Thursday, April 25, 2013

Green Party urges passage of Wall Street transaction tax

from gp.org





GREEN PARTY OF THE UNITED STATES
http://www.gp.org

For Immediate Release:
Thursday, April 25, 2013

Contacts:
Scott McLarty, Media Coordinator, 202-904-7614, mclarty@greens.org
Starlene Rankin, Media Coordinator, 916-995-3805, starlene@gp.org

Green Party Speakers Bureau: Greens available to speak on economic justice, taxation, and budget policy:http://www.gp.org/speakers/speakers-economic-justice.php

Green Shadow Cabinet: http://www.greenshadowcabinet.us


WASHINGTON, DC -- The Green Party of the United States is calling for passage of legislation to impose a "Wall Street transaction tax," which will stabilize the stock market, discourage reckless 'casino' trading, and generate revenue.

Rep. Keith Ellison's (D-Minn.) has introduced such a bill, titled the "Inclusive Prosperity Act" (http://ellison.house.gov/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=907&catid=86).

As Ralph Nader noted in his endorsement of the bill, "A small financial transaction tax of 0.5 percent or less - depending upon the financial instrument being taxed - could produce hundreds of billions of dollars annually, perhaps as much as $350 billion. This revenue could be generated from a tax that would be minuscule - half a penny or less on each dollar of the transaction value." (https://www.facebook.com/ralphnader/posts/559074687456801)

"Passing a securities transaction tax would be an effective step towards ensuring that the wealthy pay their fair share. The Green Party supports the principle that those who make money from speculation should contribute more than those who make money from hard work," said Laura Wells, Green candidate for Governor of California in 2010.

"The 2008 economic meltdown revealed three things: how little Wall Street is held accountable for criminalrecklessness and fraud; how little top corporations, especially Wall Street firms, pay in taxes compared to the rest of us, including zero taxes on the sale of securities; and the willingness of Democratic and Republican politicians, including President Obama, to bail out top Wall Street investors with our tax money while doing the minimum for people facing the loss of jobs and homes. A tax on securities trades would begin to correct these outrages," said Ms. Wells, who has filed to run for California State Controller in 2014.

The Green Party's national platform endorses such a tax: "Green Solutions... 4. Impose a financial transaction tax on trades of stocks, bonds, currency, derivatives, and other financial instruments." (http://www.gp.org/committees/platform/2012/economic-justice-and-sustainability.php#FairCorporateTaxes)

The securities transaction tax would reward long-term investment by placing a greater burden on short-term speculation, which causes rapid fluctuation and instability in the market. New York State's stock transfer tax which generates about $16 billion a year -- which the state rebates to Wall Street speculators who treat the stock market as a casino. Greens oppose bailouts and rebates for speculators. (See "Hawkins Challenges Cuomo's Silence on Halting NY's $16 Billion Annual Rebate to Wall Street" from 2010 Green gubernatorial candidate Howie Hawkins, August 3, 2010, http://howiehawkins.com/2010/media-releases/121-hawkins-challenges-cuomos-silence-on-halting-nys-16-billion-annual-rebate-to-wall-street.html).

Greens have also called for restoration of economic protections like the Glass-Steagall Act; repeal of the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000, which block regulation of complex high-risk derivatives and hedge funds; nationalization and breakup of "too big to fail" banks into smaller regional or state banks; and penalties for offshoring of accounts.

Greens support progressive tax plans, with a raising of the cap on Social Security. As the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy reports, currently "all states have regressive tax systems that ask more from low- and middle-income families than from the wealthiest" ("Who Pays?", http://www.itep.org/whopays/).

"The movement sparked by Occupy Wall Street in 2011 leveled a challenge to America's plutocrats: 'We won't pay for your crisis.' Until we get a Wall Street transaction tax, they're not even helping to alleviate the mess they made," said Julia Willebrand, Ed.D, Green candidate for Comptroller of New York City.

See also:

"Fiscal Crisis Manufactured by Politicians for Bankers, Green Gov Candidate Says"
Howie Hawkins, Green candidate for Governor of New York, June 28, 2010
http://howiehawkins.com/2010/media-releases/89-fiscal-crisis-manufactured-by-politicians-for-bankers-green-gov-candidate-says.html


MORE INFORMATION

Green Party of the United States http://www.gp.org
202-319-7191

Green candidate database and campaign information: http://www.gp.org/elections.shtml
News Center http://www.gp.org/newscenter.shtml
Speakers Bureau http://www.gp.org/speakers
Ballot Access Page http://www.gp.org/2012/ballot-access.html
Video Page http://www.gp.org/video/index.php
Green Papers http://www.greenpapers.net/
Discussion Forum https://secure.gpus.org/secure/GreenPartyForum
Google+ http://www.gp.org/google
Twitter http://twitter.com/gpus
Livestream Channel http://www.livestream.com/greenpartyus
GP-TV Twitter page http://www.gp.org/twitter
Facebook page http://www.gp.org/facebook

