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Thirty Years of Unleashed Greed! http://www.readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/7468-occupy-wall-street-take-the-bull-by-the-horns

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Occupy Wall StreetOccupy TogetherOccupy D.C.Occupy OaklandOccupy ChicagoOccupy Boston, Occupy San FranciscoOccupy Los Angeles

Use this address: ows@readersupportednews.org



Occupy Worldwide

Reader Supported News Special Coverage

26 October 11

 

 


Oakland Mayor Jean Quan's Office: 510-238-3141
Oakland Chief of Police Christopher Bolton: 510-238-3131
Oakland Mayor's Web Contact Page


Occupy Oakland Website: occupyoakland.org 
Occupy Oakland Facebook Page: Occupy Oakland

 

Iraq Veteran Shot in Head With Tear Gas Canister

By kresling

26 October 11

Occupy Oakland - Iraq Veteran Shot in Head With Teargas Canister

 

IVAW Statement on Injuries Sustained by Marine Veteran Scott Olsen at the Siege of Occupy Oakland Encampment.

By Iraq Veterans Against the War

27 October 11

Late Tuesday night, Scott Olsen, a former Marine, two-time Iraq war veteran, and member of Iraq Veterans Against the War, sustained a skull fracture after being shot in the head with a police projectile while peacefully participating in an Occupy Oakland march. The march began at a downtown library and headed towards City Hall in an effort to reclaim a site - recently cleared by police - that had previously served as an encampment for members of the 99% movement.

Scott joined the Marines in 2006, served two-tours in Iraq, and was discharged in 2010. Scott moved to California from Wisconsin and currently works as a systems network administrator in Daly, California.

Scott is one of an increasing number of war veterans who are participating in America's growing Occupy movement. Said Keith Shannon, who deployed with Scott to Iraq, "Scott was marching with the 99% because he felt corporations and banks had too much control over our government, and that they weren't being held accountable for their role in the economic downturn, which caused so many people to lose their jobs and their homes."

Scott is currently sedated at a local hospital awaiting examination by a neurosurgeon. Iraq Veterans Against the Wars sends their deepest condolences to Scott, his family, and his friends. IVAW also sends their thanks to the brave folks who risked bodily harm to provide care to Scott immediately following the incident.


Iraq Veterans Against the War is nonprofit 501(c)3 advocacy group of veterans and active-duty US military personnel who have served in the U.S. Military since September 11, 2001. IVAW currently has over 1,400 members in fifty states, as well as in Canada, Europe, Iraq and Afghanistan.

 

Thirty Years of Unleashed Greed

By Robert Scheer, Truthdig

27 October 11

t is class warfare. But it was begun not by the tear-gassed, rain-soaked protesters asserting their constitutionally guaranteed right of peaceful assembly but rather the financial overlords who control all of the major levers of power in what passes for our democracy. It is they who subverted the American ideal of a nation of stakeholders in control of their economic and political destiny.

Between 1979 and 2007, as the Congressional Budget Office reported this week, the average real income of the top 1 percent grew by an astounding 275 percent. And that is after payment of the taxes that the superrich and their Republican apologists find so onerous.

Those three decades of rampant upper-crust greed unleashed by the Reagan Revolution of the 1980s will be well marked by future historians recording the death of the American dream. In that decisive historical period the middle class began to evaporate and the nation's income gap increased to alarming proportions. "As a result of that uneven growth," the CBO explained, "the distribution of after-tax household income in the United States was substantially more unequal in 2007 than in 1979: The share of income accruing to higher-income households increased, whereas the share accruing to other households declined.... The share of after-tax household income for the 1 percent of the population with the highest income more than doubled...."READ MORE

 

Oakland Mayor Jean Quan's About-Face

By Lauren Kelley, AlterNet

27 October 11

This is rather incredible. Oakland Mayor Jean Quan released a statement late last night saying she now supports the Occupy Oakland protesters and will minimize police presence for the time being. The statement comes less than 48 hours after local police used excessive force against protesters, including rubber bullets, stun grenades, sound cannons, and tear gas. One protester, an Iraq war veteran named Scott Olsen, was shot with a projectile at close range, fracturing his skull and landing him in critical condition. [Update: Olsen's condition has since been upgraded to fair.] READ MORE

 

New TV Ad Rips Jean Quan: "Stop the Police Brutality"

By Joe Garofoli, SF Gate

27 October 11

The national heat continues to pour in on Oakland Mayor Jean Quan for her administration's tear-gas-firing reaction to the Occupy Oakland demonstrations. First, Current TV's Keith Olbermann called on her to resign. Then Jon Stewart mocked her.

And throughout Friday, the liberal online hub MoveOn.org will begin airing a minute-long ad on ABC, NBC and CBS in the Bay Area ripping Oakland's use of tear gas Tuesday to disperse the Occupiers.

"Mayor Quan," the ad's narrator says over the image of a smoke-filled Frank Ogawa Plaza "is this your city? Is this how we treat free speech in the United States of America?" READ MORE

MoveOn.org will release an ad calling for an end to the police brutality at Occupy Oakland, and urging people to demand Mayor Quan take responsibility.

 

#OccupyOakland Plans Vigil for Marine Injured During Tuesday Protests

By Patricia Decker, Bay City News

27 October 11

"Occupy Oakland" protest organizers are planning a vigil tonight for a Marine veteran who was critically injured during protests Tuesday.

Scott Olsen, who has served two tours in the Iraq War, remains at Highland Hospital for treatment of injuries sustained when law enforcement officers used tear gas, rubber bullets and smoke grenades in an attempt to disperse an assembly that formed near 14th Street and Broadway. (You can watch video - warning, there is profanity - from KTVU of the march and crowd dispersal here, which a friend of the Appeal describes as "essential." - EB)

The protests Tuesday night were in response to the police removal of the protesters' encampment at Frank Ogawa Plaza. Olsen, 24, of Daly City, was hit in the head with a police projectile, according to the group Iraq Veterans Against the War. READ MORE

 

Occupy Oakland: Too Big to Fail, Too Big to Jail

By Van Jones and Jakada Imani, Reader Supported News

27 October 11

As two activists who have called Oakland home, we are appalled at the events of our city in the last 36 hours. Last night the country joined us to watch in anguish as the Oakland Police Department, with back up from a dozen law enforcement agencies from around the region, used excessive levels of force against hundreds of mostly peaceful Occupy Oakland protesters. In a city with a long and painful record of police violence, it is especially disturbing to witness scenes of women, children, the elderly, and the disabled under assault by rubber bullets and tear gas.

This kind of crackdown is bad for our democracy, and it's bad for public safety. Mayors and police chiefs at Occupy sites across the country should take note: this is the wrong way to respond to the Occupy movement.

Oakland, one of the most ethnically diverse cities in the nation, is a true reflection of the 99%. For this reason, the Occupy movement stands directly for the people of Oakland - so many of whom have lost their homes, lost their jobs, and lost the services they rely on. Our city's unemployment rate is over 10%. People are angry. Let us not forget that this frustration and anger is real and justified. READ MORE

 

Cities Begin Cracking Down on 'Occupy' Protests

By Jesse Mckinley and Abby Goodnough, The New York Times

27 October 11

After weeks of cautiously accepting the teeming round-the-clock protests spawned by Occupy Wall Street, several cities have come to the end of their patience and others appear to be not far behind.

Here in Oakland, in a scene reminiscent of the antiwar protests of the 1960s, the police filled downtown streets with tear gas late Tuesday to stop throngs of protesters from re-entering a City Hall plaza that had been cleared of their encampment earlier in the day. And those protests, which resulted in more than 100 arrests and at least one life-threatening injury, appeared ready to ignite again on Wednesday night as supporters of the Occupy movement promised to retake the square. Early Wednesday evening, city officials were trying to defuse the situation, opening streets around City Hall, though the encampment site was still fenced off. READ MORE

 

Voters Back Wall Street Protesters, Millionaire's Tax

By Quinnipiac University

27 October 11

New York State voters agree 58 - 28 percent with the views of the Wall Street protesters, as 60 percent of voters understand the protesters' views "fairly well" or "very well," according to a Quinnipiac University poll released today. Voters also back the "Millionaire's Tax" more than 2-1, as even Republicans back the measure.

Agreement with the protesters is 74-12 percent among Democrats and 57-30 percent among independent voters, while Republicans disagree 53-32 percent, the independent Quinnipiac University poll finds.

A total of 63 percent of New York City voters understand the protesters "very well" or "fairly well" and agreement is 66-22 percent. Understanding is 58 percent among suburban voters, with agreement at 50-36 percent. Understanding is 56 percent among upstate voters with agreement at 54 - 30 percent.

By an overwhelming 82-13 percent, New York State voters say it's "OK that they are protesting." Republicans support the right to protest 71-22 percent, with strong agreement among all groups in all regions.READ MORE

 

Occupy San Francisco: Tense Standoff Between Police, Protesters

By Maria L. La Ganga, Lee Romney and Robert J. Lopez, Los Angeles Times

27 October 11

A tense standoff continued Thursday morning between San Francisco police and Occupy San Francisco protesters. Police have called on the protesters to leave Justin Herman Plaza, saying the camps pose a threat to public health.

Earlier, protesters and police faced off along the Embarcadero near the Ferry Building as officers clad in riot gear chased people who had gathered in the area.

But as of 4:30 a.m., police had not moved in to arrest protesters, according to the San Jose Mercury News, which described a festive scene with people dancing and chanting at the camp. READ MORE

 

Oakland Police and Mayor Face Fresh Protest Over Critical Wounding of Veteran

By Andrew Gumbel, Guardian UK

27 October 11

Protesters have returned to downtown Oakland, California, to demand the resignation of the city's mayor and an investigation to explain how an Iraq war veteran, Scott Olsen, was hit in the head by a tear gas canister at close range, leaving him critically injured.

About 2,000 people - half as many as Tuesday night - massed in front of City Hall on Wednesday, tearing down a steel barricade intended to keep them off the grass in Frank Ogawa Plaza. When the city closed down a nearby underground station, preventing dispersing protesters going home, they organised a spontaneous march through the centre of the city, chanting: "Whose streets? Our streets!"

Police had been under orders to let them have the run of the plaza until 10pm. Officers stood guard at junctions in patrol cars and motorbikes to deter people from jumping up on to an overhead freeway. The police were more low key than on Tuesday, when they manned barricades around the plaza and fired volley after volley of teargas that filled the surrounding streets and smoked out businesses. READ MORE

 

OWS Protesters in NYC Proclaim Solidarity With Demonstrators in Oakland, Atlanta

By Kerry Burke, John Doyle and Joe Kemp, NYDaily News

27 October 11

Protesters stormed through downtown Manhattan on Wednesday night to proclaim solidarity with fellow demonstrators who were forced out of encampments in Oakland, Calif., and Atlanta, Ga.

The drama unfolded when about 400 Occupy Wall Street protesters marched from Zuccotti Park to City Hall only to be met by a swarm of cops about 9 p.m. The crowd quickly rerouted and began walking up Broadway towards Union Square only to be met by a police barricade near Reade St.

As organizers tried in vain to call off the march, scores of demonstrators splintered off and broke through a wall of cops - some of them even swiping a roll of orange netting used to kettle the large crowd. "We wanted to go to City Hall to show solidarity with Oakland," said Katama Rose, 22. "We wanted to come out and talk about how that wasn't okay." READ MORE

 

Occupy Protesters Rally Around Wounded Veteran

By erry Collins, AP

27 October 11

Veering around police barricades, anti-Wall Street protesters held a late-night march through Oakland streets, a day after one of their number - an Iraq War veteran - was left in critical condition with a fractured skull following a clash with police.

The show of force in Oakland along with SWAT arrests in Atlanta have sent chills among some anti-Wall Street demonstrators, and protesters elsewhere rallied in support around the injured veteran, Scott Olsen.READ MORE

 

MARINES TO OAKLAND POLICE: 'You Did This to My Brother'

By Robert Johnson and Linette Lopez, Business Insider

27 October 11

Marines around the world are outraged by the injuries inflicted by police on Scott Olsen at Tuesday's Occupy Oakland protests. Olsen is in a medically-induced coma after getting hit in the head by a police projectile.READ MORE

 

St Paul's Cathedral Canon Resigns

By Riazat Butt, Shiv Malik and Lizzy Davies, Guardian UK

27 October 11

The canon chancellor of St Paul's Cathedral, the Rev Dr Giles Fraser, has resigned in protest at plans to forcibly remove protesters from its steps, saying he could not support the possibility of "violence in the name of the church."

Speculation grew in the last 24 hours that Fraser, a leading leftwing voice in the Church of England, would resign because he could not sanction the use of police or bailiffs against the hundreds of activists who have set up camp in the grounds of the cathedral in the past fortnight.

Just after 9am on Thursday, Fraser tweeted: "It is with great regret and sadness that I have handed in my notice at St Paul's Cathedral." READ MORE

 

Protesters Rally Around Trading Tax

By Eliza Newlin Carney, Roll Call

27 October 11

Known in Occupy movement parlance as the "Robin Hood tax," taxes on trades of stocks, bonds and derivatives are getting a fresh look on Capitol Hill and may draw thousands of protesters to Washington, D.C., next week. Helping lead the charge are an unlikely breed of tax activist: registered nurses.

At least 1,000 nurses are expected to rally in front of Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner's office on Nov. 3, on the eve of the G-20 finance ministers meeting in Cannes, France, where a European transaction tax will be on the agenda. That group is led by the AFL-CIO affiliate National Nurses United, which already organized two rallies in Manhattan and D.C. in June around the slogan: "Tax Wall Street and heal Main Street." The nurses are also helping organize protests in Europe. READ MORE

 

#OccupyWallStreet Protestors Can Now Occupy URLs

By NY Convergence

26 October 11

The Occupy Wall Street movement has been expansive, spreading from Lower Manhattan to the all over the world, and now its message can be vocalized on any website. According to Mashable, a program called Occupy the URL will turn an website into a protest, replete with images of Occupy Wall Street protesters popping-up. Users need only insert the URL of the website they want to occupy. READ MORE

 

Occupy Protests Around the World: Full List Visualised

By Simon Rogers

27 October 11

The Occupy protests have spread from Wall Street to London to Bogota. See the full list - and help us add more. READ MORE

 

The Classroom at the End of the Occupation
A Report From the Sidelines of Oakland

By Clifton Ross, RSN-Writing for Godot

26 October 11

The first tweet from the Occupy Oakland had gone out just a few minutes before three and we managed to make it to the plaza in about half an hour. When my wife Marcy and I arrived at Frank Ogawa Plaza, now redubbed, "Oscar Grant Plaza," the flimsy barricades, some consisting of milk crates, had already been installed in preparation for the police attack. The occupiers, most with bandanas or scarves covering their faces as some sort of protection or guard for anonymity, worked as if directed, though there was no one directing. It soon became clear that this was a problem. This was, in a sense, THE problem. After two weeks occupying the plaza, the "leadership" wasn't leading; the unity of cause wasn't a unity of action, and the occupation was now facing a very highly disciplined, well-armed, uniform and uniformed force, organized in a strict hierarchy to move as one body with a very specific objective. It was the Spanish Civil War in miniature and this pathetic last stand of anarchists against a professional military force would end similarly, a fact that was obvious beforehand, at least obvious to many, despite all the bravado of a group carrying black flags and hidden behind hoodies and scarves and the frankly ridiculous barricades, two-feet high in places. READ MORE

 

Oakland PD Fractures Skull of Marine Corps Vet Scott Olsen

By Veterans For Peace, Statement

26 October 11

Veterans For Peace member, Scott Olsen, a Marine Corps veteran twice deployed to Iraq, is in hospital now in stable but serious condition with a fractured skull, struck by a police projectile fired into a crowd in downtown Oakland, California in the early morning hours of today. Other people were injured in the assault and many were arrested after Oakland police in riot gear were ordered to evict people encamped in the ongoing "Occupy Oakland" movement. Olsen is also a member of Iraq Veterans Against the War.

