Occupy Toronto photos

Occupy Toronto photos

A few nice Occupy Toronto images I found: Mass Demonstration to End Police Violence Toronto 52 Division, Toronto Police Service Occupy Toronto 2012 Image by oktay(ca) Mass Demonstration to End Police Violence Toronto 52 Division, Toronto Police Service Occupy Toronto 2012 Mass Demonstration to End Police Violence Toronto 52 Division, Toronto Police Service Occupy Toronto 2012 Image by oktay(ca) Mass Demonstration to End Police Violence Toronto 52 Division, Toronto Police Service Occupy Toronto 2012 Mass Demonstration to End Police Violence Toronto 52 Division, Toronto Police Service Occupy Toronto 2012 Image by oktay(ca) Mass Demonstration to End Police Violence Toronto 52 Division, Toronto Police Service Occupy Toronto 2012 Mass Demonstration to End Police Violence Toronto 52 Division, Toronto Police Service Occupy Toronto 2012 Image by oktay(ca) Mass Demonstration to End Police Violence Toronto 52 Division, Toronto Police Service Occupy Toronto 2012...

Occupy Toronto: Global Call for the Robin Hood Tax March (October 29, 2011)

Occupy Toronto: Global Call for the Robin Hood Tax March (October 29, 2011)

Some cool Occupy Toronto images: Occupy Toronto: Global Call for the Robin Hood Tax March (October 29, 2011) Image by Jackman Chiu agoodbeginningphotos.blogspot.com/2011/10/occupy-toronto-… Occupy Toronto: Global Call for the Robin Hood Tax March (October 29, 2011) Image by Jackman Chiu agoodbeginningphotos.blogspot.com/2011/10/occupy-toronto-… Occupy Toronto: Global Call for the Robin Hood Tax March (October 29, 2011) Image by Jackman Chiu agoodbeginningphotos.blogspot.com/2011/10/occupy-toronto-… Sit-In Occupy Toronto Protest Police Brutality Blocking Dundas street across from 42 division police headquarters Image by Metrix X My video of the protest youtu.be/CYGFbZ_QnQE www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/story/2012/04/01/toronto-m… toronto.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20120330/occupy-t… Original video of the actual violence www.youtube.com/watch?v=xJAqF61qv0U Ontario SIU probing injury to Occupy protester toronto.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20120402/occupy-t…...

More  Occupy Toronto photos

More Occupy Toronto photos

Some cool Occupy Toronto images: Dee Occupy Toronto Image by LexnGer After yesterday’s ruling that the "eviction" stands, and a park full of people as we drove by last night on our way back into town, the Occupy Toronto village is still solidly entrenched in St. James Park. Some tents have been removed. The Yurts are being taken down and the kitchen has been removed to protect valuables. The city has provided trucks to help people move their gear. But the park still has residents in it. The media still surrounds the park. The signs have taken a much more militant spin. The Library is no longer Open and is now barricaded. Other structures have barricades around them too. I would love to see this end peacefully. Please. Everyone. Peacefully! An Occupy Toronto protestor speaks out against poverty Image by Jason Hargrove Occupy Toronto is a peaceful protest that began on October 15, 2011 in Toronto, Ontario, near Bay Street in the Financial District of the downtown core. It is related to the ongoing Occupy Wall Street movement that began in New York City on September 17, 2011. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occupy_Toronto + Photography by Jason Hargrove jasonhargrove.com Occupy Toronto March Image by Nicolai Grut Occupy Toronto Supporters on Yonge Street November 19 2011...

Cool Occupy Toronto images

Cool Occupy Toronto images

Some cool Occupy Toronto images: Occupy Toronto Day 20 Image by LexnGer At the end of their 3rd week in St. James Park, Occupy Toronto is starting to winterize. Occupy Toronto Day 20 Image by LexnGer At the end of their 3rd week in St. James Park, Occupy Toronto is starting to winterize. Occupy Toronto Day 20 Image by LexnGer At the end of their 3rd week in St. James Park, Occupy Toronto is starting to winterize....

