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Online campaign saves “Pancho” from deportations

by the El Reportero’s staff

Francisco Pancho Ramos Stierle (der) is arrestado.Francisco ­Pancho Ramos Stierle (der) is arrestado.

Francisco Pancho Ramos Stierle was released Thursday Nov. 18 by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), four days after he was arrested by police for meditating at the Occupy Oakland encampment. Pancho’s friends and supporters launched a now successful online campaign against the possible deportation of “Pancho”, an undocumented immigrant the police of Oakland arrested during a riot Nov. 14 at Oscar Grant/Frank Ogawa Plaza.

The movement got more than 8,500 people to sign a petition on Change.org, asking the Immigration office to free the protester. The petition went viral also on Facebook and Twitter, where the hashtag #FreePancho is among the most used in the Bay Area.

Although Ramos is back with the protesters, ICE demanded he returns to court soon to address the federal immigration hold on him, so his supporters continue to campaign through change.org to achieve his unconditional release.

Lee wins election for Mayor of San Francisco

Interim Mayor Ed Lee won the Nov. 8 election for San Francisco Mayor with less than a third of first-place votes. The new ranked-choice voting system, used for the first time in this race, declared Lee as the next mayor of the City. He is also the first Chinese descent to be elected mayor of San Francisco.

In second place came John Avalos, the supervisor who grew strong after showing support to the Occupy SF movement. In the Mission District, Avalos took away most of the votes, but the turnout in that area was low, leaving Avalos behind in the race.

That lack of voters was the surprise factor in this mayor’s race, only 30 percent of voters participated. Lee’s voters had a bigger presence in the polls and that was important to determined the over all result.

When the world outlawed war

War is a crime

by David Swanson

Believe it or not, November 11 was not made a holiday in order to celebrate war, support troops, or cheer the 11th year of occupying Afghanistan. This day was made a holiday in order to celebrate an armistice that ended what was up until that point, in 1918, one of the worst things our species had thus far done to itself, namely World War I.

World War I, then known simply as the world war or the great war, had been marketed as a war to end war. Celebrating its end was also understood as celebrating the end of all wars. A ten-year campaign was launched in 1918 that in 1928 created the Kellogg-Briand Pact, legally banning all wars. That treaty is still on the books, which is why war making is a criminal act and how Nazis came to be prosecuted for it.

“[O]n November 11, 1918, there ended the most unnecessary, the most financially exhausting, and the most terribly fatal of all the wars that the world has ever known. Twenty millions of men and women, in thatwar, were killed outright, or died later from wounds. The Spanish influenza, admittedly caused by the War and nothing else, killed, in various lands, one hundred million persons more.” — Thomas Hall Shastid, 1927.

According to U.S. Socialist Victor Berger, all the United States had gained from participation in World War I was the flu and prohibition.

It was not an uncommon view. Millions of Americans who had supported World War I came, during the years following its completion on November 11, 1918, to reject the idea that anything could ever be gained through warfare.

Sherwood Eddy, who coauthored “The Abolition of War” in 1924, wrote that he had been an early and enthusiastic supporter of U.S. entry into World War I and had abhorred pacifism. He had viewed the war as a religious crusade and had been reassured by the fact that the United States entered the war on a Good Friday. At the war front, as the battles raged, Eddy writes, “we told the soldiers that if they would win we would give them a new world.”

Eddy seems, in a typical manner, to have come to believe his own propaganda and to have resolved to make good on the promise. “But I can remember,” he writes, “that even during the war I began to be troubled by grave doubts and misgivings of conscience.” It took him 10 years to arrive at the position of complete Outlawry, that is to say, of wanting to legally outlaw all war. By 1924 Eddy believed that the campaign for Outlawry amounted, for him, to a noble and glorious cause worthy of sacrifice, or what U.S. philosopher William James had called “the moral equivalent of war.” Eddy now argued that war was “unchristian.” Many came to share that view who a decade earlier had believed Christianity required war. A major factor in this shift was direct experience with the hell of modern warfare, an experience captured for us by the British poet Wilfred Owen in these famous lines:

If in some smothering dreams you too could pace

Behind the wagon that we flung him in,

And watch the white eyes writhing in his face,

His hanging face, like a devil’s sick of sin;

If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood.

Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,

Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud

Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues,

My friend, you would not tell with such high zest

To children ardent for some desperate glory,

The old Lie; Dulce et Decorum est

Pro patria mori.

The propaganda machinery invented by President Woodrow Wilson and his Committee on Public Information had drawn Americans into the war with exaggerated and fictional tales of German atrocities in Belgium, posters depicting Jesus Christ in khaki sighting down a gun barrel, and promises of selfless devotion to making the world safe for democracy. The extent of the casualties was hidden from the public as much as possible during the course of the war, but by the time it was over many had learned something of war’s reality. And many had come to resent the manipulation of noble emotions that had pulled an independent nation into overseas barbarity.

However, the propaganda that motivated the fighting was not immediately erased from people’s minds. A war to end wars and make the world safe for democracy cannot end without some lingering demand for peace and justice, or at least for something more valuable than the flu and prohibition. Even those rejecting the idea that the war could in any way help advance the cause of peace aligned with all those wanting to avoid all future wars — a group that probably encompassed most of the U.S. population.

As Wilson had talked up peace as the official reason for going to war, countless souls had taken him extremely seriously. “It is no exaggeration to say that where there had been relatively few peace schemes before the World War,” writes Robert Ferrell, “there now were hundreds and even thousands” in Europe and the United States.

­The decade following the war was a decade of searching for peace: “Peace echoed through so many sermons, speeches, and state papers that it drove itself into the consciousness of everyone. Never in world history was peace so great a desideratum, so much talked about, looked toward, and planned for, as in the decade after the 1918 Armistice.” Let us try to revive some memory of that foreign world on the occasion of the latest “veterans day” this Friday in this brave new era of searching for more war. David Swanson is the author of “When the World Outlawed War” from which this is adapted.

Bilderberg 2011 The Rockefeller World Order and the High Priests of Globalization

FROM THE EDITOR: In continuing with our research and coverage of significant issues that have and are currently affecting our way of life, the following article, written by Andrew Gavin Marshall brings us into a long journey of historical passages about the Bilderberg group, a little known organization that has much to do with the policies that decide world events, such as future wars, countries invasions, mass destructions in other countries, or formation of new ‘free’ trade agreements for the benefit of the world ruling elite and the consolidation of a New World Order, and leading to the culmination of a New World Government to enslave humanity.

Due to its length, it will be divided into many parts. So please sit tight on your seat for a long ride, and hope that at the end, you’d have learned a big chunk of history.

by Andrew Gavin Marshall

Global Research

SECOND PART

Recently by Andrew Gavin Marshall: The Logic of Imperial Insanity and the Road to World War III

To say we were striving for a one-world government is exaggerated, but not wholly unfair. Those of us in Bilderberg felt we couldn’t go on forever fighting one another for nothing and killing people and rendering millions homeless. So we felt that a single community throughout the world would be a good thing.

~ Denis Healey, 30-year member of the Steering Committee of the Bilderberg Group

Foundations like Carnegie, Rockefeller, and Ford have a corrosive influence on a democratic society; they represent relatively unregulated and unaccountable concentrations of power and wealth which buy talent, promote causes, and, in effect, establish an agenda of what merits society’s attention. They serve as “cooling-out” agencies, delaying and preventing more radical, structural change. They help maintain an economic and political order, international in scope, which benefits the ruling-class interests of philanthropists and philanthropoids – a 2system which… has worked against the interests of minorities, the working class, and Third World peoples.[8]

These foundations had been central in promoting the ideology of ‘globalism’ that laid the groundwork for organizations such as the Council on Foreign Relations and the Bilderberg Group to exist. The Rockefeller Foundation, in particular, supported several organizations that promoted a ‘liberal internationalist’ philosophy, the aim of which:

was to support a foreign policy within a new world order that was to feature the United States as the leading power – a programme defined by the Rockefeller Foundation as ‘disinterested’, ‘objective’ and even ‘non-political’… The construction of a new internationalist consensus required the conscious, targeted funding of individuals and organizations who questioned and undermined the supporters of the ‘old order’ while simultaneously promoting the ‘new’.

