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AOII Angel 11-10-2011 09:38 AM

We drove past Occupy Phoenix two nights ago. They are camped out downtown about five or six blocks from me. No one is allowed to sleep due to rules about "urban camping" aka no homeless allowed to sleep downtown. They come out in shifts. There are several tents for food, medical and media. Very quiet and orderly group when we drove by. You wouldn't know it by th police presence, though. I counted five police SUVs parked next to them, and we turned the corner, two police on motorcycles were sitting there with another cruiser a block away. I can't say I've ever seen that many police vehicles away from a police station.

PSKsilver 11-10-2011 01:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by amanda6035 (Post 2103996)
I did a thread search to see if someone already mentioned this, but I didn't find anything.....

http://www.daveramsey.com/newsletter...cnl_13#feature

"A lot of people on Twitter are saying I totally agree with the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) demands and goals. The only problem is that I have no idea what their demands and goals are. And neither does anyone else. If all you ever do is stomp around, yell and hold up signs protesting a million different things, sure you'll get some attention, but over time, you'll just look foolish. You end up coming across like a three-year-old having a temper tantrum.

This is what's happening to the OWS movement. They're being discredited because no one has stepped forward and really stated what it is they're after. The whole group is coming across like a bunch of jacked-up, jobless, wannabe hippies. That's not going to change anything in this country. You've got to state your goals clearly if you want to accomplish something."

Yeah, spot on. The article continues with 4 goals worth mentioning.

Thanks for sharing this amanda6035.

I really enjoyed the last two goals that Dave mentioned, the "Wall Street is Evil" and "Wealth Redistribution."

I'm not too sure what the Occupy movement is all about (especially here in Milwaukee where it now is happening). What I think it is all about is that the 99% wants some share of what the 1% has. Is that it? I feel ignorant, or confused, or I really don't know what to think. Too much is going into this.

DrPhil 11-10-2011 07:59 PM

Man fatally shoots himself at Occupy protest in Vermont:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45246660...rmont-protest/

PiKA2001 11-11-2011 05:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DrPhil (Post 2105806)
Man fatally shoots himself at Occupy protest in Vermont:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45246660...rmont-protest/

That's interesting. I saw a story a few days back of a woman being found dead in one of the tents at an occupy event. I can't find an updated story as to the cause of the death, if it was natural or if foul play is suspected. Something that is alarming to me is the growing number of reports of how crime (to even include sexual assault) is being unreported to police and covered up for fear of the occupiers permits getting revoked.

DrPhil 11-12-2011 09:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PiKA2001 (Post 2105981)
That's interesting. I saw a story a few days back of a woman being found dead in one of the tents at an occupy event. I can't find an updated story as to the cause of the death, if it was natural or if foul play is suspected. Something that is alarming to me is the growing number of reports of how crime (to even include sexual assault) is being unreported to police and covered up for fear of the occupiers permits getting revoked.

There were a couple of violent crimes at at least one Occupy protest last week. From the dawn of humanity, putting humans together for a long enough time has resulted in crime and deviance (when societies have definitions of criminal and deviant acts). I do not know why the Occupy protestors thought that they would be different.

I agree with someone on a news show who said something to the effect of: "these types of protests are a means to a goal...they are not THE goal."

I think it is time for the Occupiers to go home (for those who have homes) and figure out their next course of action. Real longevity comes when you can enact change when you stop sleeping in tents and marching boulevards.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45258539/ns/us_news-life/

moe.ron 11-13-2011 11:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PiKA2001 (Post 2104006)
Wow, things are getting out of hand now..
http://lol.escoflip.com/

Darn it, darn it to hell

:mad::mad::mad:

DrPhil 11-14-2011 11:32 PM

Trouble arises as the Occupiers realize their shit DOES stink. They are now bickering over who is among the top 1% of the Occupiers (every group has a top percent of members); and over who is the Head Occupier In Charge.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45285979/ns/us_news-life/

ASTalumna06 11-14-2011 11:45 PM

Many businesses continue to struggle due to the protests

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...815904944.html

Over the weekend, I heard on the radio that collectively, some businesses are losing hundreds of thousands of dollars. As this article points out, sales are actually up in some areas, but in others, there are large drops in profits, layoffs are necessary, and business owners are becoming frustrated.