Occupyto.org

Occupyto.org

A few nice OccupyTo.org images I found: Occupyto.org Image by LexnGer Photos from Monday Oct 17th The Cloud Gardens GA meets every Monday @ 7:00pm Image by loretta.lime More about Occupy Toronto: occupyto.org/ Occupy Toronto Facebook: www.facebook.com/OccupyToronto More about Cloud Gardens: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_Gardens Occupy Toronto Day 20 Image by LexnGer At the end of their 3rd week in St. James Park, Occupy Toronto is starting to winterize....

Check out some Occupy Toronto images

Check out some Occupy Toronto images

A few nice Occupy Toronto images I found: Occupy Toronto Day 20 Image by LexnGer At the end of their 3rd week in St. James Park, Occupy Toronto is starting to winterize. Occupy Toronto Day 20 Image by LexnGer At the end of their 3rd week in St. James Park, Occupy Toronto is starting to winterize. Occupy Toronto Day 20 Image by LexnGer At the end of their 3rd week in St. James Park, Occupy Toronto is starting to winterize....

Occupy Toronto user pics

Occupy Toronto user pics

A few nice Occupy Toronto images I found: Occupy Toronto! Image by ruffin_ready @ Occupy Toronto, St. James Park Occupy Toronto Protests Against Police Violence Image by Metrix X They’re back… Occupy Toronto returns – Toronto Sun Occupy Toronto Protests Against Police Violence Image by Metrix X They’re back… Occupy Toronto returns – Toronto Sun...

Great Occupy Toronto images

Great Occupy Toronto images

Some cool Occupy Toronto images: Occupy Toronto: “Tunes Against Austerity” March (November 5, 2011) Image by Jackman Chiu agoodbeginningphotos.blogspot.com/2011/11/occupy-toronto-… Rachel Talking to CBC about Small Business & Occupy Toronto Image by LexnGer It’s Day 33 of the Occupy Toronto protest in St. James Park. Yesterday the eviction notices went out, a stay was issued and a court date set for Friday to decide the fate of the Occupy Toronto village. The tone of the neighbourhood around the park has been changing and the tone of the park has as well. In some cases subtle changes, in some cases not-so-subtle changes. It’s going to be an interesting couple of days. Occupy Toronto Image by jess-sanson Occupy Toronto, pre-Bay St march Image by Lazarius...

What’s the connection between #IdleNOMore and #Occupy?

