Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category

Will Hillary be the first female U.S. president in 2016?

Will Hillary be the first female U.S. president in 2016?

Who Will the Candidates Be in 2016?

By Lori Spencer

Yahoo! News

 

COMMENTARY

According to recent polls, former secretary of state Hillary Rodham Clinton would be favored by more than half of Americans to be the next President of the United States.

Hillary is already the frontrunner for her party’s nomination in 2016, although she has recently downplayed her interest in another presidential run. After stepping down from her post as Secretary of State in January 2013, the former first lady told ABC News she would like do some “reading and writing and speaking and teaching.”

But the Democratic Party likely has much bigger plans for Hillary.

David Axelrod, President Obama’s political oracle, has all but declared Hillary Clinton to be the Unsinkable Molly Brown should she decide to run in 2016.

“I think she’d be very strong,” Axelrod said. “First of all, having been engaged in a primary race with her … she is an indefatigable candidate and very, very powerful and she’s only stronger now for having four years of I think splendid leadership” as secretary of State.

“She’d be in a very, very strong position,” he added. “I think the reality of a woman getting elected the president of the United States may be an even more powerful incentive in 2016.”

A December 2012 ABC News-Washington Post poll showed that 57 percent of Americans said they’d support a run by Hillary Clinton to succeed President Obama in the oval office.

Don't count Mitt Romney out for another run in 2016.

Don’t count Mitt Romney out for another run in 2016.

Will the third time be the charm for Mitt Romney?

Twice in his political career so far, Mitt Romney has managed to flip defeats into victories.

Although he lost to Ted Kennedy in the 1994 Massachusetts Senate race, Romney soon bounced back as leader of the Salt Lake Organizing Committee for the 2002 Olympics. That job led to his successful run for Massachusetts governor in 2002.

From the governor’s office, Romney catapulted to the national stage and ran for the Republican presidential nomination in 2008. He eventually bowed out after a string of Super Tuesday losses to Arizona Sen. John McCain, but over time jockeyed himself into position to seek — and receive — the 2012 GOP nomination.

Is Romney perfectly poised to be the Republican nominee again in 2016? At this stage of the game, he certainly carries more name recognition than any other potential contender, with the possible exception of former Florida governor Jeb Bush.

The former presidential candidate hasn’t yet revealed anything about how he intends to spend the next four years, and is keeping mum on if he might run again. But given that he pulled an impressive 206 electoral votes in 2012, don’t count Romney out for 2016.

Led Zeppelin crashed the White House, the State Department, and the Kennedy Center in December.

Led Zeppelin crashed the White House, the State Department, and the Kennedy Center in December.

By Lori Spencer

Contributing Editor, This Can’t Be Happening!

 

ZEPPELIN OVER WASHINGTON

 

(Continued from Pt. I of Lori Spencer’s report from the nation‘s capitol.)

 

When Led Zeppelin attended a reception at the White House in advance of the Kennedy Center Honors, they were just as shocked to find themselves there as most everybody else was. Being personally roasted by the President of the United States — along with fellow Kennedy Center Honorees Dustin Hoffman, David Letterman, Natalia Makarova, and Buddy Guy — was an experience Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page could only later describe as “surreal.”

Page, Plant, and John Paul Jones also enjoyed getting the royal treatment during a weekend of festivities in Washington, D.C., including a State Department dinner on December 1 hosted by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and former president Bill Clinton.

Secretary Clinton described the honorees as “a group of legends and icons as diverse as they are talented. We have in our group of honorees tonight a broad cross section of talent and energy from comedian to chameleon, ballerina to bluesman, and three men so synonymous with rock and roll they need no more description than Page, Plant, Jones,” Clinton said.
“Now, in my line of work, we often talk about the art of diplomacy,” she added. “I really like saying that because so many of the building blocks for art and diplomacy are the same. We have to be willing to try new things, occasionally take big risks. … So the arts and diplomacy actually do go hand in hand. They play out on world stages and reflect our common need to build bonds of understanding with others.”

President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama join the 2012 Kennedy Center Honorees in the Pledge of Allegiance. John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, D.C., Dec. 2, 2012.

President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama join the 2012 Kennedy Center Honorees in the Pledge of Allegiance.
John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, D.C., Dec. 2, 2012.

