The candidates speak

April 18, 2012 in 2012 Spring

By Jim Witters, Green Party of Delaware

As the presidential primary season whip­ped through the nation during the winter and early spring, the Party’s candidates found themselves battling a plethora of Republican races for the attention of the media.

Celebrity Roseanne Barr, of course, garnered immediate reaction when she officially announced her Green candidacy in February. But San Diego County air quality engineer Kent Mesplay and Dr. Jill Stein of Massachusetts found the battle much tougher.

Stein, for her part, toured the country, touting her “Green New Deal” and visiting Occupy sites wherever she went. Ac­cording to Stein’s website, as of March 23, the candidate had won all nine Green Party presidential primaries held.

Here are the candidates’ responses to Green Pages:

Jill Stein

What are your top two or three issues?

I will work to deliver a Green New Deal for America—an integrated package of emergency reforms that will put 25 million people to work, end unemployment in America, halt the recession, jumpstart the Green economy for the 21st Century, and combat climate change. The Green New Deal includes reforms to the economy, financial system, and to our democracy—and is inspired by the New Deal that got us out of the last Great Depression of the 1930s.

Our economic reforms will create living wage, community-based jobs that meet needs of communities and make them sustainable ecologically, economically and socially. It will create jobs in the traditionally green areas of the economy, in clean manufacturing, local organic agriculture, public transportation, and clean renewable energy—which also provide for real national security by making wars for oil obsolete.

Let me be clear: The Green New Deal will end unemployment in America. Of course, such a thing as ending unemployment would never occur to Washington politicians because their corporate backers depend on the threat of unemployment to keep wages down. But ending unemployment, and more, is front and center on the minds of Greens.

As Greens we are committed to im­proving the conditions of working people by an immediate halt to home foreclosures and evictions, and guarantying health care for everyone as a human right through Medicare for All.

Through the Green New Deal, we will forgive the crushing student debt burden and liberate an entire generation of young people who are being turned into indentured servants. And we will provide tuition-free public education from pre-kindergarten through college. This is an investment in our future that will pay off enormously, like the GI Bill after World War II that provided seven dollars in economic activity and increased tax revenue for every dollar that Congress invested.

Speaking of investments, the takeover of our economy by big banks and well-connected financiers has destabilized both our democracy and our economy. The Green New Deal will end the bailouts and corporate giveaways, and ensure that re­sources are available for investments in our communities, for consumers, cooperatives and small business.

Of course, we cannot hope to secure the economic reforms of the Green New Deal without enacting political reforms. We don’t have that in America today. For this reason, we urgently need to amend our Constitution to make clear that corporations are not persons and money is not speech.

The Green New Deal also strengthens democracy supporting economic cooperatives and participatory democracy at the local and state levels. And it strengthens media democracy by expanding federal support for locally owned broadcast media and local print media.

How do you feel your campaign will help to build the Green Party and independent politics?

In these early months of the campaign, we have already succeeded in getting a Green Party ballot line established in Utah, and our campaign has launched Green Party ballot drives in New Hampshire, Indi­ana, and New Mexico, and has already assisted Vermont, Virginia, Connecticut, Delaware, Iowa, and Hawai’i in getting their efforts going. We are litigating for the ballot in Alabama and hiring staff for ballot access drives in Pennsylvania, Illi­nois, Indiana and, eventually, other states.

No other presidential campaign is do­ing this work, and the Green Party of the United States is relying on our campaign team to help get our party on the ballot across the country this year. We are aiming for 48 ballot lines, with a minimum of 40, and at the rate we are going, we expect to get there.

Let me add that we are attracting thousands of new people to the Green Party. We estimate that at least half of our supporters are people who have not supported Green Party candidates in the past. For these people, our campaign is an accessible and effective way to have a positive impact in the 2012 elections.

Finally, we have launched efforts to build support within organized labor, with students, the immigrant rights movement, and the climate justice and environmental justice movements for using the Green Party as an electoral bullhorn for their demands. We have visited Occupy sites in two dozen cities, as well as student hunger strikers in Virginia, striking workers in Massachusetts, and of course the Wis­con­sin uprising in Madison, where my national headquarters is now based.

We are uniting and growing our party as never before. In my 12 years as a Green Party activist, I have never seen the kind of energy and enthusiasm we are seeing now, and I am honored to have the opportunity to represent our courageous membership in the 2012 elections.

Roseanne Barr

What are your top two or three issues?

1. Legalize Weed: Listen, the fact that I’m not a politician isn’t a drawback; it’s an advantage. Do I need to know every micro-detail about a failed policy like our ridiculous “War on Drugs” to know that anyone who wants to buy some recreational drugs can probably do it, and that all we’re doing is making money for dangerous drug dealers and locking up users at a cost higher than a college education! The drug laws are written for the benefit of drug lords! And it’s a war on Marijuana smokers, mostly! YES THE EMPEROR IS NAKED AS A JAY BIRD-HE NEEDS TO PUT SOME DAMN PANTS ON!

2. Operation Slingshot: I will obliterate the “Two Party” System by becoming the first Green Party president of these United States as a result of our victory in the 2012 general election—with 99 percent of the votes. I also believe it’s essential to do away with the Electoral College, a system created by the 1 percent of the 1 percent—the super 1 percent—to enslave us all.

How do you feel your campaign will help to build the Green Party and independent politics?

The goal of any political party should be to grow. I’m throwing open the doors to the Green Party to a whole new generation of activists. Tough girls and boys who lived on the street so other people didn’t have to are beginning to attend Green Party meetings at the state level. To the youth of America I say, “The Green Party is ours to Occupy. The greater our numbers, the more ballots we Occupy. The more ballots we Occupy, the more offices we Occupy. The door stays open until the last one’s in. Occupy the Green Party!”