On the news tonight, one restaurant owner said that people are sneaking in through the back door, and some are actually changing their clothes (underwear included) in the restaurant and leaving these dirty items for him to pick up. Yuck.

Ironically, the 99% are pissing off other people in the 99% and causing them to struggle to make a living.

ASTalumna06 11-17-2011 02:43 PM

The Occupiers can't even agree as to whether or not they should make any demands...

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45260610/ns/us_news-life/

knight_shadow 11-17-2011 02:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ASTalumna06 (Post 2107143)
The Occupiers can't even agree as to whether or not they should make any demands...

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45260610/ns/us_news-life/

I've been wondering about that the entire time.

Kudos for protesting and taking a stand, but what are you standing for? I have several fraternity brothers who are very involved in this movement, and none of them have been able to tell me about it.

ASTalumna06 11-17-2011 03:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by knight_shadow (Post 2107144)
I've been wondering about that the entire time.

Kudos for protesting and taking a stand, but what are you standing for? I have several fraternity brothers who are very involved in this movement, and none of them have been able to tell me about it.

Exaaactly.

And even if they DID know what they wanted, half of them don't even want to tell the rest of us.

PiKA2001 11-17-2011 05:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ASTalumna06 (Post 2107143)
The Occupiers can't even agree as to whether or not they should make any demands...

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45260610/ns/us_news-life/

This is why true democracies rarely work on a large scale. I'm sorry, but to get anything accomplished you really need a structured leadership.

amIblue? 11-18-2011 09:45 PM

Portland Pepper Spray Shot

http://www.theatlanticwire.com/natio...ccident/45186/

If someone emailed me this, I would think it was Photoshopped.

*winter* 11-19-2011 09:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ASTalumna06 (Post 2106559)
Ironically, the 99% are pissing off other people in the 99% and causing them to struggle to make a living.

I. LOVE. THIS!!!

Now they are discovering what those of us in public health have known for years: when you get a whole bunch of people together in one place, they will have to use facilities...they will generate garbage that needs dealt with...and if sanitation facilities are inadequate, things are going to become a big mess pretty quickly. :mad:

Really, if this was a bunch of homeless crackheads doing these things in a park, the police would have already rounded them up and taken them to jail. It's like it's accepted because they are middle-class. That's a double standard.

I'm tired of these people, personally. They are resource-sappers for the rest of the 99%. And they don't speak for me. I can't relate to 99% of what comes out of their mouths. Complaining about not being automatically zoomed into Upper Middle America with their (often irrelevant) college degrees. Well, get over it- working class people have been struggling for generations. Even at its worst, their lives are so much better than the lives of so many in this country. I can't help feel they are not fighting for the truly underpriveledged, but they are just irate because their lives haven't turned out exactly the way society has told them they should by age 25, because we are in a recession.

And if they are so concerned with inequalities in this country, do something productive, like tutor at an after-school center (if there are any left, with all the funding cuts...but that's another post) for underpriveledged kids. 4 or 5 hours spent sitting in a tent doesn't do JACK for the real problems in this country. 4 or 5 hours spent working with a kid who really wants to understand Algebra but just isn't getting it without help does a LOT. Think of the power of thousands- if they would all just go volunteer for those hours, instead of sitting around in tents- amazing things could happen. These ARE edcuated, intelliegent people- pool your resources and start looking for places where you can ACTUALLY make a difference instead of pulling this stunt.

I think it's kind of funny (but I'm just mean like that)...the Occupy movement has finally come to Newark, NJ. They were told to get out of the parks by dusk, but then the police changed their mind and let them stay. The caveat? "You are on your own," the police Captain said. "Call 911 if there's an emergency." And then the officers left to go patrol the neighborhoods.

I totally agree with this approach. There are far too few police officers in cities these days due to all the crazy budget issues- those officers need to be in the neighborhoods, tackling the very real issues that are happening there, not baby-sitting a bunch of people who think sitting in a park is going to change the national tax structure (which ain't happening.)

I know, I'm just a big meanie :rolleyes: But honestly, what is sitting in a park doing to change the world? It's not 1969!!!

AGDee 11-19-2011 11:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by *winter* (Post 2107458)
Really, if this was a bunch of homeless crackheads doing these things in a park, the police would have already rounded them up and taken them to jail. It's like it's accepted because they are middle-class. That's a double standard.