The major foundations funded and created not only policy-oriented institutes such as think tanks, but they were also pivotal in the organization and construction of universities and education itself, in particular, the study of ‘international relations.’ The influence of foundations over education and universities and thus, ‘knowledge’ itself, is unparalleled. As noted in the book, Philanthropy and Cultural Imperialism: The power of the foundation is not that of dictating what will be studied. Its power consists in defining professional and intellectual parameters, in determining who will receive support to study what subjects in what settings. And the foundation’s power resides in suggesting certain types of activities it favors and is willing to support.

As [political theorist and economist Harold] Laski noted, “the foundations do not control, simply because, in the direct and simple sense of the word, there is no need for them to do so. They have only to indicate the immediate direction of their minds for the whole university world to discover that it always meant to gravitate to that angle of the intellectual compass.”

The major philanthropic foundations created by America’s ‘robber baron’ industrialists and bankers were established not to benefit mankind, as was their stated purpose, but to benefit the bankers and industrialist elites in order to engage in social engineering. Through banks, these powerful families controlled the global economy; through think tanks, they manage the political and foreign policy establishments; and through foundations, they engineer society itself according to their own designs and interests. Through these foundations, elites have come to shape the processes, ideas and institutions of education, thus ensuring their continued hegemony over society through the production and control of knowledge. The educational institutions train future elites for government, economics, sciences, and other professional environments, as well as producing ­the academics that make up the principle component of think tanks, such as the Bilderberg Group.

Foundations effectively “blur boundaries” between the public and private sectors, while simultaneously effecting the separation of such areas in the study of social sciences. This boundary erosion between public and private spheres “adds feudal elements to our purported democracy, yet it has not been resisted, protested, or even noted much by political elites or social scientists.” Zbigniew Brzezinski, foreign policy strategist, former director of the Council on Foreign Relations, Bilderberg member and co-founder with David Rockefeller of the Trilateral Commission, wrote that the blurring of boundaries “serves United States world dominance”:

As the imitation of American ways gradually pervades the world, it creates a more congenial setting for the exercise of the indirect and seemingly consensual American hegemony. And as in the case of the domestic American system, that hegemony involves a complex structure of interlocking institutions and procedures, designed to generate consensus and obscure asymmetries in power and influence.

In 1915, a Congressional investigation into the power of philanthropic foundations took place, named the Walsh Commission, which warned that, “the power of wealth could overwhelm democratic culture and politics.” The Final Report of the Walsh Commission “suggested that foundations would be more likely to pursue their own ideology in society than social objectivity.” In this context, we can come to understand the evolution of the Bilderberg Group as an international think tank aimed at constructing consensus and entrenching ideology among the elite.

Students protest shuts down Bank of America

por Yáshenka Baca

Jóvenes estudiantes protestan antes de penetrar para ocupar la cede del Banco de América en SF: antes de que la policía los arrestara. (PHOTO BY OCCUPY SF)Students protest before penetrating and then to occupy the headquarters of the Bank of America in SF before the police arrested them. (PHOTO BY OCCUPY SF)

The Bank of America branch at 50 California St. San Francisco, was shut down by students Wed. Nov. 16 at 2:00 p.m., after hundreds of them marched into the building protesting against corporate greed.

The California students hanged out signs, set up a tent, and climbed on chairs and desks chanting against the bank as the workers left. The protest’s initial intention was to rally against the UC Regents meeting scheduled for Wed. in San Francisco, but the meeting was canceled as officials thought it could cause violence.

Students then decided to gather at the Occupy SF encampment in Justin Herman Plaza, and rally to the main banks in the Financial District. They stopped outside the Wells Fargo branch and then headed to the Bank of America offices, since one of the UC Regents, Monica Lozano, is on the bank Board of Directors.

The broad majority of the protesters were students from UC Berkeley, UC Santa Cruz, SF State and SF Community College. According to Anthropology student Erin O’Flynn, from UC Santa Cruz, there were also students from Fresno, Merced and even Humboldt State University from Arcata. “Police in riot gear came inside the bank and said: If you don’t leave now you will be arrested” mentioned O’Flynn.

Outside the facility other 300 protesters sat on the floor, held signs and chanted against budget cuts in schools. Their claim “banks got bailout, we got sold out” could be heard blocks away, where hundreds of people piled up to observe the protest from the sidewalks. A total of 95 students were arrested inside the bank as supporters cheered them through the glass walls and shouted “shame!, shame!” to the police.