The Kennedy Center Honors take place at the Opera House in the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. The Honorees and their guests sit in the front of the Box Tier with the President and the First Family. In keeping with Kennedy Center tradition, the Honorees are not allowed to speak to or interact with members of the audience.

Zeppelin’s three surviving members, Robert Plant, John Paul Jones and Jimmy Page, sat down the row from President and Michelle Obama in the balcony. All of the honorees wore the Kennedy Center Honors rainbow-colored sash and medal.

Naturally, the show’s producers at CBS saved the Led Zeppelin tribute segment for last and pulled out all the stops. The Foo Fighters, with Dave Grohl behind the drum kit again and Taylor Hawkins tackling Robert Plant’s screams on “Rock and Roll.” Kid Rock did “Babe, I’m Gonna Leave You” (which was unfortunately cut from the CBS telecast Dec. 26) and “Ramble On.” Next up was Lenny Kravitz and his band funking up “Whole Lotta Love.”

“It was quite exhilarating to hear the different approaches that people had to the songs,” Page said later. He and his fellow Zeppelin bandmates could be seen throughout the entire tribute tapping their feet in rhythm, watching the musicians closely; genuinely intrigued by how their songs were being interpreted.

Finally, Ann and Nancy Wilson of Heart — two girls that grew up idolizing Led Zeppelin — walked onstage and repaid the inspiration. As the duo‘s sparse, acoustic “Stairway to Heaven” reached the song’s middle section, an orchestra joined in. Then came the 80-voice Joyce Garrett Youth Choir. The effect of so many voices singing the final chorus was overwhelmingly powerful. Tears could be seen in Robert Plant’s eyes when Jason Bonham suddenly materialized behind the drum kit, wearing his father‘s old signature bowler hat.

None of the members of Led Zeppelin had been told in advance that Jason was going to be there. They were clearly astonished — and deeply touched — when they saw him take his place onstage. Even Jimmy Page, a man not easily overwhelmed by emotion, had a tear rolling down his cheek.

Kennedy Center Honorees John Paul Jones, Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and David Letterman. John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, D.C., Dec. 2, 2012.

Kennedy Center Honorees John Paul Jones, Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and David Letterman.
John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, D.C., Dec. 2, 2012.

That moment was just one of many in recent months that Plant and Page appeared to be closer and more in sync with one another than they had been in 15 years, since their last studio album together (“Walking Into Clarksdale”). Although the pair did two solo tours together in the 1990s, John Paul Jones was not included in those creative endeavors, which deepened friction between the Zeppelin family.

Jones was invited to join them at the O2 Arena in London for the 2007 reunion, which eventually became “Celebration Day.” During their many public appearances together this fall, it was readily apparent that the trio had re-established the chemistry and friendship of years past. All seemed to be forgiven. Jones, Page, and Jason Bonham have stated quite categorically that they would be in favor of a reunion album and tour. But for the past five years, Plant has been the last holdout.

Based on the band’s renewed camaraderie and recent public comments by Robert Plant, that may be about to change.

Could it be that Plant — who always eschewed repeating the past in favor of moving forward with his own solo career — is starting to feel a bit sentimental for the days of Led Zeppelin now? At age 64, perhaps the time has finally come for one final victory lap with his old bandmates. Plant is certainly ready to talk more about it than he’s been in years.

“If anybody wants to write some new songs, I’m game,” Plant said after the Kennedy Center Honors. That’s an intriguing change of tune for the singer, who for the past five years said he was simply too busy with other projects to work with Zeppelin again.

Led Zep's Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, and Jimmy Page on the red carpet at the 2012 Kennedy Center Honors.

Led Zep’s Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, and Jimmy Page on the red carpet at the 2012 Kennedy Center Honors.

If Led Zeppelin returned to the recording studio and gave fans an album of new songs, would they tour?

“Who wants to be on a two-year tour?” Page exhales, rolling his eyes. “That would tire you out just thinking of it.”

” The responsibility of doing that four nights a week for the rest of time is a different thing,” Plant added.”The tail should never wag the dog. If we’re capable of doing something in our own time, that will be what will happen,”  We know what we’ve got. Que sera.”
“Expectations are horrific things,” Plant said. “To actually do anything at all together is such a kind of incredible weight. Because sometimes we were fucking awful, and sometimes were stunning.”

