A rotating editorial board, held
accountable to the Occupy DC
General Assembly, determines
the nal content and tone of
the newspaper. The opinions
expressed represent those of
individual authors. In no way
do we speak for Occupy DC
or the Occupy movement.
The Occupied Washington Times
Editorial Board
A disclaimer about OWT
4 December 12, 2011
Declarationof theoccupation
www.OccupiedWashingtonTimes.org
Editorial Board Contributors
Jillian Blazek
Jarrad Davis
Benjamin Daniels
Siobhn McGuirk
Justin Jacoby Smith
Karina Stenquist
Karina Stenquist
Drew Veysey
Amelia
Ashmall-Liversidge
Andfew Breiner
Kelsey Tribble
Rob Wohl
Cecilia
Nat Jawdat
Sarah Shaw
Gregory Squires
Craig Hudson
AJ Mack
Natalie Camou
Continued from 1of work, up from the 2007
average of 16.8 weeks.
These long spells
of unemployment reduce
a workers chances of
ever returning to the la-
bor market, according to
Economic Policy Institute
economist Heidi Shierholz.
People who otherwise
would enter the labor force
cant because the jobs arent
there, and older workers
who are laid off may never
return to work, she said.
But Shierholz empha-
sizes that unemployment
is not built into the post-
recession economy.
We know how to
x it, she said. Theres
strong, strong evidencethat there just isnt enough
demand. Substantial scal
stimulus would translate
into demand, and if done
on a big enough scale, bring
down unemployment. We
can completely afford it.
It comes down to politics,where Im completely sty-
mied.
Robert Zieger, Distin-
guished Professor of His-
tory Emeritus at the Uni-
versity of Florida, noted
that citizens have risen up
in the past to demand polit-
ical change in times of eco-
nomic distress. In 1932,
thousands of unemployed
World War I veterans
marched on Washington,
said Zieger.
That Bonus Army,
a group of over 40,000
marchers who camped out
in D.C. and whose demands
were eventually met by
Congress, set a precedent
for todays occupiers. They
lived in tent villages not un-
like those in the occupied
parks, said Zieger.
Full employment maynot return naturally at the
end of this recession with-
out similar political action,
according to Columbia Uni-
versity sociologist Herbert
Gans. Static wages, new
technology, and outsourc-
ing mean corporations can
make more prot with few-
er employees, he said.
Alperovitz agreed. We
dont have an economic
problem, we have a power
problem. Were the richest
country in the history of
the world, he said. Un-
less you change the power
relationships, it wont be
xed.
continued from 1
Find full text
of the Occupy
DC Declaraononline at
OccupyDC.org/Declaraton
the published Declaration.
Once the committee
nished the work of
condensing suggestions intoa single document, it went
to the GA where it received
three separate rounds of
amendments before it was
nally consented upon on
the eve of Occupy DCs two
month anniversary.
After a great deal of
challenge, Occupy DC has
nally consented upon a
solid foundation for its
future.
top related