Um, homeless crackheads live on the streets all the time and nobody does anything at all about it. There aren't enough jails...

Quote:

Originally Posted by *winter* (Post 2107458)
Complaining about not being automatically zoomed into Upper Middle America with their (often irrelevant) college degrees. Well, get over it- working class people have been struggling for generations. Even at its worst, their lives are so much better than the lives of so many in this country. I can't help feel they are not fighting for the truly underpriveledged, but they are just irate because their lives haven't turned out exactly the way society has told them they should by age 25, because we are in a recession.

This isn't the complaint. The complaint is that no matter what you or anybody else does, you are completely and totally powerless in determining the future of our country, laws, financial state, etc. Because corporations have all the power. This is NOT a government of the people, by the people or for the people. It is a corrupt hotbed of corporate greed. Is that really ok with you?

Quote:

Originally Posted by *winter* (Post 2107458)
And if they are so concerned with inequalities in this country, do something productive, like tutor at an after-school center (if there are any left, with all the funding cuts...but that's another post) for underpriveledged kids. These ARE edcuated, intelliegent people- pool your resources and start looking for places where you can ACTUALLY make a difference instead of pulling this stunt.

The bolded part is exactly what they are protesting!

Quote:

Originally Posted by *winter* (Post 2107458)
I think it's kind of funny (but I'm just mean like that)...the Occupy movement has finally come to Newark, NJ. They were told to get out of the parks by dusk, but then the police changed their mind and let them stay. The caveat? "You are on your own," the police Captain said. "Call 911 if there's an emergency." And then the officers left to go patrol the neighborhoods.

This is what the Occupy people want them to do. Watching the Portland standoff, with police in riot gear and the crowd chanting "We are a peaceful people" and "You don't need your riot gear, we don't see a riot here." This was after the police forced them out of a park, into one block of a street, packed in like sardines, and then announced over a bullhorn that if they didn't move to a sidewalk, they could be subject to arrest or physical, chemical or biological means of force. The sidewalk was packed, the street was packed and the police were blocking ALL possible points of egress. That was total B.S. Herd a group into a space for no reason, then tell them to leave or be arrested or injured and give them no way to leave???

Quote:

Originally Posted by *winter* (Post 2107458)
I know, I'm just a big meanie :rolleyes: But honestly, what is sitting in a park doing to change the world? It's not 1969!!!

Maybe it needs to be. What would you do to change the world? How would you get media attention from all over the world to look at real problems in our societal structure?

I will say that I have not agreed with every direct action they have implemented. Blocking subways during NYC rush hour doesn't hurt anybody but the rest of the 99%. Whether I agree with all of their ideas and methods or not, they have a right to be heard and a right to protest. We have the First Amendment for a reason. The 1% is clearly getting uncomfortable with this movement and orchestrated raids on Occupy camps all in the same night all over the country. The old saying is, First they ignore you, then they fight back, then you win. As they often change "The whole world is watching." This says to me that they are winning.

Check this out: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/1....html#liveblog Sounds like the 1% is getting scared to me.

*winter* 11-20-2011 08:48 AM

Um, homeless crackheads live on the streets all the time and nobody does anything at all about it. There aren't enough jails...

Point being, they get rounded up and arrested on a regular basis. In Pittsburgh they've been pretty nasty in terms of taking their belongings and raiding their camps during the day when they are empty. And certainly if there were as many of them as there are Occupy protesters, in one big place, making what amounts to a giant mess, they would all be rounded up and carted off to jail. They don't have cell phone cameras or vidoe recording devices. How do we know how the police treat them? We don't. Do these kids care? Doubtful. Bless the ones who are working with the homeless in the area, but they are the exception.

This isn't the complaint. The complaint is that no matter what you or anybody else does, you are completely and totally powerless in determining the future of our country, laws, financial state, etc. Because corporations have all the power. This is NOT a government of the people, by the people or for the people. It is a corrupt hotbed of corporate greed. Is that really ok with you?

Bull. It's the United States, not India. You are NEVER, ever totally powerless- I just refuse to believe that. As a veteran who swore up and down I'd die to defend this country and what it stands for, that statement really offends me. Not every politician is in someone's back pocket- and if there are so many that are that bad, to quote one Union official, "the only thing you need to be occupying is a voting booth."

