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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

R.I.P. RICHARD L. GROSSMAN

Richard L. Grossman, Organizer Who Sought to Curtail Corporate Power, Has Died

by Emily Langer
Richard L. Grossman, a community organizer who sought to curtail big business by raising public awareness about what he regarded as corporate abuse of power, died Nov. 22 at a hospital in New York City.
He was 68 and had metastatic melanoma, said his daughter, Alyssa Grossman.portrait by Robert Shetterly
Mr. Grossman worked on a variety of progressive causes during his four-decade career. In the 1970s, while living in the Washington area, he founded Environmentalists for Full Employment, a group that sought to unite environmental activists and unions. In the 1980s, he worked at the Highlander Research and Education Center, a social justice organization in Tennessee, and was executive director of Greenpeace USA.
Through those organizing efforts, Mr. Grossman reached a troubling conclusion.
“The activist work of so many good and able people around the country for so many decades had not brought about the kinds of changes that people had been hoping for,” he said in an interview with the publication the Progressive.
The problem, Mr. Grossman said, was that too much public influence was concentrated in corporate boardrooms.
Much of Mr. Grossman’s work was in response to a legal concept known as “corporate personhood.” The term has its roots in a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in the 1800s that said corporations could be treated as persons under the 14th Amendment.
Mr. Grossman and other activists found the concept, and its ramifications, repugnant and destructive.
“There’s a corporate class that has enormous wealth, and the power of law behind it,” he told the Progressive. “Is it really true that the majority of the American people over the last twenty-five years didn’t want a major transition in energy to move to efficiency and solar, didn’t want universal health care, but wanted pig genes in fish?”
In the 1990s, he co-founded the Program on Corporations, Law and Democracy, a group of activists that continues to pursue historical and legal research to “contest the authority of corporations to govern,” as the mission is described on the organization’s Web site.
In hundreds of community meetings and workshops, and in his speeches and writings, Mr. Grossman sought to highlight what he considered corporations’ excessive power and corrosive effects on society.
Consumer rights activist and public speaker Ralph Nader said in an interview Monday that he never received questions from his audiences about corporate charters and similar legal matters before Mr. Grossman’s advocacy work.
Weeks before his death, Mr. Grossman proposed a law criminalizing corporations. In his view, their power had led them to become inherently irresponsible.
“If people want to go into business, fine,” Mr. Grossman said in an interview with the Corporate Crime Reporter. “But this law would strip away 500 years of Constitutional protections and privileges. No more limited liability for shareholders. No more perpetual life. No more Constitutional protections.”
Richard Lee Grossman was born Aug. 10, 1943, in Brooklyn, one of three sons. His brother Lawrence K. Grossman is a former president of PBS and NBC News.
After receiving a bachelor’s degree in English from Columbia University in 1965, Mr. Grossman served in the Peace Corps in the Philippines.
Survivors include his wife of 43 years, Mary L. MacArthur of West Hurley, N.Y.; his daughter, Alyssa Grossman of Gothenburg, Sweden; two brothers; and one grandson.
Referring to the Occupy movement, Mr. Grossman advised protesters to consider the structural reasons that power is “arrayed against the 99 percent.”
“There’s no shortage of corruption and greed going all around,” he told the Corporate Crime Reporter. “But corruption and greed are not the problem. They are diversions.”

Sunday, November 27, 2011

THE INLET Boardwalk

 
Atlantic City SunsetImage by Poppy Wright via Flickr

   THE INLET BOARDWALK ( or what remains of it anyway)

   The AC Press headline today  http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/communities/atlantic-city_pleasantville_brigantine/rebuilding-of-crumbling-section-of-atlantic-city-s-boardwalk-still/article_ccaa372a-1881-11e1-8549-001cc4c03286.html was all about the section of boardwalk from the New Hampshire Jetty to where Capt.Starns once stood. This section of the boards is largely over open ocean now on the Inlet and is largely falling down. Why? Because its exposed to the fury of the open ocean especially during Noreasters. Once it had 200 ft. of beach in front of it , 60 yrs. ago.

Millions Earmarked??