Anthony Chavez, student at SF City College said, “I support the movement. I don’t agree we should take loans to go to school. Our teachers now have to spend their own money to pay for teaching utensils” Chavez added. Psychology major SF State student Morgan Laurie said, “tuition has doubled in the last three years because of education cuts, it was $ 1,400 before and now we are paying $ 3,100.”

During the two hours it took the police to arrest all the bank occupiers, some people complained about the way the protesters had taken action, a woman who identified herself only as Julie, said the whole idea of the protest was good, but disturbing the life of other people wasn’t. Julie was waiting to meet a friend who was inside the building and, apparently, couldn’t get out.

But the action also got supporters who heard about it on the news or through social media, and came to see by themselves what was going on. Chris, a small business owner was one of them.

“I’ve heard media saying the protest is not good for small business and I have to say that’s not true. The big banks have being the worse to small businesses, they are not granting credits. The protest is helping us” he added.

As the police continued to arrest all the protesters inside the bank, another couple hundred people who remained outside marched to San Francisco City Hall and the State Building, where an assembly took place until 6 p.m.

UC Berkeley raid intensifies students’ actions

Ever since police forcefully removed UC Berkeley students from their encampment Nov. 9, the General Assemblies and Action Days have intensified in schools all over the Bay Area.

Several tents arose at UC Berkeley only a day after deputies hit the midsections of activists with batons, dragged them and later arrested students and a teacher in front of Sproul Hall. The videos from the police actions went viral online, several hundreds more have joined the Occupy Cal general assembly ever since.

Only this year, California cut $650 million from the UC and California State University systems, causing class cancellations and layoffs in both systems. Another $100 million reduction could happen if the state revenue does not meet a certain threshold.­

 

Ebrard endorses López Obrador in Mexico

by the El Reportero’s news service

Andrés Manuel López ObradorAndrés Manuel López Obrador

On Nov. 15 the left-wing Partido de la Revolución Democrática (PRD) surprisingly chose Andrés Manuel López Obrador, rather than Marcelo Ebrard, as its 2012 presidential candidate.

Elections expose limits of democracy in Central America

The re-election of a former Marxist guerrilla in Nicaragua and the victory of a right-wing ex-military general in Guatemala would suggest both countries were heading in radically different directions.

Yet the two elections, which took place on 6 November, were more significant – and similar – in revealing the fragility of democracy in the region. The case of Nicaragua, where President Daniel Ortega won an illegal re-election in a process slammed as fraudulent, is the most obvious test of democracy, with Ortega under growing international and domestic pressure to address these concerns.

In Guatemala, the run-off was in line with institutional procedure (see page 3). But the success of Otto Pérez Molina marks the first time since the restoration of democracy in 1986 that an ex-military official has won the presidency. This implicit rehabilitation of the military, together with Pérez Molina’s proposed mano dura (iron fist) response to crime that won him the vote, has its own implications for the country’s democratic institutions.

Even more of a haven?

The long drawn out saga of the Euro-debt crisis, which even prompted China to abandon its mask of inscrutability and express impatience with European policymakers, again underlines the attractions of Latin America as a place to invest. Latin America’s greatest economic asset is not its raw materials but its democratic approach to economic policymaking.

Mexican leaders air drug-war di­fferences using US forums to impress at home

The debate over solutions to the escalating violence associated with the wars between drug cartels and the government’s response has been taken once more to US audiences. President Felipe Calderón has used an interview with the New York Times to portray at least a sizable sector of the opposition Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI) as favouring an ‘understanding’ with the cartels, while his predecessor Vicente Fox (2000-2006) aired before a forum in Washington his proposals for a truce and eventual amnesty.

Santos scores twice in one week

It seemed that President Juan Manuel Santos’s honeymoon with Colombian public opinion was heading for a rough patch; his right-wing detractors were gaining strength ahead of the Oct. 30 regional elections, expressing concern over what they deemed was a rapid deterioration of the country’s security situation.

The argument was simple: as President Santos concentrated on social issues, he was taking the eye off the ball in the state’s fight against the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (Farc), which would allow the Farc to strengthen again and renew its call for peace talks in which it would still have enough strength to make demands.