It's not okay with me, but it's not been okay with me and my family basically since we got off the boat. Look at how factories treated workers in the 20th century, and when they didn't get their way in the US anymore, they packed up and moved the whole operation overseas, thus basically killing off the towns left behind. Not to mention the tens of thousands of orphaned dump sites they still have yet to clean up. Not to mention drafting our kids to fight in their wars (a roundabout version still occurring with the wars and the population most likely to "volunteer" for them) So, yeah...corporations being selfish and not thinking about the workers- this is NOT breaking news. It's only an "issue" since Middle America feels put out by the whole thing. If it was just the lower class, as its been for the entirety of the country's history, it would be business as usual.

The bolded part is exactly what they are protesting!

But their protesting is only making it worse for cities. There are only so many resources to go around. That's why I agree with the police Captain telling them they are on their own. For most of them, it's not THEIR city, it's not their tax dollars funding the police department, so too bad- quit hogging resources from the rest of the 99%.

God forbid someone like my mother/sister (62 with osteoperosis, and mother of a toddler, respectively) would be calling 911 for a true emergency, and the lines would be clogged, or the police/fire/EMS dispatched elsewhere over this nonsense. If that was your family, living in a city, dependent on already limited resources, how would you feel? People living in high-crime areas in cities need to know with 100% certainty that if they call 911 for a life-threatening emergency, that there will be officers available to answer. I'm sorry, but protesting is just NOT that important in the grand scheme of things.

Maybe it needs to be. What would you do to change the world?

I'm already doing it. Just because I'm not a protester doesn't mean I'm not changing the world. What I'm doing in individual lives and individual communities will have exponentially more of an impact than what these people are doing. Because, at the end of the day, do you really think the 1% cares? Fight them one on one when there's injustice in your own community, inequalities in your own school district, get out there and meet the people who are dealing with them and their gas wells, or their coal mines, that's what I'm doing. And I'm incredibly proud of my work, and what is yet to come.

How would you get media attention from all over the world to look at real problems in our societal structure?

Who cares about social media attention? The last time I turned on my TV, it told me Kim K's wedding was the biggest event in the news. Point proven.

Whether I agree with all of their ideas and methods or not, they have a right to be heard and a right to protest. We have the First Amendment for a reason.

Great, speak- there's freedom of speech. But don't use your cause to drain resources and throw your dirty underwear and human excrement around. Other people in the area have rights too- why are their rights to free speech "more important" than everyone else's basic rights to live in a clean and safe community?

The 1% is clearly getting uncomfortable with this movement and orchestrated raids on Occupy camps all in the same night all over the country. The old saying is, First they ignore you, then they fight back, then you win. As they often change "The whole world is watching." This says to me that they are winning.

Again, most of the world watches the Jersey Shore, so just because the world is watching does not mean it is going to bring positive change.

The 1% does not give an F. Walk into Goldman Sachs. I bet it's business as usual. They know they are untouchable, and they've already gotten bailed out.

The ones I deal with feel untouchable- they are in a situation where they have lied, cheated and stole to get where they are (all things we have proof of- in due time, it will all come to light) and when asked politely to come to the table and bargain with the community, they snub their noses! Because they know they can!!! They have top-notch lawyers, they have always gotten over on the people, so they think this time will be no different. Their arrogance is absolutely astounding. Based on this dealing, I would not exect much from the 1% no matter how many places people "Occupy."

But that does not make them untouchable. The truth is untouchable. Justice is untouchable. Once there is an arena to be held accountable in a court of law, hopefully justice will prevail, and thus prove my point- this country has a lot of flaws, but the rich and powerful don't always win.

And then the inevitable, "Well that's what they are protesting!" One, I don't completely agree that that is what they are protesting (more on that below). Two, I don't think protesting will change things, but I do know that fighting for our communities every day WILL. Maybe not on a global level, but one on one, and that's important, too. That's where I choose to concentrate my energy. It is frustrating when you are volunteering with a skeleton crew on feral cat management, or with Big Brothers Big Sisters, Salvation Army, or any other organization that can't find enough volunteers, but there are 1000 people sitting in a park. To me, that's maddening.

This does not apply for ALL protesters, but for many of them...I can't help think if their lives had worked out the way they "thought" they would (i.e. graduate college, get a great job, in 5 years marry and buy a brand-new overpriced house in a development, buy a giant SUV, move up in the corporate world) they wouldn't be protesting. They'd be exactly where they thought they'd always be: off in the suburbs, living lives ignorant of the struggles of the rest of the country.

