Direct Action Against Legislative Corruption on February 29: Difference between revisions

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| event name = Direct Action Against Legislative Corruption on February 29
| event name = Direct Action Against Legislative Corruption on February 29
| page = Direct Action Against Legislative Corruption on February 29
| page = Direct Action Against Legislative Corruption on February 29
| date = Wednesday, February 29th, Rally at 11:30am, March at 1pm
| date = Wednesday, February 29th
| time =
| time = Rally at 11:30am, March at 1pm
| location = March begins at Waterfront Park at SW Naito and SW Ankeny
| location = March begins at Waterfront Park at SW Naito and SW Ankeny
| purpose = ;Occupy Portland announces mass mobilization & direct actions against the American Legislative Exchange Council
| purpose = ;Occupy Portland announces mass mobilization & direct actions against the American Legislative Exchange Council

Revision as of 20:27, 27 February 2012

Direct Action Against Legislative Corruption on February 29

[improve]

  • Date: Wednesday, February 29th
  • Time: Rally at 11:30am, March at 1pm
  • Location: March begins at Waterfront Park at SW Naito and SW Ankeny
  • Jump to this event's wiki page, edit it, discuss it or return to the events page.

Purpose

Occupy Portland announces mass mobilization & direct actions against the American Legislative Exchange Council

Rally and march in downtown Portland to protest the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), a conglomerate of corporations and legislators that writes and passes legislation to advance corporate interests. The march will visit some of the over 15 social justice, environmental, and anti-capitalist groups that will take non-violent direct actions at ALEC corporations with offices in Portland. Concerned citizens, students, and occupiers in over seventy cities across the nation have responded to a national call from Occupy Portland; this will be the Occupy movement’s largest coordinated action in 2012 to date.

The goal of the protest is to see an end to ALEC and the role big corporations have in corrupting our democracy. The American Legislative Exchange Council is seen by protesters as the chosen tool of the 1% and the wealthiest corporations in the world to craft legislation that serves their interests. According to ALEC’s figures, nearly 10% of state laws originate from their efforts, laws that protesters feel have damaged communities, workers, civil liberties, the environment and democracy. The protest represents an effort to focus on corporate power as the root cause of the deep inequalities that the Occupy movement has brought to the surface in recent months.

WHAT IS ALEC?
Organizers chose to focus on the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) because of its behind-the-scenes role in crafting pro-corporate legislation, partnering with state legislators to pass these laws, and then profiting directly from those laws – a cycle that exemplifies the dominate role of corporations in our democracy. ALEC is comprised of state and federal government legislators – 14 Oregon state legislators are members – and many of America’s biggest corporations. ALEC is responsible for some of the most contentious legislation at the state level in the last year, including Arizona’s widely criticized Racial Profiling bill (SB1070) and the anti-union Wisconsin Act 10, which stripped public employee unions of collective bargaining last year. Prison and criminal justice legislation from ALEC include mandatory minimum sentences and Three Strikes laws, giving repeat offenders 25 years to life in prison; and “truth-in-sentencing,” which requires inmates to serve most or all of their time without a chance for parole.

Occupy Portland under the umbrella of the newly formed Portland Action Lab has spearheaded the protests, with participation from the Animal Defense League, Bike Swarm, Cascadia Earth First!, Friends of Peace House, Jobs with Justice, Our School, Portland Central America Solidarity Committee, Rising Tide, We Are Oregon, and others. Over 70 cities and occupations around the country and around the world have signed on to participate.

This action was endorsed by the Occupy Portland General Assembly.

More information at http://www.occupyportland.org/f29, http://www.shutdownthecorporations.org and http://www.portlandactionlab.org

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