Public Consultation on Communication Law in Venezuela

The National Assembly of Venezuela begins on Wednesday a public nationwide consultation of a Draft Law on Communication for Peoples´ Power, a law that emerged through an initiative of community groups.

The draft was approved by the Parliament on November 10 during a first discussion. The objective is to achieve “a real and timely communication, whose main protagonist is the sovereign people.”

DOJ want to criminalize uploading You Tube videos

Racketeering charges for violating website’s terms of service

by Paul Joseph Watson
Infowars.com

The Department of Justice is attempting to criminalize uploading videos that break You Tube’s terms of service, along with any other online action that is deemed to contravene a website’s usage policy, in a shocking expansion of cybersecurity laws deemed draconian by critics.

“In a statement obtained by CNET that’s scheduled to be delivered tomorrow, the Justice Department argues that it must be able to prosecute violations of Web sites’ often-ignored, always-unintelligible “terms of service” policies,” writes Declan McCullagh.

Such violations would include creating a fake Facebook profile, lying about your weight on dating websites, or providing any other item of false information that violates a website’s TOS agreement.

Under the DOJ’s new legal framework, an expansion of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA), agreeing to a website’s terms of service would be identical to signing a contract with an employer, with similar punishments for breaking that contract.

“To the Justice Department, this means that a Web site’s terms of service define what’s “authorized” or not, and ignoring them can turn you into a felon,” writes McCullagh, pointing out that millions of Americans violate ‘terms of agreement’ policies every single day.

Indeed, in the case of You Tube, users are often informed months or even years later that they may have infringed on the company’s ‘terms of service’ agreement if another user merely complains about the content of their video.

Attorney Stewart Baker warns that under the newly amended law, users uploading a copyrighted You Tube video more than once would fit into “a pattern of racketeering,” with even harsher criminal penalties, “at least if Justice gets its way.”

A coalition of free speech organizations from across the political spectrum, including the ACLU, Americans for Tax Reform, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and FreedomWorks have joined forces to oppose the move, savaging the proposed changes as an affront to Internet anonymity in a letter to the Senate.

“If a person assumes a fictitious identity at a party, there is no federal ­crime,” the letter states. “Yet if they assume that same identity on a social network that prohibits pseudonyms, there may again be a CFAA violation. This is a gross misuse of the law.”

As we have documented, the attempt to create a Communist Chinese-style system of Internet policing, advocated by Senator Joe Lieberman, mandates that Internet anonymity be outlawed and that a system even more draconian than what was rejected in China – individual ID’s for Internet users – be put in place.

The attempt to expand CFAA is just one tentacle of an all out war on Internet freedom that has been launched by the federal government. Another piece of legislation that has received bipartisan support, the so-called “Rogue websites bill,” would create a Chinese-style ban list where ISPs would be mandated to block certain websites by government decree.

Paul Joseph Watson is the editor and writer for Prison Planet.com. He is the author of Order Out Of Chaos. Watson is also a regular fill-in host for The Alex Jones Show.

Artists put to work at Working Conditions Expo

by the El Reportero’s staff

Works by different artistsWorks by different artists

Nine artists from different backgrounds, such as painting and wood sculpting, will be put to work together in an exceptional project named Working Conditions, in different sessions from Nov. 11 to Jan. 6, at the Southern Exposure Exhibition Center in 20th Street, San Francisco.

The project is not the usual exhibit where each artist gets a different room to build a one-person presentation. Instead, Working Conditions is an open gallery environment, where all nine artists will create and ­develop an idea based in the concepts of labor, production and process, working in full view of the public and during ‘regular’ working hours.

Southern Exposure (SoEx), the nonprofit visual arts organization that presents the exhibition, wants to introduce the creators of the art pieces as members of the workforce. The exhibition pretends to show the public, an ever-changing artistic process, given the conditions and impositions of society and environment the artists are exposed to.

It’s nine the total of artists present at this rare exhibit. Steven Barich, Elysa Lozano, Jennie Ottinger, Nathaniel Parsons, Carlos Ramirez, Zachary Royer Scholz, Charlene Tan, Ethan Worden and Wafaa Yasin will be at the SoEx at 3030 20th Street (at Alabama), San Francisco. Admission is free. For more information go to www.soex.org.