A Zeppelin reunion with some fresh, new material undoubtedly looks more hopeful now than ever before. But unlike their 2007 reunion concert, don’t expect an impassioned replay of the old Zeppelin warhorses. Rest assured if they do get back together in 2013, the song will definitely not remain the same.

At a Dec. 1 State Department Dinner, Kennedy Center Honorees John Paul Jones, Jimmy Page, and robert Plant of Led Zeppelin joke around with blues guitar legend Buddy Guy as Secretary of State Hillary Clinton looks on.

At a Dec. 1 State Department Dinner, Kennedy Center Honorees John Paul Jones, Jimmy Page, and Robert Plant of Led Zeppelin joke around with blues guitar legend Buddy Guy as Secretary of State Hillary Clinton looks on.

By Lori Spencer

Yahoo! Music Featured Contributor

The surviving three members of Led Zeppelin arrived in Washington last month to be honored by the Kennedy Center — along with Dustin Hoffman, David Letterman, Natalia Makarova, and Buddy Guy — but the legendary British rockers didn’t quite expect to be the center of quite so much official attention.

Led Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page, Robert Plant, and John Paul Jones were given the royal treatment during a weekend of festivities in Washington, D.C., including a State Department dinner on December 1 hosted by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and former president Bill Clinton.

Secretary Clinton described the honorees as “a group of legends and icons as diverse as they are talented. We have in our group of honorees tonight a broad cross section of talent and energy from comedian to chameleon, ballerina to bluesman, and three men so synonymous with rock and roll they need no more description than Page, Plant, Jones,” Clinton said.

The following night, Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant, John Paul Jones and Jimmy Page, sat down the row from President and Michelle Obama in the box tier of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. All of them wore the Kennedy Center Honors rainbow-colored sash and medal that President Obama had presented them in a White House ceremony that afternoon.

Naturally, the show’s producers at CBS saved the Led Zeppelin tribute segment for last and pulled out all the stops. The Foo Fighters, with Dave Grohl behind the drum kit again and Taylor Hawkins tackling Robert Plant’s screams on “Rock and Roll.” Kid Rock did “Babe, I’m Gonna Leave You” (which was unfortunately cut from the CBS telecast Dec. 26) and “Ramble On.” Next up was Lenny Kravitz and his band funking up “Whole Lotta Love.”

“It was quite exhilarating to hear the different approaches that people had to the songs,” Page said later.

(Story continues HERE.)

By Lori Spencer

Contributing Editor

This Can’t Be Happening!

According to the National Archives, one item has been requested more than any other over the past forty two years; more than the Bill of Rights or even the Constitution of the United States. Yes, it's the  iconic photograph of Elvis Presley shaking hands with President Richard M. Nixon on the occasion of Presley's visit to the White House. December 21, 1970.

According to the National Archives, one item has been requested more than any other over the past forty two years; more than the Bill of Rights or even the Constitution of the United States. Yes, it’s the iconic photograph of Elvis Presley shaking hands with President Richard M. Nixon on the occasion of Presley’s visit to the White House. December 21, 1970.

It was a few days before Christmas, 1970, and Elvis Presley was suddenly obsessed with a strange notion. Not another late-night private shopping spree for Lisa Marie, or a cross-country hamburger run this time. No, what Presley had in mind was far more important: the trumpet of destiny was once again beckoning him to her siren call. It had been decided somehow in his drug-addled mind that the King of Rock and Roll should meet the President of the United States. Not next week; not next year, or in the next decade: this had to happen right now.

Within hours, and without telling anyone in his Memphis Mafia entourage, Elvis was on a red-eye flight to Washington, D.C. – alone. Before Vernon Presley could say, “has anybody seen Elvis?” (thus setting off a full-scale panic back at Graceland), Presley had arrived at the White House gates uninvited, asking to see the president.

Elvis explained to an astonished security guard that he knew the president was very busy, but that he would just like to say hello and give him a gift (a commemorative World War II .45 caliber pistol). He also bore in his hand a six-page handwritten requesting – incredulously enough –  to be appointed a “Federal Agent-at-Large” in the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs.

Once it had been determined that the letter was genuine and that this heavily armed, velvet and suede-clad man at the gate really was THE Elvis Presley, phones began ringing frantically all over the White House. “What the hell do we do with this guy?” was the question of the day. Elvis waited patiently in his three-room suite back at the Hotel Washington while the president’s men scrambled to accommodate his bizarre request.