Not only do they want a piece of the pie, their problem is they've felt ENTITLED to the pie, as a virtue of their social class and standing, for their entires lives. When that doesn't automatically happen at 22 years old, they can't handle it. The "pie" is not your birthright. The ability to succeed still exists in this country. It is not dead. Fight for what is yours and eventually success will come.

AGDee 11-20-2011 10:13 AM

I think you're off on the demographics of the people protesting. There are doctors and nurses volunteering in the medical tent at Occupy Detroit. They are providing medical care with donated supplies to ANYBODY who stops in there. They provided food to all of the homeless who came to eat and tent space to those who wanted it. There are small business owners donating vast amounts of food, a warehouse and other supplies. The rallies have people in business suits coming right from work, old and young.. The church leaders in the city are supportive and allowing safe parking in their parking lots. Some of Detroit's City Council have been at protests as have the Fire Department and off duty Police. These are not all college students or young recent grads who haven't found work. They are not all unemployed. I discussed the demographics of people at the rally in Chicago that I witnessed way back in this thread. I admit, some of my perspective is limited because most of my knowledge comes from Occupy Detroit, but I've seen positive actions in other Occupy cities too. In Washington, DC, they have taken over a building that is a closed homeless shelter and are working to get it in good condition again and demanding that it be re-opened because it is needed.

The only time Detroit ever rounded up homeless people and took them anywhere was two weeks before we hosted the Super Bowl. They have tent cities and those don't get closed down.

One Occupy (I think it is Portland) was using the restrooms in the park where they had set up camp until the city shut the water off. They were also cleaning those restrooms. Then they had porta potties donated. They weren't leaving human waste anywhere, yet they got evicted from camp. The police told them they had to leave and they started packing up their belongings, peacefully. They were taking things to their cars and then not allowed back in to get the rest. Their stuff was destroyed.

I've yet to see a politician who wasn't taking PAC money for their campaign or influenced by lobbyists. Sure, we get to vote, but, above the city level, all candidates are essentially chosen by the political party and pushed and supported by the parties. I remember when McCain won the Republican primary in Michigan over Bush in 2000. The Republican party was mad, really mad and flooded the media with statements about Democrats poisoned the primary by voting for McCain. It was infuriating, as a usual Democrat who was one of those who vote for McCain, not to *poison* the vote, but because McCain, at that time, was a Republican I felt I could support.

On top of that, several states have taken away the right to vote for their local officials in the form of emergency managers who can fire all the officials that the local people elected. I'm mad as hell about that.

Protests and movements of this type have effected change. The Tea Party has DEFINITELY effected change and they started out as a protest movement like this. The women burning their bras in the early 70s while trying to get the ERA passed (and I am STILL angry that women don't have an amendment declaring us equal to men), did effect change. The Civil Rights movement did effect change. None of these changes happened over night. We still have a long way to go in some of these areas, but those movements started us heading in the right direction.

I am sorry that you are offended, as a veteran, at my statement that we are powerless. I think that if I were a veteran, I'd be angry at the structure that has taken away our power rather than the statement that it has happened.

I do agree that the Occupy movement should be more careful about their direct actions. Like I said, blocking subways (which is an action that requires police intervention) is not a useful tactic. However, in other cases, there was no reason for a city to use the kind of police resources that they used. When Bank of America announced the $5 debit card fee, and they protested that and encouraged people to move to other banks, BoA decided to renounce that fee. It's a small example of change, but it is happening.

Our news media is covering Occupy every day.

As someone who has been fighting for success every day, I disagree that if you fight hard enough, it will come. Some would define me as successful and in some ways, I am. "They" said that my generation would be the first to not do as well or better than our parents and I'm feeling that now. As I prepare to do my daughter's FAFSA forms, it has hit me that I make less money now, in 2011 than my dad did in 1983 when we did MY financial aid forms. My tuition was $45 a credit hour. The tuition at the same school now is $246 a credit hour but I make LESS money than my dad did at this stage of life, with more education, more qualifications, a solid work history and consistently superior performance evaluations at every job I've had.

