Topic: Opinion piece on OWS | |
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Opinion
'Occupy Wall Street' -- It's Not What They're for, But What They're Against By Sally Kohn Published October 14, 2011 | FoxNews.com Print Email Share Critics of the growing Occupy Wall Street movement complain that the protesters don’t have a policy agenda and, therefore, don’t stand for anything. They're wrong. The key isn’t what protesters are for but rather what they’re against -- the gaping inequality that has poisoned our economy, our politics and our nation. In America today, 400 people have more wealth than the bottom 150 million combined. That’s not because 150 million Americans are pathetically lazy or even unlucky. In fact, Americans have been working harder than ever -- productivity has risen in the last several decades. Big business profits and CEO bonuses have also gone up. Worker salaries, however, have declined. Most of the Occupy Wall Street protesters aren’t opposed to free market capitalism. In fact, what they want is an end to the crony capitalist system now in place, that makes it easier for the rich and powerful to get even more rich and powerful while making it increasingly hard for the rest of us to get by. The protesters are not anti-American radicals. They are the defenders of the American Dream, the decision from the birth of our nation that success should be determined by hard work not royal bloodlines. Sure, bank executives may work a lot harder than you and me or a mother of three doing checkout at a grocery store. Maybe the bankers work ten times harder. Maybe even a hundred times harder. But they’re compensated a thousand times more. The question is not how Occupy Wall Street protesters can find that gross discrepancy immoral. The question is why every one of us isn’t protesting with them. According to polls, most Americans support the 99% movement, even if they’re not taking to the streets. In fact, support for the Occupy Wall Street protests is not only higher than for either political party in Washington but greater than support for the Tea Party. And unlike the Tea Party which was fueled by national conservative donors and institutions, the Occupy Wall Street Movement is spreading organically from Idaho to Indiana. Institutions on the left, including unions, have been relatively late to the game. Ironically, the original Boston Tea Party activists would likely support Occupy Wall Street more as well. Note that the original Tea Party didn’t protest taxes, merely the idea of taxation without representation -- and they were actually protesting the crown-backed monopoly of the East India Company, the main big business of the day. Americans today also support taxes. In fact, two-thirds of voters -- including a majority of Republicans -- support increasing taxes on the rich, something the Occupy Wall Street protests implicitly support. That’s not just anarchist lefty kids. Soccer moms and construction workers and, yes, even some bankers want to see our economy work for the 99%, not just the 1%, and are flocking to Occupy protests in droves. I’ve even met a number of Libertarians and Tea Party conservatives at these protests. So the critics are right, the Occupy Wall Street movement isn’t the Tea Party. Occupy Wall Street is much, much broader. Maybe it’s hard to see your best interests reflected in a sometimes rag-tag, inarticulate, imperfect group of protesters. But make no mistake about it: While horrendous inequality is not an American tradition, protest is.And if you’re part of the 99% of underpaid or unemployed Americans crushed in the current economy, the Occupy Wall Street protests are your best chance at fixing the broken economy that is breaking your back. Sally Kohn is the founder and Chief Education Officer of the Movement Vision Lab, a grassroots think tank. Follow her on Twitter@sallykohn. Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2011/10/14/understanding-occupy-wall-street/#ixzz1b0InfO1r |
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The Idea is great but it is just a Hippy Protest in the end. Hiraldo Rivera has been interviewing people at these protests and when asked if they would take a job if a corporate man walked up to them offering them jobs most of them said no emphatically. A lot of these protesters want a hand out. It lacks direction and a more solid reason other than to vent frustration. Given time it will fade out.
Now as far as the place the message is being presented is all wrong. 100% totally and categorically wrong! Why are they in Wall Street when they should be at Pennsylvania Avenue! They should be on the steps of Congress hall. They should be at every state capital. Wall Street isn't the problem yet these protesters are just trying to piss on "The Bank's" Lawn. Why are they not on the steps of the Federal Reserve itself? Misguided, Self Interest, Uninformed, Educated Ignorance, I mean there is so much to say about this protest. Again it is a great idea but they are not affecting the people who need to make the changes and regulate banking in this nation. If anything this is just a trivial protest. If it was people banging on the door of Congress hall and being civilly disobedient on the steps of congress I would be more impressed! |
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There are signs of confidence, but also signsof tension among the demonstrators at ZuccottiPark , the epicenter of themovement that began a month ago Monday. Theyhave trouble agreeing onthings like whether someone can bring in a sleeping bag, and show little sign of uniting on any policy issues. Some protesters eventually want the movement to rally around a goal, whileothers insist that isn't thepoint.
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There is an “Occupy Beijing” group on Facebook , but you can only get onto Facebook – which is blocked by the Great Firewall – if you have censorship-evading software, a comparative rarity in China. That makes the social networking site a poor organizing tool here.
A group of older men did mount a brief demonstration last week in a park in Zhengzhou , the capital of the central province of Henan , but it had a very different feel to it from the youthful tent cities that have sprung up in European capitals, to judge by a video that made it onto the Chinese web. “Proletarians of the world, Unite!” read their red armbands, reminiscent of Mao’s days. |
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“Occupy Shanghai ” Facebook page. Pictures show a man in a panda mask in a number of different locations in Shanghai holding up a sign reading “We are the 99 percent. We do not need greedy financial system. We need to moveforward mankind” in Chinese and English.
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Sally Kohn!
Progressive and Community Organizer Obama-Style! ![]() http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sally_Kohn Obama's Brain-Sister! |
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Police hauled away protesters in various cities Sunday as Occupy Wall Street rallies continued for the 30th day.
In Washington, D.C., 19 people were arrested by Supreme Court Police, a spokeswoman said. New York authorities arrested 14 people for violating a midnight curfew by sitting in a fountain with no water at Washington Square Park. The number was in addition to 78 arrested Saturday in citywide protests. "It was a classic peaceful sit-in," said Paul Browne, the deputy police commissioner. In Chicago, a police spokesman said there were "multiple" arrests early Sunday for disorderly conduct and violating an 11 p.m. curfew. And in Minneapolis, a woman was arrested for trespassing, CNN affiliate KARE reported. City police officials declined to comment. About 150 people were camped out under a canopy near city hall after police took away their tents, a Minneapolis protest organizer said. |
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Police hauled away protesters in various cities Sunday as Occupy Wall Street rallies continued for the 30th day.
In Washington, D.C., 19 people were arrested by Supreme Court Police, a spokeswoman said. New York authorities arrested 14 people for violating a midnight curfew by sitting in a fountain with no water at Washington Square Park. The number was in addition to 78 arrested Saturday in citywide protests. "It was a classic peaceful sit-in," said Paul Browne, the deputy police commissioner. In Chicago, a police spokesman said there were "multiple" arrests early Sunday for disorderly conduct and violating an 11 p.m. curfew. And in Minneapolis, a woman was arrested for trespassing, CNN affiliate KARE reported. City police officials declined to comment. About 150 people were camped out under a canopy near city hall after police took away their tents, a Minneapolis protest organizer said. |
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