VFP members are involved with dozens of these local "occupy movement" encampments and we support them fully. In Boston, for example, our members, wearing VFP shirts and carrying VFP flags, stood between a line of police and the encampment, urging police to "join the 99%" and not evict the protesters. In that case, several of our members were banged and bruised when the police decided instead to carry out their eviction orders.

In Oakland last night, a similar thing happened, according to VFP Chapter 69 member and Navy veteran, Joshua Sheperd, who said he went to downtown Oakland "to see if, as a VFP member, I could help still the anger ... to be between the police and the protesters ... it seemed unconscionable to me that the police use the cover of darkness like that to do what they were doing." Fortunately, he was not injured in the police assault that left Olsen with a fractured skull. READ MORE

 

FOCUS: Marc Ash | A Witness to the Violence in Oakland

By Marc Ash, Reader Supported News

26 October 11

If Gandhi was right, yesterday's Civil Resistance Action in Oakland, California, achieved all of its aims. By day's end a heavily-armed, fully-militarized police force was in control of Frank Ogawa Plaza, but Occupy Oakland was in control of the agenda.

Two major confrontations occurred between police and protesters in Oakland, both marked by non-violent restraint on the part of the protesters and a lack of restraint - each time leading to violence - by the police.

The day began with a fully-coordinated assault by riot police on Occupy Oakland's encampment in Frank Ogawa Plaza. The police have charged one protester with resisting arrest. What is not in dispute is that they used tear gas, beanbag shotgun rounds and rubber bullets. In all, 95 protesters were arrested, mostly charged with unlawful camping violations. READ MORE

 

Occupy Atlanta Protesters to Be Freed on Signature Bonds

By Mike Morris, Christian Boone and Rhonda Cook, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

26 October 11

A judge on Wednesday ruled that all 52 people arrested in the Occupy Atlanta protest could be released on signature bonds. Atlanta Municipal Judge Crystal Gaines set a March 9 arraignment hearing for the protesters, who were being returned to the Atlanta City Jail to be processed and released. Gaines said that any of the protesters who are homeless could provide an Occupy Atlanta address in signing their bonds. The protesters were arrested overnight when police cleared Woodruff Park after more than two weeks of protests. The hearings had been scheduled to begin at 8 a.m. but did not get under way until noon. READ MORE

 

'Occupy' Likely to be Word of the Year

By Julie Moos, Poyter Institute

26 October 11

"Occupy" is a strong contender for word of the year, says Ben Zimmer, who leads the New Words Committee of the American Dialect Society, which selected "app" last year and "tweet" in 2009. Other possibilities for 2011 include "winning" (thanks, Charlie Sheen) and "downgrade" (courtesy of the US credit rating). Zimmer tells Brooke Gladstone that the word "occupy" has been around in English since the 14th century, but it was used to describe protests - by Italian factory workers - for the first time in 1920. READ MORE

 

Occupy Denver Says Some Protesters Suffer Hypothermia

By Alan Gathright, KMGH Denver

26 October 11

As the first major snowstorm of the season hit Denver overnight, Occupy Denver protesters said several people suffering from hypothermia had to be removed from Lincoln Park. With rain falling Tuesday night and temperatures dropping into the 30s, a Denver police officer warned activists that they had to take down tents and other structures in the park because they were violating local ordinances, according to a YouTube video titled, "People will die in the cold," posted by activists. "All right, people are going to die tonight," a protester replied on the video. Another activist told the officer the tents "are not coming down." READ MORE

 

D.C. Douglas: 'Why #OccupyWallStreet? 4 Reasons.'

By D.C. Douglas

26 October 11

D.C. Douglas: 'Why #OccupyWallStreet? 4 Reasons.'

Actor, voiceover talent and non-political figure D.C. Douglas chimes in with his take on OWS-Occupy Wall Street.

 

Matt Taibbi | Wall Street Isn't Winning – It's Cheating

By Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone

26 October 11

I was at an event on the Upper East Side last Friday night when I got to talking with a salesman in the media business. The subject turned to Zucotti Park and Occupy Wall Street, and he was chuckling about something he'd heard on the news.

"I hear [Occupy Wall Street] has a CFO" he said. "I think that's funny."

"Okay, I'll bite," I said. "Why is that funny?" READ MORE

 

Police Raid Occupy Atlanta

By Errin Haines, Associated Press

26 October 11

With helicopters hovering overhead, police moved into a downtown Atlanta park and arrested around 50 Occupy Wall Street protesters who had been encamped there for about two weeks early Wednesday.

Like in many other cities, protesters had been camping in Woodruff Park to rally against what they see as corporate greed and a wide range of other economic issues.

Before police moved in, protesters were warned a couple times around midnight to vacate the park or risk arrest. READ MORE

 

Who's Afraid of Elizabeth Warren?

By Samuel P. Jacobs, The Daily Beast

25 October 11

Elizabeth Warren is running for office in the most high-profile race in the country not involving Barack Obama. It's a position that calls for some tact. So what does she think about the Occupy Wall Street protests that are roiling the country? "I created much of the intellectual foundation for what they do," she says. "I support what they do."

Warren's boast isn't bluster: As a professor of commercial law at Harvard and the force behind Obama's consumer-protection bureau, Warren has been one of the most articulate voices challenging the excesses of Wall Street. Still, she enjoys an outsize celebrity for an academic and bureaucrat: a favorite guest of Jon Stewart, Warren, 62, has become a hero to the left, a villain to the right, and a fascination for everyone in between. READ MORE

 

Moving to Re-Occupy

Marc Ash, RSN

5:05:pm:pdt

The crowd assembled at the Oakland Library is about to march back down 14th Street to Frank Ogawa Plaza with the intent of re-occupying the barricaded former encampment.

 

Update 04 From Occupy Oakland

Marc Ash, RSN

4:45:pm:pdt

A crowd of over 2,000 has rallied at the Oakland Library in opposition to the raid on the Occupy Oakland encampment and police brutality.

They are chanting, "This will not end here."

The police are here in force, but right now powerless to act.

 

"Meeting at the (Oakland) library is getting big."

Marc, Ash RSN

4:07:pm:pdt

 

Mayors Across US Begin Arresting OWS Protesters

By Patrik Jonsson, The Christian Science Monitor

25 October 11

Hundreds of arrests have already taken place, most of them coming in September when protesters blocked the Brooklyn Bridge in New York. Police cleared smaller camps in San Francisco, San Diego, and Cincinnati this weekend. Chicago police arrested 130 people as they cleared Grant Park on Sunday, though protesters say they would not be deterred. "We're not going anywhere," Occupy spokesman Joshua Kaunert told the Associated Press. READ MORE

 

Tahrir Square Protesters Send Message of Solidarity to OWS

By Jack Shenker, Guardian UK

25 October 11

Egyptian activists who helped topple former dictator Hosni Mubarak have lent their support to the growing Occupy movement in the United States and Europe, a further sign that links between global pro-change protests appear to be growing.

A message of solidarity issued by a collective of Cairo-based campaigners declared: "We are now in many ways involved in the same struggle," adding: "What most pundits call 'The Arab Spring' has its roots in the demonstrations, riots, strikes and occupations taking place all around the world." READ MORE

 

Occupy Oakland "Not Finished"

By Brock Keeling, SFist

25 October 11

After this morning's temporary disembowelment of Occupy Oakland by the city of Oakland, the group sent out a strongly worded message in which they claim a) "it's not finished" and b) that they will regroup this afternoon to plan their next move. At the request of city officials, police moved in on Frank Ogawa Plaza - shortsightedly renamed Oscar Grant Plaza by a few unfocused activists - between 3 a.m. and 5 a.m. today to clear out the area. READ MORE

 

Report From Oaklander Max Allstadt

By Zennie Abraham, SF Gate

25 October 11

Lots of rumors down there. I was in the Plaza when the cops showed up, watched the entire thing, got out of the way when it got ugly, got back in afterwards to get my bike because I know enough OPD officers to find one who'd let me in.

No sound cannon. People repeatedly mistook a speaker truck for an LRAD sound cannon.

I saw one tear gas grenade go off. There were a few shots from air rifles designed to fire non-lethal ammo. That's about all I saw of weapons use. The rest was just force of numbers. At least 10 police agencies were there. Cops outnumbered protesters. And they showed up very very fast and quietly before, fully mobilized in 5 minutes, made announcements for 10 minutes, took over the whole plaza in less than 15 minutes.

I was there from 3:30 to 6am. READ MORE

 

Police and Protesters Massing in Oakland After Overnight Raid

Marc Ash, Reader Supported News

25 October 11

Oakland Police wearing full riot gear are out in large numbers in downtown Oakland, as protesters rousted early this morning mount an effort to retake the encampment they were forced to leave.

The scene is tense, and marks one of the largest confrontations between police and protesters since the Occupy demonstrations first began in New York on September 17th.

There are unconfirmed reports that Oakland Police used both tear gas and rubber bullets during the early morning raid. Credible first-hand reports and video of tear gas make almost certain that at least tear gas was used. Reports of use of rubber bullets by Oakland Police on demonstrators cannot yet be confirmed.

 

Police Raid on Occupy Oakland

By punkboyinsf, ThinkProgress

25 October 11

 

OWS: Washington Still Doesn't Get It

By Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone

25 October 11

I'll have more coming out about this in a few days, but there have been two disgusting developments in the realm of plutocratic intervention on behalf of Wall Street that everyone protesting should take note of.

The fact that both of the following things took place in the middle of the full fever of OWS, when everyone is supposedly trying to placate anti - banker sentiment and Obama and the DCCC are supposedly pledging support of the protesters, shows how completely bankrupt this system is and how necessary street-level protests have become. Popular uprising is probably the only move left to stop developments like the following:READ MORE

 


 

Immunity and Impunity in Elite America

By Glenn Greenwald, TomDispatch

25 October 11

As intense protests spawned by Occupy Wall Street continue to grow, it is worth asking: Why now? The answer is not obvious. After all, severe income and wealth inequality have long plagued the United States. In fact, it could reasonably be claimed that this form of inequality is part of the design of the American founding - indeed, an integral part of it.

Income inequality has worsened over the past several years and is at its highest level since the Great Depression. This is not, however, a new trend. Income inequality has been growing at rapid rates for three decades. As journalist Tim Noah described the process: READ MORE

 

Wall Street Protest Plans Global Rally Before G20

By Michelle Nichols, Reuters

25 October 11

Canada-based Adbusters wants the Occupy Wall Street protest movement against economic inequality to take to the streets to call for a 1 percent tax on such deals ahead of a November 3-4 summit of the Group of 20 leading economies in France.

"Let's send them a clear message: We want you to slow down some of that $1.3 trillion easy money that's sloshing around the global casino each day -- enough cash to fund every social program and environmental initiative in the world," the activist group said on its website, www.adbusters.orgREAD MORE

 

OWS Puts Spotlight on Police Stop-and-Frisk Tactics

By Ryan Devereaux, Guardian UK

24 October 11

Stop-and-frisk refers to a common practice within the NYPD where officers detain people on the street, and, in some instances, search them. The department, along with the mayor's office, both contend that the stops have contributed to a considerable decrease in violent crime in the city, particularly in low-income communities and communities of colour.

READ MORE

 

OWS Sympathizer Creates 'I'm Getting Arrested' App

By Tracy Connor, NY Daily News

22 October 11

An Occupy Wall Street sympathizer created a free app called "I'm Getting Arrested" that lets protesters send out text messages to friends and family when cops swoop in.

Jason Van Anden, a Brooklyn software developer, said he came up with the idea when a colleague told him his girlfriend was about to get busted at a demonstration.

"He said it would be great if you had an app so that she could quickly broadcast her situation," said Van Anden, 43, a Flatbush dad. READ MORE

 

Cops Arrest Occupy Oakland Protesters

By Demian Bulwa and Henry K. Lee, SF Chronicle

25 October 11

Oakland police arrested dozens of people at a plaza outside City Hall and at a second, smaller camp nearby, two weeks after the protesters launched their efforts as part of the Occupy Wall Street movement against corporate greed and economic inequality.

At about 4:57 a.m., officers began making arrests and removing tents and makeshift shelters at the Occupy Oakland protest at Frank Ogawa Plaza near 14th Street and Broadway. By 5:05 a.m., the bulk of the arrests had been completed, and arrestees were led away in plastic handcuffs. READ MORE

 

Sgt Shamar Thomas on Countdown w/ Keith Olbermann

By Keith Olbermann

24 October 11

1Sgt Shamar Thomas on Countdown w/ Keith Olbermann

 

Where Do We Go From Here? Occupy Wall St.

By Ed David

19 October 11

Where Do We Go From Here?

 

Why Not Occupy Newsrooms?

By David Carr, The New York Times

24 October 11

Almost two weeks ago, USA Today put its finger on why the Occupy Wall Street protests continued to gain traction.

"The bonus system has gone beyond a means of rewarding talent and is now Wall Street"s primary business," the newspaper editorial stated, adding: "Institutions take huge gambles because the short-term returns are a rationale for their rich payouts. But even when the consequences of their risky behavior come back to haunt them, they still pay huge bonuses." READ MORE

 

Occupy the Food System!

By Eric Holt Gimenez and Tanya Kerssen, Food First

24 October 11

In the past few weeks, the U.S. Food Movement has made its presence felt in Occupy Wall Street. Voices from food justice organizations across the country are connecting the dots between hunger, diet-related diseases and the unchecked power of Wall Street investors and corporations. See Tom Philppot's excellent article in Mother Jones.

This is very fertile ground.

On one hand, the Food Movement's practical alternatives to industrial food are rooted at the base of our economic system. Its activities are key to building the alternative, localized economies being called for by Occupy Wall Street. READ MORE

 

'Occupy' Now a Banned Search Term in China

By Cord Jefferson, GOOD

24 October 11

A good rule of thumb for life is that if the Chinese government is against it, you're probably doing something right. The latest evidence to support this axiom is the Occupy Wall Street movement, which has spread from lower Manhattan to cities around the globe, including London, Auckland, Toronto, and Rome, among many others. Terrified by OWS' viral growth, the oppressive regime controlling China is taking measures to ensure the protests don't happen there. And it's starting with the internet. READ MORE

 

Vatican Calls for Central World Bank, Condemns "Idolatry of the Market"

By Philip Pullella, Reuters

24 October 11

The Vatican called on Monday for the establishment of a "global public authority" and a "central world bank" to rule over financial institutions that have become outdated and often ineffective in dealing fairly with crises. The document from the Vatican's Justice and Peace department should please the "Occupy Wall Street" demonstrators and similar movements around the world who have protested against the economic downturn.