In a staff memo fired off quickly to Nixon’s Chief of Staff H.R. Haldeman, the president’s Special Assistant Dwight Chapin suggested that “if the president wants to meet with some bright young people outside of the government, Presley might be a perfect one to start with.”

Haldeman scribbled in the margins of the memo, “you must be kidding.”

Nevertheless, he approved the visit, and Presley was finally allowed entry into an inner sanctum that no rock-and-roller before him had ever penetrated: the oval office.

That groundbreaking summit brought a new whiff of respectability to rock and roll music, and yet even by the early 1980′s, rock bands still weren’t exactly welcome visitors on Washington’s elite holiday party circuit. Reagan’s Secretary of the Interior James Watt memorably banned the clean-cut, all-American Beach Boys from the annual July 4th Concert on the Mall in 1983.

Watt had announced that all rock bands attracted “the wrong element,” and that the Reagan administration opted for a “wholesome” program with Wayne Newton. “We’re not going to encourage drug abuse and alcoholism,” Watt sniffed, “as was done in the past.”

Secretary Watt was apparently unaware that the Beach Boys had played the White House just a month before in June, at Ron and Nancy Reagan’s personal request. Watt later apologized to the Beach Boys after learning the Reagans were fans of the band. Reagan gave James Watt a “shoot yourself in the foot” award over the embarrassing incident and invited the Beach Boys back in 1985 to play his second Inaugural concert. The times they were a-changin’, but still…not that much.

YOUR TIME IS GONNA COME

Had you told me then – some thirty years ago during the waning years of the long, Cold War – that a Russian ballerina, a black bluesman from Lettsworth, Louisiana, and the English kings of debauch, Led Freaking Zeppelin, would be honored at the White House by the nation’s first black president within our lifetimes, I would have told you to dream on and fuck off.

But there they were: ballerina Natalia Makarova, blues legend Buddy Guy, Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page, Robert Plant and John Paul Jones, all sitting quietly in the distinguished East Room of the White House on December 3, 2012. Unlike previous visits by Elvis Presley and The Beach Boys, these artists were not unexpected visitors or performing court jesters; they were honored guests of the president.

As I listened intently to president Obama singing their collective praises – along with their fellow Kennedy Center Honorees Dustin Hoffman and David Letterman – I could only shake my head in amazement and think to myself, “this can’t be happening!”

L to R: Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones of Led Zeppelin, Natalia Makarova, David Letterman, Dustin Hoffman, Buddy Guy, and President Barack Obama.

L to R: Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones of Led Zeppelin, Natalia Makarova, David Letterman, Dustin Hoffman, Buddy Guy, and President Barack Obama.

On more than a few occasions during the ceremony I saw that same “look how far we’ve come” grin spread across the faces of several attendees, including one Jimmy Page, who later called the whole experience “surreal, like a dream.”

When asked if they had ever been invited to the White House before, Robert Plant exploded in a cackle of laughter. “Naaaah, you’re joking, right?” Reflecting back in time, Plant’s face suddenly turned stoic, and a hint of bitterness crept into his tone.

“We were hardly the toast of the American political establishment back then,” Plant pointed out sharply. “Your government and police certainly were interested in us, but not for our music. But we were being questioned quite often!”

The native British band expressed great excitement (and perhaps some befuddlement) at being chosen for this prestigious award, because the Honorees are recognized for making unique contributions to American culture. Of the 178 recipients of the Kennedy Center Honors over the past three and a half decades, only one other British rock band has been chosen: The Who in 2008.

Led Zeppelin guitarist and sonic architect Jimmy Page considers the selection of Led Zeppelin in 2012 to be “a terrific honor.”

“We owe such a massive debt to American music,” Page said. “It’s a thing that definitely seduced us all to be want to be part of the music.”

“Everything that we talk about is American, from our music tastes more or less (and maybe north African and Egyptian).” Plant agreed. “Our mutual love of and absolute and total influence by American music whether its from Mississippi or Chicago in 1982 – it’s great because we’re sort of Americans but…not – of course.”

Although Plant is still a British citizen, he now lives part-time in Austin, Texas with his musical partner and lady love Patty Griffin. “I do consider myself an American in many ways,” Plant said. “Austin feels like home to me now.”

“So the fact that we get to go to this thing and meet the most dynamic and charismatic American outside of America – Obama – bar none is a great, great privilege.”

