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View Full Version : Die-in at Minn. Gov. Pawlenty’s office



Communist
25th March 2010, 04:02
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Die-in at Minnesota Governor Pawlentys office (http://www.fightbacknews.org/2010/3/24/die-minnesota-governor-pawlenty-s-office?utm_source=Fight%20Back%21%20News%20Service&utm_campaign=2a56354989-UA-743468-8&utm_medium=email)

These cuts would kill

March 23, 2010

http://www.fightbacknews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article-lead-photo/die-in-at-pawlenty4.jpg (http://www.governor.state.mn.us/contacts/index.htm)

St. Paul, MN -

Tombstones and bodies filled the halls outside the Governors office here, March 23, as participants in a die-in demonstrated against the effects of Governor Pawlentys proposed cuts in health and human services.

Members of the Welfare Rights Committee (http://welfarerightsmn.wordpress.com/) and the Minnesota Coalition for a Peoples Bailout (http://www.mn-peoples-bailout.org/), along with other social justice groups, joined the protest.

Joanne Gonzalez and Angel Buechner spoke at the press conference before the action, explaining the potential devastation of Pawlentys cuts and spoke out against further cuts that are being proposed by Democrats in the House of Representatives.

According to Kim DeFranco, of the Welfare Rights Committee, Pawlentys proposed budget cuts are the most hurtful, illogical, inhumane and criminal to date. If these cuts are passed in this 2010 legislative session, it would bring more harm and devastation to many families that are already struggling. As we continue face severe economic crisis, there is a need more than ever for the very programs that Pawlenty is proposing to cut! Pawlenty is leaving office, but first he is trying to sink Minnesota.

While the event started as a die-in, it soon morphed into loud and defiant chanting and drumming. For nearly 30 minutes, the capitol building rang with, Hey hey! Ho ho! Pawlentys cuts have got to go!

Security guards eventually shut the doors to the governors reception room, only to have to witness dozens of tombstone-shaped signs that protesters pushed underneath the door.

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Ramon Mercador
25th March 2010, 06:07
IT is horrible the kinds of attacks on workers that are going on. I wish we ont he left could put aside the sectarian crap for a minute to fight against this.

Long live Stalin

Communist
29th March 2010, 05:37
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Parent responds to TV attack on
school kids joining protest

Commentary (http://www.fightbacknews.org/2010/3/27/parent-responds-tv-attack-school-kids-joining-protest) by Jess Sundin

Minneapolis, MN - We have a social safety net that is nearly gone, and the politicians are stealing the last crumbs from the tables of our state's poorest families. Not only do they ignore our kids when they cut the budget, they try to hide the fact that children make up the majority of impoverished people in this country.

http://www.fightbacknews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article-lead-photo/die-in-at-pawlenty4.jpg (http://www.fightbacknews.org/2010/3/27/parent-responds-tv-attack-school-kids-joining-protest)

So, yesterday [March 23], the children of welfare rights activists, as well as middle school students from my daughters school, participated in a protest at the governor's office. Two local TV stations ignored the crisis that budget cuts will create for our families, and instead criticized parents and schools for having children participate the protest.

One says we're using our kids as pawns, when they know nothing about the issues protesting. The other takes a play from the tea party playbook, complaining that a publicly-funded school took students on a field trip to a protest.

At Southside Family School, my daughter is getting a great education. After just a few months in kindergarten, she can read those cardboard signs folks hold up beside the road, "Will work for food." She asks me about it, and I choose not to lie to her.

Like most kids her age, she pays attention to the world around her, and she has opinions about it. She knows it's bad to be hungry. She knows how important it is to have a place to call home. She even knows that medicine makes her feel better when she's sick. Some kids know it even more personally; their parents cant choose to shelter them from the hard knocks of life - 20% of American kids live in poverty.

You don't need to be 18 years old to believe that everyone should have their basic needs met. You shouldn't have to wait until you vote, before you can speak up and be counted.

And really, is it such a crazy idea? Okay, maybe not everyone blames the governor, or the capitalist system... but can't we all agree that children shouldn't live in poverty? So, you take your kids to church to ask God to take care of it, and I'll take mine to a protest to ask the government to take care of it.

One of the most wonderful things about children is their idealism. My daughter believes everyone CAN have what they need. And she believes that WE can change the world to be that. How could I teach her to ignore reality, teach her that she has nothing to say about how her world is, or teach her that she cannot help shape it?

The media stories criticize us for teaching our kids to hate. Have they ever watched their own news reports? And all that air time given to racist, tea bagger rants? I do not teach my child to hate, and I don't think most of us do. I teach her that some things are right, and some things are wrong. And I teach her that if someone is doing the wrong thing, you should speak up and try to stop them.

I teach her that Gov. Pawlenty is responsible for his choices, just as she is for hers. And I teach her that people can change - and they should. The entire spirit of a protest is that the people in power have a choice - they can choose to act differently. This is how I talk to my daughter.

She's five, I don't tell her everything (like that it's not in the Governors interest to act differently, and it is only pressure from outside, from poor and working people and our allies, that will make him change). I also don't tell her that some people hate queer folks, like her two mamas. I do tell her that some people don't like us, but they are wrong. And yup, we don't like Gov. Pawlenty. Give me one good reason why our family should like him?

It is a good and positive thing to teach children that they have power, that they have a voice. If we hope to see a better world one day, our children will need confidence in their own strength to bring it about.

That is exactly what makes Southside such a wonderful school. Our children learn about social justice and are taught progressive values. But they are not brainwashed, or set up as props for protesters. On the contrary, our kids learn about the issues they become involved in. And not just the he said-she said of "both sides." They learn the background, the statistics, the history. Southside holds up the example of the Civil Rights movement to say that protests can make change. It makes sense that sometimes, students go out into the world, and put what they are studying into practice. They can see and decide for themselves - by doing - whether and how to have an impact on the world around them.

So, cheers to all the students, children and youth who are taking it to the streets and speaking out for justice in the world. We need you!

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