Kent Mesplay

What are your top two or three issues?

A hybrid economy is best. My main rival touts a federal jobs program that is dependent upon raising corporate taxes and slashing military spending. This will take time to implement, and lacks legislative support. My approach is more workable:

  • Focus on security arguments favorable to transforming our military into being trained to address the emergency conditions associated with drastic climate change (essential climate-related concerns include health care, emergency food production, the housing of masses of displaced citizens).
  • Provide tax incentives for businesses providing goods and services that help us be more sustainable.
  • Generate trustworthy bonds to stimulate investment in several key areas: re­newable energy, energy efficiency and conservation in housing and transportation.
  • Small-scale organic agriculture.

The top-down approach must be complemented by a ground-up approach that works with market forces (such as true, full-cycle cost pricing), allays skeptical, fearful people who learn to appreciate the security-enhancing properties of sustainability, and that looks beyond standard economic models to recognize that consumption outside our means is harmful and misguided.

The global economic and environmental catastrophe has solutions rooted in local action: scrip, time-banking, volunteerism, trade-and-barter, sharing and even philanthropy. Federal recognition of our state of emergency may clear the way for local governments to be more tolerant of citizen-driven solutions. We need to think beyond consumption and jobs and be allowed to meet more of our needs locally and directly and quickly.

Climate change matters. Climate change has long been a dire issue with me, as this threat to public health and safety and biodiversity, including human native biodiversity, is real. The solutions to climate change, in mitigation and preparation, are steps that reduce over-consumption of limited resources and that point the way to using less, needing fewer consumables, saving more, being more connected to earth, family and friends, and having an inherent “built in” baseline of living that is more secure, in terms of water, food and energy.

Sustainability is a key, core issue. Sus­tainability reflects ecological wisdom and concern for other species and those who are to come. At the base of the dominant culture must be recognition of the essential value of living sustainably. Sustain­a­bility is security: Especially with instability in climate, it is important to enact policies and behaviors encouraging less consumption, promoting local, independence-enhancing solutions and affording people of all levels of training and education to have basic economic well-being.

I am also an advocate of Native perspectives (including warnings about climate change), cultures, sovereignty and regained self-reliance.

How do you feel your campaign will help to build the Green Party and independent politics?

We grow the Green Party and the green movement by pointing out the security-enhancing features of sustainable living: better emergency preparedness, better ex­tended-emergency preparedness, less need for others to come to our rescue, once we learn better to care for ourselves and each other, locally.

When we talk, seriously, about living sustainably we demonstrate that this feature of decentralization is one that enhances and supports independence and diversity. The green movement is an independence movement, built upon recognition of our interdependence. By removing the corrupting influence of money in politics, such as through “Move to Amend,” good governance will bloom at all levels and independence will flourish.

In short, we need good governance, we need Green values and we need to get the influence of money out of politics. And we certainly need to cut bloated Penta­gon spending and waste and enact an independent, trusted system to audit military spending.

About Roseanne Barr

April 18, 2012 in 2012 Spring

Roseanne Barr
Los Angeles, California
Born Nov. 3, 1952

Roseanne Barr is an actress, comedian, writer, television producer and director. She began her career in stand-up comedy at clubs before gaining fame for her role in the television sitcom “Roseanne.” Barr also hosted a television talk show, “The Roseanne Show,” from 1998 to 2000. In 2005, she returned to stand-up comedy with a world tour. In 2011, she began starring in an unscripted TV show, “Roseanne’s Nuts,” about her life on a Hawaiian farm.

Aside from being an Emmy-award winning actress and New York Times bestselling author, Barr is an advocate for social justice. From her hardscrabble days in Denver, Colorado, where she launched her stand-up career, Barr has always looked out for the least among us.

She also is no stranger to politics. During the 2004 election cycle, Barr spent time working with ACORN in Florida and Ohio registering voters and handing out bottles of water at polling places. This was not for the cameras. She was doing it on her own dime to reach out to disenfranchised voters, welcoming them into an electoral process that typically cast them aside.

In 2008, Barr endorsed Green Party presidential candidate Cynthia McKin­ney. On August 4th, 2011, Roseanne Barr announced her candidacy for president of the United States on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno, declaring that she would not run as a Democrat or a Republican “because they both suck, and they’re both a bunch of criminals.”

She has since decided to seek the nomination of the Green Party of the United States. On September 17, 2011, which was Day 1 of Occupy Wall Street, Barr became the first public figure to stand with the occupiers in downtown Manhattan’s Zuccotti Park, delivering a speech before the very first General Assembly.

On February 2nd, Barr publicly an­nounced her candidacy for the Green Party presidential nomination. “I am pleased to announce that I am seeking the Green Party’s nomination for president of these United States of America. The Democrats and Republi­cans have proven that they are servants—bought and paid for by the 1 percent—who are not doing what’s in the best interest of the American people. As a long time supporter of the Green Party, I look forward to working with people who share my values. Behold the greening of America!”

About Jill Stein

April 18, 2012 in 2012 Spring

Jill Stein, MD
Lexington, Mass.
Born 1950
JillStein.org

Stein was born in Chicago and raised in suburban Highland Park, Ill. She graduated magna cum laude from Harvard College in 1973, and from Harvard Medical School in 1979.