Galería de la Raza to host Benefit Art Auction

The non-profit community-based arts organization Galería de la Raza, will host its 10th Annual Benefit Art Auction on November 19, at its location in 24th Street, San Francisco.

The Galleria will present the work of more than 70 contemporary artists such as Misty Avila-Ovules, Savanna Rodriguez, Amanda Lopez, Jason Jangle, Stella Lai, and Silvia Polo to. Guests can purchase all artwork shown by bidding on a live, on a silent auction or by proxy (register by Thursday, November 17th at 5:00 p.m.) All proceeds will benefit the Galería’s work in support of Latino artists in the visual, literary, media and performing art fields.

The evening will have a 1970s flare, DJ’s will play disco, salsa and Latin Funk.

Guests are welcome to dust off their platform shoes, bell-bottoms and hot pants. There will be a prize for the best attire. Saturday, November 19 at 7 p.m. 2857 24th Street – San Francisco. General Admission: $20 -$50, Galleria Members: $10, Early Bird Special: $15.  For more information go to ­www.galeriadelaraza.org.

­

Short film “8” wins several awards

­

­por el equipo de El Reportero

Crisis de Víctima, un cortometraje 8Victim Crisis, a short film­

The film “8”, a drama directed and produced by the Spanish filmmaker Raúl Cerezo, won the Best Short Film Award in the 2011 Sitges Film Festival in Cataluña, Spain, and will be part of the 2012 edition of the Goya Awards.

In only six months of distribution the movie “8”, a short fantasy-drama, has being selected to screen in more than 60 film festivals around the world, in Spain, France, the United States, Germany, The United Kingdom, among others. And it has already premiered in Colombia, Argentina and Brazil.

At the Goya Awards on January next year, Raúl Cerezo’s “8” will be one of the contenders for Best Short Film. The Goya Awards are the Spanish equivalent to the Oscars for American filmmakers.

The short film is having a successful career toward the most notable worldwide competitions by winning Best Music Award at the Mostra de Cine Jove dElx, Best Short Film Award at the XIII Semana Internacional de Cine Fantástico de la Costa del Sol and Jury’s Award at The Antic Horror Picture Show, all of the in Spain.

Cerezo, is also the author of the short films Lenguas (1997) and Escarnio (2004). To watch the trailer of the award-winner “8” go to ­http://vimeo.com/22037704.

Miss Venezuela wins Miss Mundo crownMiss Venezuela, Ivian Lunasol Sarcos Colmenares (22) was crowned Miss Mundo 2011 on Sunday, November 6, at a ceremony held in Earls Court Two in London, England. Sarcos became the sixth Miss Venezuela to win the crown in Stea Miss World competition.

Sarcos, who grew up in an orphanage in Venezuela, came ahead of misses from 113 countries, becoming a strong contestant after showing her skills and beauty in the categories of talent, sports, beach beauty, top model, and ‘beauty with a purpose.’ The second place was for Miss Philippines, Gwendoline Ruais, and the third one for Miss Puerto Rico, Amanda Pérez.

Ivian Sarcos had a tough life, she is one of 13 siblings and she lost her parents when she was only eight years old. After receiving the crown, Sarcos said to the AFP “this has taught me that life, although it may be bad, doesn’t have to end badly.” She added “I want to help people in need. People like me, I am an orphan. I would also like to help the elderly and troubled teenagers. As many people as I can.”

According to the organizers, the Miss World competition was followed by more than a billion viewers from more than 168 countries.

 

Medical Cannabis California coalition filed suit against the U.S. government

­by the El Reportero staff

A group of patients, cooperatives and property owners have filed suit against the federal government, looking to stop the apparent statewide crackdown on medical marijuana.

The lawyers who represent the coalition, have introduced the law suit simultaneously in three federal districts of California; San Francisco, Sacramento and Los Angeles. This action, they allege, is a response to threats of forfeiture of property and criminal prosecution that U.S. Attorney Eric Holder and other four government attorneys have made to tenants and landlords of buildings where cannabis cooperatives work legally.

Briana Bilbray, a cancer survivor from the San Diego area, said “Not only is the U.S. Attorney infringing on my right as a California resident to obtain the medicine I need, but she is punishing me by making it more difficult to get the one thing I really need as a patient.” “It is one of the worst feelings imaginable.”

