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Occupy Underground
Related: About this forumOccupy Sandy builds worker power in Far Rockaway
http://wagingnonviolence.org/feature/occupy-sandy-builds-worker-power-in-far-rockaway/Three and a half months ago, the walls upstairs at the Church of the Prophecy in Far Rockaway, a low-income coastal neighborhood of New York City, were covered with maps of where help was most needed. The church was a hub for the Occupy Sandy relief effort after Hurricane Sandy. Now, nearly five months after the hurricane struck, the maps have been replaced by posters extolling the virtues of collective struggle and art made by neighborhood children enrolled in Occupy Sandys twice-weekly after-school program.
The kids missed a month and a half of school, explained Luis Casco, a member of the churchs congregation who pulled strings to help move Occupy into Far Rockaway. The after-school program was, in part, his brainchild. We figured wed start helping the kids and we could win over their parents. Then we could actually start bigger projects, he said.
One of those bigger projects is a worker-run cooperative initiative, organized by Occupy Sandy and supported by the Working World, an organization that specializes in incubating collectively owned businesses.
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Occupy Sandy builds worker power in Far Rockaway (Original Post)
starroute
Mar 2013
OP
Viva_La_Revolution
(28,791 posts)1. Kick!
Cooperatives are awesome.
sabrina 1
(62,325 posts)2. Excellent, building from the ground up and growing a movement
that is sorely needed, in the process.
It should be a priority that during these disasters children have access to education, even if it is provided by relief groups, or volunteers. This is the first time I have even seen that problem addressed.
limpyhobbler
(8,244 posts)3. A good read. Gives me hope. Thanks for posting.
antiquie
(4,299 posts)4. Quoting Richard Wolff from the link:
Richard Wolff, professor of economics at the New School and author of Democracy at Work, a study of cooperative businesses, argues that forming cooperatives can be the first step in enacting a sweeping social and economic shift. Wolff envisions a transformation, similar to the social shift from feudalism to capitalism, in which cooperatives replace corporations and goods are distributed through a democratically planned economy.
The cooperatives that Wolff talks about, and the ones that Occupy Sandy is aiming to establish, are more accurately known as worker self-directed enterprises: businesses that organize democratically collective ownership at the point of production.
When the workers get together and decide how to distribute the income in such an enterprise, would they give the CEO $25 million in stock bonuses while everybody else can barely get by? Wolff asks rhetorically.
A better world IS possible.