If You Don't Stand Up You Might As Well Lay Down

AS THE BIG BANKS POST RECORD PROFITS AND PAY OUT OBSCENE BONUSES, 
WHAT SHOULD WE THE PEOPLE DO: STAND UP OR ROLL OVER?



On February 1, 1960, four students sat down at a lunch counter at
 the former Woolworth’s store in Greensboro North Carolina.



4 students! Just four!



They were protesting racial segregation. They were denied 
service, harassed and arrested.



Greensboro was and still is a backwater, yet their courage and
 commitment sparked and helped drive a national movement that
 would, within a few years, transform this country.



Martin Luther King may have had the dream but they had a scheme—a
way of getting attention, a way of showing that if you want to
 make change, you have to be willing to act.



Few us remember their names. I knew one, Joseph McNeil, because he
 went to my high school in the Bronx before heading to AT&T, a
 traditionally black college, later famous as the school at which
 Jesse Jackson played football.



Today there is a marker down the street from where the Woolworth’s 
once stood. (At least there was when I was last there in the 80’s.)



Woolworths 
had once been one of the best-known brands in America for decades.



The chain went from fame to infamy to out of business. Lunch counters
 were soon out, and so was Woolworths despite its skycraper in downtown Manhattan. It would later be bought up, broken up,
 and sold off by an avaricious private equity firm, which, 
in a mad search for profits, drove the company under. Some stores survived 
in the UK and Australia but not in the USA. There used to be one across the street from where I live. It is now a GAP.



Sound familiar?



Formal segregation may be gone, even if an interracial couple
 couldn’t get a marriage license recently in Louisiana, but class separation 
and inequality in America has deepened sharply. The middle class
 that the Greensboro 4 hoped to join as college graduates is only a
 memory for many.



Black communities across this country have been savaged by the 
foreclosure crisis. Black unemployment is twice that of whites, a
 figure that in real terms stands at 20% or more. That means 40% 
for minorities!



Millions of families are going backwards to homelessness, and 
insecurity. Downward mobility is now a mass phenomenon. If you
 don’t believe me, look at your bank statement. Check out the added charges, look at your credit card.



These large banks are run by the miscreants FDR called 
“banksters." They are reporting super profits and giving out obscene
 bonuses. Their lobbyists are blocking new regulations and eroding
 old ones while presiding over the largest transfer of wealth 
in history from the working poor to the flamboyant super rich.



Racialization has been displaced by financialization. Now the 
“action” in the Tar Heel State is down the road in Charlotte where 
the Bank of America is based.



But can we still Bank On Banks Like The Bank Of America? 
(You may not recall but the first bank to go in the great Depression 
was called the Bank of the United States.)



Banks R’Us. Today, there are bank branches in almost every neighborhood—except 
the poorest ones where pay day lenders reign with their usury on
 their mind and in their interest rates. When it comes to credit, 
the poor pay more—and the banks know it and profit from it. There
 are also mortgage brokers galore in every community.



Fraud is 
their middle name. (I am not the only one saying this. The FBI denounces it as an “epidemic.” There are arrests every week.)



The many financial institutions and sleazy lenders are there to do business but they could also become 
convenient targets for civic engagement.



Can they be challenged? So far, very few have been. While the Banks are
 aggressively lobbying; citizens groups are passively sending
 e-mails. Never before have so many allowed so few to dominate this
 discourse. The banks are clearly winning over the regulators and critics. Even Barney Frank’s committee has capitulated.



Nevertheless, protests against the big banks are beginning. There
 will be one at the end of October at the American Banker’s 
Association convention and greed-fest in Chicago.



But you don’t have to go to “Sweet Home Chicago” to find targets 
of outrage, or even trek down to Wall Street. You know where you
 bank! True, many branches are just made up of ATM machines who 
want your money, not to hear from you. But the bigger branches are 
not far away. They advertise. They are everywhere, doing 
business as usual except lending to people who need it most.



Your money in; their profits out.



This could change or at least become “more challenging.” Think of the Greensboro 4, just a few people
 then made enough noise to get things going.



Today, you don’t have to call them sit-ins, just polite but firm 
and “protracted” conversations with the banksters. If a million 
people called their 800 numbers at once, what would happen? Why 
not informational picketing to advise consumers about how they are 
getting ripped off with high rates and excessive fees? Why not 
bring the pain of excessive debt and dispossession to the people 
who are causing it and profiting from it? Student loan victims, are 
you listening.



What if families who can’t afford day care turned their favorite 
branches into day care centers? What if their profits and bonuses 
were posted neatly on their windows? What if…. (You fill in the 
blank!)



Lets say, concerned folks assembled at key bank branches 
during the noon hour—Mondays at Chase, Tuesdays at BOA, Wednesdays 
at Wells Fargo, Thursdays at Wachovia, etc and then spent dress down
 Fridays at Goldman Sachs or Morgan Stanley?



I am sure the bankers will welcome the opportunity to “dialogue”
 with their enraged critics and customers. This can only work if it is
done regularly, week after week. One shots won’t work. They may make 
protesters feel good but that’s all they will accomplish.



You will be surprised because the acts of a few can inspire action by the many.
 Think of Brian Haw, camped out in front of the Parliament in London every day since the Iraq 
war started in 2003. He knows we are in a marathon, not a sprint!



You get where I am going? I am not sure where Fred Douglass 
banked, back in the days when companies like Lehman Brothers,
 before its fall, were financing the slave trade, but his mantra 
that without struggle, nothing changes still survives.



Nothing will change without making them uncomfortable. Anger, if
 not ‘deployed” like an unguided missile, has its uses.



The Banksters are terrified of what they call “economic populism.” 
I prefer to call it economic democracy. Even Barack Obama
 understood that years ago when he worked as a community organizer.
 I am not sure if he still does.



No one’s going to win a Nobel Prize in Economic Fairness for this
 type of non-violent activity but it will bring this issue out of
 the back pages of the business section where it is safely buried 
and into the front lobes of people’s minds.



Where are the activists blocking foreclosures or rallying at unemployment 
offices for extended benefits. Where is the push back against the health insurers?


Why are you asleep?



It’s so simple. The Greensboro 4 understood it decades ago. If you
 don’t stand up, you might as well lay down.



News Dissector Danny Schechter edits Mediachannel.org. His new 
film and book, THE CRIME OF OUR TIME is on the financial crisis as
 a crime story. Comments to dissector@mediachannel.org





Ann and I closed our bank accounts several months ago. We threw out our credit cards a year ago and stopped making payments. Yes, they began collection proceedings and we'll never be able to get credit cards again, or any credit for that matter. Yes, it's a hassle to pay bills since we have to get money orders. Yes, they will very likely put a lien on our house for the credit card debt we refuse to pay and will NEVER agree to pay.

We've applied for a loan modification through Chase to lower our house payment. If it doesn't come through we will also be walking away from our house. We're not afraid.

The banks own you and it's time to stop acting like slaves. It's time to take action and hit them where it hurts the most. In their financial pockets.

Close your bank accounts.
Throw away your credit cards.
Stop paying. Stop. Just Say 'Fuck No'

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Comment by Jeff on October 19, 2009 at 7:56pm
Yup, yup, yup, getting the rest of America to do the same thing would surely take control back and give us all a leg to stand on, BUT, most Americans are simply scared.

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