She is the co-author of two widely praised reports, “In Harm’s Way: Toxic Threats to Child Development,” published in 2000, and “Envi­ronmental Threats to Healthy Aging,” published in 2009. The reports promote green local economies, sustainable agriculture, clean power, and freedom from toxic threats. Stein’s “Healthy People, Healthy Planet” teaching program reveals the links between human health, climate security, and green economic revitalization. This body of work has been presented at government, public health and medical conferences, and has been used to improve public policy.

Stein began to advocate for the environment as a human health issue in 1998 when she realized politicians were simply not acting to protect children from the toxic threats emerging from current science. She offered her services to parents, teachers, community groups and Native Ameri­cans seeking to protect their communities from toxic exposure. Stein has testified before numerous legislative panels, as well as local and state governmental bodies.

She played a key role in the effort to get the Massachusetts fish advisories updated to better protect women and children from mercury contamination. She also helped lead the successful campaign to clean up the “Filthy Five” coal plants in Massachu­setts. Her testimony on the effects of mercury and dioxin contamination from the burning of waste helped preserve the Massachu­setts moratorium on new trash incinerator construction in the state.

Stein has appeared as an environmental health expert on the Today Show, 20/20, Fox News, and other programs. She was also a member of the national and Massa­chusetts boards of directors of the Physicians for Social Responsibility. Her efforts to protect public health has won her several awards including: Clean Water Action’s “Not in Any­one’s Backyard” Award, the Children’s Health Hero Award, and the Toxic Action Center’s Citizen Award. She has twice been elected to town meeting in Lexington, Mass. She is the founder and past co-chair of a local recycling committee appointed by the Lexington Board of Selectmen. In 2003, Stein co-founded the Massachusetts Coalition for Healthy Com­munities, a non-profit organization that addresses a variety of issues that are important to the health and well-being of Massa­chusetts communities, including health care, local green economies, and grassroots democracy.

Stein became an advocate for campaign finance reform and worked to help pass the Clean Election Law. This law was approved by the voters by a 2-1 margin, but was later repealed by the Massachusetts Legislature on an unrecorded voice vote. In 2002 activ­ists in the Massachusetts Green-Rainbow Party approached Stein to run for governor. She accepted.

Stein represented the Green-Rainbow Party in two additional races—one for State Representative in 2004 and one for Secretary of State in 2006. In 2006 she won the votes of over 350,000 Massachusetts citizens—which represented the greatest vote total ever for a Green-Rainbow candidate.

In 2008, Stein helped formulate a “Secure Green Future” ballot initiative that called upon legislators to accelerate efforts to move the Massachusetts economy to renewable energy and make development of green jobs a priority. The measure won over 81 percent of the vote in the 11 districts in which it was on the ballot.

About Kent Mesplay

April 18, 2012 in 2012 Spring

Kent Mesplay, PhD
San Diego, California
Born July 19, 1962
Mesplay.org

Mesplay spent the first 10 years of his life in New Guinea, where his parents were Lutheran missionaries. He was home-schooled for the first three years of school, later attending a British-style boarding school at Wau. At boarding school he was influenced by the international student body and by tales of World War II, as Wau had been one of the busiest airstrips in the world during the war. His closest friends at school were German and Australian, with teachers from around the planet.

After coming to the United States, the family moved to Mira Mesa, California, in 1977, following his father’s acceptance into graduate school for clinical psychology. Mesplay graduated in 1980 as valedictorian from Mira Mesa High School, where he had captained and lettered on the track team and received a Bank of America Achievement Award in Liberal Arts for his debating skills. Mesplay studied engineering at Harvey Mudd College and went on to earn a PhD in biomedical engineering from Northwestern University, with empha­sis on prosthetic design and function. Mesplay now works for San Diego County as an air quality inspector with the Air Pollution Control District.

Regarding Green Party involvement, Mesplay is active locally and on the state and national levels. He registered with the Green Party of California in 1995. In 1996, he was a Nader delegate to the Green Party’s national convention. He was elected Treasurer of the Green Party County Council, San Diego, where he served from 1996 to 1997. During the same period, he was the co-chair of the Communications Committee, Green Party County Council, San Diego. Mesplay has served numerous times as a delegate to the Green Party of California General Assembly.

In 2004 Mesplay became a Green Party of California delegate to the Green National Committee and has served continuously since. In 2006, he was again elected to the Green Party County Council, San Diego.

Mesplay sought the Green Party presidential nomination in 2004, announcing at a State Green Party meeting in Chula Vista, CA, in September of 2003. Entering the 2004 Green Convention in Milwaukee, WI with a count of 10 (1.3 percent) committed delegates, Mesplay more than doubled his delegate count in Round 1 of the presidential nomination voting, earning 24 (3.1 percent) delegates.

After a number of candidates withdrew 
or were eliminated Mesplay entered the second and final round, where he again nearly doubled his count, finishing third with 43 (5.6 percent) of the delegate votes. David Cobb received the nomination with 408 (53 percent) delegate votes.

In 2006, Mesplay ran for U.S. Senate in California. This was the first time the Green Party had a contested senatorial primary in California. With very little organizing and minimal voter outreach, Mesplay received one sixth of the Green votes in the primary.

In 2007, Mesplay began his run for the 2008 Green Party presidential nomination and partnered with another Green Party candidate, Kat Swift of Texas. This unique partnering allowed both candidates to share resources and make common arrangements for debates and events. Mesplay placed third at the Chicago convention in 2008 behind Kat Swift and party nominee Cynthia McKinney.

In 2011, Mesplay was the first Green Party presidential candidate to announce.

How to get and keep a Green Party presidential nomination

April 18, 2012 in 2012 Spring

By Jim Witters, Green Party of Delaware

Becoming the Green Party’s presidential nominee is not as simple as de­claring your candidacy and watching the contributions and votes start rolling in.

