Sunday, 18 September 2011

OCCUPYWALLSTREET COINCIDES WITH OBAMA PUSH TO MAKE MILLIONAIRES PAY FAIR SHARE IN TAXES

 

I don’t think this was planned, certainly not by the #occupywallstreet folks, but a big civilian protest on Wall Street mimicking social-media-fueled protests in Egypt and Iran and other Arabic countries (the “Arab Spring“) AND the Obama administration are both working to make the richest 1% of the country contribute more to society this weekend.

Quote of the day:
 Actually, this is an even better "Quote of the day":

You have to love this repeatedly retweeted statement by Anonymous (anonops) from yesterday: “The police ask to speak to the leader. We told them that there is no leader. They didn’t understand. ~ #TakeWallStreet #OccupyWallStreet #Sep17

The beauty of social media and social media activism is that the leader is the cause. Or, one could argue, the leader is social media, which has made it so much easier for like-minded people to communicate, plan, and act. One person builds off of another, and other one builds off of them, and the momentum grows (if the cause taps a nerve in the collective consciousness). This issue clearly has tapped that nerve.


This Occupy Wall Street crowd is not going to get silenced anytime soon either. It includes hundreds of thousands (if not millions) of people worldwide. And it is fueled by an inequality and corruption problem that has become more and more obvious to more people.


DEMOCRACY IN ACTIONS: After speakers with a bullhorn rallied the crowd, the people broke into groups to discuss the event’s goals. Some participants circulated trays of sliced white and wheat bread while others passed out jars of creamy Skippy peanut butter, and distributed apples, bananas and oranges from shopping carts.

Others donned white, mustachioed masks of the anti-authoritarian protagonist from the film “V for Vendetta.” A few people played instruments, including guitars, ukuleles and maracas. Chants and applause periodically erupted around the plaza.


WALL STREET PROTEST BEGINS, WITH DEMONSTRATORS BLOCKED

September 17, 2011

Wall Street has turned into a campground, according to eye witness reports, people have gathered to peacefully protest the double tax standard, hedge fund bonuses and the $300 million underwater cable being laid between London and New York to speed up financial transactions by 6 milliseconds, among other things.
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Not widely reported in the news, for fear of a larger gathering, the milling protesters say they may camp out on Wall Street, “for up to a month.”

Protesters have gone as far as to place a small stuffed bunny rabbit on the hood of a police car. 

(ED: How terribly violent!)

The protestors gathered in Lower Manhattan for what they called a Day of Action Against Global Capital. Robert Stolarik for The New York Times Protestors gathered in lower Manhattan for what they called a Day of Action Against Global Capital.

For months the protesters had planned to descend on Wall Street on a Saturday and occupy parts of it as an expression of anger over a financial system that they said favors the rich and powerful at the expense of ordinary citizens.,

The organizers planned the rally on Wall Street for months to express anger over the rule of the “capitalist political system” and the rule of the rich. Some referred to the movement simply as September 17, after the date of the rally. 
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The “Occupy Wall St.” movement had stated beforehand that its mission was to bring 20,000 people
to flood into Lower Manhattan, set up beds, kitchens, peaceful barricades and occupy Wall Street for a few months.”
The idea, according to organizers, was to camp out on or near Wall Street for weeks or even months and was inspired by the massive protests that took place in Egypt, Israel, Greece, Spain and Iceland. An “Occupy Wall St.” group on Facebook calls on followers to replicate the kind, if not the scale, of protests that erupted earlier this year in these places.
deploy this emerging stratagem against the greatest corrupter of our democracy: Wall Street, the financial Gomorrah of America.”
The protesters claim that they are
the 99 percent that will no longer tolerate the greed and corruption of the 1 percent.”
As it turned out, the demonstrators found much of their target off limits on Saturday as the city shut down sections of Wall Street near the New York Stock Exchange and Federal Hall well before their arrival.

By 10:00 a.m., metal barricades manned by uniformed police officers ringed the blocks of Wall Street between Broadway and William Street to the east.

Bill Steyert, 68, who lives in Forest Hills, Queens, stood near the barricades at Wall Street and Broadway and shouted, “Shut down Wall Street, twelve noon, you’re all invited,” as tourists gazed quizzically at him.
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Talking to a reporter, Mr. Steyert elaborated:
“You need a scorecard to keep track of all the things that corporations have done that are bad for this country.”
Nearby, Micah Chamberlain, a 23-year-old line cook from Columbus, Ohio, held up a sign reading
“End the Oligarchy” and said he had hitchhiked to New York to participate in the protest.