Occupy Toronto January 27, 2013 by Michael Holloway &nbsp Edmonton Alberta conservative activist Patrick Ross has lately written that #Occupy is &#8220colonizing&#8221[1] #IdleNOMore. &#8220Occupy activists have been gradually colonizing Idle No More&#8221 &nbsp So, ahead of reactionary Sun Media picks up on this correct wing conspiracy theory (if they haven&#8217t currently) –  I thought this would be a good opportunity for a little left wing transparency. #Occupy isn&#8217t colonizing #IdleNOMore. Idle No More is as considerably a portion of Occupy as Occupy is a element of Idle No Far more.  They are the very same point &#8211 social justice movements. I use the &#8216#&#8217 hastag on the words above for a quite critical explanation these are two grass roots, horizontally organized, world wide web primarily based movements. They are a type of direct democracy exactly where every person agrees on a set of goals and everybody just goes out and does a part.  No one particular assigns tasks &#8211 it just occurs &#8211 from every single according to their capacity (to quote a person renowned). Leadership evolves and in the cae of he Quebec Students Stike &#8211 is tested for well-known help Very routinely. In the case of Occcupy Totnto every time the was a Basic Assembly, new individuals lead based on what they have been operating on and how it was developing. The two movements –  are World wide web, New Form Best Practice, Social Justice network organizing in action. An  evolving form of on-line direct democracy. (Probably a vision of what our constitution will reflect in civil society in a couple of years time.) Right here&#8217s the details, some hyperlinks. The Social Justice Movement is on-line and transparent &#8211 you just have to uncover the essential words and adhere to the hyperlinks &#8211 here are some: The Planet Social Forum (Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Globe_Social_Forum) is the connection amongst #IdleNOMore and #Occupy. This connectivity goes all the way back to the Seattle IMF meeting in 1999 (N30 -Wikipedia &#8211 &#82201999 Seattle WTO protests&#8221 &#8211 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999_Seattle_WTO_protests) &#8212 years prior to either of the two groups existed! &nbsp Time Travel? Alien Invasion? George Soros&#8217s &#8211 &#8216Tides Foundation&#8217? No &#8212 a international, progressive&#8217s response to corporate globalization, and the emerging International American Empire. In Canada &#8211 in November 2012 &#8211 Social Kind-  aka &#8216People&#8217s Assembly&#8217 &#8211 was proposed coming out of the effective &#8216Casseroles&#8217 worldwide solidarity movement which sprang up in support of the hugely profitable Quebec Students Strike against the privatization of public education. This Individuals&#8217s Assembly would be &#8216occupy style&#8217, a horizontally organized discussion towards locating typical ground and in order to hopefully unite progressive social justice activists from English, French Canada and Indigenous Nations from across Turtle Island. That discussion resulted in a Basic Assembly this weekend (Jan26-27) in Ottawa: &#8220Towards a Peoples&#8217 Social Forum in Canada&#8221 &#8211 http://peoplessocialforum.webs.com/ &nbsp Under is a video from the Ottawa Assembly published nowadays on Youtube by skyearthstories. Below the video is a lot more about the organization of the J26 Ottawa Social Forum. &#8220Jessica Gordon &amp Sheelah McLean @ Men and women&#8217s Social Forum Ottawa Jan 26, 2013&#8243 &nbsp To describe the organization of the &#8216J26 Ottawa Social Forum&#8217, I reprint some relevant paragraphs from the &#8220Towards a Peoples&#8217 Social Forum in Canada&#8221 website. The 3 reprints are: The history of the The Globe Social Forum movement The get in touch with for attendance (the meeting&#8217s raison d&#8217etre) and lastly, the proposed architecture, objectives of the Forum. J26 Ottawa Peoples&#8217 Social Forum January 26-27, 2013 University of Ottawa &nbsp Towards a Peoples’ Social Forum What is a Social Forum? (http://peoplessocialforum.webs.com/what-is-a-social-forum) The initial social forum was the Globe Social Forum held in January 2001 in Porto Alegre, Brazil. Basically put, it was a response to the increasing onslaught of the neoliberal agenda of the ruling parties in numerous components of the globe. It challenged the TINA syndrome as properly as the correct-wing theses of &#8220the end of history&#8221 and &#8220clash of civilizations.&#8221 It also proposed the slogan &#8220Another Planet is Attainable.&#8221 The World Social Forum was intended as a regular meeting of activists to move experiences from the individual to the collective. This forum set the trend for organizing such events on an annual basis. Until 2007 there have been seven WSF in diverse cities of the globe with an typical participation of 100 000 men and women. From then onwards a WSF is held each and every two years. The subsequent WSF-2013 will be held in Tunis. In addition to this international event, there emerged national and regional social forums. For instance &#8220Quebec Social Forum,&#8221 &#8220European Social Forum,&#8221 &#8220Africa Social Forum&#8221,&#8221India Social Forum.&#8221 At the identical time social forums were organized on thematic basis. For example, &#8220Democracy Social Forum,&#8221 &#8220Education Social Forum,&#8221 etc.. &nbsp Creating Social Movements as Instruments of Transformation (http://peoplessocialforum.webs.com/why-a-social-forum-now) Anger and discontent against the ruling Conservative government is on the rise all across Canada. Human rights groups, women’s organizations, cultural associations, environment groups, labour, indigenous peoples, students, in reality civil society organizations in basic feel threatened and angered by the government’s policies and actions. Protests for social and environmental justice are erupting all more than the nation. Casseroles have been organized on the streets of many cities in assistance of the student movement in Quebec. The youth across Canada are joining hands with those from Quebec in difficult neo-liberal austerity policies. Indigenous communities are fighting to preserve their culture, and defend their lands from predatory mining and oil corporations. There are a lot of campaigns, gatherings and protests planned for the months to come. But our movements continue to be fragmented and ghettoized. We have to function collectively and develop a space for all these voices of dissent and strategize together our progressive agenda to help create hyperlinks and solidarity across movements and problems. &nbsp A grassroots approach to a Canada-Québec-Indigenous Peoples’ Social Forum (http://peoplessocialforum.webs.com/why-a-social-forum-now) We are proposing a grassroots horizontal strategy to organizing a People’s Social Forum across Canada as a means of stimulating debate, discussion and further our sense of community and collective action. The process of the social forum seeks to reach out to a plurality of social movements, groups and progressive institutions across Canada, Québec and Indigenous communities. The brief term aim becoming to construct on existing struggles by developing a united and cohesive front against the Conservative agenda of austerity and privatization but long-term to assist transform the current political, economic and social paradigm, by employing creative resistance even though proposing options options So far many organizations and folks have come collectively to type Expansion Commissions in Montreal, Ottawa and Toronto. Discussions are going on to form related commissions in Vancouver, Calgary, St. John’s, and so on. The Expansion Commissions will focus on involving as numerous other organizations and individuals in the process. There is a proposal that these Commissions call for a Common Assembly later this fall or in early winter to launch the Peoples’ Social Forum. This general assembly will take the choices on the name, final dates and locations as nicely as the process top to the forum, and its final format. &nbsp _ [1] Patrick Ross @OutlawTory &#8211 &#8220Idle No Much more/Occupy Toronto&#8217s Rhetorical Intimidation Fail&#8221 uploaded by PatrickRoss45 &#8211 http://youtu.be/-X4p57-jxeE &nbsp &nbsp mh...