A short time later Plant, Page, and Jones were shaking the president’s hand during a White House reception preceding the Kennedy Center Honors. In a wildly mixed crowd that included celebrities such as Morgan Freeman, Lenny Kravitz and Page’s old school chum Jeff Beck, there were still plenty of old-guard Washingtonians propped up on their walkers and canes, casting disapproving glances at these gray haired, tuxedo-clad hippies actually being honored in the East Room. There goes the neighborhood, indeed.

President Obama roasted the members of Led Zeppelin in his remarks to the Kennedy Center Honorees at the White House.

President Obama roasted the members of Led Zeppelin in his remarks to the Kennedy Center Honorees at the White House.

DAZED AND CONFUSED

“It’s been said that a generation of young people survived teenage angst with a pair of headphones and a Led Zeppelin album,” President Obama said in his remarks to the Honorees. “And a generation of parents wondered what all that noise was about.

“But even now, 32 years after John Bonham’s passing — and we all I think appreciate the fact — the Zeppelin legacy lives on,” Obama proclaimed. “The last time the band performed together in 2007 — perhaps the last time ever, but we don’t know — more than 20 million fans from around the world applied for tickets. And what they saw was vintage Zeppelin. No frills, no theatrics, just a few guys who can still make the ladies weak at the knees, huddled together, following the music.”

The president’s speechwriters couldn’t resist that niggling temptation to rib the members of Led Zeppelin over their party-boy reputations.

“Of course, these guys also redefined the rock and roll lifestyle.  We do not have video of this,” President Obama quipped. “But there were some hotel rooms trashed and mayhem all around.  So it’s fitting that we’re doing this in a room with windows that are about three inches thick and Secret Service all around. So just settle down, guys…these paintings are valuable.”

·    The Kennedy Center Honors will air on CBS December 26. Part Two of TCBH’s coverage takes us to the Kennedy Center for an all-star tribute to the 2012 Honorees, and more with the members of Led Zeppelin.

 

 

 

This photo was posted by Snoop Dogg on his official Facebook page, expressing his support for presidential candidate Ron Paul.

By Lori Spencer

Yahoo! News

 

The latest celebrity to endorse Republican candidate for president Ron Paul (R-Texas) appears to be rapper Snoop Dogg. In recent weeks, Rep. Paul has also attracted endorsements from Kelly Clarkson, Julie “Catwoman” Newmar, Vince Vaughn, Joe Rogan, Barry Manilow, and famed director Oliver Stone, among others.

Snoop Dogg – whose real name is Calvin Cordozar Broadus – gave the candidate a big thumbs up on his Facebook page Sunday with the headline “Smoke Weed Everyday” stamped upon a photo of Ron Paul. The caption of the photo reads simply: “Because I said so.”

The Dogg’s unofficial endorsement of Paul quickly went viral…

 

Story continues here.

Occupy OKC was evicted from Poet's Park in downtown Oklahoma City Dec. 14. Photo: Curtis Ensler.


Occupy Oklahoma City fights to keep the commons; sues in federal court

 

 

By Lori Spencer

 

Originally published on This Can’t Be Happening! Also appears on Counterpunch and OpEdNews, among others.

 

*An abridged version of this article originally appeared on Yahoo! News

 

 

Having spent the better part of two months as an embedded reporter with Occupy OKC’s camp in Kerr Park (aka Poet’s Park) I have often praised both the city and police department. Oklahoma City’s occupation has so far managed to avoid the mass arrests and police brutality seen in other cities around the nation. In my opinion, this is largely due to the group’s respect for the park and city ordinances, as well as the city’s respect for the First Amendment. I frequently pointed to OKC as a model city, setting an example for how a local government and occupiers can peacefully coexist.

So imagine my surprise upon learning that the City of Oklahoma City recently refused to accept the group’s $55/day permit fee. Assistant City Manager M.T. Berry told Occupy OKC that not only were they being evicted from Poet’s Park, all city parks would be closed to them. Protesters were further informed that anyone remaining in Poet’s Park after curfew would face citation or arrest, effective immediately.

The word was blasted out in urgent text messages, Facebook posts and Twitters: “EVICTION IMMINENT! Please come to Poet’s Park NOW!”

6:40 p.m. – an emergency General Assembly is called to decide whether to leave the park voluntarily or standoff with police. Occupier Jay Vehige speaks first:

“Mic check!