Tom Yager, co-chair of the national par­ty’s Presidential Candidate Support Com­mittee, explains the process:

When a candidate decides to seek the Green Party’s presidential nomination, the pro­spective candidate contacts the Presiden­tial Campaign Support Committee and fills out a questionnaire, which has questions about the prospective candidate’s views on what the goals of the presidential campaign should be.

The prospective candidate also must pledge in writing to appear on all offered state­wide Green Party ballot lines after receiving the nomination, have a website to pro­mote his or her candidacy, and to not be registered in another political party.

Upon meeting these criteria, the candidate becomes eligible for PCSC recognition after a period of one week, if there are no objections from PCSC members.

To maintain PCSC recognition after December first of the year preceding the presidential election, the candidate must receive verifiable support from 100 Green Party members, including members from at least five state parties. After Dec. 31, it is necessary to establish a campaign committee and file with the Federal Elections Commission to maintain recognition.

After February first of the presidential election year, the candidate needs to raise $5,000 (not including self-financing) to retain recognition. It is possible for the candidate to lose recognition by missing a deadline but regain it by taking the necessary steps at a later date.

Although a presidential candidate can win the nomination without PCSC recognition, it is much more difficult. When determining who will be on the ballot in their presidential preference processes, state parties tend to use the list of candidates who are recognized by the PCSC or have been recognized at some time during the election cycle.

In some states, Green parties are holding state-financed primaries. The law about whether a state Green Party has the right to a state-funded primary varies from state to state. In some states, all ballot-qualified parties have the right to a primary, but in other states, there are different levels of ballot access in which only major parties are permitted to hold state-funded primaries. Other state parties use mail or online primaries of their membership, caucuses, or conventions.

Greens show solidarity with Occupy

April 18, 2012 in 2012 Spring

The party offers a way to take back the government
by Wendy Kenin @greendoula, Green Party of California

photos: Wendy Kenin

The Occupy Oakland tent camp November 11, 2011 at Oscar Grant Plaza in front of Oakland City Hall

Greens are participants and supporters of the Occupy movement, from local to national to international spheres. From party members to elected officials to presidential candidates, Greens are bringing years of hard work to the movement that mirrors the Ten Key Values. Decades of Green activism have set the stage for a new government that represents the interests of its people.

On September 27, 2011, the Green Party of New York City endorsed Occupy Wall Street. In a statement, it condemned “our autocratic Mayor Bloomberg, under whose command the police engaged in systematic brutality of peaceful demonstrators against a predatory and parasitic financial order centered in Wall Street. We applaud the expression of direct democracy that this occupation embodies.”

In 2013 we hope to see them occupying their state capitols not as protesters, but to claim seats of power in government.
Asher Platts of the Maine Green Party

September 30, 2011 the Green Party of Maine endorsed Occupy Wall Street, en­couraging protesters to run for public office. “These peaceful protesters are very much aligned with the Green Party’s platform and values,” said Asher Platts of the Maine Green Party. “I want to see the people occupying Wall Street bring about the major re­forms they are demanding. It’s my hope that they will carry this energy and excitement to their home towns, build their local Green Party, and run as candidates in 2012. And in 2013 we hope to see them occupying their state capitols not as protesters, but to claim seats of power in government.”

The Green Party of Washington State en­dorsed the Occupy movement on October 10, 2011, supporting “the demands for an end to corporate domination over our political and economic sectors.”

The San Fernando Valley Greens in Cali­fornia endorsed Occupy Wall Street, “be­cause of our ‘common cause’ with the Occupy movement… as well as the Right of Assembly and Freedom of Speech of all protesters around the world who have joined them, and their efforts to bring about peaceful change for the benefit of all of us.” Their statement of endorsement elaborates on the common cause, by discussing how each of the 10 Key Values of the Green Party of the United States ad­dresses issues being raised by Occupy.

Protesters outside police lines in Oakland January 28, 2012 after more than 400 peaceful demonstrators were kettled, tear gassed, and arrested.

The Green Party of California endorsed Occupy Wall Street October 7, 2011, ex­pressing solidarity with Occupy “actions in California and throughout the country and the expression of direct democracy that it represents.” The Green Party of Ala­meda County, California has been participating in Occupy Oakland since its inception.

November 10, 2011, Richmond, California Green Mayor Gayle McLaughlin welcomed the movement to her city. “The Occupy Wall Street movement has burst onto the scene, calling for an end to corporate domination all over the globe. We, in Rich­mond, are part of this movement and have everything to gain from it.”

November 9, 2011 the Colorado Green Party endorsed Occupy Wall Street citing the core values of the party and the bravery and righteous purpose of the movement. In the statement, the Colorado Greens sent a clear message to occupiers while embarking on election year. “We welcome you to join with the Greens in kind. Every Occupier who registers Green is making a statement against the two party corporate system that has driven our country to the brink.”

In Connecticut December 16, 2011, the West Hartford News published an editorial appreciating that the Green Party of Con­necticut had unanimously endorsed Oc­cu­py Wall Street and local Occupy groups, siting that it hoped, “that others will also help this young movement to continue to evolve and that others in the political system will support their ideals and their actions.”


The Green Party of Steuben County, New York endorsed Occupy, applauding that, “The internal democratic process of the various occupations is coupled with the formation of food distribution systems, medical services, and libraries at each pro­test site, further showing that this is something quite new in the political and economic landscape.” The Steuben County statement asserts, “that the Green Party and the Occupy movement are naturally aligned not by political gain but by a vision for a better future.”