Occupy Toronto protests provincial Liberal Government

as their delegates select their new leader at their convention in downtown Toronto. I carried a sign that study OCCUPY TORONTO SUPPORTS WORKERS! as protesters met at Moss Park at noon and proceeded to Sherbourne &amp Dundas to point out an abandoned property that could be utilised for housing in this cold exactly where a banner was unfuraled reading &#8220HOUSING NOW&#8221 Marchers proceeded to Allan Garden&#8217s at 1pm and join the OFL(Ontario Federation of Labour) for speeches ahead of moving on to the leadership convention at the Gardens/Mattamy. Where there could have been anyplace from 30-35,000 people in the crowd blocking Carlton St. to streetcars and automobiles&#8230 http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/story/2013/01/26/ontario-liberal-leadership-protest.html &nbsp...

One year later: Lessons from “Occupy” on communal living

On October 25, 2012 by Megan Kinch It’s hard to believe that this time last year, I was “living” outside in a park downtown at Occupy Toronto, with several hundred other people. The experience was pretty intense — living in a massive open community situation that we simultaneously built while knowing it could only be temporary, kind of like building an awesome sandcastle while the tide is coming in. It’s hard to look back at such a complicated experience, but as we hit the one-year anniversary of Occupy, I think there are some general lessons that can be learned, not only for political occupations but for more mundane but ultimately more lasting kinds of communal life. Full article: www.offbeathome.com/2012/10/occupy-toronto-communal-living...

