Late Tuesday I got a call from members of Occupy Wall Street NYC along with some San Antonio occupiers. After some drama within their ranks,…
Mr 1% in San Antonio
Posted in Archive, and Occupy Wall Street
Adventures of a Gonzo Journalist
Posted in Archive, and Occupy Wall Street
Late Tuesday I got a call from members of Occupy Wall Street NYC along with some San Antonio occupiers. After some drama within their ranks,…
Posted in Austin, Journalism, and Occupy Wall Street
On Monday I appeared on The Stream, a social media-based program of Al Jazeera English. I shared a panel with representatives of the occupations of…
Posted in Archive, and Occupy Wall Street
Apologies for the silence here. Things have been so full during the last week it was hard to stop to document it — from getting…
Posted in Austin, Life, Occupy Wall Street, and SXSW
Today is the first day of Occupy Southby, the Occupy Austin occupation of the massive SXSW festival that takes over Austin every year. We’re offering…
Posted in Austin, Occupy Wall Street, and SXSW
Today I participated in a ‘MIC CHECK’ confrontation with Arne Duncan, the US Secretary of Education, at a town hall meeting at Austin Community College. Duncan is criticized for many reasons, but he came under fire from Occupy Austin for his support of charter schools and privatization which puts teachers out of work, puts taxpayer money and our students in the hands of 1% corporations with little accountability.
Occupy AISD (a.k.a. Occupy Education) is one of our most effective working groups. They’ve engaged in amazing outreach to schools, teachers, parents, and activists. They led a successful rally earlier this month, bringing many non-occupiers on the march. They’ve also had a real effect on our schools, supporting the efforts to oppose IDEA Charter that resulted in only 5 students asking to attend the controversial east side charter school.
I felt honored to support their efforts today with the help of four other occupiers who attended the town hall meeting. Here’s what our mic check sounded like:
Because we did not know how many we had present to support us, we read it more as a speech than a traditional call & response, but near the end you could hear students & others joining in. The crowd applauded and many came up after to ask us questions or thank us. As for Duncan himself, he’s obviously used to being mic checked and responded calmly with a stock answer about the importance of the “public-private partnership.” The campus police lined up but when we sat down again left us alone.
Later, during the question & answer session, the last question was a pointed one from another occupier:
After the meeting, we had a pleasant & positive chat with Brette Lea, a member of ACC’s Public Information & College Networking department. We talked about how the occupation supports efforts by colleges like ACC to educate the disadvantaged, but opposes the 1% infiltration of education. We also heard from Timothy John Tuten, Director of Special Projects for the US Department of Education. He thanked us for being nonviolent and urged us to contact him to share our concerns. But not everyone reacted calmly, as James explained in a brief interview:
Participating in such a successful action thrilled me — and then I got another thrill to see my video on the Washington Post.
If you’re coming to Austin for South by SouthWest, (SXSW) be sure to check out Occupy Austin’s
The full text of our mic check, written by Amanda Michelle of Occupy AISD, is below.
Originally published on Approximately 8,000 Words.
Posted in Austin, Life, and Occupy Wall Street
Interior: Mayor’s Office, an American City American Mayor: Darn those occupiers and their tents! They’re sleeping all over our nice clean park. I hope I…