The Green Party of Minnesota issued a statement of support to Occupy. The Green Party of San Francisco endorsed Occupy San Francisco. Internationally, in Liver­pool, England a workshop took place at a Green Party Conference in February, to discuss learning from and supporting the Occupy movement.

“The Green Party encourages those Occu­piers who want to have an effect on the 2012 elections to help us build a permanent alternative party that represents the interests of We The People—the 99 percent—instead of banks, oil companies, arms manufacturers, insurance firms, and other powerful lobbies. The Green Party accepts no money from corporate PACs. Our platform reflects the values and demands of Occupy Wall Street,” said Kent Mesplay, candidate for the Green Party’s 2012 presidential nomination.

Every Occupier who registers Green is making a statement against the two party corporate system that has driven our country to the brink. ~ Colorado State Green Party

The Washington Post quoted candidate for Green presidential nomination Roseanne Barr, noting candidate Jill Stein’s involvement with Occupy as a reason to support her. “Both the Democratic and Republi­can parties are bought and paid for by corporate America and cater to the needs of the highest bidder as opposed to the people they claim to represent,” Barr said in a statement on Green Party Watch. She adds that she’s been “a tireless advocate of Occupy Wall Street” since its beginning.

November 28, 2011, The Hill questioned whether Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein is the Occupy Candidate. Later, she presented a speech in Washington, DC for Occupy The Courts January 20, 2012, where she emphasized the Green Party’s opposition to corporate personhood since 1996 and the need for true democracy led by its citizenry, as part of the social, constitutional, legal, and electoral movement.

The Green Party of the United States has issued press releases condemning police brutality against peaceful occupy demonstrations, encouraging electoral activists participating in occupy to run for office, and helping to distinguish occupy as separate from the two-party system.

The national Green Party of the United States website sported a banner across its homepage this winter that read, “Occupy America: Laura Wells at Occupy The Courts: Voices of Green Party members,” which clicked through to a video of Green activ­ists occupying the Federal Court­house in Oakland, CA January 20, 2012 at Occupy the Courts. Phoebe Sor­gen, former member of the Berkeley Peace and Justice Com­mission, says last year they had protested the first anniversary of Citi­zens United v the Federal Election Commis­sion and that, “the occupy movement has come up since then, which makes me really hopeful.”

Green Party candidate for California Governor Laura Wells protests corporate personhood and speaks at Occupy the Courts January 20, 2012 at Occupy Wall Street West outside the Oakland Federal Courthouse.

“The biggest thing to me is the social movement in combination with the electoral movement to take back the government,” Green Party of California candidate for Congress Laura Wells said. “There’s so much Green in what’s happening… the values [are] interconnected.”

To view Greens in action as part of the Occupy Movement type in “Greens in Occupy Movement” at the YouTube website. Some specific clips include:

www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Tw28AplMFcI – Laura Wells and Phoebe Sorgen at Occupy The Courts Jan 20, 2012

www.youtube.com/watch?v=orcQYUyfUyY

www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZkVmIw9k_8U

www.youtube.com/watch?v=6V0vsGS3-KE

www.youtube.com/watch?v=PgxSnPwDt30&feature=related

www.youtube.com/watch?v=s9L_xeHEIoI&feature=related

How Occupy Wall Street Brought Me Here

April 18, 2012 in 2012 Spring

Commentary by @Kevin_Seal

photo: Wendy Kenin

When I began watching the Global Revolution Livestream channel this past September, I experienced a rush of feelings that I hadn’t felt in years: optimism for the possibility of real social change, acceptance of controversial opinions, joy in learning I wasn’t alone in my frustration, and strength in numbers.

Those people in Zuccotti Park—mostly younger than me, and more technologically savvy—were giving exposure to concerns seldom seen on TV or in most newspapers. They refused to accept the notion that corporations are people. They refused to sit idly by while Wall Street corruption widened the gaping chasm between the super-rich and the rest of humanity. And they refused to condone their country’s aggressive and destructive engagement in unnecessary wars. Much like the Greens.

In those Livestream chat sessions, the Oc­cupy Wall Street moderators repeated a mantra to guide the conversation: NO CAN­DIDATES. Many in those chats were Ron Paul supporters, and many were Obama defenders, but the moderators discouraged any campaigning. Want to talk about end­ing the Fed? Fine. Want to suggest that we tax Wall Street trades? Okay. But never mention a candidate’s name.

This refusal to discuss candidates helped those online debates adhere to ideas for systemic change, and suggestions for action. It was the polar opposite of the frame that mainstream media creates for partisan politics; in the 24-hour news cycle, partisan bickering becomes a blow-by-blow sporting match, with Red Man scoring X number of political points for pushing emotional buttons while Blue Man appeals to his traditional party base by reaching out to certain reliable special-interest groups.

The Occupy conversations wasted no time on the gameplay between the entrenched, seemingly intractable Democrat and Re­publican poster children. They spoke more deeply to the kinds of radical change we wanted to see if parties and politicians were not in the picture at all.

The inspired, inspiring people in the en­campments talked about their exasperation at the sclerotic nature of the Ameri­can two-party system. In a refreshing twist, the dialogue did not smell of liberal guilt, conciliatory hand-wringing and compromise. Debates were incisive and fearless. The consensus emerging in Zuccotti Park (and in Troy Davis Park, Oscar Grant Plaza, and thousands of other public spaces) seemed to be that the red-blue, Demo­pub­lican turf war was merely a distraction. The left-right orientation was itself a false paradigm. CNN, MSNBC and Fox News all peddled a sophisticated update on the old Roman bread and circuses. The donkey-and-elephant tennis match was a ruse to make us plebes feel involved, and to prevent us from voicing deeper objections.

