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Indybay Feature
Occupy Wall Street in Northern California: Challenging Economic Injustices in City Centers & Beyond
Date:
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Time:
9:15 AM
-
10:45 AM
Event Type:
Speaker
Organizer/Author:
Location Details:
Unitarian Universalist Breakfast Forum
Martin Luther King Room
First Unitarian Universalist Church, San Francisco
1187 Franklin Street at Geary
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Martin Luther King Room
First Unitarian Universalist Church, San Francisco
1187 Franklin Street at Geary
Sunday, November 25, 2012
"Occupy Wall Street in Northern California: Challenging Economic Injustices in City Centers, on Campuses, at the Port, on the Farm, and Beyond" with Indybay.org journalist Dave Id. Documentation of the movement's protagonists and antagonists presented through photographs and video (photo below: Occupy the Farm, April, 2012).
Speaker: Dave Id, Documentary Photographer and Indybay Journalist
---------------------------------------------------------
What is the UU SF Forum?
“We are a spiritual community coming together for social justice and community education."
We meet for breakfast and conversation each Sunday and to hear compelling speakers of stature and deep knowledge in many areas, including politics, religion, philosophy and academia as well as eco- and social-justice.
Speaker: Dave Id, Documentary Photographer and Indybay Journalist
---------------------------------------------------------
What is the UU SF Forum?
“We are a spiritual community coming together for social justice and community education."
We meet for breakfast and conversation each Sunday and to hear compelling speakers of stature and deep knowledge in many areas, including politics, religion, philosophy and academia as well as eco- and social-justice.
For more information:
http://www.uusf.org/Committees/Forum/index...
Added to the calendar on Mon, Oct 29, 2012 10:06PM
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So move on.
That last comment is not helpful or informative.
Tangibly, there are foreclosure actions, library actions, and farms actions still going on. There is also Occupy's legacy of having shaped the contemporary zeitgeist on economic inequality.
Even if there were absolutely nothing left but memories, is Occupy not a phenomenon worth historical examination as social movements press forward? Is it wise to not look back at what worked, what didn't, and where things might go from here?
Tangibly, there are foreclosure actions, library actions, and farms actions still going on. There is also Occupy's legacy of having shaped the contemporary zeitgeist on economic inequality.
Even if there were absolutely nothing left but memories, is Occupy not a phenomenon worth historical examination as social movements press forward? Is it wise to not look back at what worked, what didn't, and where things might go from here?
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