"Towards Reforming the International Financial and Monetary Systems in the Context of a Global Public Authority," was at times very specific, calling, for example, for taxation measures on financial transactions. "The economic and financial crisis which the world is going through calls everyone, individuals and peoples, to examine in depth the principles and the cultural and moral values at the basis of social coexistence," it said.READ MORE

 

The 40 Funniest Signs From Occupy Wall Street

By Shane Cosme, Complex.com

24 October 11

From poignant to outlandish, down to chuckle-causing and headline-making, OWS protesters' cardboard declarations have captured our attention. They're making their issues and demands known through written wit, and, like any truly clever statement, are succeeding in not only causing laughter, but also some serious thought. That's right: OWS has got jokes! Jokes that have opened up an important conversation, no less.READ MORE

 

St Pauls Protesters Vow to Stay On

By AFP

24 October 11

Anti-capitalist protesters outside St Paul's Cathedral in London vowed on Monday to stay there as long as they can despite claims that the historic church is losing £16,000 a day from closing the building to tourists.

A second site has been established on Finsbury Square in the city's financial district, but activists at St Paul's refuse to abandon their high-profile location. READ MORE

 

Bill Maher To Republicans: Quit Calling Occupy Wall Street Protesters 'Hippies'

By Real Time with Bill Maher

24 October 11

Quit Calling Occupy Wall Street Protesters 'Hippies'

READ MORE

 

The Class War Has Begun

By Frank Rich, New York Magazine

24 October 11

During the death throes of Herbert Hoover's presidency in June 1932, desperate bands of men traveled to Washington and set up camp within view of the Capitol. The first contingent journeyed all the way from Portland, Oregon, but others soon converged from all over - alone, in groups, with families - until their main Hooverville on the Anacostia River's fetid mudflats swelled to a population as high as 20,000.

READ MORE

 

Occupy Wall Street Camps Staring Down Eviction

By Alyssa Newcomb, ABC News

22 October 11

Under normal circumstances, Rupert Murdoch doesn't have much patience for the annual shareholders' meetings that are required by law of American public companies. He regards them as a farce, because they cannot change the outcome in a company where a voting majority is secure, and as an exercise in liberal corporate law designed to put him personally on the spot.

Still, his handlers, whose job is, in part, to protect him from himself, have long made him train for these meetings as though he's going into a presidential debate. Without rigorous practice, he is quite liable to not pay attention and appear quite bewildered, or pay too much attention and explode in fury, or worse, truthful exasperation. READ MORE

 

Police Brutality Charges Sweep Across the US

By Paul Harris, Guardian UK

22 October 11

Officer Michael Daragjati had no idea that the FBI was listening to his phone calls. Otherwise he would probably not have described his arrest and detention of an innocent black New Yorker in the manner he did.

Daragjati boasted to a woman friend that, while on patrol in Staten Island, he had "fried another nigger". It was "no big deal", he added. The FBI, which had been investigating another matter, then tried to work out what had happened. READ MORE

 

The Obligation to Peacefully Disrupt

By Naomi Wolf, Reader Supported News

22 October 11

Mayor Bloomberg is planning Draconian new measures to crack down on what he calls the "disruption" caused by the protesters at Zuccotti Park, and he is citing neighbors' complaints about noise and mess. This set of talking points, and this strategy, is being geared up as well by administrations of municipalities around the nation in response to the endurance and growing influence of the Occupation protest sites. But the idea that any administration has the unmediated option of "striking a balance," in Bloomberg's words, that it likes, and closing down peaceful and lawful disruption of business as usual as it sees fit is a grave misunderstanding - or, more likely, deliberate misrepresentation - of our legal social contract as American citizens. READ MORE

 

Police Arrest 130 at Occupy Chicago

By Barbara Rodriguez, Associated Press

22 October 11

Anti-Wall Street demonstrators of the Occupy Chicago movement stood their ground in a downtown park in noisy but peaceful defiance of police orders to clear out, prompting 130 arrests early Sunday, authorities said.

Occupy Chicago spokesman Joshua Kaunert vowed after the arrests that protests would continue in the Midwest city. "We're not going anywhere. There are still plenty of us," Kaunert told The Associated Press after the arrests, which took police more than an hour to complete.

Elsewhere in the nation, police reported 11 arrests overnight in the Occupy Cincinnati protests. Police said those arrested had stayed in that city's Fountain Square after Sunday's 3 a.m. closing time and each was charged with criminal trespass. READ MORE

 

#OccupyMarines Preparing to Occupy America

By Anomaly100, PoliticusUSA

22 October 11

United States Marine Corps. Sergeant Shamar Thomas in a spectacular moment defended the protesters of Occupy Wall Street while staring into the faces of thirty NYPD officers, and now countless other Marines have organized in an amazing show of solidarity.

Sgt. Thomas' gallant actions in standing up for American citizens being brutalized by the police were shown in a video which has gone viral with almost 2 million views. Marines have joined forces with #OccupyMarines in solidarity with the movement not just in New York, but nationwide:

"OccupyMARINES Are Currently Assessing The Current Situation To Ascertain What Is Currently Needed To Support OWS America. We Are Humbled At The Substantial Support OWS America Has Provided And Ask That Everyone Continue As You All Do While We Implement Organization Nationwide. As We All Know, 'Occupy' Groups Are Being Established Even Now And Would Like To See This Trend Continue."READ MORE

 

OWS Protesters Plan "Teach-In" After Police Arrest 35 on Friday

By NY1 News

22 October 11

The Occupy Wall Street movement plans to march again today. Protesters will hold a teach-in at Washington Square Park this afternoon.

Many are also expected to gather in Union Square to participate in the 16th Annual Day of Protest to Stop Police Brutality, a national event.

Protesters are calling on the New York City Police Department to end its controversial stop-and-frisk policy, which civil activists say disproportionately targets men of color. In 2009, more than half-a-million people were stopped and frisked.  READ MORE

 

Anonymous Hacks Police Websites and Data to Support OWS

By Adrian Chen, Gawker

21 October 11

Although they had a hand in starting the Occupy Wall Street protest, the hacktivist collective Anonymous has been pretty quiet since it started. No longer: Anonymous claims they just hacked a ton of police sites and leaked usernames and passwords.

The biggest target of today's hack was the International Association of Chiefs of Police, whose website is still down as of this writing. It's auspicious timing, as the IACP is holding its annual meeting in Chicago. READ MORE

 

Occupy London: Demo Forces St Paul's Cathedral to Close

By BBC

21 October 11

The decision was taken with a "heavy heart" for health and safety reasons, said the Right Reverend Graeme Knowles.

Anti-capitalist demonstrators from Occupy London Stock Exchange have been in St Paul's Churchyard since Saturday. The group said they were "disappointed" by the closure but they planned to continue the protest.

Following a meeting of the protesters, one of the group, who gave her name as Lucy, said: "It was felt by everyone that we really wanted to stay and continue with the protest.

"This protest is massive, it affects everybody, everyone's watching at home right now.

"It's not just about a few people who have got some tents in St Paul's, it's not a stunt, it's not a spectacle."

Earlier a statement from Occupy London Stock Exchange said the camp had been reorganised in order to meet fire safety concerns. READ MORE

 

More Arrests Coming for Wall St. Protesters, Bloomberg Says

By Erin Calabrese and Josh Margolin, NY Post

21 October 11

More arrests are coming for the Occupy Wall Street protesters. Mayor Bloomberg announced this morning that the city is going to take a hard line with demonstrators making camp in Lower Manhattan after going easy on the throngs for weeks.

"We will start enforcing that more," he said of rules requiring permits for marches and assemblies.

The mayor's comments came during his weekly appearance on John Gambling's show on WOR-AM.READ MORE

 

Latest Developments in the Global Occupy Protests

By Associated Press

21 October 11

NEW YORK--Ninety-two-year-old folk music legend Pete Seeger marched with throngs of people in New York City's tony Upper West Side in support of the Occupy Wall Street protests. Seeger, accompanied by musician-grandson Tao Rodriguez Seeger, composer David Amram, and bluesman Guy Davis, shouted out a verse as the crowd of about 1,000 people sang and chanted. They marched peacefully over more than 30 blocks from Symphony Space, where the Seegers and other musicians performed, to Columbus Circle. Police watched from the sidelines. At the circle, Seeger and friends walked to the chant of "We are the 99 percent" and "We are unstoppable, another world is possible." Seeger stopped to bang a metal statue of an elephant with his cane - to cheers from the crowd. At the center of the circle, Seeger and Amram were joined by '60s folk singer Arlo Guthrie in a round of "We Shall Overcome," a protest anthem made popular by Seeger.

CALIFORNIA--Hundreds of protesters defiantly remained at their campsite outside Oakland's City Hall early Saturday, despite a city order to vacate. As the 10 p.m. time of the city's ultimatum passed Friday night, Occupy Oakland demonstrators showed no signs of departing as music blasted from the plaza. More protesters arrived with tents as midnight approached. READ MORE

 

Pete Seeger Joins Occupy Wall Street Late-Night March Down Broadway

By mmflint

21 October 11

 

Occupy Columbus Circle! Pete Seeger, Arlo Guthrie

By Schlockumentaries

21 October 11

 

Folk Legend Pete Seeger Supports "Occupy Wall Street" Protesters

By NY1

21 October 11

"Occupy Wall Street" protesters received a jolt of support from American folk singer Pete Seeger during an Upper Manhattan march Friday night. "I am here right now in solidarity with Pete and the other singers and musicians," said one protester. "Pete Seeger is an absolute idol of mine, and I dreamed that he would come and support 'Occupy Wall Street,'" said another.

Many of the same people took to downtown streets earlier in the evening to protest Verizon. Company officials said the protest's targets are misguided. Several dozen Muslims took part in a three-hour prayer service earlier in the day before a Jewish group celebrated Simchat Torah. Demonstrators also reacted to President Barack Obama's announcement that the Iraq War would come to an end by the end of the year. News that U.S. troops will be returning home by the holidays generated a mix of excitement and skepticism in Zuccotti Park. READ MORE

 

Dozens Arrested at 28TH Precinct In Harlem to Stop "Stop & Frisk"

World Cant Wait

21 October 11

The NYPD's notorious program of STOP & FRISK was the target of hundreds of demonstrators who marched from the Harlem State Office Building to Harlem's 28th precinct this afternoon. At the station, Cornel West, author and Princeton professor, Carl Dix of the Revolutionary Communist Party, Rev. Stephen Phelps, interim senior minister of Riverside Church, and dozens of others were arrested in an act of non-violence civil disobedience. Among those arrested and protesting was a large contingent from downtown's Occupy Wall Street.

Taken up the words of Rev. Phelps of Riverside Church, as arrestees were carried to waiting police vans the crowd chanted, "Stop & Frisk don't stop the crime, Stop & Frisk IS the crime." READ MORE

 

Occupy Columbus Cirle

 

Protesters Plan March To Columbus Circle With Pete Segar, Family Sleepover

By NBC, New York

21 October 11

Iconic folk singer Pete Seeger and his grandson Tao will become the latest notable musicians to march in solidarity with the Occupy Wall Street protesters when they join up with the crowd tonight.

The march departs at 10:30 p.m. by Peter Jay Shape Theatre on Broadway and is expected to wrap up at midnight at Columbus Circle, where folk musicians are planning to stage a midnight occupation. READ MORE

 

Occupy Wall Street Day 34

By Keith Olbermann

21 October 11

 

FOCUS: Of the 1%, by the 1%, for the 1%

Joseph E. Stiglitz, Vanity Fair

21 October 11

It's no use pretending that what has obviously happened has not in fact happened. The upper 1 percent of Americans are now taking in nearly a quarter of the nation's income every year. In terms of wealth rather than income, the top 1 percent control 40 percent. Their lot in life has improved considerably. Twenty-five years ago, the corresponding figures were 12 percent and 33 percent. One response might be to celebrate the ingenuity and drive that brought good fortune to these people, and to contend that a rising tide lifts all boats. That response would be misguided. While the top 1 percent have seen their incomes rise 18 percent over the past decade, those in the middle have actually seen their incomes fall. For men with only high-school degrees, the decline has been precipitous - 12 percent in the last quarter-century alone. All the growth in recent decades - and more - has gone to those at the top. In terms of income equality, America lags behind any country in the old, ossified Europe that President George W. Bush used to deride. Among our closest counterparts are Russia with its oligarchs and Iran. While many of the old centers of inequality in Latin America, such as Brazil, have been striving in recent years, rather successfully, to improve the plight of the poor and reduce gaps in income, America has allowed inequality to grow.READ MORE

 

1 Marine vs. 30 Cops

By BklynJHandy

16 October 11

 

A Long, Steep Drop for Americans' Standard of Living

Ron Scherer, The Christian Science Monitor

20 October 11

Think life is not as good as it used to be, at least in terms of your wallet? You'd be right about that. The standard of living for Americans has fallen longer and more steeply over the past three years than at any time since the US government began recording it five decades ago.

Bottom line: The average individual now has $1,315 less in disposable income than he or she did three years ago at the onset of the Great Recession - even though the recession ended, technically speaking, in mid-2009. That means less money to spend at the spa or the movies, less for vacations, new carpeting for the house, or dinner at a restaurant.READ MORE

17 september - 02 October : 02 October - 06 October : 06 October - 10 October : 10 October - 12 October

 

Comments  

 
+185# Barbara K 2011-09-18 12:13
Hey Media: Just so you know, we are sick to death of your brown-nosing the Tbaggers and their nutty utterances. How about covering some events where intelligence prevails? How about coverage for intelligent people? We have had enough and are turning off your idiots.
 
 
+15# Progressive Patriot 2011-09-24 18:08
Many of us never tuned in to the Reich-wing media, so we don't have to turn them off.
 
 
+6# Freeman1776 2011-10-10 08:45
Quoting
Many of us never tuned in to the Reich-wing media, so we don't have to turn them off.


You are right, but those who have been asleep and are now waking up, need to be made aware of how they have been brainwashed by the media.
 
 
+23# X Dane 2011-09-26 21:59
Barbara, the media is beginning to pay attention, not in a positive way, but they can't ignore it now I would suggest we call the news papers and ask them why they are not covering the protests. Flood them with calls. Drive them crazy.

I am so impressed with the protesters.

I know I was critical of us for not having enough will to stick with it. I stand corrected. I eat my words and I apologize. The protesters are AVESOME.
 
 
+18# Vardette 2011-09-28 15:54
I am so on the same page and wrote MSNBC and told them that I am so sick of the oral diarrhea that substitutes for news. What about the world, our environment, the XL pipe line, famine, drought?!
 
 
+5# Barracuda87 2011-10-05 18:29
Good for you! I've written them before as well... Hopefully some good will come out of it. I feel like Keith Olbermann is the only one that used to cover stories that mattered, but he had finally had enough as well and packed up and left.
 
 
+5# Peace Anonymous 2011-09-29 20:02
Quoting
Hey Media: Just so you know, we are sick to death of your brown-nosing the Tbaggers and their nutty utterances. How about covering some events where intelligence prevails? How about coverage for intelligent people? We have had enough and are turning off your idiots.


Great point but there is a reason...follow the money.
 
 
+150# X Dane 2011-09-18 12:52
HELLOOOOOO. The media is OWNED BY BIG BUSINESS.

They have no intetion to show how angry we are. The demostrations need to be MUCH, MUCH bigger. 
There are so many people out of work, they could demonstrate during the week, when ihe rest is at work.
We need our own Tahrir Square,.....NOW
 
 
+65# Vardette 2011-09-18 18:06
Ed Shults on MSNBC does. Hes out in Ohio letting the people talk.
 