All of the things that were available and promised in the 80s when I started my first career job are gone- pensions, health insurance after retirement, and probably social security and medicare (which I've paid into my whole life but will likely not get anything back), company loyalty (because I can't tell you how many people I see get laid off just before they can retire so that what few bennies are out there don't have to be paid). I've had 5 different pension funds go away because the business went bankrupt. I've worked damn hard, continually upgraded my skills, gotten certifications and degrees and for what? To realize that I am powerless because our system is broken.

I've had to make financial decisions that were tough. I choose to live in a very modest ranch house with no garage. I choose to not get things like my carpet replaced, despite its poor condition because I want to give my kids experiences. I made a conscious decision a few years ago that giving them life experiences, such as People to People trips, Boy Scout camp trips, special pre-college programs, is more important than whether our carpet is worn or our furniture has holes in the upholstery. I am determined to help them with college as much as humanly possible so that they don't graduate in a heap of massive debt. But I'm in a very weird income bracket... one where I qualify for little, but can't afford much. I am solidly middle class. I have never lived extravagantly. I don't own designer stuff. In my 46 years, I've had 3 new cars. I don't need that stuff. But, I'm tired of financing corporate exec bonuses, and this movement has made me more aware.

So, I haven't actually participated in an Occupy rally here in Detroit. But I'm making changes. I'm supporting local businesses. I'm supporting mom and pop restaurants and stores as much as I can. I'm moving away from box stores and chains. I'm refusing to use credit, except for work travel (because that gets paid off before interest is paid), to avoid giving banks more money so I can keep it for myself. I am contemplating moving my banking to a credit union, although my bank, PNC, has not been as bad as some of the others so I haven't done that yet. These are actions that the Occupy movement are encouraging.

Senusret I 11-20-2011 10:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AGDee (Post 2107552)

So, I haven't actually participated in an Occupy rally here in Detroit. But I'm making changes. I'm supporting local businesses. I'm supporting mom and pop restaurants and stores as much as I can. I'm moving away from box stores and chains. I'm refusing to use credit, except for work travel (because that gets paid off before interest is paid), to avoid giving banks more money so I can keep it for myself. I am contemplating moving my banking to a credit union, although my bank, PNC, has not been as bad as some of the others so I haven't done that yet. These are actions that the Occupy movement are encouraging.

I like this.

carnation 11-20-2011 10:45 AM

Yep.

But I do feel like I'm back in the sixties again.

AOII Angel 11-20-2011 11:22 AM

I completely agree with you, Dee. It also makes me sad when people who THINK they are middle class support the status quo saying things like, "I have three jobs to make ends meet; they just need to stop protesting a get a job." Seriously, they think it's reasonable to have to get three jobs to make a living wage. That is a problem.

littleowl33 11-20-2011 01:42 PM

Occupy Baltimore "mic checked" Karl Rove at a symposium speech on my undergraduate campus this week (article and video):

http://articles.baltimoresun.com/201...-youtube-video

Like the majority of my friends at Hopkins I'm no fan of Karl's, but everyone I've talked to there has been pissed about it. A big complaint is that the Occupiers planted in the audience were not Hopkins students, but they felt justified in disrupting the entire event for everyone.

The Milton S. Eisenhower symposium is a year-long speaker series run by Hopkins students and funded by the university, and though it is primarily for Hopkins students, faculty and staff, it is free and open to the public in an effort to give back to the Baltimore community. They've had some pretty controversial speakers in the past (and the protestors that come with) but no one has ever actually tried to derail the speaker like this, as far as I know.

In the Youtube video you can hear booing in the background from the other attendees at the Occupiers. Most of the people I know who were there don't agree with Karl Rove's politics, but they wanted to hear what he had to say. IMHO the protestors' actions were in very poor taste.

PiKA2001 11-20-2011 06:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AGDee (Post 2107552)
One Occupy (I think it is Portland) was using the restrooms in the park where they had set up camp until the city shut the water off. They were also cleaning those restrooms. Then they had porta potties donated. They weren't leaving human waste anywhere, yet they got evicted from camp. The police told them they had to leave and they started packing up their belongings, peacefully. They were taking things to their cars and then not allowed back in to get the rest. Their stuff was destroyed.

Occupy Portland was a mess Dee. Rat infestations, lice outbreaks, herion dens (tents) popping up. It's a public safety concern. The police and city officials are in a difficult situation because can't stand back and let this continue due to health and safety reasons, but if they evict these people from parks, busses, etc there is conflict. It is what it is.

