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99 Percent Declaration

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99 Percent Declaration
Website logo and
Washington State Route 99 road sign
CreatedOctober 7, 2011
RatifiedOctober 15, 2011
Locationthe99declaration.org
Author(s)Occupy Wall Street Demands Working Group
PurposeTo convene a national general assembly to petition for the redress of twenty suggested grievances and amend the United States Constitution

The 99 Percent Declaration is a political document including a list of suggested grievances on which Occupy Wall Street organizers have been trying to get Occupy movement protesters to vote. It calls for a United States General Assembly on July 4, 2012 in Philadelphia to support public works programs, tax hikes on the wealthiest, debt forgiveness, ways to get money out of politics, and amendment of the U.S. Constitution. The Declaration says the Assembly would operate like the Committees of Correspondence of the Founding Fathers of the United States who met in Philadelphia.

Occupy Wall Street at Washington Square Park (David Shankbone, 2011)


Background

On October 15, 2011, a The Working Group on the 99% Declaration published the Declaration of demands, goals, and solutions. However, according to Huffington Post blogger Tyler Kingkade, an email sent to him by a person involved in the NYCGA or the Demands Working Group said that New York City General Assembly official statements are agreed upon by consensus-based general assemblies, while another protester indicated that not all participants agree with issuing demands. The email added, "This matter was not submitted or agreed upon by the NYC general assembly, and therefore by-passed the process all OWS plans have been made through."

David Haack introduced a proposal outlining demands during the early planning stages of the Occupy Wall Street protests, but they were was struck down in late August. He discovered a "goals" working group and hoped that common ground could be found. Shawn Redding and others formed the working group in early October to establish specific actions they would use to formally ask federal, as well as local government to adopt. Due to the nature of the movement, that has been difficult in New York and other locations.

On October 31, 2011 the 99% Working Group on the 99% Declaration disappeared from the New York City General Assembly website. The group was deleted by "Stan Ford" a/k/a "TheStormKrow." Later that evening a member of the group began making disparaging remarks about the site administration team and the movement overall. The server logs show the group was deleted unilaterally by "Stan Ford". The Official NYC GA website, "Site News" stated that administrators of groups have the ability to delete their own group at any time and "This story gets especially intriguing, though, when the other group admin decided to blame the movement". According to political commentator, Taylor Marsh: "he one thing I’ve seen at OWS, the “working group” isn’t mentioned by name." She goes on to mention postings from OWS and "hat seems to indicate the issuers of the Declaration are not directly tied to OWS.

Further reading

References

  1. "The 99 Percent Declaration" the99declaration.org
  2. ^ Kingkade, T. (October 18, 2011) "Occupy Wall Street Protesters Propose A National Convention, Release Potential Demands" Huffington Post. Retrieved 20 October 2011
  3. ^ Duda, C. (October 19, 2011) "Occupy Wall Street Protesters Call for National General Assembly, Put Forward Possible Demands" Juvenile Justice Information Exchange
  4. ^ Walsh, J. (October 20, 2011) "Do we know what OWS wants yet?" Salon
  5. Kennedy, A.L. (October 22, 2011) "Protesters Plan to Occupy Williamsburg" Williamsburg Yorktown Daily
  6. ^ Haack, D. (October 24, 2011) "How the Occupy movement won me over" The Guardian
  7. Dunn, M. (October 19, 2011) "‘Occupy’ May Hold National Assembly In Philadelphia" CBS Philadelphia
  8. Elisabeth Jacobs, “Not So Demanding: Why Occupy Wall Street Need Not Make Demands (Yet)”, The Brookings Institute, November 3, 2011
  9. "Protesters Debate What Demands, if Any, to Make". The New York Times. Retrieved 11-3-11. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  10. "The NYCGA-True Hollywood Story: The 99Declaration Group, an Exposé". New York City General Assembly Official Website. Retrieved 11-3-11. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  11. ""The 99 Percent Declaration" from "An OWS Working Group"". TaylorMarsh.com. Retrieved 11-3-11. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)

External links

International human rights instruments
Declarations, manifestos, and resolutions
International law
Regional law
International humanitarian law
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