The relevant power structures were not on C-SPAN or in the public record. They were in corporate back rooms and boardrooms, in the unaccountable global chicanery of the IMF and the WTO, and in the greased palms of war profiteers. Occu­pi­ers don’t repeat “NO CANDIDATES” be­cause they are tired of sloganeering and campaigns; they feel that candidates and elected officials are all impotent pawns in fraudulent, invalid institutions.

Occupiers, on the whole, also suspect that attempts at Reform are a waste of energy.

For those of us who refuse to believe that Reform and Revolution are mutually ex­clusive, the “NO CANDIDATES” mantra poses some obstacles. One challenge is in advocating the idea that “NO CANDIDATES” does not equal “NO VOTING.” If the left-right paradigm should be re­placed with a bottom-up worldview, then those local-issue decisions present chances for at least a few crumbs of representation. If elections are stolen, there is no way of proving election fraud without having dissenting votes cast.

Many in the Occupy movement embrace a philosophy of “Nothing short of Revo­lution.” The reasoning behind this philosophy makes sense. Forty years ago, the Democratic Party co-opted many Amer­ican revolutionaries. Four years ago, the Obama campaign co-opted the anti-war protest movement. Of course, most hopes that Big O would bring Reform vanished the moment he named Tim Geithner to his cabinet. Many of his younger, more radical supporters were heartbroken, and ready to abandon any and all faith in the U.S. system of governance.

But “Nothing short of Revolution” is a recipe for defeat in the U.S. Despite the public outrage over financial corruption, the majority of Americans are not ready to revolt. Revolutions require mass participation, and the echo chamber of the Occupy movement does not like hearing that “support,” as expressed in polls, does not equate to involvement. Agreement is not participation.

So how do we Greens inspire some hope into the Occupy movement that “NO CANDIDATES” should really be “NO DEM­OPUBLICAN CANDIDATES?”

The answer is to join them. Occupy. Help shape the conversation. Listen to them. The Green ideals and the goals of most Occupiers are remarkably aligned. We all want economic justice, an end to corporate personhood, and a reduction in the amount of control big business exerts over our government. You are the 99%.

As a Green, you are more radical than you might think. Reach out and invest your time. Occupy is leaderless and horizontal; the sooner you add your voice to the mix, the sooner you will hear your views honored and represented.

Your town, or the town down the road, has an Occupation—even if it does not have an encampment. The energy of this phenomenon is too great to ignore. If you are a natural leader, prepare to humble yourself. If you tend to be quieter and more passive, prepare to step up and act more like a leader. This is a new idea for those unaccustomed to the idea of horizontal organizing: it works brilliantly when people can find more equal footing.

As an Occupier, I believe that part of the movement’s success is its ability to take on the properties of water. It can fill and overflow any container that tries to hold it; it can saturate any porous surface; it flows in the direction that gravity pulls it; the molecules attract one another; the surface tension helps it resist breaking. Water also moves to equilibrium by distributing heat: in Occupy, hot heads are ad­vised to chill out, while those with cooler heels find encouragement in stomping their feet to get the blood flowing.

Just imagine the difference you could make by adding your pitcher of Green to the water supply of your local Occupy. This is a transformative moment in global culture. Here in the U.S., the Green Party can be deeply engaged in this transformation, but only if its members take part, and occupy the moment.

The Climate of Fear

April 18, 2012 in 2012 Spring

Commentary by Jennifer Sullivan, Co-Chair of the Green Party of Florida

It’s never enough. The greed. The downplaying. The usual. Once again the climate of fear that the Twin Powers of Politics have created to play their ongo­ing ‘good cop bad cop’ routine has reared its ugly head: Trayvon Martin shot in cold blood.

Part of the reason that the Green Party exists is to decry this ongoing injustice!

The story isn’t new. It goes back to when people were purchased, transported & sold out of Africa. It’s the Freedom Rid­ers and Emmett Till (brutally slaughtered for— gasp—maybe whistling at a white woman). It’s when neighborhood organizers were portrayed as ‘hoods’ by unethical cops & then hunted & killed. Such was the case of Fred Hampton, in Chicago, taken out by the FBI. Being any sort of excellent black leader could fare no better, as we all know. Martin Luther King Jr. & Malcolm X were both shot, surprisingly, after they each realized that peace was the answer to violence.

The riots of the ’60s in Watts, Oakland, Detroit & elsewhere had a reason. The evidence often can be hidden or destroyed, but when it emerges there is no hiding for the perpetrators, other than the clannism of certain white males who feel that they are never to be challenged & that they are never the wrongdoers. It’s more expected in the deep south, but it’s been all over. Found in our 3 premiere cities from coast to coast: New York, Chicago & LA just as now found in a small town like Sanford, Florida.

When the Rodney King beating is captured on film. It’s ‘justified’ in that he may have had a record & ‘deserved’ it. The shooting of Oscar Grant at the Oakland BART station? He seemed ‘suspicious.’ Amadou Diallo in NYC shot 41 times by several officers? They did it in ‘self-defense’ since they “thought he had a weapon” when he got out his wallet to show them his ID. It’s again, in NYC with 18 year old RaMarley Graham shot by police. All were ‘guilty’ of being black men.

Jarrell "J-Brick" Walker was only 19 years old when sheriff's deputies burst in waking him from sleep and shot him three times in the back.