Speaking at a press conference Monday, Matthew Kumin, one of the attorneys suing the U.S. Government, said the people of California are going to fight back. “This is multipronged, organized effort to get into court and to send a message to the federal government that we need to stop the aggression and sit down and talk reasonably about these issues,” Kumin said.

Oakland police says the are the 99%

The Oakland Police Officer’s Association, an institution that represents 645 officers, posted an open letter on their website on November 1st, stating, that as the people camping at the Frank Ogawa plaza, they are also the 99%. “We are fighting for better working conditions, fair treatment and the ability to provide a living for our children and families” the letter says.

The group also shares its confusion for the decisions taken by Mayor Jean Quan regarding the Occupy Oakland movement, that camps in the Frank Ogawa Plaza since last September.

The statement says “on Tuesday, October 25th, we were ordered by Mayor Quan to clear out the encampments at Frank Ogawa Plaza and to keep protesters out of the Plaza … then, on Wednesday, October 26th, the Mayor allowed protesters back in – to camp out at the very place they were evacuated from the day before.”

For the Officer’s Association, this is not only confusing, but also a sign of bad decision making and a waste of resources. “Last week’s events (Oct. 25 raid) alone cost Oakland taxpayers over $1 million.”

The open letter also says no officers were allowed to take the day off on November 2nd, the day of the general strike. That decision, the statement notices, is “costing hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars – at a time when the Mayor is also asking Oakland residents to vote on an $80 parcel tax to bail out the City’s failing finances.”

Merced passes tenant protection law to stop arbitrary evictions after foreclosure

por Tenants Together
Organización por los derechos de los arrendatarios

The Merced City Council has passed the Central Valley’s first anti-eviction law. The ordinance seeks to stop evictions of innocent tenants after foreclosure. Members of Tenants Together, California’s statewide organization for renters’ rights, successfully advocated for passage of the law.

Mayor Pro Tem Bill Blake and Council Members John Carlisle, Mary-Michal Rawling and Noah Lor voted to pass the law. Blake, an early proponent of the law, called it “the moral and right thing to do.”

Mayor Spriggs and Council Member Pedrozo had previously voiced support for the law at a city council hearing in August, but bowed to pressure from realtors and voted in opposition to the new tenant protections. Council Member Michele Gabriault-Acosta, herself a real estate agent, opposed the law at all times. The final vote was 4-3 to pass the law.

Tenea Wallace and her family rent a home in Merced that is scheduled for auction later this month. Under existing law, her family could face eviction after the foreclosure auction. Wallace foreclosurewelcomed the City Council vote: “Our communities are sick and tired of evictions by irresponsible banks that kick out good renters after foreclosure.

With this new law, tenants like me will be able to stay in our homes.”

The law approved by the Council on Monday requires that banks and investors have “just cause” for evicting tenants after foreclosure. The law spells out the specific circumstances where eviction is permitted, such as where the tenant fails to pay rent or where the owner wants to move into the property. Foreclosure is not a recognized reason for evicting tenants under the law. Fifteen other California cities already have laws against eviction of tenants due to foreclosure.

“Mayor Pro Tem Blake and Council ­members Carlisle, Rawling and Lor deserve enormous credit for listening to Merced’s residents and doing their part to stop the unfair evictions, vacancies, and blight that are plaguing this community,” commented Dean Preston, Executive Director of Tenants Together, California’s statewide organization for renters’ rights. Preston urged other Central Valley cities to follow Merced’s lead, noting that this is a cost-free law that any California city can adopt to protect their residents from abuse by financial institutions.

Long overlooked by the media and policymakers, tenants are innocent victims when landlords stop paying the mortgage. Tenants Together issues an annual report detailing the impacts of foreclosure on tenants across California. The 2011 report found that at least 38% of residential units in foreclosure in California are rentals. Most tenants are displaced from their homes after foreclosure, except in cities with just cause for eviction laws.

“We look forward to working with renters who want to stay in their homes after foreclosure,” commented Pahoua Lor, staff attorney with Central California Legal Services, a nonprofit legal services organization in Merced that will assist eligible renters exercise their rights under the law. “This new law will enable many tenants to stay in their homes and keep paying rent, rather than being forced onto the streets when banks take over foreclosed properties.”

There will be a second reading of the ordinance. The law is expected to take effect before the new year.