   It was a surprise to learn millions of dollars had been earmarked to repair this decaying structure and even build a seawall in front of it. Why? This area like the Inlet in Longport is heavily eroded and is not a good candidate for a boardwalk anymore. That one existed here once might have made sense, but NOT anymore. If the City and the CRDA however insist it must be fixed , then I have a suggestion for the section up to Pacific ave. MOVE it 150 ft. inland! Then you won't need a sea wall for another 30 yrs. It will still take a beating however, because of its location. Putting a sea wall at this location won't work. Putting a breakwater would, but at huge expense. What's needed there is NOTHING. The boardwalk in this area goes nowhere now and was lightly used ( mostly by fishermen these last 40 yrs.) It seems sometimes, as though all the PTB ( powers to be)                   want to do is WASTE our money on obviously STUPID ill advised plans like this one. STOP already with pissing millions right into the Ocean here! Instead use some of this cash and lower the damn DUNE already and let our tourist trade ( what's left of it anyway) see the Ocean again and smell the salt air.


MARKETING GENIUS?

On that note, I got a kick out of a AC Press guest editorial today http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/opinion/commentary/augie-renna-if-we-work-together-atlantic-city-is-poised/article_063c2a2d-e1c3-5ff9-b261-293fc190433e.html  by some marketing hack for the Golden Nugget. He actually had the balls to say that we should market our Ocean View and salt air. From where, Sir? Maybe he's thinking of the doomed Inlet section of the boardwalk? As the rest of us are well aware from everywhere else there is little or no view now, thanks to State Sen. Jim Whalen and the Army Corp./ NJDEP.     Don't you just love marketing hacks , they always want us to believe some fantasy and are usually offended if we point out their Bullshit to them.
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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

OCCUPY THE POLITICAL SPACE !!

Occupy Moncton 15 October 2011Image by Stephen Downes via Flickr

# Occupy Wall street  began on Sept. 17th on a nice warm late summer day in NYC. The encampment was ended a few days ago as Mayor Bloomberg decided it had to go. It continues @ Zuccotti park during the daylight hours even now. In many other cities around the country similar evictions have occurred, with similar adaptations like day time General Assemblies in the same spaces.Fine till winter sets in and fine in Calif. and Fla. all winter.For the rest of the movement,  its time for the movement to change its tactics and adapt. Occupying physical space by encampments on public property 24/7  presents many opportunities, but it also creates enormous problems.  If  Occupy is about changing the political discussion in this country then we should be considering other tactics at this juncture.

Let's Occupy Public Space Inside Public buildings!

   For a start I would and have recommended to our own local Occupiers that they locate the various Publicly owned buildings now open for public use and meetings during most of the daylight hrs. The possibilities are schools, public auditoriums like the Convention centers, libraries, etc. et. al. The Occupy movement should be in discussion with the local City administrations for space to hold its General Assemblies and its working groups in these PUBLIC spaces. They shouldn't have to be told they have to hold them on public sidewalks.  NO offense to these folks, but IMO marching around on Pacific ave. with a few signs waiting for people to honk is counter productive . Its also NOT what Occupy  IMO was and is about. The core of the Occupy idea has and will continue to be the General Assemblies and the attendant working groups. From them a direction can be democratically followed and focused.  If its decided that marching on sidewalks is the thing so be it. Good luck with marching around locally outside Jan. to April. 

OCCUPY the POLITICAL SPACE INSTEAD OF THE PHYSICAL

Here's how I see it. We are indeed the 99% and we already Occupy the Physical space in this country. What we the people increasingly do not Occupy though is the political space and that should be our goal! The Occupy movement and to some degree even the Tea Party movement have and are attempting to Re-Occupy that space with "real people" not just Corp. cash.  An enormous political vacuum exists today in America because Money talks ( shouts) and it also owns the mic everywhere. So, the result has been an increasing resistance among more and more people to this one-sided conversation. 



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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Saturday, November 19, 2011

BEACH REPORT: OCCUPY 2 MOS. ON!

