Occupy Wall Street

Gatherings, Protests, Demonstrations, discuss them all here.

Re: Occupy Wall Street

Postby Kate Shaw » 11/ 24/ 11 8:36 am

styky wrote:Some 99 Percenters Living Like 1 Percenters At Swanky New York Hotels

http://sayanythingblog.com/entry/some-9 ... nything%29


The night Ezra and the Toronto Sun revealed that only 5 of the 29 tents at Occupy Toronto were occupied at night, neighbours told the Sun that the rest of them were across the road at the Holiday Inn.

They just dont make revolutionaries like they used to!
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Re: Occupy Wall Street

Postby RedDog » 11/ 24/ 11 8:42 am

Kate Shaw wrote:
styky wrote:Some 99 Percenters Living Like 1 Percenters At Swanky New York Hotels

http://sayanythingblog.com/entry/some-9 ... nything%29


The night Ezra and the Toronto Sun revealed that only 5 of the 29 tents at Occupy Toronto were occupied at night, neighbours told the Sun that the rest of them were across the road at the Holiday Inn.

They just dont make revolutionaries like they used to!

There wasn't a soul seen on the site in Edmonton Sunday morning aside from the two idling police cruisers in -24c weather. I worked a homeless kitchen for the day on 96 st. No placard waving marchers showed up to help. I suspect they were watching football in their hotel rooms downtown.
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Re: Occupy Wall Street

Postby Kate Shaw » 11/ 24/ 11 8:44 am

* Because thats where the cameras were. (Yesterday there were way more media than Occupiers, and all the Occupiers they captured appeared to be, um, mentally confused).

*Because he heard the Black Bloc had been seen near the upscale electronics shop next door.

*Because he had phoned in sick to the office and didnt want his boss to see him in smelly clothes pretending to be homeless.

*To meet Sid Ryan and find out how to join a Public Union and become one of the 1%.

*To get to the Holiday Inn.
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Re: Occupy Wall Street

Postby Dogpatch » 11/ 24/ 11 8:53 am

Image

:lol:
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Re: Occupy Wall Street

Postby RedDog » 11/ 24/ 11 8:59 am

That guy didn't spend a lot of time in class as a youngster. He's not doing it right. Of course, maybe like Obama his country is Kenya.
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Re: Occupy Wall Street

Postby styky » 11/ 24/ 11 10:26 am

I pledge to never buy a single song from anyone that records for this album. That's a promise.



Occupy Wall Street plans benefit album for itself
http://www.seattlepi.com/business/artic ... 284131.php
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Re: Occupy Wall Street

Postby Ogopogo » 11/ 25/ 11 10:29 pm

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142 ... y+movement

* NOVEMBER 25, 2011

Fairness and the 'Occupy' Movement
The protesters are on firm ground when they denounce those who get rich because of their political pull.

By ARTHUR C. BROOKS

The Occupy Wall Street movement has just passed its two-month anniversary. The protesters' calls for greater income redistribution and their denunciations of capitalism have become shriller, and the protests are becoming more violent and destructive.

A major topic of debate in conservative circles these days is how to respond. There are two schools of thought. One advocates the firehoses-and-handcuffs approach. The other is to ignore the movement and hope it fades away.

Neither is correct. Conservatives and free-enterprise advocates should seize the moment to show their own passion for the issues being debated—and, where appropriate, even embrace the protesters' moral critique of America's distorted and depressed system.

The most important area of disagreement concerns what our country needs today. The "We are the 99%" signs at every Occupy rally make it clear the protesters believe greater income equality—not more free enterprise—is what America needs. Unsurprisingly, the White House has found this class-struggle leitmotif quite handy to divert attention from its economic record. Last month White House spokesman Josh Earnest assured the public that the "interests of 99% of Americans are well represented" by Mr. Obama. This came after the president's well-worn attacks on "millionaires and billionaires," who, as we have heard many times, are not paying their "fair share."

Free-enterprise advocates should view this as a rare opportunity to expose mistaken and misleading arguments about income inequality. The dreaded top 1% earns about 20% of income today, we hear. Yes, and they also pay 37% of the federal income taxes, according to the Tax Foundation. Further, as my colleague Jim Pethokoukis has shown, wealth inequality is roughly unchanged from 20 years ago—and from 40, 60 and 80 years ago too, for that matter. According to the Congressional Budget Office, every income quintile has seen a real increase in purchasing power of at least 18% over the past 30 years.

