How to support the largest academic labor strike in US history

27 11 2022

As 48,000 academic workers enter the third week of this historic strike, support is urgently needed.

Here are ways to help:

For UC Faculty:

  • The most impactful act you can take is to honor the picket line and sign the UC Faculty Pledge of Solidarity with UC Academic Workers’ Strike. Join distinguished colleagues such as Angela Davis, Cherrie Moraga, Howard Winant, Robin D. G. Kelley, Frank Wilderson, Judith Butler, Karen Barad, and more than 200 others in pledging to withhold faculty labor—including grades—until the strike is over. Only through such solidarity can faculty and strikers collectively bring the gears of the neoliberal edu-factory to a grinding halt, thus providing the crucial structural leverage needed to bring UC to the table to bargain fairly and urgently.
  • Share the Pledge with your UC colleagues: https://sites.google.com/view/ucfacultypledgeofsolidarity/home
  • Build undergraduate solidarity by teaching students the structural urgency behind the strike (UAW Teach-In slideshow)
  • Concerned about withholding grades or replacing struck labor? See CUFCA’s FAQs and Additional FAQs re: Grading

For UC undergraduate students: here is a link to a template letter you can customize to ask your professor to cancel class and honor the strike.

For everyone:

More information available at FairUCNow.org.





UC Student Art Action protests corporate privatization of public education

10 05 2012

Art intervention at Bancroft and Telegraph, one of the main entrances to the UC Berkeley campus

(UPDATED 6/22/12:  1) Center for Artistic Activism’s Actipedia site; 2) Radio Interview)

On Tuesday, May 8, in the midst of final exam week, a group of female students performed a public art action at UC Berkeley to call attention to the UC Regents’ privatization of what was once the premier public university in the country. Read the rest of this entry »





Pix: A Million Hoodies March for Trayvon Martin #OSF #OO

21 03 2012

San Francisco, March 21, 2012





American Spring is Here: Live from Zuccotti / Liberty Park #OWS 6-Month Anniversary

17 03 2012

Whose Park? Our Park!





Occupiers set up living room in Bank of America lobby

14 03 2012

[Embedded video]

Uploaded by on Mar 12, 2012

A crew of occupiers makes a home of a Bank of America lobby with a couch, a coffee table, a rug and a potted plant. “Bank of America took our homes so we though we’d move in here!” Join them March 15 as America turns the tables on the nation’s largest bank!

facebook.com/fightbankofamerica

fthebanks.org/

FtheBanks: Take Action to Foreclose the Banks & Move Your Money!





What #M5 Democracy Looks Like

5 03 2012

https://twitter.com/#!/zunguzungu/status/176889009929334785

https://twitter.com/#!/OakFoSho/status/176865358232289281

https://twitter.com/#!/tigerbeat/status/176852477369524225

https://twitter.com/#!/KatrinaNation/status/176873059293216768

photos + video of March on the Capitol coming soon . . .





Student Actions: UCSD reclaimed, UC Davis re-occupied

3 03 2012

UCSD Chancellor’s Conference Room reclaimed by students.  A list of demands has been delivered.  Check out the footage of the student-reclaimed CLICS library, which now functions as an artspace.  More infoGo Tritons!

UC Davis encampment is back.  Go Aggies!

https://twitter.com/#!/reclaimuc/status/176144468775419904

@salmonsoir UC Davis, reoccupied. In preparation for the March 5 day of action: twitpic.com/8rnl2v #occupyca #m5

@salmonsoir UC Davis, reoccupied. In preparation for the March 5 day of action: twitpic.com/8rnl2v #occupyca #m5

occupy_the_capitol

Sign-up Now for free bus ride!

 





Occupy Education: 99 Mile March for Education and Social Justice

3 03 2012

occupy-education

“Student Protests Seek to Breathe New Life Into Occupy,” Josh Harkinson, MoJo, Mar. 1, 2012.

March 1 Art on Sproul

Art on UC Berkeley’s Sproul Plaza on March 1, National Day of Action.

OccupPy Education Read the rest of this entry »





Watch This Video: The Battle of Oakland

8 02 2012

Produced by Brandon Jourdan and David Martinez

On January 28th, 2012, Occupy Oakland moved to take a vacant building to use as a social center and a new place to continue organizing. This is the story of what happened that day as told by those who were a part of it. it features rare footage and interviews with Boots Riley, David Graeber, Maria Lewis, and several other witnesses to key events.

