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Tag Archives: OCCUPY Movement

A Dark Night for America

22 Sunday Jul 2012

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Human Behavior, United States, Urban Violence

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Aurora/Colorado, Batman, Fragility of life, Guns, Human Mind, James Eagen Holmes, OCCUPY Movement, sociopathic behavior, Student loans, The Dark Knight Rises

US mourns victims of Colorado shooting – 20 July 2012

 Source: http://www.channelstv.com

 

Today, I join the families in Colorado and other US states who mourn the loss of their loved ones, snatched from them by the gunman, James Eagen Holmes. It is a tragic reminder of the fragility of our lives.

As I gleaned from media reports, James Holmes had everything in his favor for a successful life. The 24-year-old was a tall, white male from a middle-class American family, and a brilliant scholar with an honors neuroscience degree from the University of California Riverside and working towards his doctorate at the University of Colorado Denver. People who knew him described him as studious, shy, and a loner: Not unusual for highly intellectual individuals. Like millions of young people graduating from college, James struggled to find work after graduating in 2010. Presumably, he too has massive student loans to repay.

Before Thursday midnight, heralding July 20, James had never committed any criminal offence. Something went terribly wrong in James’ mind to turn him into a cold-blooded killer. Dressed head-to-toe in black riot gear like a SWAT officer, he gunned down seventy people in a dark theater in Aurora, Colorado, while they watched the special midnight showing of the Batman movie, The Dark Knight Rises. Of the seventy people shot, ten died on the spot, two died shortly afterward, and a number of others remain in critical condition.

As a mother of two young men, I am shaken by James’ sociopathic behavior. Such rage builds up over years, caused by any number of factors such as neglect, indifference, abuse, alienation, and loss of control over one’s life. Like most parents, we do our best, within our financial constraints, to raise our children along the path of acceptable behavior for living and succeeding in our society.

But we do not raise our children in a vacuum. They grow up in communities of other individuals: neighborhood, church, sports club, school, and others. They are exposed to other societal influences through the media, pop culture, and the ubiquitous Internet. Then there is the violence.

Violence surrounds us. We are a nation at war overseas and at war at home with the protestors of the Occupy Movement. The excessive violence used to dispel peaceful protestors is disconcerting. What does the behavior of adult authority at the highest levels teach mentally troubled young men like James Holmes?

Our electronic games and movies have become darker and more violent. Our fairy tales and comic book stories of our favorite superheroes have become violent films with dark themes. In the dark cinema, James Holmes emerged as the Dark Knight fighting crime in the world he lived in.

James Holmes is a reminder of the malleability of the human mind and the danger of making guns easily available to all.

International Workers’ Day: 1 May 2012

29 Sunday Apr 2012

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in United States, Working Life

≈ Comments Off on International Workers’ Day: 1 May 2012

Tags

Labor Day, May Day, Occupy May Day – General Strike, OCCUPY Movement

 

Labor Day is commemorated internationally on May 1. For this reason, the day is also known as May Day. It is a national holiday in more than 80 countries – including Guyana and Brazil – during which workers and their labor unions organize street demonstrations and marches.

In the United States, Labor Day is not celebrated until the first Monday in September (3 September 2012). Nevertheless, on Tuesday, 1 May 2012, the OCCUPY Movement has organized an Occupy May Day – General Strike.

No work – no school – no shopping – no banking – no trading.

Learn more about events planned for that day in your city at occupywallst.org.

Year 2011: Reflections

01 Sunday Jan 2012

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in Social Injustice, United States

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

financial institutions, Freeway to Destruction, giant corporations, OCCUPY Movement, self destruction, Year 2011, Year 2012

Source: http://www.designdazzling.com

Launching and maintaining this blog was an important achievement in 2011. Thanks to a 2011 in blogging report from WordPress, I know that visitors have come from the United States, Canada, Guyana and the Caribbean, Brazil and other countries in South America, Europe, South Africa, Asia, and Australia.

I would like to thank each one of you for stopping by and sharing my vision of our world. A special thanks to those of you who follow my blog and have taken the time to share your own thoughts. In this New Year 2012, may each one of you realize your goals and find the happiness and fulfillment you seek.