“There are millions of people in this county without jobs,” he said.

“And 1 percent of the people have 99 percent of the money.”
Throughout the afternoon hundreds of demonstrators gathered in parks and plazas in Lower Manhattan. They milled, held teach-ins, engaged in discussion and debate and in some instances embarked on marches through the streets and sidewalks, brandishing signs with messages like “Democracy Not Corporatization” or “Revoke Corporate Personhood.”
Organizers said the rally was meant to be diverse,
and not all of the participants were on the left.
Followers of the right-wing figure Lyndon LaRouche formed a choir near Bowling Green and sang “The Star Spangled Banner” and “The Battle Hymn of the Republic.” Nearby, anarchists holding a red and black flag carried knapsacks, sleeping bags and tents.
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At one point in the early afternoon, dozens of protesters marched in a circle around the famous bronze sculpture of a bull on lower Broadway. Among them was Dave Woessner, 31, a student at the Harvard Divinity School, who had traveled to New York with several fellow students.
“When you idealize financial markets as salvific you embrace the idea that profit is all that matters,” he said. “You start thinking only as yourself.”
A few minutes later about 15 people briefly sat down on a sidewalk on Broadway, leaning against a metal barricade that blocked access to Wall Street. For a moment things grew tense as officers converged and a police chief shoved a newspaper photographer from behind.
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After a police lieutenant used a megaphone to tell those sitting on the sidewalk that they were subject to arrest the protesters got up and marched south.
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Paul J. Browne, the Police Department’s chief spokesman, said no permits had been sought for the demonstration but plans for it “were well known publicly.”

Some slogans include:”feed the poor, eat the rich”. Also; “The system is going to collapse,” a voice blasted through megaphone, “we are here to make it collapse faster.”
“The one thing we all have in common is that We Are The 99 Percent that will no longer tolerate the greed and corruption of the one percent,” said a statement on the website Occupy Wall Street. The movement was launched by the online magazine Adbusters in July.

MEANWHILE BACK IN WASHINGTON:

CHUTZPAH AT ITS WORST: 
 Republican leaders are calling Obama’s proposal to tax millionaires and billionaires at least the same as common citizens are taxed “class warfare” ~ way to protect multi-million-dollar estates built on the backs of underpaid workers!

For sure, rich Republicans owned by richer businessmen will do all they can to fight Obama’s proposal, which would help bring the U.S. out of debt, create jobs, and balance societal wealth and power. But hopefully it can get pushed through.


Meanwhile, Obama, whose highly successful presidential campaign used social media better than any other, is also frustrated with the inequality in the country (or at least in the tax code), or is just listening and responding to the growing discontent in the country.


He will have to do more than try to close tax loopholes for the rich, though, to satisfy this growing civilian movement. The goal of the Occupy Wall Street crowd is reportedly “to get President Barack Obama to establish a commission to end ‘the influence money has over our representatives in Washington.’”
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There is an Al Jazeera stream of the mellow protest available here. According to Twitter, the riot police are closing in. Remember, with Al Jazeera, watch the stream, but don't believe a word they say.

Live stream:  http://www.livestream.com/globalrevolution




 





10 QUESTIONS
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PROTESTS ARE GLOBAL


Occupy Wall Street is actually just one part of the story, though a leading part of it. Coordinated protests were planned around the world. Here’s a list from Wikipedia:

#TOMALABOLSA in MadridSpain

#TOMALABOLSA in ValenciaSpain

#OCCUPYFDSF in San FranciscoUSA

#usdorLosA in Los AngelesUSA

#TakeTheSquareWI in MadisonUSA

#OCCUPYBAYSTREET in TorontoCanada

#OCCUPYBANKOFENGLAND in LondonUK

#ANTIBANKS in LisbonPortugal

#ANTIBANKS in AthensGreece

#OCCUPYMARTINPLACE in SydneyAustralia

#OCCUPYBÖRSENSTRASSE in StuttgartGermany

#OCCUPYMARUNOUCHI in TokyoJapan

#OCCUPAZIONEPIAZZAAFFARI in MilanItaly

#ANTIBANKS in AmsterdamNetherlands

#ANTIBANKS in AlgiersAlgeria

#ANTIBANKS in Tel AvivIsrael


No small deal, eh?

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