In my area of Florida, St. Petersburg, this has been an ongoing issue. As the Green Party representative, I have marched & spoken out in solidarity for reparations for the young African American men shot (be­fore any sort of trial) by police such as Javon Dawson, Tyron Lewis, Marquell McCullogh & Jarrell Walker. All these even BEFORE the Obama administration said it’s ‘okay’ to kill citizen suspects.

It happens all the time where certain white males are allowed to kill someone darker than a paper bag. These murders are usually either never investigated or never solved. They usually never end in a serious conviction. Whereas the opposite is true when the colors are reversed. Then justice is swift­er than facts. SOMEBODY will always be found. Consider Mumia Abu Jumal, Troy Davis & the numerous African males who were freed after DNA evidence emerged to show them innocent.

How dare the Soledad Brothers look for humane prison conditions!

Consider a preposterous law that was passed in the state of Florida called “stand your ground”, thereby implying some sort of action star heroism. As the facts continue to emerge, the outrageousness of this recent shooting of a beloved young man named Trayvon gets way beyond anything that we should tolerate in our society. Especially troubling is the drumbeat from the NRA desperately trying to justify Zimmerman’s role & trash Trayvon’s image, as well.

As a mother, who happens to be the co-chair of the Green Party of Florida, I weep for this injustice on many levels. First, having known the deep agony when my son faced death after an athletic injury. I did not have to travel that horrific road to the very end. Still, the memory of the possibility where my child’s life could suddenly end, while still virtually a child, will never leave me. If you have not been even there, how can one feel the pain of mothers who lost their boys, primarily, just because their color made them targets?

As an activist, I decry the popular notion that “if you do what’s right, you won’t get into any trouble & have nothing to fear.” That does not pan out because when you speak for good things like: peace, clean energy, health care for all, worker’s unions, women’s rights, homeowners over Wall Street bankers & a more fair political system it’s amazingly considered ‘anti-Amer­i­can’! This system makes people who do good & simple things like protecting de­fenseless animals or simply practicing the faith of Islam viewed as ‘potential terrorists.’ It makes people of color automatic ‘criminals.’

Jennifer Sullivan, author of The Climate of Fear

The Green Party exists because we reject discrimination & the violent fearmongering that works to divide us, so that we can be conquered by the those who are thriving in the existing power structure. We reject the agenda of those who embrace their greed as good, be it hoarded power or hoarded wealth. We stand, not as a dis­appointing political party that play-acts as the one that those who are dis-empowered can cling to. We stand, not as the party that hates to share, says that whatever they speak is ‘right’ & flaunts hierarchy as somehow ‘earned’ even though it’s really just born into.

The Green Party stands as the alternative and in unity with all of the 99% of us who could get along better if the indoctrination from the power structure would let us.

Nine Black Robes . . .

April 18, 2012 in 2012 Spring

Steve Bloom

. . . occupied (I have been told)
by human beings; we
were hopeful for a while
but in the end discovered:
It cannot be true.
The human beings, instead,
remained, for the duration,
standing vigil outside
the prison’s gates.

Nine black robes
occupied by those
commonly referred to
as “Justices.” Yet how
can this be
when the human beings
search for justice
throughout the evening
but still cannot find it?

Allow me to recall a time, long ago.
I was too young, then, to understand—
could not, therefore, explain it,
not even to myself, certainly not
to my teachers as they lectured,
enthralled by “the rule of law,” which,
we were informed so often, stands
in contrast to “the rule of men.”
and so Troy Davis waited
for more than four hours
in a death chamber built
according to their rules.

Today, however, I comprehend
well enough to compose these lines,
appalled by a “rule of law” which,
it is revealed once again, stands
in contrast to the rule of justice,
so that we may attempt, through poetry,
to consider the depth of our tragedy.
The medical team waited too,
poised to begin its infusion
of the lethal potion.

Nine black-robed Injustices
of the US Supreme Court
deliberating deep into the night
while a nation
of human beings
holds its breath and others,
who merely masquerade
as human, drum fingers,
impatient to proceed.

Finally the word comes down:
You may carry out your execution.

And so the choice
is revealed once again:
to continue with this masquerade
or finally become human;
to welcome murder
or embrace life;
to accept their “rule of law”
or impose a new rule, of justice.

And it says here that this choice
is up to you, because today
the word has finally come down.

[On September 21, 2011, the State of Geor­gia, the US Supreme Court, and a host of other co-conspirators—including President of the United States Barack Obama—murdered Troy Davis by lethal injection.]

By Steve Bloom, Green Party of New York State

What a difference a Green Mayor can make

April 18, 2012 in 2012 Spring

Greenwich Mayor shows accomplishments once in office
By David Doonan, Green Mayor of Greenwich New York

In the months leading up to my election as Mayor of the Village of Greenwich in upstate New York, I now realize I only had a surface-level view of the responsibilities of serving in this position. Origi­nally planning to build a local Green Party chapter once in office, the reality is that as Mayor I am just too busy. I have come to understand that I serve the party by doing the best possible job I can as Mayor.

Below are listed some of the things that have been accomplished during the last four years while I have been Mayor.

I worked with the community to help form a not-for-profit dedicated to youth, and also helped to revitalize another community group to assist people with substance abuse problems after three overdoses (two fatal). The two groups now work together and have formed a youth center at Village Hall. A coordinator has been hired with cooperation of the Village. The emphasis at the center is on electronic and performing arts. Members are now beginning to shoot and edit digital films. During the summer, the center will begin live streaming music, news and interviews. The long-term goal is to gain an FCC license for a low-power community radio station.

The Village, including the Police chief, hosted a no-questions-asked prescription drug turn-in event at Village Hall.