(Crowd) Mic check!

Mic check!

Jay: I’ve been arrested twice already and I’ll do it again if I know people are with me. I’m not afraid!

(Crowd) Not afraid!

Jay: Clearly (crowd repeats) They’ve lied to us before. I bet the police officers are suiting up for battle right now. So let’s be real. The time has come for us to make our stand. Will we cower? In the corner? Or will we stand against tyranny? We will not allow them to continue to infringe upon our rights. We will stand in solidarity with our brothers and our sisters until our grievances have been redressed by our government!”

The GA’s decision is unanimous to stay. Former U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Gary Jaymie Johnson stood up and announced, “I’ve signed up to get arrested. I’ve already called my fiancee’ and told her what to expect. I contacted Capt. Byrne (of OCPD) myself and asked him if we’d be evicted from the park and he said no, we wouldn’t be. He lied to me. So now I can’t trust the city, I can’t trust the police department. Right here, right now, we’re taking a stand. All of these people out here are the 99% and so are you. And whatever happens, if I get arrested, I will smile when they take my picture.”

Britney Shantel-Guest begins passing around a sign-up sheet for those who are willing to be arrested. Each volunteer is to fill in their full name, phone number, and emergency contact information. Those assembled are assured that anyone arrested will be bailed out of jail.

As the 11 p.m. eviction deadline approaches, a crowd of about 100 people have gathered to defend the park. Marching and chanting helps stave off the 38-degree cold and a biting north wind.

“Whose park?”

“Our park!”

“Whose streets?”

“Our streets!”

“Whose city?”

“Our city!”

“Whose state?”

“Our state!”

“Whose country?”

“Our country!”

As police encircle the park, occupiers sing Woody Guthrie’s “This Land is Your Land.” The words of Oklahoma’s best-known songwriter seem to have the desired effect on police: they leave quietly.

Occupiers Jay Vehige (carrying flag) and Army veteran Jaymie Johnson rally to keep the park. Nov. 28, 2011. Photo courtesy Garett Fisbeck, The Vista.

OCCUPYING THE COURTS

The following day, U.S. District Judge Timothy DeGiusti granted Occupy OKC’s emergency motion to obtain a Temporary Restraining Order. This would prevent Oklahoma City police from from evicting or making any arrests after curfew in the meantime. A hearing was set for the following Wednesday, December 7, on Occupy OKC’s motion for preliminary injunction against the city. The judge also required protesters to post a $550 bond within five days.

The 43-page petition filed in federal court by Occupy OKC addressed point-by-point each reason the city was using to justify an eviction. As in most other cities giving protesters the boot, city officials claimed potential health and safety concerns were the reason for revocation of the group’s permit.. Occupy OKC countered that participants keep the park as clean as possible, but alleged that the city “has been dilatory about picking up trash at the park,” and that “the Defendant City refuses to provide running water to assist in clean up of the park.”

The group also argued that the city’s burdensome permit fees were bankrupting the organization. From the first day of occupation on October 10 until November 27 – the date the city refused to accept any more permit renewal fees – Occupy OKC paid the City of Oklahoma City a total of $2,680. Says the complaint:

Permit fees charged by the City, and the fees incurred for maintaining portable toilets on-site and service which is an express condition of the permit required by Defendants, have comprised over 90% of the expenses incurred by Occupy OKC. These fees are having the practical effect of starving

Occupy OKC and its political message by attrition of funds.”

In the week leading up to Occupy OKC’s court date, the city released information to the media designed to make Occupy OKC look like a burden to the taxpayers. The city claimed that it has spent in excess of $58,000 “protecting” the occupiers, including overtime pay for police officers. Wondering how the city could possibly blow through more money in two months than most Americans make in a year, Occupy OKC challenged the city to provide an itemized detail of expenses.

Plaintiffs dispute this assertion and would contend that Police conducted unnecessary surveillance of the park, even though two police stations are located within six blocks of Kerr Park and the response time from these stations to Kerr Park would be less than one minute. There is no reason that officers regularly assigned to patrol the downtown area could not have handled any and all calls relating to any activity at Kerr Park, and Occupy OKC did not request or require any extraordinary police presence or protection.”

Late in the afternoon, the city notified Occupy OKC that the planned police eviction set for that night was being postponed. Both sides agreed to wait until a federal judge could hear the case and nervously anticipated what would happen next.