Jim Leyland’s Occupy Baseball Moment

Occupy Toronto 22 October 2012 by Michael Holloway Wrote this in the Youtube page where I created the video edit, reprinted in it’s entirety. First the Video: MLB Tigers’ manager Jim Leyland’s Occupy Baseball Moment (00:31)   What I wrote under it:   Jim Leyland’s Occupy Baseball Moment Published in Youtube, Oct 22, 2012, by Michael Holloway In this edit, Tigers manager Jim Leyland talks about the World Series festivities in Detroit, the focus in the media on big money, and “the spirit of the people”. A nod to the emphasis in this economy on money; Leyland points out – like the older ones are supposed to do – that it is “the spirit of the people” that is the most valuable commodity when a whirl-wind of consumerism and hedonistic excess lands on a place. As soon as the words uttered his mouth I had a sudden image of Zuccotti Park on a rainy fall day last year – the hope we created, the Joie de vivre we enjoyed. Another World is Possible....

1 Year Reunion Video

Filmed and Edited by Mike Roy Recorded in Toronto, Ontario Canada (Oct 15th 2012) The Indignants (Media group) In my opinion Occupy was a success the first day, it brought people together to talk, it provided the tools such as horizontal democracy. It built a broader social network and introduced activist to groups like Food not Bombs and other local affinity groups, which helped replenish the damage done in the wake of the G20. Occupy is what it is, just first the piece of a larger social movement against austerity, and people need to understand that more pieces are to come before we win. About 40-60 people showed up early afternoon at Saint James Park to celebrate the 1 year reunion of Occupy Toronto. No actions were planned and the day consisted of art, music, reminiscing, and reflection. Unfortunately we could not stay for the evening festivity’s, which consisted of a fantastic reenactment play about Occupy Toronto....

Occupy Toronto 1 year later Party at St James Park

We lived in St. James Park for 40 days, built a community, part of a global community, and we were transformed. We saw the impact of austerity, as poor people gathered in the park to share food and stories of strife. Workers talked about how wage cuts, loss of benefits, and unemployment were impacting their lives. Indigenous peoples shared a sacred fire and openly spoke about the scars of residential schools, the loss and destruction of their land and the impact on communities throughout the country. Immigrant peoples detailed how precarious their status is and how Harper’s policies keep families separated and workers grossly underpaid. Through all these conversations, we talked about how the current political and economic system marginalizes and exploits people and keeps us separated. In the park, we found each other and began to build a movement for change. On the 15th, our one year anniversary, we will celebrate our struggle, growth, and accomplishments as a community. We hope you will join us for this celebration! Schedule: 1pm: SE corner of King and Bay – Musical march to call out corruption and celebrate compassion 3pm: St. James Park – Garlic planting jam to ward off vampires sucking the life out of the city 4pm: St. James Park – Free’scool workshop, practicing democracy 5pm: St. James Park – Open Mic at the gazebo 6pm: St. James Park – Common Thread community choir 7pm: St. James Park – Docket Theatre presents Performing Occupy Torontowww.facebook.com/events/392972550775367/ 8:30pm: St. James Park – Hip hop, spoken word & the indie band Leading Armies 11:00pm: We march outta the park and into the future of the movement See you there! www.facebook.com/events/179545805515245/...

Harvest Jam

Harvest Jam – Toronto Sept. 29, 2012 Flickr source: www.flickr.com/photos/87854503@N07/sets/72157631662437938/ Donations Occupy Toronto welcomes non-charitable financial donations to assist with various types of expenses. No one working with Occupy Toronto is paid. Financial donations can be made: A. (preferred) In person, at any Alterna Savings & Credit Union Branch: Account Name: ‘Occupy Toronto’ Account #: 5028427 B. By ‘bank draft’ or ‘money order’ made payable to: “Occupy Toronto” 69 Yonge Street PO Box 17076 Toronto, ON M5E 1Y2 C. By PayPal...

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Occupy Toronto welcomes non-charitable financial donations to assist with hosting and development costs for the website. To donate for all other costs including committee management, please use the contact us for here. No one working with Occupy Toronto is paid.







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