Police Response to Occupy Wall Street is Absurd


Events like the one in the above video have been far too common in the police response to Occupy protests across the country. I do believe that Occupy Wall Street is at a tipping point, and that it must grow beyond and evolve away from the tent city occupations, but this police response is absurd and excessive.
Arrests exceeding 250 people followed protests in New York City yesterday. All across the country, cops are cracking down on protesters with force. I may be a critic of Occupy Wall Street, but the police are public servants, and public servants have no business treating the public this way.
By and large, Occupy has been a peaceful affair. Certainly pepper-spraying protesters while they sit calmly in a row like this is a gross abuse of power. It should have our collective blood boiling, whether or not we even agree with the protesters themselves. What was meant to be a protest against economic equality quickly morphs into a protest against the police state.
And make no mistake, the powers of the police in this country have grown out of hand. I’ve written at length on the militarization of the police, of SWAT team abuses, and the way that the war on terror and the war on drugs have both contributed to what is really just a war on individual liberty. Occupy Wall Street may need to grow up and evolve, but a far greater and more pressing issue facing this country is what to do about the security state we’ve erected about us at the local, state, and federal level.
Between the Patriot Act and the War on Drugs, it’s hard to see a light at the end of the tunnel.
[Update]
UC Davis is forming a task force to investigate Friday’s events. The University Chancellor has issued an apology as well.
I have a follow-up to this piece here, noting that excessive use of force by police is bad for the police themselves.




MY TAKE:
This is an article from FORBES Magazine about excessive Police force  being applied to the Occupy movement by Police Forces nationally. Forbes is not exactly what anyone would call a Left wing periodical. However, even FORBES writers see that the  "Powers to be" are way over reacting to this whole situation.

Friday, November 18, 2011

SCIENCE FRI. - FASTER THEN LIGHT ROUND 2 !!

2nd test affirms faster-than-light particles

By
Washington Post reporter Brian Vastag
    (Washington Post)  This story was written by Brian Vastag
    A second experiment at the European facility that reported subatomic particles zooming faster than the speed of light -- stunning the world of physics -- has reached the same result, scientists said late Thursday.
    The "positive outcome of the [second] test makes us more confident in the result," said Fernando Ferroni, president of the Italian Institute for Nuclear Physics, in a statement released late Thursday. Ferroni is one of 160 physicists involved in the international collaboration known as OPERA (Oscillation Project with Emulsion Tracking Apparatus) that performed the experiment.
    While the second experiment "has made an important test of consistency of its result," Ferroni added, "a final word can only be said by analogous measurements performed elsewhere in the world."
    That is, more tests are needed, and on other experimental setups. There is still a large crowd of skeptical physicists who suspect that the original measurement done in September was an error.
    Should the results stand, they would upend more than a century of modern physics.
    In the first round of experiments, a massive detector buried in a mountain in Gran Sasso, Italy, recorded neutrinos generated at the CERN particle accelerator on the French-Swiss border arriving 60 nanoseconds sooner than expected. CERN is the French acronym for European Council for Nuclear Research.
    A chorus of critiques from physicists soon followed. Among other possible errors, some suggested that the neutrinos generated at CERN were smeared into bunches too wide to measure precisely.
    So in recent weeks, the OPERA team tightened the packets of neutrinos that CERN sent sailing toward Italy. Such tightening removed some uncertainty in the neutrinos' speed.
    The detector still saw neutrinos moving faster than light.
    "One of the eventual systematic errors is now out of the way," said Jacques Martino, director of the National Institute of Nuclear and Particle Physics in France, in a statement.
    But the faster-than-light drama is far from over, Martino added. The OPERA team is discussing more cross-checks, he added, including possibly running a fiber the 454 miles between the sites.
    For more than a century, the speed of light has been locked in as the universe's ultimate speed limit. No experiment had seen anything moving faster than light, which zips along at 186,000 miles per second.
    Much of modern physics -- including Albert Einstein's famous theory of relativity -- is built on that ultimate speed limit.
    The scientific world stopped and gaped in September when the OPERA team announced it had seen neutrinos moving just a hint faster than light.
    "If it's correct, it's phenomenal," said Rob Plunkett, a scientist at Fermilab, the Department of Energy physics laboratory in Illinois, in September. "We'd be looking at a whole new set of rules" for how the universe works.