 
+61# Barbara K 2011-09-19 05:53
Love Ed Schultz and watch him every night. We need more like him in the media. Not afraid to speak the truth and to help the people too. Go Ed!
 
 
+29# Progressive Patriot 2011-09-24 18:18
We should occupy K Street in Washington DC, where all the lobbyists are located .... slow down their operations and force them to stop influencing Congress so much.
 
 
+62# Capn Canard 2011-09-18 14:42
X Dane, that is the heart of the problem and IMO the MSM does as they are instructed to do by big business. I used to work in a newsroom, and it is a sickening process to watch, though they do try to be subtle though occasionally they can be rather clumsy, i.e. some HOT stories/ideas start getting some attention and then inexplicably and mysteriously the potential story is tabled. Editors don't necessarily share the reasons why to their underlings and the offended Publisher need not say a word!
 
 
+48# X Dane 2011-09-18 16:12
Yes Capn. I think a number of jounalits are liberal and want to inform the public and go after important stories.
But they are hamstrung by the corporate owners. 

Then there are the "big" journalists who, I am afraid, have been blinded by politicians and celebrities and do not want to risk access, by writing anything unflattering, or asking in dept questions.

One in particular puzzle me: Woodward, he seems downright conservative, while Bernstein stayed feisty and liberal.
What is your take on Woodward, Capn??
 
 
+45# KittatinyHawk 2011-09-19 15:13
GE owns NBC so do not look to them for news
they have blocked out Japanese protest and the crime of their Nukes in Japan failing as in other places....Boycott GE
 
 
+4# Capn Canard 2011-10-01 06:52
Woodward? I am not certain, but he may be too close to the powers that be... of course I am cynical, so he may try to avoid killing the goose that has laid some golden eggs.
 
 
+2# X Dane 2011-10-03 22:31
Capn, thank you for replying, It would seem you agree with me. I was wondering if I was being unfair. But maybe Woodward always were more conservativem and simply went with the big story, watergate certainly was?
 
 
+88# Saberoff 2011-09-18 14:46
We all need to support these "Occupy Wall Street" protesters. Stay informed. Do what you can. Do not let up. These things are, and must, come to a head soon. We demand!
 
 
+33# Vardette 2011-09-20 12:50
Yes - we need more but Americans arre starting to wake up and so many are the young who will also be devasted by a jobless society,low wages paying the rich to stay rich at the cost of our lives!
 
 
-34# punk 2011-09-18 16:18
just ~1000 demonstrators? i wd think in manhatten u cd get more ppl to demonstrate about pigeon droppings. everybody hates the banksters and only 1000 protesters show up?
i know it sounds strange, but it could be a good idea to work with the TParty on this. i think there is a large segment of them who do not just protect the rich and are furious about the bailouts. they at least seem better able to generate involvement than the left. fixing wall st investment companies is an issue that has support on the L and the R
 
 
+24# Ken Hall 2011-09-18 19:58
I don't think anyone is prohibiting or blocking TPers from being there.
 
 
+27# Glen 2011-09-19 03:43
How many tea party types are in the street? We know so little that it is possible they are there in great numbers. Maybe we'll find out from Amy Goodman or the like. I'll be watching Democracy Now this evening.
 
 
+5# KittatinyHawk 2011-09-19 15:15
Lot of them are in alleys and subway bathroom stalls, cannot afford to miss out on the money
 
 
+20# Progressive Patriot 2011-09-24 18:39
It's not a TP issue. They don't oppose large banks. Remember, for all their claim of being a "Grassroots" organization, they ARE funded by the likes of the Koch Brothers. The Teabaggers are a corporate push trying to make out like they're just ordinary people.
 
 
+7# readerz 2011-09-25 13:14
Yeah, anybody can wear a flannel shirt.
 
 
+32# Glen 2011-09-19 03:49
Unless you are there, the numbers aren't known yet. Not being in New York doesn't mean there isn't concern, and yes, possibly from the tea party. The inability to get to New York City is an example of part of the problem. Folks have to work and can't afford to make the trip.

Time to get creative to find a way to show how much support there is of this protest by those who cannot be there.
 
 
+32# KittatinyHawk 2011-09-19 15:18
Rethink your 401k investments, look into who your Unions deal with, look into Canada, Mexico. Sierra Club has some new plans using green technology investments, but must watch that they are not in bed with GE etc.
Want to make an initiative Boycott and show the TeaParty you are doing what they do not do...because they are in bed with everyone. Tea Party, an insult to every American
 
 
+16# readerz 2011-09-25 13:17
Don't just boycott GE. 
BE SURE to boycott the many companies that are actually the Koch brothers; lots of grocery store items. 
It really pains me, because I love the arts, but Koch has put their ugly stamp on the arts in NYC; it's time for avid audience members to say NO to the NO sayers. It really pains me, because sports is so much worse, but what do the arts stand for?
 
 
+15# Progressive Patriot 2011-09-24 18:44
I've been reading that what is needed to support the Wall Street protests is to get people out in the streets in other cities, protesting at banks and other financial places.
 
 
+10# Torvus 2011-09-28 10:16
Protesters should ensure they go to a demo armed with at least a bottle of water (to drink, or rinse spray from eyes). And (from Nation of Change): if you get ar­rested, call the Na­tional Lawyers Guild at 212-679-6018. Write that num­ber on your arm, be­cause the po­lice take all your stuff when they put you in jail.
 
 
+10# KittatinyHawk 2011-09-19 15:14
More than that have been showing up TP perhaps more will continue around the world to say No to Wall Street
 
 
+21# suzyskier 2011-09-20 16:32
Punk where did you get the number 1000? I think that there are more than that protesting, and even if there aren't there yet maybe it is because there is a blackout from NBC and other networks. I think more people would show up if they knew about it!
 
 
+8# Progressive Patriot 2011-09-24 18:05
Why would we consider working with the TeaTHUGliKKKlan s, when they hate Americans? THEY are the ones who have been DESTROYING America for the past 30+ years.
 
 
+8# readerz 2011-09-25 13:12
As much as everybody (me too) hates the TP, those few who are not racist pigs might be moved to agree that this country is being taken away from everybody, including them. 
As far as "generating involvement," that is because there is a LOT of money funding the TP demonstrations, and the media covers them if 2 show up. (Remember the article that stated we should say it is a TParty rally?) There are more of us than them, and more of us demonstrating. 
But lastly, if I say anything too strong, I will be censored. Remember what the college kids used to do in the late 1960s and early 1970s? They would occupy buildings, not streets, and I'm not suggesting it, but in this case... that would be the big media companies that are an EQUAL overpaid and underserving problem as the stock market and banks.
How many people do you know with a million dollar salaries (i.e., in the pocket of big business); now think of all those well-heeled "news" anchors.
 
 
+27# minkdumink 2011-09-18 16:35
''The kingdoms of Experience
In the precious wind they rot
While paupers change possessions
Each one wishing for what the other has got
And the princess and the prince
Discuss what's real and what is not
It doesn't matter inside the Gates of Eden''
Bob Dylan/Gates of eden
 
 
+80# michelle 2011-09-18 17:39
If nothing else is accomplished we are sure of one thing now--there is no fourth estate in America. The press has deserted the citizens. Eerie feeling to know you cannot get information.
 
 
+20# KittatinyHawk 2011-09-19 15:24
But we can. We should remember the Newspapers, rags that actually started to give us our voice. Rolling Stone Village Voice used to. Buy papers that are not blacking us out....Papers are losing their subscriptions, now make it a reality.]
News stop watching TV...they thrive on ratings. Watch only Letterman, Kimmel etc...let them loseratings therefore advertising. Get people to call advertisers esp out of Country to pull ads with Stations until Media starts remembering this is America not Hitlers Germany.
 
 
+33# suzyskier 2011-09-20 16:38
No it isn't Nazi Germany, not yet. All the signs are there. I think the teaparty is a bit fascist. Lucky for Germany they have turned their country into a great nation, they learned the hard way. Is that is what in store of us?
 
 
+8# readerz 2011-09-25 13:21
There are many signs of TP imitating Nazis, but they are also descended from the same people: the Bush family in the 1930s funded the Nazis. The Allies made sure that Germany put in a law the spreading Nazi propaganda (after WWII) is not free speech; it is against the law there. But here... although I'm not for censorship (we would be hit first), some kinds of hate speech are tearing people apart.
 
 
+62# stevb 2011-09-18 18:13
Protests and marches are ineffective. To make a dent in the corporate oligarchy we have to hurt them and hurt them seriously and the only way to do that is by boycott and strike, strategies not too popular these days because they require months and years of hard work, organizing at every level, relentlessly. This is the commitment the movement needs - permanent international boycott of one of the corporate players until driven into bankruptcy and then move on to another. No other way to get their attention, and their respect.
 
 
+42# X Dane 2011-09-18 19:38
Protest marches are ineffective steveb.
Just one word TAHRIR SQUARE, no that was two.

It CERTAINLY was EFFECTIVE. But it would seem the Egyptians want democracy MORE than we do
They sure had the WILL and the PATIENCE to stick it out till they won.

I am afraid that in this INSTANT AGE we Americans lack STICKTUITIVENES S.
If it doesn't happen FAST we loose interest........or will.

ANYTHING WORTH HAVING, IS WORTH FIGHTING FOR
 
 
+10# Vardette 2011-09-28 15:50
I think that is changing now that joblessness and poverty are exploding. Our young people are facing ever increasing dismal futures.
 
 
+4# X Dane 2011-10-03 22:42
I hope you all saw I apologized for being sceptical.I am so glad, that I was wrong. 
Y'all should watch Dylan Rattigan at one o'clock (pacific time) on MSNBC. He is certainly fired up. Hi makes a lot of sense. I just wish he would TALK instead of yelling. He was interviewing some of the protesters.
Things are beginning to move the right way for us
 
 
+43# michelle 2011-09-19 09:34
Marches if they are large enough should get some attention. Remember it took several days before we had any information on Wisconsin.

Boycotts can be very effective as well. An unorganized push on Netflix may not have yielded any results for consumers but look at the damage inflicted on the company. Netflix was trading for $304/share a couple of months ago and now it is $153/share. This was a spontaneous, I'm not gonna take it anymore, response to outrageous rate hikes. Imagine if it was coordinated.

I remember many years ago, in the 60's, attending the Delano Grape Pickers event in Cucamonga, Ca. The Farm workers were advocating a boycott, surely one that would harm them in the short term. Their position was they would win in the long term and that is just what they did. Eventually farmers settled with them, recognized farm workers and wages improved. It cleared the way for the birth of United Farm Workers. Farm workers still have a long way to go but the boycott won some changes. Nothing will happen over night. Both approaches, boycott and protest marches, will move the goals forward. Both approaches allow people to participate when and where they can.
 
 
+21# Vardette 2011-09-21 13:45
During the 60's it was nation wide protests and very protracted and finally after the establishment knew resistance was futile they stopped the war. It was the same with the civil rights movement- This will alwsys be our battle because there will always be those in power who will allow corruption and greed to take a front seat against the people.
 
 
+22# KittatinyHawk 2011-09-19 15:25
Right now there have been Marches for the past week in USA...so it is a very disgusting situation that we are living supposedly in a Democratic Nation and Media is working for Nazis
 
 
-7# fobsub 2011-09-22 22:51
Quoting
Protests and marches are ineffective. To make a dent in the corporate oligarchy we have to hurt them and hurt them seriously and the only way to do that is by boycott and strike, strategies not too popular these days because they require months and years of hard work, organizing at every level, relentlessly. This is the commitment the movement needs - permanent international boycott of one of the corporate players until driven into bankruptcy and then move on to another. No other way to get their attention, and their respect.


A good idea,, 50 years too late to be effective here. The infestation is too widespread and integral to too many vital structures. Killing the disease would kill us all. It has to be destroyed using the same type of tactics that developed it: plain view, accepted deception.
 
 
+3# Vardette 2011-09-28 12:14
BS
 
 
+59# speedboy 2011-09-18 22:02
What we need is a nationwide shut-down! No one should leave their home on a designated day, as a warning of what will happen if the majority of Americans continue to be ignored
 
 
-7# KittatinyHawk 2011-09-19 15:27
I wrote about it last spring...it was done but too many ignore us when we tell you
 
 
+23# minkdumink 2011-09-19 16:26
it would be nice if that day was a sunday and the NFL games were empty.Theres no way that could be ignored.
 
 
+9# fobsub 2011-09-22 23:24
Quoting
What we need is a nationwide shut-down! No one should leave their home on a designated day, as a warning of what will happen if the majority of Americans continue to be ignored


In theory you are correct, one or two days is all it would take but in reality it can't happen because all Americans were willing conspirators in the growth of this cancer and the small economic quake we've recently experienced while generating some noise and discomfort, has not harmed enough of us to motivate widespread consideration of such drastic measures. For example the military and police structure was virtually unharmed and remains completely loyal to the enemy. Its business as usual and those losers who fell under the wheels served nicely as lubricant. One can only hope for a miracle disruption of mega proportions and seriously organize massive events on a relentless basis following that bit of luck. A week long national power blackout of mysterious origin for example.
 
 
+30# Texan 4 Peace 2011-09-19 06:36
Disappoint to see #punk get so many thumbs-down. Certainly the teabaggers are odious, in their present form, but they are a significant manifestation of populist rage and many of them are as angry at the über-rich and their bankster henchmen as we are. That rage just needs to be educated and channeled in a productive direction. Not an easy task I know, but we need to build bridges if this is to become a mass movement. Today's teabagger may become tomorrow's progressive after he's been foreclosed on.
 
 
+66# X Dane 2011-09-19 09:09
Texan. The T baggers are NOT a grassroots movement. They were STARTED, ORGANIZED and FINANCED by the Koch brothers, and those two creeps call the shots at ALL TIMES. 

They got together the nastiest reactionary wing of the republicans. I am sure that some independants and democrats are angry too, but they are not as stupid and backwards as the T-bags
 
 
+21# michelle 2011-09-19 09:38
As much as I dislike the TPers and I'm pretty sure they can't think their way out of a paper bag, you may be on to something. Divisiveness advances the power and wealth of the plutocrats and renders the rest of us powerless. I have tried talking with some on the far right and have not made any progress. I'm not sure how we can accomplish this but again the division is really harming the other 98%.
 
 
+62# Tommypaine 2011-09-19 08:40
A bought off congress, supporting free trade agreements that have destroyed American jobs. A Wall Street casino, with no government oversight destroyed the housing market. Taxation policy has starved the Federal government of needed revenue. The rich have doubled their wealth while the poor increase in number. We fight endless wars with borrowed money. We have futile nation building abroad while our own infrastructure crumbles. The public watches TV. Now, watch Wall Street.
 
 
+22# Tommycanyouhearme 2011-09-23 07:36
Correction: According to Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman,( NY Times) the wealthiest Americans have increased their wealth 480% ! The middle class has had a 27% increase, over the same time span. Protests are more than justified, since there is no action being taken to change this trend.
 