The Occupy protesters are dead wrong on income inequality—but they are not so wrong in indicting our system today for unfairness, and for being wracked with crony capitalism, insider dealings and corruption. What is a fair economic system? Some define it in terms of forced income redistribution. The overwhelming majority of Americans, however, believe fairness means rewarding merit, even if that means some people have a lot more than others.

In 2006, the World Values Survey asked a large sample of Americans to, "Imagine two secretaries, of the same age, doing practically the same job. One finds out that the other earns considerably more than she does. The better paid secretary, however, is quicker, more efficient and more reliable at her job." When asked if it was fair that one secretary be paid more than the other, 88.6% of respondents answered that it was fair indeed.

According to the meritocratic definition of fairness, we have been getting less fair as a nation with every new redistributive policy and regulation that unnecessarily hinders entrepreneurship. Greater fairness means rewarding hard work and innovation—not handing out stimulus cash to politically well-connected corporations and campaign donors. It means lowering disincentives to invest, not trying to squeeze more money out of private entrepreneurs while protecting public-sector unions. Penalizing earned success destroys jobs and lowers growth, which especially hurts the economically vulnerable.

This brings us to a second Occupy goal that free-enterprise advocates can embrace: denouncing crony capitalism. Like statism, crony capitalism is just a way to use government to weaken competition for the sake of those who are powerful yet unwilling or unable to compete.

Indeed, crony capitalism is statism's co-dependent wife: Lurking behind almost every company deemed "too big to fail," you will find close proximity to government power. For example, Washington's auto-industry bailouts and its "Cash for Clunkers" program—handing out government grants to buy new cars—are opposite sides of the same coin. Wall Street malfeasance in the housing market is real and was spawned by the government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Want less crony capitalism, fewer insider deals and a smaller lobbyist-industrial complex in Washington? Then shrink and reform the government.

Capitalism's advocates should not see today's protests as a threat, but rather as an opportunity to express their own core values. The issues the protesters raise invite the champions of free markets to demonstrate their passion for true fairness and their anger toward crony capitalists and statist operators. In this way they can recommit themselves to the free enterprise system that has created more opportunity for more people than any system in the history of the world.

Mr. Brooks is president of the American Enterprise Institute. His latest book is "The Battle: How the Fight Between Free Enterprise and Big Government Will Shape America's Future" (Basic Books, 2010).
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Re: Occupy Wall Street

Postby Ogopogo » 11/ 25/ 11 10:29 pm

http://www.observer.com/2011/11/new-yor ... protester/

New York Gay Porn Director Films in Oakland, Reaches Out to Bloodied, Pantsless Zuccotti Protester

By Drew Grant 11/22 6:30pm

OWS' Dirk Diggler? (Photo via Getty)

The porn industry has been in a rut ever since the Internet starting offering amauteur sex for free. Now everyone’s looking for the next big, flashy hook: 3-D porn? Virtual porn? Snuff films?

Well, that last one might not be too far from the mark: New York-based porn company Dirty Boy Video has just released “Occupy My Throat,” a homoerotic caper through the tents of Oakland’s Occupation. (Hopefully, the stars escaped unscathed during the police raid.)

But now Dirty Boy Video is expanding their repertoire back on their home turf. Remember Brendan Watts, the protester who lost his virginity in Zuccotti before having his head bashed in and pants pulled off by the NYPD during OWS’ Day of Action?

The men behind Dirty Boy are reaching out to Mr. Watts, writing an open letter appealing to his sense of social injustice as a reason why he should star in their porno:

We at Dirty Boy Video believe in free expression, challenging the status quo, and standing up to injustice. It is in this spirit that we present an open letter to Brandon Watts, the blood soaked protester arrested on the Day of Action:

Dear Mr. Watts,

We are vocal supporters of Occupy Wall Street and the statement it makes. Your energy, commitment and drive have directly contributed to the success of the Occupation movement. As I watched the police drag you away in handcuffs, your face covered in blood, I could only think, “Wow, he’s hot!” Later, I learned you were among the first to pitch a tent in Zuccotti Park, making the movement a literal occupation. The NY Daily News reports you even lost your virginity in that park. Congratulations! Dirty Boy Video has long encouraged young men like yourself to pitch tents in parks. I offer you the opportunity to perform on our website, an opportunity to express yourself and your politics freely and without censor. Working together we can create a sexy, fun platform that inspires you, be that with other actors, actresses or both. Whether you choose to work with us or not, I salute your dedication and your courage.

Sincerely,
Andy Fair
President
DirtyBoyVideo.com

We’re pretty sure you don’t need to sign up with Dirty Boys to “express yourself” “without censor” on the Internet. That’s why God invented XTube. Really, the worst thing for an Occupier to do is get involved in the porn industry, which we all know from that one David Foster Wallace essay on the AVN Awards is full of money-hungry, superficial crazy people…just like Wall Street.