Count me in with the 99% who is annoyed and feels these people are actually the .099% and they do not represent me.

DrPhil 11-20-2011 08:59 PM

Generally speaking, I am both annoyed and amused. I am all for their right to speak out and protest--within reason. As with every movement and everything, there is the good with the bad. There is the necessary with the unnecessary. There is the much-needed-voices-for-change with the batshit-crazy-sitchoassdownsomewhere.

And let us not forget that the social movement is not the end goal. The end goal should be (insert whatever end goal(s) the majority of the Occupiers claim to have). The end goal will not be attained quickly so I hope the Occupiers do not intend to sleep on the street until there is this absolute and visible change.

Last but definitely not least, it never fails that when certain groups of people (read: predominantly white people who are working class and middle class and find once in a while opportunities to express their relative deprivation) feel oppressed or exercise their voice of oppression, these certain groups want the world to stop. Don't kid yourself, the world has not stopped as much as people want to believe--the 1% is not shitting its pants as heavily as people would like to pretend they are. These certain groups want to pretend that they are the first group of people (read: most important group of people) to really experience what they are experiencing and the first to cry out so strongly in an attempt to be a voice for change. "We are Occupying and if you don't drink what we're pouring then YOU are part of the problem. What are YOU doing for change?!" Uh...the same thing that those of us who are involved in the community and with different power minority groups have been doing for years. Where have YOU been...oh yeah, you just realized that your shit also stinks and want to sit in the "Oppressed Chair."

Have your seat in the "Oppressed Chair" until most of you decide to get back into the “(for some, conditionally) Privileged Chair." Either way, don't take opportunities from the other 99% while you're busy protesting.

ASTalumna06 11-20-2011 10:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DrPhil (Post 2107623)
Generally speaking, I am both annoyed and amused. I am all for their right to speak out and protest--within reason. As with every movement and everything, there is the good with the bad. There is the necessary with the unnecessary. There is the much-needed-voices-for-change with the batshit-crazy-sitchoassdownsomewhere.

And let us not forget that the social movement is not the end goal. The end goal should be (insert whatever end goal(s) the majority of the Occupiers claim to have). The end goal will not be attained quickly so I hope the Occupiers do not intend to sleep on the street until there is this absolute and visible change.

Last but definitely not least, it never fails that when certain groups of people (read: predominantly white people who are working class and middle class and find once in a while opportunities to express their relative deprivation) feel oppressed or exercise their voice of oppression, these certain groups want the world to stop. Don't kid yourself, the world has not stopped as much as people want to believe--the 1% is not shitting its pants as heavily as people would like to pretend they are. These certain groups want to pretend that they are the first group of people (read: most important group of people) to really experience what they are experiencing and the first to cry out so strongly in an attempt to be a voice for change. "We are Occupying and if you don't drink what we're pouring then YOU are part of the problem. What are YOU doing for change?!" Uh...the same thing that those of us who are involved in the community and with different power minority groups have been doing for years. Where have YOU been...oh yeah, you just realized that your shit also stinks and want to sit in the "Oppressed Chair."

Have your seat in the "Oppressed Chair" until most of you decide to get back into the “(for some, conditionally) Privileged Chair." Either way, don't take opportunities from the other 99% while you're busy protesting.

*LIKE!*

*winter* 11-22-2011 06:35 AM

I so want to respond properly, but I'm just too tired (this week is insane.) So for now, I'm going with, "Yeah...^^^^...that. What they said."

AGDee 11-22-2011 07:40 PM

Occupy Detroit has packed up and are occupying a warehouse (that was donated to them) and looking for other space. They are still having general assemblies twice a week and planning direct actions, including a mic check at a mall on Black Friday and some protests at Walmart on Black Friday. Today, the Detroit Police Chief praised them.. front page article in the Detroit Free Press today:

http://www.freep.com/article/2011112...xt|FRONTPAGE|s

DrPhil 12-09-2011 10:26 AM

I watched the "eviction" of the Occupy DC on CNN last weekend. I found it to be amusing and annoying on the part of the Occupiers.

Occupy NY:

http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/20...ng-occupy-camp

Can someone remind me of what the purpose of this Occupy movement is?

knight_shadow 12-09-2011 12:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DrPhil (Post 2111060)
Can someone remind me of what the purpose of this Occupy movement is?

No one knows :(


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