 
+41# iris 2011-09-19 10:56
I cant reach Amy goodman, but the demand was made by hundreds of picketing nurses a couple weeks ago. it was to tax wall st. transactions, like 17 other countries do at about 1/2 of one percent, and save the economy. This would also make them pay damages, and make it easier to police the fraud and risky speculation. Too bad there,s is a news blackout iris
 
 
+6# fobsub 2011-09-22 23:45
Quoting
I cant reach Amy goodman, but the demand was made by hundreds of picketing nurses a couple weeks ago. it was to tax wall st. transactions, like 17 other countries do at about 1/2 of one percent, and save the economy. This would also make them pay damages, and make it easier to police the fraud and risky speculation. Too bad there,s is a news blackout iris


Who are you asking to do this tax thing? Lawmakers and virtually all major federal agencies (FDA, EPA etc.) work only for Wall Street and its related business partners (Monsanto, Big Pharmas etc.), not for us,, so why would they want to bite their own butt? In reality, they likely already have in place, laws that compensate them with tax dollars whenever they make an oops and suffer direct losses,, oh wait.....they actually do have that don't they!! And you want to ask them to play nice? Ha!
 
 
+30# iris 2011-09-19 11:01
cry out!!! TAX TRANSACIONS! POLICE THE FRAUD! JAIL THE GAMBLERS! (and Can Geithner and Summers et.al)
 
 
0# Regina 2011-10-08 08:38
Especially the latter!! Obama, thinking sweetness and peace, retained Bush's sneaky varmints. Didn't work out that way.
 
 
+22# jimmyjames 2011-09-19 14:23
I just sent the protesters $100 of Pizza from Liberato's Pizza in NYC. I challenge supporters on this site to do the same (or what you can afford. VIVA La Revolution!!
 
 
+14# michelle 2011-09-19 17:49
Excellent suggestion. I had to call Liberato's because the online ordering crashed. You can purchase a pizza for $12-$21 pretty reasonable. I assume it is the place on Cedar St. for those who need to google.
 
 
-12# fobsub 2011-09-22 23:48
Quoting
I just sent the protesters $100 of Pizza from Liberato's Pizza in NYC. I challenge supporters on this site to do the same (or what you can afford. VIVA La Revolution!!


I would but I haven't got a hundred bucks,, will you lend it to me?
 
 
+8# michelle 2011-09-24 08:47
Do you have $12? I think jimmyjames suggests, 'what you can afford." If you have nothing, then of course you cannot send food to Liberty Plaza.
 
 
+2# Progressive Patriot 2011-09-24 18:58
Do they take food stamps form out of state?
 
 
+27# Ma Tsu 2011-09-19 14:29
Wall Street is to the economy as insurance is to health care - a big suck on our prosperity, our well-being, a con game run by the few to benefit the few. 
Enough of the suck. Game over. A new day dawns.
 
 
-14# fobsub 2011-09-23 00:15
Quoting
Wall Street is to the economy as insurance is to health care - a big suck on our prosperity, our well-being, a con game run by the few to benefit the few. 
Enough of the suck. Game over. A new day dawns.


The "pot calling the kettle black". Republicans may have designed and facilitated this mess but they couldn't have accomplished it without the greedy, shameless participation of all of us. Proud of yourself? If Americans will accept their own complicity in the creation of this ugly monster that has already killed millions and if there is any conscience remaining among us AND enough are willing to accept extreme hardship and sacrifice for a long time, then maybe a well organized effort could begin to turn things around. Personally I don't believe Americans will ever become desperate enough in large enough numbers to be able to achieve such greatness and maybe thats a good thing.
 
 
+7# BLBreck 2011-09-29 14:39
Yes, fobsub, we have been complicit and complacent. The mistake that has been made is that more and more people are no longer comfortable and no longer complacent. Thus, I believe more and more of these demonstrations will happen. these are so many young people who cannot find jobs...they are the main force, as always, but this time there are also many "old hippies" who demonstrated against wars and for civil rights that have also had their comfort and complacency ripped away. Demonstrations are now rising in Boston and I know there is one being planned in San Diego and I will join them. It will, if nothing else, be heartening to hear our own voices when we feel no one is listening in Washington in this time of very bad choices by the government that is supposed to be working for ALL the people, not just the top 1 or 2%.
 
 
+32# X Dane 2011-09-19 14:53
We all agree, that the right-wing is evil and conniving........unfortunately, they have also been A LOT SMARTER that the democrats. 
Years ago they began buying up Newspapers, radio and TV stations, so now THEY OWN PRACTICALLY ALL MEDIA.........Guess what? ....only THEIR message is heard. They are poisoning the airwaves with their right-wing crap. And what can we do??.............diddly squat.
We need to have wealthy democrats buy, and or start news outlets, so we can be heard, or we wil basically be out of the game......If you are never heard.......YOU DON'T EXIST
 
 
+14# KittatinyHawk 2011-09-19 15:31
We slept thru it all or went to Wallie World.
I remember Letterman and GE...now Letterman is one who will have this on tonite, he has been speaking out and in favor of tax on rich...he is one of them
 
 
+24# X Dane 2011-09-19 18:46
Thank god a number of wealthy people can see the injustice, and SAY that they should pay mere, good for them,....and us
 
 
+23# Torvus 2011-09-19 15:03
And reading the comments about lack of sufficient media coverage, maybe protestors should demonstrate outside some of the media's centres of operation? If certain of the media are so negatively selective in disseminating demonstrators news and views, what is their news 'coverage' worth? That should get exposure and an overhaul along with Wall Street.
 
 
+20# DanetteB 2011-09-19 15:21
This may actually tip the scales- if RSN continues to cover this while others ignore it. Perhaps that's the biggest news of the day-- who's paying attention to this? Who is encouraging the people to rise up?
 
 
+18# Tommycanyouhearme 2011-09-21 18:22
Follow the money from Wall Street to Washington. It is the elephant in the room, ignored by the lame stream, gothcha media. Someone must say stop!
 
 
-18# fobsub 2011-09-23 00:19
Ok, I'll volunteer since I have nothing to lose, so here goes......STOP! Did it work? Are we all fat and happy again?
 
 
-13# fobsub 2011-09-23 00:16
It won't
 
 
+24# Dave45 2011-09-19 21:02
This is so great to see. Wouldn't it be great if "Occupy Wall Street" was only part one, with part two being a similar occupation of the media giants who refuse to cover part one (or anything else slightly out of the ordinary that is beneficial for common people).Obama--pay attention!The White House could be next.
 
 
+7# fobsub 2011-09-23 00:25
Don't blame Obama, blame yourself! Part one didn't, won't and cannot do anything. Part two, three, four,... will have the same results. A whimper isn't heard, it takes a ROAR!!
 
 
+7# cstein 2011-09-20 00:12
MONEY HAS AN ENEMY -- PASS IT ON
 
 
+9# X Dane 2011-09-20 11:22
Not MONEY, but gready conniving cheeters
 
 
-9# fobsub 2011-09-23 00:29
By that you're making it personal,, you mean all of us don't you?
 
 
-7# fobsub 2011-09-23 00:27
Any enemy of MONEY has been met and defeated.
 
 
+18# jwb110 2011-09-20 09:56
Remind the NYPD that they have a functioning Union and a very good retirement program and medical care. Whose side are they on. The people pay for the things that the NYPD enjoys not Wall Street.
 
 
+5# fobsub 2011-09-23 00:33
The NYPD works for them, not us as do all PD's and they are well taken care of, so don't expect any quarter from them.
 
 
0# Regina 2011-10-08 08:43
It was the White Shirts, police managers, that attacked the demonstrators, not the rank and file blue shirts, union members. (No doubt they have an even better retirement program.)
 
 
+12# iris 2011-09-20 10:55
what was that lovely musical piece in the 5 min of slow motion clip? by the way read Saul Alinskis "rules for radicals". once you start, keep it up, point out specific targets, and specific demands
 
 
+14# Torvus 2011-09-20 12:46
Thanks for the Alinsky tip, iris; one section reads: Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize it. In conflict tactics there are certain rules that [should be regarded] as universalities. One is that the opposition must be singled out as the target and 'frozen.'...

"...any target can always say, 'Why do you center on me when there are others to blame as well?' When your 'freeze the target,' you disregard these [rational but distracting] arguments.... Then, as you zero in and freeze your target and carry out your attack, all the 'others' come out of the woodwork very soon. They become visible by their support of the target...'
 
 
+10# Torvus 2011-09-21 14:41
. They become visible by their support of the target...'
Or in this case by their LACK of support for the protesters. The silent media must be really really scared.
 
 
-16# fobsub 2011-09-23 00:38
Hey that insight is really cool, it should solve everything! I think it should be reinforced with a catchy slogan or rallying call like "gimme back my D"
 
 
+29# Vardette 2011-09-20 15:47
I praise these young people who have the courage to get out there. They are isn such trouble and I think they are starting to get it. We fought for 15 years to end the Vietman war so give them encouragement for doing the right thing. Without action we are all sunk!
 
 
-17# fobsub 2011-09-23 01:00
I would too if I thought the event has anything to do with "courage". To me "courage" implies suffering, danger, sacrifice and I don't see any of that here. With no concerted agreement as to expected outcome or demanded solutions it looks more like an electronically organized social event put together by some bored school kids who think whats happening in some tortured countries is really cool.
 
 
+7# Capn Canard 2011-09-21 07:52
I like the video of 9 year old Sam Kesler and his comment of "Reverse Robin Hoods", nice.
 
 
+7# iris 2011-09-21 11:03
I still dont know how to locate that great song on the slow motion video... u tube only gave it hard rap...And Torvus: I did a protest once targeting a governor and a labor comissioner. by the time the press got done "the others" did come out of the woodwork. 14 public officials resigned in a hurry. Now if yahoo keep censoring id do a boycott, change servers, and sell their stock short... just like the banksters. iris
 
 
+8# Torvus 2011-09-21 14:47
Well done, iris, and at least you had the Press on your side for that one to work. Where is the media now? Who was it who said decades ago that Pressmen are prostitutes? Obviously we must exclude those who ARE reporting this news and not blacking it out as if it were a non-event.
 
 
+1# Regina 2011-10-08 08:51
We need to separate the reporters from the editors and the publisher, who call the shots on what gets covered and published, not the writers who cover what's assigned. And it's the corporate owners who decide policy. (Reporters also have a union but we're not hearing from them.)
 
 
+16# Torvus 2011-09-21 12:34
So protesters are 'dumb' are they? (CNN contributor and RedState blogger Erick Erickson labeled the protesters as "profoundly dumb.") DON'T YOU HEAR THEM, MAN? THEY are not dumb. YOU are DEAF; and out of it. Maybe a member of the arrogant smirking breed as shown by the people who were on a Wall Street balcony confidently raising their glasses and laughing as the protesters did their laps around the protester-forbidden street (which should now be called Fall Street). Financiers and their supporters are the real dumbos. They are so arrogant they are not only deaf, but blind as well.
 
 
-23# fobsub 2011-09-23 01:35
"Dumb" is actually a fairly accurate description of this incident and its participants. Serious protesters that may have been planning a real protest action may be justifiably angered by this non-event as it brings to mind "the boy who cried wolf" in that it halfheartedly addressed a very serious condition and resulted in not only appearing frivolous but also playing down its importance to public opinion and may have only served to produce a massive obstacle of indifference to any future truly fervent organized attempts to address this issue. Good going kids, hope you had fun, don't bother to pick up all those pizza boxes, I'm sure the cleaning lady will take care of it!
 
 
+6# cstein 2011-09-21 18:02
MONEY HAS AN ENEMY (pass it on
 
 
+17# Tommycanyouhearme 2011-09-21 18:11
The protesters are certainly not dumb or stupid. They are unafraid. When you ain't got nothing you got nothing to lose. The current economy affects them the most, because they are young with no prospects for a real job. Only they are willing to say what everyone else knows but are reluctant to speak out. The system engineered over the last 30 years has failed them and almost everyone else. The rich, the big banks, the multinationals, are doing very well and must use the NYPD to keep things that way. Keep in mind that many Police officers have lost their jobs etc. as well. Can you get them on your side? You probably could, if you decided to do that.
 
 
-21# fobsub 2011-09-23 02:09
Of course they're unafraid, they have nothing to be afraid of,, they don't even know what they want and they'll all go home soon, so they present no threat. While its true that they are the ones that will be most affected by this problem, its also true that "youth is wasted on the young" so they don't even know it and by the time they figure it out they'll be too old, battered and defeated to be able to do anything, or will have gained so much to lose by goin with the flow that they won't want to do anything. Every previous generation contributed in that way to help create this ugly condition and I am as confident as its evil perpetrators (knowing that they are far more immoral and clever than I) that every following generation will do the same until the whole thing crumbles down on top of its self,, only then will the sun come out and birdies will be tweeting again and there may even be a few human survivors to eagerly begin the whole process over again. Thats the human thing,, its how we progress.
 
 
+13# Tommycanyouhearme 2011-09-21 18:16
There is a lot of rainy weather ahead. I think you should consider working in shifts to give people a chance to dry off and warm up. Good luck, don't give up.
 
 
-26# fobsub 2011-09-23 02:12
No need, they won't be there,, they'll be home polishing their skis or otherwise getting ready for their next adventure.
 
 
+16# iris 2011-09-22 09:02
if the press wont cover it, try bumper stickers that say it "tax wall st transactions" ." police the fraud" "Jail banksters!". return the glass steagal act. iris.
 
 
-19# fobsub 2011-09-23 02:13
Cool, mine says "I brake for ants"
 
 
+21# TrueAmericanPatriot 2011-09-22 12:59
No, Keith; Mainstream Media did not FAIL to cover the protests; THEY REFUSED to cover it!
 
 
+17# BLBreck 2011-09-22 13:43
I have written comments at NPR and CNN and the NYT asking them why they are not covering progressive events like this and the protest out side of the White House about the Keystone Pipeline where hundreds of people were arrested. I guess it's time to start calling them, too! Perhaps if a lot of people who can't be in NYC flood the phone lines of major media asking why they are not covering this event, it would be part of this protest.
 
 
-15# fobsub 2011-09-23 02:19
Things get to where they get because the perps have confidence in the American people. This is a Demockracy so you have a choice,, get with it, or get burried.
 
 
+7# reiverpacific 2011-09-29 17:00
Quoting
Things get to where they get because the perps have confidence in the American people. This is a Demockracy so you have a choice,, get with it, or get burried.

This has been an interesting and sometimes cloudy back-and-forth but I have to interject here. The fact that you consider the "Fragmented States" to be a "Demockracy" (is that a new spelling for a mockery of "democracy?" -in that case, right on!), demonstrates y'r insouciance and please don't give me any patronizing or flippant claptrap in return. -Just what you base these specious assumptions and mockeries on.
Macing a non-violent bystander OR a protester and cuffing same is not democracy. These are NOT spoiled trust-fund brats but people of all ages who see their future and past (like me ) being shredded by the greed-mongers and their shills in congress. They are occupying public and semi-public spaces as is their right.
The bloody cops should be out there WITH them! -They are just as much at threat as the Wisconsin example shows.
I'm an old activist from way back, physical and conceptual, and I applaud ALL attempts by ALL people from ALL walks of life to get out and say "Enough!".
If you don't like it, get outa the way! I'd be there with them if wasn't one of the "New Poor", caused by -well guess who?
Now git real or git off!
 
 
-7# fobsub 2011-09-22 22:23
I heard few complaints before the meltdown. The "99%" are equally responsible for allowing an evil enemy to permeate, gain power and tear down the constitution and democracy while we (the 99%) turned a blind eye, greedily hoping that some of the blood $$ would drip on us. Its a little late. It will take millions of determined protestors on Wall Street to begin to make a dent and many will die. Ready to make a sacrifice?
 