After an exhausting day-long trial on Dec. 7 and an excruciatingly long weekend waiting for the federal judge to decide their fate, a ruling was issued on Dec. 12. The news wasn’t good. Judge DeGiusti’s denial order reads in part:

“The court concludes that plaintiffs have not satisfied their burden to show that the circumstances of the case warrant extraordinary relief and that a preliminary injunction should issue to prevent the city from proceeding to enforce its laws regulating the use of Kerr Park.”

Unlike numerous other cities across the country that openly defied overnight camping ordinances, Occupy OKC perhaps wisely decided to avoid the pepper spray and complied with the court’s ruling. On the night of Dec. 14, the occupiers assembled one last time to break down the tents and say their goodbyes to Poet’s Park.

The first Occupy OKC General Assembly meeting at Kerr Park, Oct. 7, 2011. Photo courtesy Curtis Ensler.

 POET’S PARK SITS EMPTY AND DARK

It was an emotional farewell. This was the place where more than 300 former strangers sweated out the first General Assembly in oppressive 112-degree heat. This was where we’d shared many meals together, debated politics, hatched ideas, shared life stories, laughed and quarreled. Here we marched in both the stifling heat and the freezing cold; camped in the pouring rain, experienced a 5.6 earthquake, and frantically battened down the hatches when the first winter storm came barreling in.

This is where we’d met an 18 year-old homeless man named Louis Rodriguez (aka “Street Poet”), who quickly became a beloved part of the camp family. When Street Poet was found dead in his tent here on Halloween, he became the first casualty of the occupy movement nationwide. His sudden death also had a profound impact on all of us personally. Occupy OKC even managed to track down his estranged family members and flew them in for Louis’ memorial service at this park, now unofficially re-named in his honor.

Everywhere you look around this park, there are memories. Strange how you can become so emotionally attached to a place in such a short period of time. Occupy OKC only resided here for two months, but for those who spent long hours working at the park daily or slept here night after night, it was home.

Only one tent was left behind as a symbolic reminder that the occupiers were once here. The park was otherwise left spic-and-span, with all trash disposed of and all evidence of our occupation erased. A couple of occupiers (who shall not be named for obvious reasons) climbed a tree and hung our battered old American flag from one of the high branches. The hope was that Old Glory would continue to fly long after we were gone. Unfortunately city crews tore down the flag the next day; an irony that wasn’t lost on us.

On Christmas Eve, Poet’s Park sat empty and dark. This once-bustling public square in the heart of downtown should have been glistening with colorful Christmas lights. If the occupiers were still here, there would be hot food cooking, music playing and conversations brewing. There would also be a safe and warm tent city for 20-30 homeless members of the 99% to sleep.

The true spirit of Christmas eluded Oklahoma City officials and a federal judge this holiday season. Here in the buckle of the Bible Belt, “foxes have holes, and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head.” (Matthew 8:20)

Unidentified occupier hangs Old Glory high in a tree on the final night of the occupation. Dec. 14, 2011. Photo courtesy Bronwyn Agnew.

LORI SPENCER is a veteran journalist and musician from Austin, Texas. The newest member of the ThisCantBeHappening! collective, she has visited eight occupy camps throughout the American heartland since early October. Currently she’s an embedded reporter with the Occupy Oklahoma City camp (while managing to squeeze in some holiday time with her family). Look for more of Lori’s traveling occupy journals on TCBH! in the months ahead. Keep up with her journey on Facebook and Twitter.

Occupier Jacob Vogt stands in a deserted Poet's Park on Christmas Eve, 2011. Photo by Eryn Nichole Short.

By Lori Spencer

Yahoo! News

Ron Paul is now the new Republican presidential frontrunner.

 

With the Iowa caucus now less than two weeks away, the formerly wide field of Republican presidential candidates is narrowing further. Early frontrunners, such as Rep. Michele Bachmann, Texas Gov. Rick Perry and businessman Herman Cain, have all taken a nosedive in recent public opinion polls. As is usually the case with politicians, the candidates’ own boneheaded blunders caused their fall from grace.

What lessons can the GOP learn from these “don’t-ever-do-that-again” mistakes?

 

 

Story continues at: http://news.yahoo.com/gop-learn-own-mistakes-003700574.html