Green Pages: The official publication of record of the Green Party of the United States
http://gp.org/greenpages-blog



Sunday, April 21, 2013

Occupy Wall Street cops won’t be prosecuted, DA says

from metro.com




occupy zucotti park 2012
The Manhattan District Attorney will not be prosecuting the NYPD cops who were caught on video pepper-spraying and punching Occupy Wall Street protesters,the Daily News reported.
The DA’s office made the announcement on Friday.
The cops in question are two Deputy Inspectors, Anthony Bologna and Johnny Cardona.
In video footage that surfaced in late 2011, Bologna was seen liberally pepper-spraying a seemingly calm crowd in Union Square on September 24, and Cardona was captured punching a protester named Felix Rivera-Pitre in the face in the Financial District on October 14.
Bologna was reportedly docked 10 vacation days, and Cardona was cleared by the department.
Manhattan DA spokeswoman Erin Duggan reportedly told the Daily News that additional evidence made it unclear that the officers’ actions were unjustified.
“After a thorough investigation … we cannot prove these allegations criminally beyond a reasonable doubt,” Duggan said.
Roy Richter, Captains Endowment Association President praised the decision, and hailed Cardona as “a true victim of the [Occupy Wall Street] fiasco.” Cardona needed hip- and knee-replacement surgery due to injuries sustained during a demonstration.
Richter also said that Bologna “did nothing that rises to the level of criminal conduct.”
Ron Kuby, an attorney who pressed for assault charges on behalf of victims in both cases, condemned the DA’s decision, particularly in light of the office taking ”almost 19 months to decide he would do nothing.”
“Despite the overwhelming proof on videotape, seen around the world, Cy Vance Jr. has shown that he will do nothing to disturb his cozy relationship with the police, even in the face of the clearest wrongdoing,” Kuby complained.

Follow Danielle Tcholakian on Twitter @danielleiat


Tuesday, April 16, 2013

How Occupy Wall Street Lit Up Brooklyn with Love for Boston

from theatlanticwire.com





Last night New York's support for Boston was evident on a side of a building. Words of support and love for the usually rival city were projected out of a van onto the side of the Brooklyn Academy of Music. The image spread with messages of solidarity on Twitter and Instagram.  
So how did those projections come to be? We talked to Lucky Tran, a 29-year-old member of the Occupy Wall Street-born collective, The Illuminator, which was responsible, along with the OWS Light Brigade for the display of love. The Illuminator is probably best known for their Bat Symbol-esque 99 percent sign projected on the side of the Verizon Building
The Illuminator was scheduled to put on another show Monday: a "tax evaders" video game for Tax Day, but when news of the tragedy broke, and remembered the feeling in the city following 9/11, they changed their plans. "We remembered how there was this unified moment of 9/11 that quickly became a culture of fear and a culture of war," Tran said. Not only was upped security in New York going to make it difficult for the group to get to the corporate buildings they wanted to use for their projections, but Tran said the collective decided the message should be changed into something that people could "unite around."
In about two hours the project came together. It was moved to BAM—their van is housed in Brooklyn—and messages, including Martin Luther King Jr.'s quote about darkness and "Brooklyn Loves Boston," were chosen.  They also decided to evoke the Yankees-Red Sox rivalry: "To take those symbols of rivalry and unite them and show that we are here in unity," Tran said. (The projections, he explained, are simply JPEGs made with Adobe Illustrator.)
 So they wanted to capture that unified spirit, without any potentially divisive messages. What they found, Tran said, was that not only did their projections (and the Light Brigade's LED signs) bring people together on, say, Twitter, people also began to physically congregate around BAM, where they talked about how they were feeling and their friends in Boston. "It was a really beautiful moment," Tran said. 
See more images of the projection here via Tumblr and Facebook

Want to add to this story? Let us know in comments or send an email to the author atezuckerman@theatlantic.com. You can share ideas for stories on the Open Wire.
 

Monday, April 15, 2013

NYC agrees to pay Occupy Wall Street $232,000 for books destroyed during raid

from washingtontimes.com 




Occupy Wall Street’s “People’s Library” settled a suit out of court with the city Tuesday, winning $232,000 for the destruction of 2,800 books during the police raid on Zuccotti Park in November 2011.
New York City will pay the $232,000 to cover costs of the destroyed property and lawyers’ fees. It will also shell out another $133,000 to settle two other lawsuits growing out the raid, theNew York Daily News reports.
“This is not just about the money,” said Occupy’s attorney, Norman Siegel. “It is about holding the city accountable.”