 
+15# Tommycanyouhearme 2011-09-23 07:42
If voters were truly informed and checked their facts before they voted,that would solve all our problems. The middle class is a sleeping giant, easily persuaded to vote against their own interests, on the basis of mere slogans. The politicians smile and wave the flag, while they pick your pocket. Wake up america, please.
 
 
+11# Tommycanyouhearme 2011-09-23 07:43
Tip: best rain wear is a full length poncho.
 
 
+11# boudreaux 2011-09-23 07:00
They have forgotten who bailed them out and now look at where we are, they still get so many profits from kickbacks and keep wanting to drain us of everything that we have worked for in this country to stay free, now it looks like they will become a police country until these Americans wake up and know that they live in this country too...we need more United We Stand in this once beautiful land in which we lived and prospered.Let's not ever forget that we built this land and this land is our land......
 
 
+13# Tommycanyouhearme 2011-09-23 14:44
Wall Street just completed it's worst week since 2008. This may get people to realize that NOTHING has been fixed on Wall Street. The protest may begin to gain more traction. Don't give up. Peace.
 
 
+15# Vardette 2011-09-23 14:48
It is so sad to see our bright, young people protesting in desperate for the preservation of their futures! They deserve better and they know they are totally being screwed. Kieth Olbermann did report the protest on Current TV 107 on Comcast! I emailed Ed Shultz demanding coverage.
 
 
+12# Helen 2011-09-24 09:18
I wonder if this protest is being reported abroad. Maybe the people in other countries would be interested in seeing that all Americans are not in league with the corporations.
 
 
+10# coffeewriter 2011-09-24 17:08
As a South African living in South Korea, I admire and support these protests 100%. I hope they carry on until, in your own country and elsewhere, the powers that be take note. Make sure your mainstream media has no option but to report on the occupation! Strength and peace to all involved.
 
 
+1# Dion Giles 2011-10-06 19:19
I noticed a call on Facebook today inviting people to an Occupy Townsville meeting on October 15 at that town's Masonic Hall. Townsville is a regional city in north Queensland, Australia. There are many echoes of the Occupy Wall Street movement around the world - but the usual Press blackout.
 
 
+9# Vardette 2011-09-24 10:43
Things need to start from somewhere and this is a beginning. We must protest or be crushed. Also we should all call our reps and tell them that legal bribery has been a primary component in landing us where were are today and we will no longer vote for reps who put profit and corporate favoritism ahead of the survival of their constituients. You can look up where your reps get their money from online. http://www.opensecrets.org/cmteprofiles/overview.php?cmte=SBUD&cmteid=S07&cycle=2012
 
 
0# wwway 2011-09-24 14:06
Someone told me that one of the reasons why NYC has so much law enforcement and other services and eminties like Central Park upkeep is because the wealthy residents pay extra above and beyond their own taxes and raise money among themselves to fund all these things. Is this true? Anyone know? It seems that the police are getting braver and braver through expectations by the wealthy that the city be "cleaned up."
 
 
+3# teachnet 2011-09-24 14:22
Scott Galindez' "Put on Notice?" captures the struggle intrinsic to capitalism and made real in the 1854 question attributed to Chief Si'ahl (Seattle) "How can you own the sky?" Capitalism MUST commodify EVERYTHING -- the Midas Virus. Brookfield Properties spent $8 million renovating the plaza in 2005, probably much less than the taxes they owed that year but avoided paying. They "own" this public land! Privatization of that which we should share in common with all life leads to "Notices" of what we can and cannot do there. 

Time to take it back. ALL of it.
 
 
+7# angelfish 2011-09-24 14:24
WHY are the Police acting like Nazi Storm Troopers towards these PEACEFUL protesters? Mayor Bloomberg should be ASHAMED of himself for allowing this kind of brutality to take place against NON-VIOLENT citizens exersizing their right to Free Speech! This is DISGRACEFUL and will be remembered! I sent an e-mail to the New York Times asking WHY they haven't covered any of this and have not received the favor of a reply. So much for "All the News that's fit to print"!
 
 
+4# endgame 2011-09-24 14:32
Is this really happening? I just now rechecked today's New York Times and the LA Times. Not a word on it in either paper. Must be one of those strange dreams. I gotta get off the jug wine.
 
 
+5# fobsub 2011-09-24 16:10
Quoting
Is this really happening? I just now rechecked today's New York Times and the LA Times. Not a word on it in either paper. Must be one of those strange dreams. I gotta get off the jug wine.


Good morning sleepy,, now you know what your news media is all about. What you see happening here is the norm and can be extrapolated to include all "news" in this country. We call Palestinians "terrorists",, start reading foreign news broadcasts to learn who the real "terrorists" are. This is just one of many glaring examples demonstrating that every word or action, spoken or perpetrated by Republicans is a lie or a deceitful tactic bent on personal gain regardless of cost to others or national consequence. Have a nice day.
 
 
+10# Annette Saint John Lawrence 2011-09-24 14:35
Simply wanted to thank RSN for this excellent Chronicle. I appreciate the simplicity and meticulousness of what you 
put out as well as the way you go about it. I experience a
certain Soul quality which I am not able to explain in words.
Thank You.
 
 
+11# angelfish 2011-09-24 14:50
I think it's heartening to see so many bright, articulate young people telling their truth to power in such a peaceful and coherent manner. THIS is why the News Media isn't covering any of it. They WANT to see blood in the streets, THEN and ONLY then will it get any air time. Shame on ALL of them who are turning this Country into a Nazi/Fascist State!
 
 
+4# Lulie 2011-09-24 15:39
Hurray for the protesters! But they need to make their demands more clear and specific.
 
 
+6# Progressive Patriot 2011-09-24 18:50
I'm not at all surprised that there is brutality on the part of the police. America promotes that kind of treatment of demonstrators in other countries.
 
 
+10# giraffee2012 2011-09-24 18:52
How does one get a "permit" to join the protest? I "Heard" - those without a permit will be arrested.

These PD are acting like "brown shirts" of yester-year!

Other than ONLINE - has anyone seen these protests in local newspapers?
 
 
+3# X Dane 2011-10-03 23:03
Yes Giraffe. I don't know where you live, but I can tell you that on the 12th day LA Times FINALLY got their act together and started writing about the protests, a number of snide remarks, because there were not thousands (week-day) but hundreds.....and they also chided protesters because there were not any famous people taking part.
I wrote and asked them if they were waiting for the blood to flow in the streets before they would bother to inform their readers about what is going on.
 
 
0# boudreaux 2011-10-14 08:04
Not at all....
 
 
+5# Tommycanyouhearme 2011-09-24 21:02
I have to hand it to the officer in the white shirt who applies the pepper spray to the females in the orange net and then quickly walks away, out of view. Is that what they teach them in the police academy?
 
 
+8# seeuingoa 2011-09-25 01:35
Policestate and fascism as in
Germany and Italy in the 1930´s
is just around the corner.
 
 
+9# seeuingoa 2011-09-25 02:28
what about making huge banners saying:

DEAR POLICEMAN

WE ARE HERE FOR YOU ALSO

SO PLEASE BE NICE TO US
 
 
+1# X Dane 2011-10-03 23:06
Good idea, and also the truth.
 
 
+14# SteveH 2011-09-25 08:22
I just visited the NY Times web site to see if there's any reporting and, yep, a couple f articles in fact. The articles were disparaging of and focusing on what could be seen by many as the "fringe". This is an attempt to discredit the movement.

However, by far, the largest number of readers' comments, responding to those articles, articulated that these protests are valid, relevant and intelligently motivated. Despite biased reporting, people are watching and understanding all too well that the 99% are us and that Wall St controls K St and K St controls 1600 Pennsylvania Ave and 1st St.
 
 
+3# X Dane 2011-10-03 23:12
Steve H, write and give them hell. They really need to understand how angry we are. And they neglect it at their own peil, because the protedters are not going away. I truly believe this is a beginning of something important. and we need to support the protesters, even if we can't be there with them on the street.
 
 
-19# Joeconserve 2011-09-25 09:14
Hey, the sit in is getting great coverage on FOX. Oh, that's right that channel is not on the list of approved channels. Anyway, it's been good coverage.
 
 
+2# angelfish 2011-10-03 08:20
Yeah? Maybe so, but I think that, Sick Puppies that they are, they're just gloating at seeing young people get brutalized by the Goon Squads.
 
 
-2# X Dane 2011-10-04 19:44
Joeconserve Who cares what fixed news says or does, very few people with working brains and hearts watch that crap.
A few times I have watched. It nearly made me sick. Sadly too many people's brains have been poisoned, and turned into mush by the venom spewed by fix.
I am afraid they are now a lost cause.
 
 
+9# Vardette 2011-09-25 12:41
OUT RAGE!!!!- I am calling Bloomberg's office and telling him I will NEVER vote for him again! How dare they do this to our desperate young people!
212-788-0010
 
 
+6# propsguy 2011-09-25 13:29
hmmm, does anyone still go to burger king? maybe you want to stop
 
 
+6# bigkahuna671 2011-09-25 16:41
How many of you are veterans? How many of you really believe we need to do something about Wall Street? If you really did, you'd think that maybe it needs to be occupied by veterans who've decided to exercise the 2nd Amendment rights guaranteed to us by the GOP and their Supreme Court. All police officers and other first responders who are vets and who are sick and tired of the greed and corruption of Wall Street should also get involved and shut down the Street. Don't support Big Money by coming down on middle class Americans who've grown tired of being screwed by these jerks, support your brethren and peers and help to drive them out of the country. Do you think the Chinese would put up with this kind of greed? Hell, no! In China, you do this and you get publicly executed. If the Right Wing can call for people to take up arms, isn't it about time that the Left Wing do the same? Enough of this garbage, take the SOBs down. Scare the living bejeesus out of them and maybe (although I doubt it), just maybe, they'll start working for less $$ and try to restore the foundations of our economy. Hey, maybe we could even get some of the Pols in the GOP to join in, although I doubt it. Throw the bums out of their offices and into jail cells!!!
 
 
+1# punk 2011-09-26 04:28
wtf are u talking about? u havent been to china, thats for sure. there are enormously wealthy ppl there, and they're out shopping like mad in malls so glitzy, they make american malls look like run-down dollar stores.
get out your guns and talk ignorant gibberish? i think you crashed the wrong party. u sd have taken a hard right back at the T party exit. sorry, but you'll just have to lick the bankers' ferragamo moccasins [$2,300] with all the other t party toadies.
 
 
+3# X Dane 2011-10-03 23:17
Spoken like a true right wing punk. You are clinging to your damned guns.

GUNS DO NOT SOLVE PROBLEMS THEY CREATE THEM. BRAINS SOLVE PROBLEMS.
 
 
+6# bigkahuna671 2011-09-26 13:32
I guess people didn't get my sarcasm with the 2nd Amendment rights bit. Actually, as a Democrat, this is one point of view I could appreciate 'cause I'm sick and tired about hearing how the wealthy pay more than their share, after all, they pay more than the rest of us combined...1% pays more than 97%, whoa!
But, hey, they earn the most and protect it through all the tax breaks they're given by our Congress. What breaks do the middle class have? Unless you own a home, just your mortgage interest, but the wealthy incorporate themselves and buy their cars, vacation homes, etc, through the corporations. The corporation pays at a corporate rate, but since the car is used to haul the CEO around and the vacation home might be used to reward junior execs for a job well done, they become complete write-offs. It's a racket but they get away with it. Jefferson said a little blood needs to be shed every now and then. In recent years, with the two Bush wars, the only blood that's being shed is by working class stiffs. I still think a 2nd Amendment solution sounds pretty good.
 
 
+4# punk 2011-09-26 03:56
i'm glad the 'Protesters Go Topless' vid was removed. why did u put it on anyway? nothing like making the whole protest look stupid.
 
 
-15# Martintfre 2011-09-26 12:32
crap that might of been the only vid worth the time.
 
 
-1# Martintfre 2011-09-26 12:28
Wrong target - 

If corporations are what your after then 
Occupy the FED (Federal Reserve Bank) They are a corporate monopoly protected by government with the 'exclusive' power to print money at will.

By the way - the Democratic party, like the Republican party and the US government are corporations as well - legal fictions that have no brain no belly no life and no right to vote.
 
 
+11# davidhp 2011-09-26 13:20
The arrests I have seen on these videos were just plain harassment of the right to assemble and petition the government. This is part of the creeping fascism which is a result of allowing the corporate robber barons to control America's economy at the expense of the rights of the people.

America allows right wing theocratic zealots to appear at demonstrations supporting the corporate oligarchy and armed with assault rifles and takes no action, but arrests peaceful demonstrators against the corporate power structure. The police who are union members should be ashamed for allowing this to happen (though it appears the police manager scabs are the ones leading the arrests).

These demonstrations need to spread across the country - they cannot be centralized in one location. The arms of Wall St spread through out the country, they must be fought everywhere.
 
 
+11# davidhp 2011-09-26 16:48
Everyone should be contacting their representatives in Congress and the Senator demanding a federal investigation into police brutality at the anti Wall St demonstrations in New York. Stop this fascism now.
 
 
+5# Vardette 2011-09-26 17:51
These kids are disorganized. They need a leader- Where is Michael Moore and the unions? Where are Progressive leaders. These poor kids are alone trying so hard to make change and be heard.
 
 
+2# Regina 2011-10-08 09:04
Michael Moore has been there, but only Keith Olbermann showed him there, as I recall.
 
 
+7# Vardette 2011-09-26 18:01
NY police should pay attention to the Tea Party agenda to break the unions and know that the police unions are at risk as much as evryone else. So as silly as these people may seem to them, tomorrow it may be their wages and jobs that are cut.
 
 
+8# R U Kidding Me? 2011-09-27 00:47
This is reminiscent of the 60's in the fight for Civil Rights, the fight to abolish Prohibition, and it will no doubt spread throughout the country which is a great thing. Have a cohesive argument PLEASE...don't be all over the map so your message is clear: College grads with a ton of debt unable to get good jobs...the American dream hijacked by sheer corporate greed. They are not job creators, they are middle class destroyers and WE THE PEOPLE SHALL OVERCOME one more storm. The sane part of the country is with you and the insane part you don't want anyway.
 
 
+9# sebouhian 2011-09-27 00:51
This violence against the people is not surprising. From my childhood in the Bronx up to my high school in Queens, I experienced police threatening us boys on the street, to confess robbing a local store, when we were just playing ball in the street; climaxed by a scene in which several cop cars screeched up to a corner out side the high school, jumped out with their batons lashing at the kids gambling with dice, no warnings, no talk, just attack to injure, beating the kids on the head, all over, no restraint, kids sobbing in pain, police crazed by what they saw as enemies like on a battle field. I grew up on seeing the police as a danger to us, not as protectors of peace and justice. Unfortunately what has happened on Wall Street simply reinforces that view, as if the citizens peacefully objecting to the captialistic system and its faults and economic cruelty against workers and their families--as if those objecting in public are the terrorists.
 
 
+6# gtigerclaw 2011-09-27 10:47
Hi all, I just got bounced off Facebook for posting this link on the official Occupy Wall St page http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XLRX7bZH41g.

I don't really care, but if that was the cause, the big players are getting really scared.

They have the power to isolate me, but change my mind and stop me from spreading the word never.
 
 
+6# Bodiotoo 2011-09-27 14:35
Wish the "sitters" all the best. Stay "Peaceful. find the route the serves the poropse...long term anti violence, we need these all over the country, not just in front of Wall Street..."
 