TRT: 20:16  February 2012.

Note:  This Thursday (today 2/9/12) at 6pm, Occupy Oakland is hosting a Citizens Police Review Board and Open Forum on Oakland Police Department Actions at the Grand Lake Theater.

Last week, Oakland’s Citizens Police Review Board (CPRB) announced they had indefinitely postponed a forum which had been planned for months. This forum had been intended to allow the community to discuss the Oakland Police Department’s (OPD) handling of Occupy Oakland.

In actions against Occupy Oakland, OPD has consistently broken with their own crowd control policies and procedures, while brutalizing those they have arrested. Journalists have been arrested and detained, crowds have been tear gassed with no path of escape, and 409 people were trapped, assaulted, and arrested with no dispersal orders given. Let us not forget the most egregious action of OPD misconduct when Scott Olsen was shot in the head with a tear gas canister and nearly killed. All of these actions, and many others, on the part of OPD are proof that the department has a long way to go in the implementation of reforms mandated by federal courts stemming from the Rider Case almost a decade ago.

That the Oakland CPRB would choose to cancel its forum at such a critical time is appalling. As a result, Occupy Oakland is hosting its own CPRB to address these issues and instances of misconduct and brutality. The community, press, and city officials are all invited to attend and listen. There will be a public speaking section at the end of the forum for all to voice their opinions, concerns, and experiences.

Thursday, February 9, 6:00pm
Grand Lake Theater

Full Agenda here.





Choose Your Shield

7 02 2012

Which do you like better?

Climate Camp's "Face Shields" 2007, precursor to the Occupy movement

Climate Camp's "Face Shields" in 2007, precursor to the Occupy movement

Or would you consider to be more effective?

#OO shields #J28

Shields in Oakland on #J28 (via SF Weekly)

The answer may depend on one’s intentions, but consider this about the former:

The Face Shields were used as part of a mass action at Heathrow against the proposed third runway. The shields featured large-scale pictures of real people whose lives had been affected by climate change. These images were put on cardboard boxes, and handles were attached to the backside. Inside the cardboard boxes was not only stuffing to protect protester from police batons, but pop up tents. In this fashion the tents were able to sneak past police lines and once at the targeted destination, British Airport Authority, they were used to camp overnight forming a blockade. Such occupations by Climate Camp are a precursor to the occupy movement.  (more on Face Shields here)

Versus the headline that goes with the latter:

Occupy Oakland: Judge Issues Restraining Order Against Protesters

Here’s what the Laboratory of Insurrectionary Imagination‘s brilliant A User’s Guide to Demanding the Impossible has to offer (our emphasis):

During recent demonstrations in Rome, students brought out shields to defend against police batons, with book covers painted onto them. Culture itself appeared to be resisting the cuts. During the 2007 Climate Camp protests in London, shields appeared with huge haunting photographic portraits of the faces of climate refugees upon them. The TV cameras caught the police striking these faces with their batons to contain the crowd. Such re-engineering can be directly functional as well as symbolically powerful.  (Link to download book here)

Again, it all gets back to the question of the movement’s intention, now and for the future, and how much of that is about growth.  In the context of the battle for hearts and minds taking place via the mainstream media, it’s something to seriously consider on a tactical level.

Additional links and free publications produced in the midst of student uprisings:

We Demand The Impossible: An Interview with John Jordan and Gavin Grindon. – 19 July 2011.  Marc Garrett interviews John Jordan and Gavin Grindon about their collaborative publication, A User’s Guide to Demanding the Impossible.

Occupy Everything! Reflections on why it’s kicking off everywhere – 28 Jan 2012.  Ed. Alessio Lunghi & Seth Wheeler

Penned after the 2010 European student unrest and before what is now commonly referred to as the “Arab spring” began to escalate, BBC Newsnight economist Paul Mason’s “20 Reasons Why It’s Kicking Off Everywhere” sought to establish an understanding of the motivations behind these globally disparate, yet somehow connected struggles.

What roles do the “graduate with no future,” the “digital native” or the “remainder of capital” play in the current wave of unrest? What are the ideas, ideologies, motivations or demands driving these movements? How is struggle organized and coordinated in the age of memetic politics and viral ad campaigns?

This collection of essays seeks to further explore Paul Mason’s original 20 Reasons in an attempt to better understand our turbulent present.

(Link to Scribd and free download).