As I reflected on the Year 2011 during the past week, I was overwhelmed with thoughts of the challenges We-The-People have faced in the United States and around the world.

I will remember the Year 2011 as the year the economic crisis swept away two of my close friends. In the face of their loss, I was powerless to bring about the changes they needed to restore the lifestyle they once enjoyed. Losing one’s spacious, three-bedroom home and motor vehicle is a terrible blow to one’s self-esteem.

Like my friends, millions of Americans have lost their jobs and their homes. With Sears and Kmart planning to close as many as 120 stores in this New Year 2012, the future is bleak for those workers who will be laid off.

I have lost my trust in the US government’s ability to lead the world towards a brighter future for all.

I have lost my trust in the members of our government to put the well-being of We-The-People before their own personal interests.

I have lost my trust in our financial institutions and giant corporations to put the interests of We-The-People before their profits and billionaire salaries.

I have lost my trust in those who have coveted Earth’s resources for their own enrichment.

I have lost my trust in our species to protect and save our planet from self-destruction.

I have lost my trust in those who say one thing and do another.

In the face of deprivation and uncertainty about tomorrow, many Americans have begun to reevaluate their lives; to question the validity of amassing stuff; to focus more on spending time with family and friends; and to protest against the great divide between the Top One Percent and the rest of our nation.

The Occupy Movement – started in New York in September 2011 and spread across our planet – is the only positive sign I see for getting off the Freeway to Destruction in the Year 2012. I foresee a long struggle of detoxification from our myriad addictions: easy gains, oil, drugs, consumerism, and pornography, to name a few.

I have learned in life that it is through adversity that our strength, generosity, and goodwill towards others become manifest. My hope for the Year 2012 is that justice, truth, and good sense will prevail.

Giving Thanks during Difficult Times

20 Sunday Nov 2011

Posted by Rosaliene Bacchus in United States

≈ Comments Off on Giving Thanks during Difficult Times

Tags

99 Percent, Charitable volunteer workers, Giving thanks, OCCUPY Movement, Thanksgiving Day, Top One Percent, Turkey and pumpkin pie

On Thursday, November 24, Americans will celebrate Thanksgiving Day. For many offices and businesses, it will be a four-day weekend holiday break. Celebrated yearly on the fourth Thursday of November, Thanksgiving Day is a special time of the year for families and friends to get together for a special meal and give thanks for the blessings in their lives.

After celebrating seven Thanksgiving meals since moving to California, I have observed that turkey with stuffing and gravy, cranberry sauce, and pumpkin pie are a must on this special day. I am not a great lover of turkey, but I am developing an appreciation for pumpkin pie. I remember, with thanks, last Thanksgiving when I shared the best pumpkin pie, so far, at the home of a writer friend.

When the United States was an agricultural-based society, Thanksgiving was a time for celebrating the end of the harvest season and of giving thanks for a good harvest. In our industrialized and technological world, we can measure our harvest by the returns from our businesses, factories, professional pursuits, and jobs.

During these times of job shortages and dwindling consumers for our products and professional services, the harvest is poor or lost for millions of families across the United States and many other countries across our planet. Without assistance, the homeless, jobless, and hungry among us will have no cause for celebration or for giving thanks this Thanksgiving.

I give thanks, this Thanksgiving, for the benefactors and charitable volunteer workers who provide assistance to our families in crisis.

I give thanks for the protestors of the OCCUPY Movement across our nation who are facing the cold, pepper spray, tear gar, police beatings, and arrest to clamor for an end to the growing inequality among us: the Top One Percent get richer while the remaining 99 Percent get poorer.

I give thanks for the people currently in my life, especially my two sons who make it possible for me to be a writer; for the people in journeys past who reached out a hand or changed the course of my life; and for the beauty and gifts of our planet.

If, this thanksgiving, your life is more like that of a person groping in the darkness along the edge of a precipice, know that help comes in unexpected ways from strangers who care. Give thanks for the miracles each day brings. You are not alone.

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