 
+9# Bodiotoo 2011-09-27 14:45
will the actions of the officers in NY mark the "Kent State" of this generation or will we need our youth to be murdered on the streets and campuses again?
 
 
+5# Vardette 2011-09-28 12:13
We need to do what we have to do with courage and conviction for our futures and lives. Kids in poor neighborhoods are getting murdered every day. Medical malpractice is the major cause of death in our nation, followed by smoking cigarettes, poverty, lack of healthcare. We are already being murdered!
 
 
0# Ella 2011-09-27 22:20
A simple revolution for people who don't get that they are being manipulated and lied to like always. Shedding more blood for the NWO, jut like the original "fake" tea party. History is being written/falsified once again. How many will die for this one? Wake up people, Anonymous is the CIA. Alex Jones is CIA. You are being CONNED.
 
 
0# Vardette 2011-09-28 12:09
Please. What planet are you from?
 
 
+4# Vardette 2011-09-28 11:36
I emailed brother West and he heard my call now we need more like him to join in. I have even called the Obama comment line saying that if he is truly behind jobs and our futures he needs to come and support our young people who are fighting for their lives! IT MADE ME CRY TO SEE HIM THERE!
 
 
+8# Vardette 2011-09-28 11:46
TIME FOR THE UNIONS TO JOIN IN THE NURSES UNION, THE TEACHERS UNION AND ALL THE WORKERS WHOSE JOBS ARE BEING THREATENED!!!!
 
 
-2# X Dane 2011-10-03 23:24
Vardette. They are joining in now. one of the big union leadersg to join the protests there.
 
 
+10# Vardette 2011-09-28 13:11
Now that MSNBC has joined Olbermann on current TV along with Amy Goodman I am very, very happy that our young people whose futures have been stolen by criminals and gangsters as Mr. Moore put it, are getting support. But they need and deserve much more. All I know is that if we end up with a TP nation every parasitic special interest will suck the economic marrow from our bones and our young people know it. As Boehner said, " no jobs, so be it."just as long as the rich stay rich at our expense. They are not for jobs, healthcare, education, student loans, unemployment benefits, food stamps, head start, you name it, higher wages, unions, workers rights. Waxman just said this is the most anti envirnmental congress in our history so we can kiss our entitlements and protections good-bye too. If we vote in these guys it will be the end of our nation as we know it. This is why so many big corporations are paying off our corrupt reps that we vote for and throwing milllions to beat Obama. The GOP doesn't care if 50 + million have no health care or that our kids pay more for college than any other developed nation - And when the ten's of millions graduate and there are no jobs waiting for them shoud they roll over and play dead?
 
 
+7# futhark 2011-09-28 15:28
The whole idea of having a "demonstration" is to attract media attention to a cause or point of view. Now, however, with the corporate-controlled media being used as a tool to protect the plutocratic status quo, demonstrations as we have known them in the past are no longer as useful.

So, some other tactic needs to be invented whereby the media are compelled by public interest to give attention to opinions at variance with the self-serving interests of the plutocracy.
 
 
+9# Vardette 2011-09-28 16:16
Michael Moore interviewed at Wall St on MSNBC on the Lawrence O'Donnell show!

Michael " How can I live in a nation where 100's of peaceful protesters get arrested but not one banker that robbed us and the nation are arrested.

O'Donnell - " We have to protest this." who says protests don't work?

Thak you Lawrence!
 
 
+6# unclewags 2011-09-28 18:12
Please ask Mayo Bloom to identify the "White Shirts" component. Are they oursourced mercenaries, trained and contracted through "BlackWater" with Homeland Security funding? Resurging Nazi-fascist "Brown Shirts" ? Our citiizenry must demand full disclosure re this tool of fascist tactics. If not, our nation may well totally succumb to the dictates of corporacity-fascist governance which is in gestation at the obstretician hands of "Goebels-ian" manipulations of facts before presentation to mass consumption. As an FDR Democrat, now turned Independent, after having recruited "Veterans for Obama" who manned a phone bank in southern Indiana for the Obama '08 Campaign, I am now prepared to support only person of integrity who have proven themselves to have spoken against the abuses of power as exemplified in the actions of both the "repugnacants" and the "demon-rats" for have been feeding at the trouth of WS and the MIC. Wake up true American patriots; before you are silenced by the "White Shirted SS" of fascism... Ponder the machinations of Hitler's Brown Shirts".
 
 
+5# in deo veritas 2011-10-02 12:20
Bloomberg is the biggest corporate fascist of them all. Why did the stupid voters elect him?
 
 
+6# Vardette 2011-09-29 13:43
The jobless rate for young people are the lowest since they have been keeping records.

I guess Beohner is keeping his word. "No jobs so be it!

This state of affairs is a threat to the health, safety and welfare of ten's of millions of people. The Pew Foundation just reported that those without jobs will live shorter lives. And it made me sick to see the wall street gang standing above the crowd laughing and sipping wine! How dare they!
 
 
+2# JohnMayer 2011-09-29 22:44
Bull Conner would have gone far in the NYPD.
 
 
+4# Paul Scott 2011-09-30 20:03
I would suggest that all of us who want to support the OcuppyWallStree t movement include OWS at the end of our messages when using the internet. Its only three little letters, but at this time it represents, the power of the people.

OWS
 
 
+1# michelle 2011-10-25 11:53
I am writing 'I support the Wall Street Occupation heroes' on the back of every envelop I mail, every bill, every correspondence, every card. Let's show our support each and every way we can. Any more suggestions? I think I will add your OWS both at the end of emails and in the re: section. Resistance has to start somewhere.
 
 
+5# btbees 2011-09-30 20:06
The documentary "Inside Job" should be shown on large screen to all attending the protest rally. The shocking truth of Wall Street, a crime story like no other in history.
 
 
+4# Vardette 2011-10-01 09:05
As a supporter of NPR I am outraged that they are not reporting Occupy Wall St and I am emailing them to tell them I will not support them until they cover this story and you should too!
 
 
+6# Vardette 2011-10-01 14:34
UNION PEOPLE NEED TO SHOW UP NOT JUST GIVE THEIR SUPPORT!!!!!
 
 
+2# X Dane 2011-10-03 23:29
They are now, Vardette. They will join protesters in Pittsburg
 
 
+8# Vardette 2011-10-01 14:47
all I can say is vote for Elizabeth Warren and more like her. Listen to her epic speech and we can all see she is on our side 100%

http://act.credoaction.com/campaign/warren_thankyou/index2.html
 
 
+4# Vardette 2011-10-01 15:53
They may be spying on us but we are all reporting on them with our millions of cell phones and cameras! They can't hide this from the people anymore and having ten's of millions of young educated people with no jobs is actually going to make big changes for all of us - GO FOR IT
 
 
+6# Vardette 2011-10-02 10:51
Here's a bit of info that might make you angry. This was just reported in the New Yorker. Congressional aids do not have to pay back their student loans and congressmen and women get all stellar benefits and pay for the rest of their lives even if they only serve one term. In this case why would any of our congressmen or senators ever have any incentive to sticke their necks out for the people. All their needs are take care of and we can go to hell! This is an outrage and I will be contacting my reps to express how I feel that demand that this needs to be changed- You should too -202-224-3121 As ten's of millions of Americans struggle to survive, our reps are sitting pretty!
 
 
+6# jooberdoober 2011-10-02 11:00
The first line of this NY Times article was heavily edited from the original. The original first line stated "After allowing them on the bridge, the police cut off and arrested dozens of Occupy Wall Street demonstrators. The edit now implies that the DEMONSTRATORS were unruly and were NOT lead on to the bridge by police. Someone must complained that the reporter was reporting the truth the first time and that it had to be changed to appease the NYPD.
 
 
+3# in deo veritas 2011-10-02 12:18
nyone who maintains an account of any kind with these vampires is an incorrigable idiot and an accomoplice. Switch banks-they are not all of them corrupt. Pay off any credit cards you have with them. The only thing these thugs will feel is in their bottom line as they have no other area of sensitivity, certinly no heart or conscience.
 
 
+4# Vardette 2011-10-02 14:33
JPMorgan Chase Recently Donated 4.6 Million to NYPD

Of course they did. This is the nation we have become. The theives are paying their private police. This is why we are out there becasue of abuse of power.
 
 
+6# Stephanie Remington 2011-10-02 19:49
Regarding "JPMorgan Chase Recently Donated 4.6 Million to NYPD":

JP Morgan Chase reported over $100 billion in revenue last year. Donating $4.6 million is like a person who made $50,000/year donating a little over $2. Despite JP Morgan Chase's role in destroying police jobs and pensions, this pitiful 'tip' – to "let [NYPD] know how much we value their hard work" – apparently bought them police brutality on their behalf.
 
 
+2# williamofthetrees 2011-10-03 05:46
The Public Square is after all Public: where WE are all equal; where life needs to flow and become renewed so as to channel into every house and institution the spirit of the times. The fact that force is used on the people against the expression of that spirit is an intrusion of authoritarian power. The objective force of speech not only as a right in the full sense of the term but as a quality in the human being that keeps "life" alive is what needs to be protected above all else. Transparency, communication, solidarity are aspects of trust between human beings and are all needed for a healthy development of a humane society.
 
 
+4# boudreaux 2011-10-03 07:59
I am so in AWE of what I am seeing with the 99%, they are cleaning up the streets as they go, sweeping up garbage and being so civil with each other...but where is the media? I don't hear anything about this on CBS at all. I'm thankful for MSNBC for taking a stand with the 99% but what I really want to know is where are the people like Michael Moore, Bernie Sanders, Van Jones and the teamsteers in all of this. They should be leading in the front lines of this protest then see how many will be arrested...I am still here in the streets doing what is right, where is Robert Reich? Come on out and join the 99% where you should be....Let us all unite...
 
 
+4# metamind 2011-10-03 15:03
http://911.nodes.org We had a cabal in 2000 when Bush was "elected." There is ONE truth. Set the truth free and the truth will set us free.
 
 
+6# Vardette 2011-10-03 15:56
All I can say it will be a long hard fight so hang in there. We need you, your courage and determination. Obama has the power to use his executive power to override congress and create an emergency jobs act. Everyone shoudl call his comment line and urge him to be strong and so that.
 
 
+7# Vardette 2011-10-04 06:51
I was thrilled to see on MSNBC that Joseph Steglitz, the Nobel Prize winning economist go down to Wall St. It is people like him who make it so much more important and bring attention to the economic crisis, the destruction of our Demicracy and nation are being subjected to. He was shocked when he found that no Bull Hornes or microphones were allowed and wondered what happened to our rights. We the people are in such big trouble. The unions and many people cannot sit back and let so many of OUR brave young people take the heat for the rest of us!
 
 
+7# aljoschu 2011-10-04 08:10
Dear Americans,
you can be proud of this movement - go for it! We from the outside are looking in on what is going on in NY. 
This is like Libya, like Egypt - a bottom-up movement against the plutocrats.
They are all of one kind: But Mubarak fell, Gadaffi fell - Wall Street and its filthy thugs will fall too for the better of the people.
I just wished we could get NATO to support you in your march to Wall Street ;-))
You are not living in a democracy yet, but hopefully you will be soon.
Best wishes and good luck
 
 
+10# RemainingHuman 2011-10-04 09:03
LET US HENCEFORTH USE THE TERM "CORPORATE MEDIA" ...... IT IS not not not MAINSTREAM IS IT?
 
 
+1# RemainingHuman 2011-10-05 14:16
Right on!
 
 
-16# Martintfre 2011-10-04 09:54
TIME TO DEMAND A PEOPLES DICTATOR!


The Sheepole demand a new dictator!
 
 
+3# Vardette 2011-10-04 14:45
What wolf is saying is exactly waht we need to do and I have been SOL. We need to kick out the TP, GOP and Blue Dogs and replace them with PROGRESSIVES!!! ! AND CHANGE THE FACE OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY THE WAY THE TP HAVE CHANGED CONGRESS. 

VT is now a progressive state. Gee how did that happen? They VOTED FOR ALL PROGRESSIVES! So whatever it takes vote for Obama and a Progressive congress and senate!
 
 
+10# haightashbury 2011-10-04 19:58
Try this slogan.

Hay Hay B of A 
How many homeowners did you Bankrupt today!
 
 
+5# socialismby2020 2011-10-05 08:11
Let the media now we want events covered! Sign protest forum at: http://occupywallstreetnow.blogspot.com

700 arrested, thousands beaten, women groped, peaceful protesters maced, yet the media won't report it!

http://occupywallstreetnow.blogspot.com
 
 
+5# redchilirevolution 2011-10-05 09:49
http://www.kob.com/article/stories/S2313130.shtml?cat=500

Occupy Albuquerque !

New Mexico supports Occupy Wall Street !

Restore 95% federal personal income tax rates on Americans who NET $1 million or more a year.

Close all USA corporate federal income tax loopholes.

Use these new tax revenues to create at least 14 million new jobs !
 
 
+4# socialismby2020 2011-10-05 10:10
Why isn't the media reporting this? Sign the petition at: http://occupywallstreetnow.blogspot.com
 
 
+5# R U Kidding Me? 2011-10-05 11:35
Every single politician has been bought off. The Supreme Court with the likes of Thomas is the worse offender. They don't even do it on the sly anymore, they are blatant in their insipid moves. How long can the people on Wall Street and everywhere else building momentum last? The 1% are sitting in their plush offices thinking this will pass. WE CAN'T LET THAT HAPPEN!!! If they are allowed to get away with these iniquities, THE MIDDLE CLASS IS FINISHED!!! There is very little insulation between a resurgence of any middle class and a collapse of the corruption between politicians and Wall Street. Wall Street won't relent unless LAWS CHANGE!!! ALL THEY WILL DO OTHERWISE IS RIDE OUT THIS WAVE!!!
 
 
+1# RemainingHuman 2011-10-05 14:08
FANTASTIC HARMONICA!
 
 
+4# RemainingHuman 2011-10-05 14:12
Why do we care so much whether CORPORATE media covers this history? We are making it. We know about it. We are telling all the people who want/need to know about it. To hell with CORPORATE media. They are jackals for CORPORATE interests the world over. When we slaughter people, bomb them with drones ad nauseum - we are the MILITARY for all the wealthy of the world. We are protecting their assets as well as the assets of the SLIME in this country.
 
 
+6# angelfish 2011-10-05 15:33
The People, UNITED, will NEVER be defeated! God Bless you all in Liberty Plaza! Those of us who can't be with you in body are there in Spirit!
 
 
+5# socialismby2020 2011-10-05 15:50
1200 arrests yet the mainstream media does not report this. Protest now:
http://occupywallstreetnow.blogspot.com
 
 
+1# socialismby2020 2011-10-05 15:51
 
 
+6# angelfish 2011-10-06 01:22
Has anyone else noticed that there is NO mayhem UNTIL the Police, especially the ones in the White Shirts arrive? WHY do they need to Pepper Spray and Club unarmed, non-threatening people with their Batons? Don't they realize that this is ALL being filmed for Posterity AND the Courts so that when they try to criminalize the behavior of the Protesters, THEY themselves will be seen as the Perpetrators? God Bless ALL the Protesters! Remember that, the People, UNITED will NEVER be defeated! Justice WILL be served!
 