Read more: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/apr/14/nyc-agrees-pay-occupy-wall-street-232000-books-des/#ixzz2QYlruBgx
Follow us: @washtimes on Twitter

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Occupy easy street

from nypost




  • Last Updated: 11:46 PM, April 14, 2013
  • Posted: April 15, 2013
New York just saw a huge victory for the 1 percent: Occupy Wall Street’s lawyers.
Last Tuesday, the city settled a lawsuit brought by Occupy Wall Street protesters who claimed police had seized and destroyed their library in November 2011. The city agreed to pay them $47,000. That’s a pittance compared to what civil-rights attorney Norman Siegel’s firm earned for repping the protesters in that suit.
Siegel’s firm pulled in $185,000 in legal fees — four times more than Occupy won for its ruined books. Rather than coming from their clients, about 95 percent of that tab will be picked up by city taxpayers, thanks to a federal law that allows civil-rightslawyers to collect big paydays when they win cases.
Robert Miller
Norman Siegel
“It’s not unusual that firms sometimes get more than the clients,” Siegel said, noting that he had originally sought an evenlarger fee from the city, about $235,000 in all.
Well, not everyone can be as pure of spirit as the squatters of Zuccotti Park.

Friday, April 12, 2013

Book News: NYC To Pay Occupy Wall Street For Destroyed Books

from npr


Books from the Occupy Wall Street library damaged in the November 15 eviction of Zuccotti Park and recovered from a New York city sanitation depot.
Stan Honda/AFP/Getty Images
The daily lowdown on books, publishing, and the occasional author behaving badly.
  • New York City agreed to pay Occupy Wall Street for the destruction of books during a November 2011 police raid on Zuccotti Park. In a settlement Tuesday, the city agreed to pay the protesters and their lawyers over $230,000. The city also gave an almost-apology: "Defendants acknowledge and believe it is unfortunate that, during the course of clearing Zuccotti Park on November 15, 2011, books were damaged so as to render them unusable, and additional books are unaccounted for."
  • I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings author Maya Angelou spoke to The Daily Beast in aninterview published Wednesday: "I promised myself that I would write as well as I can, tell the truth, not to tell everything I know, but to make sure that everything I tell is true, as I understand it. And to use the eloquence which my language affords me. English is a beautiful language, don't you think?"
  • Jack Kerouac's online dating profile, from the Barnes & Noble books blog: "On a typical Friday night I am...probably off fuming and screamin' in a mountain nook, experiencing wonderment in the bleakness of the mortal realm."
  • "Sometimes we felt as if we were actually getting somewhere, but the truth was, like most people, we were just marking time." — from a new short story by San Miguel author T.C. Boyle in The New Yorker.
  • Last week, Google sold Frommer's Travel Guides back to Arthur Frommer after buying it less than a year ago. But according to paidContent, it kept all of the social media data.
  • Melville House laments that the media has declared the following bookish things dead this week: books, brick-and-mortar book stores, online book stores, the American Author, travel guides and cursive.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Occupy Wall Street settles lawsuit with city over books destruction for $232K

from  dailynews



Occupy Wall Street’s “People’s Library” settled a federal lawsuit with the city over the destruction of 2,800 books during the police raid on Zuccotti Park in November 2011.

Comments (1)
An Occupy Wall Street protester stands his ground as the NYPD and sanitation department prepares to raid the camp at Zuccotti Park in lower Manhattan.

PEARL GABEL/PEARL GABEL FOR NEWS

An Occupy Wall Street protester stands his ground as the NYPD and sanitation department prepares to raid the camp at Zuccotti Park in lower Manhattan.

That's one hefty library fine.
Occupy Wall Street’s “People’s Library” settled a federal lawsuit Tuesday with the city over the destruction of 2,800 books during the police raid on Zuccotti Park in November 2011.
The city agreed to pay $232,000 — $47,000 to cover the costs of the books and $185,000 to civil rights attorney Norman Siegel, who brought the lawsuit last year.
The city also agreed to shell out another $133,000 to settle two other lawsuits growing out the raid, which evicted members of the protest movement from the park after a lengthy encampment.
Global Revolution TV is getting $75,000 for damaged electronic gear, and their lawyers are getting nerly $50,000. Time’s Up, an environmental nonprofit, will receive $8,500 for 16 damaged “energy” bicycles.
As part of the settlements in Manhattan Federal Court, the city admitted it was “unfortunate” that the books and the other items had been ruined.
The donated books were hauled away by the Sanitation Department.
“This is not just about the money,” said Siegel. “It is about holding the city accountable.”


Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/occupy-wall-street-settles-lawsuit-city-books-destruction-232k-article-1.1312565#ixzz2Q57piYfF