For the past two years, the Village of Green­wich has co-sponsored a fundraising soccer tournament, with all proceeds going to the groups mentioned above, to be used to help those with substance abuse problems.

A Village-owned parcel was turned over for a community garden. While some participants are growing vegetables for their personal use, many are donating their crops to the local food pantry. A minister arranged for the donation of a refrigerator to the food pantry so the produce can be kept fresh until it’s distributed. It looks like this year the garden will be re-located to the farm operated by the Future Farmers of Amer­ica chapter at our high school. The new garden will be substantially larger. With its location next to the senior housing complex we’re hoping that many of the residents of the complex will be able to participate.

Springtime arrives in Greenwich

Last year the Village was awarded a $400,000 New York HOME Grant, targeted at limited income homeowners for needed re­pairs. This grant provided funding for new roofs, windows, boiler replacement and other home energy-related improvements at zero cost to the homeowner.

Last spring the Village acted as the lead applicant, in cooperation with the Towns of Greenwich and Easton, for a similar grant. While most of the funding for that round was diverted to help the communities devastated by flooding in the Cats­kills and southern Tier, we’ll be applying once again this year.

The Village was awarded a NYSERDA Grant for the installation of a 40k solar array at the Village water plant. It went online in early September. We’re seeking funding for a solar project at the sewage treatment plant and other opportunities to apply with the town and school.

In conjunction with the Chamber of Com­merce, we were awarded our second $200,000 New York Main Street Revital­i­zation Grant, targeted at interior and exterior renovations for commercial structures. Once the state capital releases this year’s grant information, we’ll be applying for a Main Street Anchor Project Grant, aimed at helping to restore a building that once housed a restaurant that attracted diners from a 50 mile radius.

Recently a lease was approved to bring a YMCA into the Village, located on a part of a Vil­lage owned parcel, which had been abandoned for many years. Within six months, the membership at the Y met its two-year goal.

For almost three years I’ve been working with officials from Washington County, the EPA and the New York Department of Environmental Conservation to bring a nine-acre parcel of river front property back to life. This former mill property, located along a world-class fly-fishing river, has been unused since the mid-1980’s. I have also had discussions with a responsible, local businessman interested in working with the Village to develop a master plan for this site to help improve it so it best benefits the Village. The history of this property and the efforts of the past three years are worthy of a story by itself.

Last October I chaired a meeting with three parties interested in purchasing commercial/industrial properties in the Village. Also in attendance were a local grant seeker, the local Chamber of Commerce and representatives of Senator Kirsten Gilli­brand, Congressman Chris Gibson and State Assemblyman Tony Jordan. Two of the parties are continuing to pursue their plans.

Three years ago the Village was awarded a $20,000 grant from the Historic Sara­toga-Washington on the Hudson Partner­ship, which was used to commission a Vision Plan from the SUNY School of Environmental Science and Forestry.

Two years ago we applied for a New York Department of State Brownfields Oppor­tunity Area Grant which, if awarded, will be used to do a survey of all empty and underutilized properties in the Village, determine best possible uses for each property and create the marketing materials to help bring them back to life.

A policy of submitting monthly Mayor’s reports to the Village Board was instituted since trans­parency and accountability in government was a part of my campaign.

A board resolution was passed stating the Vil­lage’s support for HR-676 (the Single Payer health care bill sponsored by Rep. John Conyers).

Another resolution stated the businesses the Village is targeting for recruitment are a hotel, software developers and a craft brewery. These three industries span the economic spectrum. So if we’re successful in recruiting all three, we will have helped to create local jobs for all income levels. Craft breweries are targeted for three reasons: they have good paying manufacturing jobs, they have become tourist destinations similar to wineries, and they could partner with our local agricultural community for hops production. This one in­dustry has the potential to positively affect three distinct segments of the economy.

We’ve worked with local residents spearheading an effort to revitalize a trail system on a 140-acre parcel the Village owns. The Village attorney is in discussions with a resident interested in donating an ad­joining 20-acre parcel. Hudson River Green­way, a state agency, has agreed that the Village parcel fits within its mission, which will allow the Greenway to provide, at State expense, liability insurance to private property owners should the trail system expand. The Washington County Soil and Conser­va­tion District helped in pre­paring a $6,000 grant application for im­provements to the trail. The first funded project will take place in May when the former reservoir on the property is stocked with fish. Along these lines the local Girl Scout troop has been creating a trail along side the Batten Kill, which flows through the heart of the Village.

Last year a number of local residents, in­cluding elected officials from the Village, Town of Greenwich and Village of Argyle, attended a two-day training seminar on Transition Towns. Out of that has grown a local Time Trad­ers chapter  and a Front Porch Forum in Argyle.

Last summer a public referendum was held for a new firehouse. While the public overwhelmingly voted no, I am very proud of giving the public a vote on this matter. Everyone admits it should have been ad­dressed decades ago. The primary fire station, built circa 1870, was condemned late last year, forcing the Department to relocate. A special Board meeting will be held at the end of April to review proposals for demolition of the existing building and de­sign and construction of a new fire station.

While I haven’t done everything right, my time in office has been guided by doing what I believe is best for the long-term future of the Village of Greenwich.

Election Day is an appropriate time to review the past four years.

While I had attended many Village and Town meetings in the 18 months leading up to the election four years ago, doing so was at best a surface-level view of the responsibilities and duties of serving as Mayor. The first illusion that went was the idea I could use my position to help build a local Green Party chapter. I came to be­lieve (and still do) that the most important task for an elected Green is to do the best possible job in her / his position. After being elected, should a Green not take the position seriously, they not only sully their name, but the name of our party as well.