 
+5# fredboy 2011-10-06 09:26
Crowds frighten police. They are trained in order and expect people to obey sheepishly, thus a large crowd that stands its ground is terrifying to them.

I think, for greatest effect, it may be time to take the protest to cyberspace. And summon the will and strength of tens of millions.
 
 
+7# RemainingHuman 2011-10-06 10:39
We (my loved ones and I) are in awe of your intelligence, humanity, courage …. We salute you. We applaud you. We admire you. We support you. It would seem that those deriding this movement do not understand: (1) that the top 20% of Americans hold 87% of the total wealth in this country and that the bottom 60% owns 3.9%; (2) that the US accounts for 41% of total military spending in the world (China ranks second at 6%); (3) that 54% of all federal spending goes to fund present and past wars; and (4) if you have a job you are lucky and most definitely benefit from the work and sacrifice of all who came before us (including the cleaning staff at the hospital where you were born and the people who paved the highway to get to the hospital) … and including, of course, all those before us who struggled and died so that you DO have a job, a forty hour week, a safe work environment, health benefits, holidays, etc. Those of you who mock the bravery of these true patriots are lucky. You are NOT special. And certainly you are no more special than the patriots on the streets. (Think maybe the alleged object thrower may have been an undercover cop?)
 
 
+5# Billy Bob 2011-10-06 18:30
Yahoo is at it again. They just dumped 5 more of my emails into my trash folder while I wasn't looking.

ALL OF THEM had references to "class warfare", or "occupy wall street" in the subject heading.

I'm sure it's just another one of those "bugs" they're trying to fix.
 
 
+3# giraffee2012 2011-10-06 18:33
Jobs - not cuts - TAX WALL STREET!

Wall Street has bought our government - and ... VOTE DEM VOTE OBAMA in 2012 -- the most important election ever.

Carl Rove already has 350 Million in his "super pack" thanks to the Supremes' decision to give "person hood" to big $$$ (the motion was put before the Supremes by the Koch Brothers - after they wined/dined Scalia/Thomas - that was in the news)

Go to your Dem headquarters to go with others to minority, old people etc. neighborhoods so these people get registered and get MAIL-IN ballots. Our elections in USA are "still" free so those "required" IDs in some states FOR VOTING are also free. Walker of WI is trying to charge $28 for an ID - and there are other crazy laws being put in to limit Dems from voting.

This advice is from Michael Moore & others.

Do not sit home as in 2010 or we'll have more GOP/TP supported by the Koch + GE + ???.

And if you CAN take the day off - volunteer to COUNT VOTES -- so Dems votes do not end up in trunks of cars, garbage cans etc (as they found in OH in 2004 after John Kerry conceded.

Thank You --- VOTE DEM VOTE OBAMA -- "trust me I'm Jewish" (old saying) and old (truth)
 
 
+3# DurangoKid 2011-10-06 18:59
So the Democrats have enbraced Occupy Wall St. What comes next? Strangle it?
 
 
+3# Dion Giles 2011-10-06 20:04
Item: Michael A. Memoli, Los Angeles Times,reports: "President Obama said Thursday that the Occupy Wall Street protests show a 'broad-based frustration' among Americans about how the US financial system works." 
==================
No, Mr Obama. the frustration is not with how "the system" works, as if "the system" were the product of some kind of natural economic laws. The frustration is over DECISIONS that have thrown millions out of work, out of their homes, out of what passes in the USA for insured medical care, in order to serve the interests of Wall Street billionaires who produce no goods and no services for the community with their own hands and brains. The decisions are ones they buy through their lobbyists with the wealth they accumulate. The decisions in large measure are those made by you and by your largely chosen administration, Mr Obama, and by the venal pollies predominating in the chambers of Congress. Yes your predecessors did the main damage, but Mr Obama you are following with essentially the same decisions.
 
 
+5# Vardette 2011-10-07 08:23
Obama said on the news that if Europe goes belly up we will too. So this Global capitalism situation has clearly failed! Obama is telling us that his JOBS ACT is insurance if we go belly up except he knows damn well that this bill will NEVER pass. But when it comes to the military writing blank checks for billions is NEVER A PROBLEM - In the meantime our desperate young men and women are getting beaten and pepper sprayed while Obama and the senate are giving us false hopes once again. HOW DARE THEY AND I Have called THE OBAMA HOT LINE, AND MANY REPS HOWLING ABOUT THIS! HERE OUR PEOPLE ARE STURGGLING TO SURVIVE, GETTING BEATEN AND ABUSED WHILE OUR REPS ARE TAKING BRIBES THAT HURT US EVEN MORE, AND THEY HAVE BILLIONS FOR THESE GODDAMN WARS - NO PROBELEM!!!!!!! ! HOW DARE THEY! AND NOW WE ARE FACED WITH MR GUTLESS, GAME PLAYING FALSE HOPES OBAMA OR THE HORRIBLE TP WHO WANTS US TO GO BELLY UP! BUT BILLIONS FOR THE MILITARY AT ANT TIME NOW PROBLEM. TAX CUTS FOR THE 1% DURING A DEPRESSION, NO PROBELM AND IT MAKES ME SOOOO SAD TO SEE THESE DESPERATE KIDS GETTING BEATEN AND THE PEOPLE OF OUR NATION CRUSHED BY THE HANDS OF OUR CORRUPT AND RUTHLESS LEADERSHIP AND REPS WHILE THEY GET PENSIONS FOR LIFE NO MATTER HOW LONG THEY SERVE!!!!!
 
 
+4# Kathymoi 2011-10-09 07:54
I am greatly releaved to see that there is a ground swell of open protest to the takeover of America by corporate greed, wall street greed and bankers' greed. The protesters are risking arrest, brutal beatings and other hardships to stand up for all of us. I am, however, concerned, that marching and sign carrying will not make any impression on the rich corporations or the politicians who may be dependent on the contributions of the rich. I think the protest needs teeth. We need to organize to do something that the corporations will feel, such as withdraw our investment money from their stocks and transfer all investment money to stocks only in "socially and environmentally fair" companies. Also, shopping at local and smaller businesses rather than huge international corporations who are in large part responsible. Is there a group among the protestors offering education on what some of the huge corporations such as WalMart and McDonalds are doing and on how we can get along without supporting them? Is there a group offering education on safely borrowing money for a mortgage? What can we do to cause the bankers and corporations tofeel the danger instead of the protestors being the only ones risking loss and discomfort?
 
 
+4# Freeman1776 2011-10-10 08:40
Dear Occupiers, thanks for doing what you are doing for the rest of us who can't join you at this time, but we are slowly increasing our numbers and will be joining you soon. 

A word of caution, there are members of the FED, corporate monkeys, some government moles amongst you with an agenda to thwart the cause or to misdirect it. You are vulnerable because you are not yet well organized and that is when you are weakest and most likely to have a breach in leadership. Be careful of whom you follow and what road they will lead you down. Dont get infatuated with a dynamic leader who may have been coached on how to create a following and steer you down the wrong path. 

Keep up the great work!
 
 
+4# Hardy 2011-10-11 19:43
Lets close down B of A! close your account move your credit cards to another institution.
 
 
+1# Vardette 2011-10-12 10:25
MORE CORPORATE ABUSE IS IN THE WORKS@!

Big Business is trying to rig the justice system.

Multibillion-dollar banks, cell phone companies, cable providers and other industries are slipping forced arbitration clauses into the fine print of their contracts.

These clauses strip the signer's right to take the company to court. Instead, consumers and employees who have been hurt or ripped off are forced into a private, secretive tribunal that favors corporations.

Tell Congress: Stop the corporate attack on our rights and end forced arbitration.

No one should have to sign away their rights in order to buy a product or get a job. 

Last April, the Supreme Court made this bad situation worse. It ruled that corporations can use forced arbitration clauses to deny people the right to band together in class actions.

There is virtually no way for the customers to hold the company accountable for stealing $100 million.
.

This is corporate mugging on a grand scale.

The Arbitration Fairness Act (S. 987, H.R. 1873) would fix this injustice. The Consumer Mobile Fairness Act (S. 1652) would specifically fix the problem Don't let Big Business rig the justice system.

Thanks for all you do,


Public Citizen's Online Action Team
action@citizen.org
 
 
+3# Cheryl 2011-10-12 11:27
If this is all true, IT SHOULD BE INCLUDED IN THE PROTEST RIGHT ALONG WITH THE WALL STREET money crabbers!!!!How many Americans can get a retirement like this???? Wouldn't it be nice to able to vote on you future income or have a FREE handout like this to all of us for so Little time at a job??? Make term limits on all politician's. STAND UP FOR THIS CAUSE ALSO!!!!!

Subject: Wages

Salary of retired US Presidents .............$180,000 FOR LIFE 


Salary of House/Senate .........................
$174,000 FOR LIFE 

Salary of Speaker of the House ............$223,500 FOR LIFE 

Salary of Majority/Minority Leaders ...... $193,400 FOR Life

These are unfair compared to the above salaries... 

Average Salary of Soldier DEPLOYED IN AFGHANISTAN $38,000.00

Average income for SOCIAL SECURITY seniors $12,000

I think we found where the cuts should be made! 

If you agree... Pass it on!
 
 
+2# Holyone 2011-10-12 16:45
How can we send "Care Packages" To Our Brave 99%ers Camping out on Wall Street?

How can we get them Porta- Toilets Services and Porta- Shower Services?
 
 
+2# Vardoz 2011-10-18 17:24
An interview with the head of the Nation paper said on MSNBC all these protests must translate into votes. We must be aggressive at the voting stations and not let the screw us and that is what they want to do - HOW DARE THEY!

You gets just dont sem to get it!
 
 
+1# Activista 2011-10-19 11:13
"Occupy Wall Street Shows People Want Democracy, Not Corporatocracy: Jeffrey Sachs"
anybody with smarts knows that the MOVEMENT is not about voting, but changing system.
Start with shutting MILITARISM - $1.3 trillion/year
 
 
+2# Vardoz 2011-10-23 18:30
All I can say is that those who have landed us where we are today have made us a gross twisted hypocritical nation that waves an empty flag of "Democracy". The ambitions of those who are in charge behind the scenes have a sadistic vision of what humanity means. I hope we can prevail under such demented and ruthless conditions. Those masters of war and Wall St with their myopic minds could create a world of compassion and raise the bar for all humanity but instead they pursue a tortured world that they will leave behind anfter they have lives out their short meaningless lives. This is mankind's paramount failure and shows how truly primitive we still are.
 
 
0# panhead49 2011-10-25 15:04
Not surprised by Oakland PD in the least. They cannot do anything about the rampant violence - mostly caused by wealth & resource disparity - because the gang bangers shoot back. The OWS protesters don't. Talk about low hanging fruit!! And anyone that doesn't get that their PERS STRS 401k ad nauseum is in the hands of the Wall Street Mafia (with apologies to the real Mafia for the defamation) shouldn't be given a badge and certainly not a loaded gun!
 
 
0# Vardoz 2011-10-26 16:08
EMAIL TO OBAMA

Your inability to uphold the rule of law and justice and your willingness to destroy equal rights for American citizens and protect criminals at our expense does not make us want to vote for you. 

How many people did Bush and company kill and torture in Iraq? A war that was based on lies.

How many innocent men women and children have we murdered in Afghanistan. 

I cannot believe this is who you really are in you heart. 

How can you face your children when you support such horrific crimes? 

What is your objection to respecting the rule of law? 

Why do you support immunity for criminals and use the law to protect crime? 

We are no longer a nation that lives by the rule of law and we fly a hollow flag of Democracy that has lost all meaning.

Desperate Americans, faced with a dire economy, fighting for their lives as the gluttonous military, blithely spends 9 billion per week for the so called war in Afghanistan one of the world's poorest nations, corporations and the 1% are sucking our economy dry, as you stand impotent to protect the people who elected you and now support the abuse they are receiving while practicing their right to assemble. How can we cast our vote for you in light of all this?
 
 
0# Vardoz 2011-10-26 16:55
Survival gear when protesting- motor cycle helmets or football helmets, bullet proof jackets or some kind of reinforced jacket if you can afford it and gas masks.
 

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Thirty Years of Unleashed Greed

By Robert Scheer, Truthdig

27 October 11

 

Occupy Wall Street: Take the Bull by the Horns

 
t is class warfare. But it was begun not by the tear-gassed, rain-soaked protesters asserting their constitutionally guaranteed right of peaceful assembly but rather the financial overlords who control all of the major levers of power in what passes for our democracy. It is they who subverted the American ideal of a nation of stakeholders in control of their economic and political destiny.

Between 1979 and 2007, as the Congressional Budget Office reported this week, the average real income of the top 1 percent grew by an astounding 275 percent. And that is after payment of the taxes that the superrich and their Republican apologists find so onerous.

Those three decades of rampant upper-crust greed unleashed by the Reagan Revolution of the 1980s will be well marked by future historians recording the death of the American dream. In that decisive historical period the middle class began to evaporate and the nation's income gap increased to alarming proportions. "As a result of that uneven growth," the CBO explained, "the distribution of after-tax household income in the United States was substantially more unequal in 2007 than in 1979: The share of income accruing to higher-income households increased, whereas the share accruing to other households declined.... The share of after-tax household income for the 1 percent of the population with the highest income more than doubled...."

That was before the 2008 meltdown that ushered in the massive increase in unemployment and housing foreclosures that further eroded the standard of living of the vast majority of Americans while the superrich rewarded themselves with immense bonuses. To stress the role of the financial industry in this march to greater income inequality as the Occupy Wall Street movement has done is not a matter of ideology or rhetoric, but, as the CBO report details, a matter of discernible fact.

The CBO noted that in comparing top earners, "The [income] share of financial professionals almost doubled from 1979 to 2005" and that "employees in the financial and legal professions made up a larger share of the highest earners than people in those other groups."

No wonder, since it was the bankers and the lawyers serving them who managed to end the sensible government regulations that contained their greed. The undermining of those regulations began during the Reagan presidency, and so it is not surprising that, as the CBO reports, "the compensation differential between the financial sector and the rest of the economy appears inexplicably large from 1990 onward." Citing a major study on the subject, the CBO added, "The authors believe that deregulation and corporate finance activities linked to initial public offerings and credit risks are the primary causes of the higher compensation differential."

So much for the claim that excessive government regulation has discouraged business activity. The CBO report also denies the charge that taxes on the wealthy have placed an undue burden on the economy, documenting that federal revenue sources have become more regressive and that the tax burden on the wealthy has declined since 1979.

In the face of the evidence that class inequality had been rising sharply in the United States even before the banking-induced recession, it would seem that the Occupy Wall Street protests are a quite measured and even timid response to the crisis.

Actually, the rallying cry of that movement was originally enunciated not by the protesters in the streets, but by one of the nation's most respected economists. Last April, Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz wrote an article in Vanity Fair titled "Of the 1%, by the 1%, for the 1%" that should be required reading for those well-paid pundits who question the logic and motives of the Wall Street protesters. "Americans have been watching protests [abroad] against repressive regimes that concentrate massive wealth in the hands of an elite few," Stiglitz wrote. "Yet, in our democracy, 1% of the people take nearly a quarter of the nation's income - an inequality even the wealthy will come to regret."

Maybe justice will prevail despite the suffering that the 1 percent has inflicted on the foreclosed and the jobless. But to date those who have seized 40 percent of the nation's wealth still control the big guns in this war of classes.



"Those who stand for nothing fall for anything"
                          Alexander Hamilton

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