Drew Grant is a Staff Reporter for The New York Observer. Follow Drew on Twitter or via RSS. dgrant@observer.com
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Re: Occupy Wall Street

Postby backhoe » 11/ 26/ 11 1:28 pm

http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2011/11/ows-is-racist-more-blacks-supported-tea-party-movement-than-support-occupy-movement/

Racists!… More Blacks Supported Tea Party Movement Than Support #Occupy Movement
Posted by Jim Hoft on Saturday, November 26, 2011, 11:11 AM



They must be racists.

Image

Today the Washington Post reported that African Americans, who are 12.6 percent of the U.S. population, make up only 1.6 percent of Occupy Wall Street.

It’s too bad the Occupy Movement couldn’t be like the tea party.
An April 2010 Gallup poll found that 6% of tea party support came from non-hispanic blacks.

Image

Up twinkles for the tea party.

Where’s the NAACP?
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Re: Occupy Wall Street

Postby Dogpatch » 11/ 26/ 11 2:12 pm

Hmm, the truth?

Image

;)
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Re: Occupy Wall Street

Postby Ogopogo » 11/ 26/ 11 9:23 pm

http://newsbusters.org/blogs/jack-colem ... s-99-perce

Melissa Harris-Perry: Pilgrims Were Illegal Immigrants, Indians 99 Percenters

By Jack Coleman | November 26, 2011 | 08:34
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Did you know the Pilgrims were not only illegal immigrants, but part of that reviled economic elite known today as the one percent? At least according to Tulane professor and MSNBC contributor Melissa Harris-Perry.

Here's Harris-Perry on Al Sharpton's radio show earlier this week reaching for new heights in revisionism (audio) --

SHARPTON: Give me your idea of the kinds of things people ought to deal with this Thursday when their families and friends get together.

HARRIS-PERRY: You know, it's an interesting question. I've been thinking a lot about Thanksgiving and the moment that we're in because, you know, our economic crisis right now is highly tied to the European economic crisis and so I was thinking about kind of what is that first Thanksgiving when these illegal immigrants from Europe come over and are fed by the people of the actual Americas, the Native and indigenous people, you know, here on this land, that they are trying to escape religious prosecution and persecution in Europe and then you have the Europeans basically calling them dirty, no good, worthless, basically 99 percenters, right? And all of that is now playing out in a different way as we see the 99 percent pushing back against this idea that the elites are the only one that deserve to have a Thanksgiving dinner. All of that.

Once again, that was Tulane University, for you parents of soon-to-be college age children. Consider yourself warned.

Harris-Perry is not alone in her take on the Pilgrims as illegals scurrying surrepitiously into America. That's also how they were depicted on the cover of this week's New Yorker.

But such a premise begs the question -- were the Pilgrims actually here illegally?

Apparently not to those who would have had a basis for making this claim -- the Native Americans who lived in southeastern Massachusetts. In fact, their leader, Wampanoag sachem Massasoit, agreed to a treaty with the Pilgrims in March 1621, just three months after the English colonists landed at an abandoned Indian village whose inhabitants had been decimated by smallpox.

Peace between Pilgrims and Wampanoag would endure for more than a half-century, until King Phillip's War in 1675, when their grown children could not resolve the differences between them.

The pact between the Pilgrims and Indians was based on pragmatic self-interest for both sides, according to Nathaniel Philbrick's 2006 book "Mayflower: A Story of Courage, Community, and War" --

Without Massasoit's help, the Pilgrims would never have survived the first year, and they remained steadfast supporters of the sachem to the very end. For his part, Massasoit realized almost from the start that his own fortunes were linked to those of the English. (in defending his tribe from native foes). In retrospect, there is a surprising amount of truth in the tired, threadbare story of the First Thanksgiving.

But the Indians and English of Plymouth Colony did not live in a static idyll of mutual support. Instead, it was fifty-five years of struggle and compromise -- a dynamic, often harrowing process of give and take. As long as both sides recognized that they needed each other, there was peace. The next generation, however, came to see things differently.

Harris-Perry's glib analogy wasn't the only dubious take on Thanksgiving from our liberal friends this week. Another came from Huffington Post blogger Richard Schiffman, who criticized Rush Limbaugh in a post titled "The Truth About Thanksgiving: What They Never Taught You in School" --

The popular talk radio host blames the Pilgrim's communal work ethic and equal sharing of the fruits of their labors for the colony's rocky first year in which half of the one hundred settlers perished of starvation and disease.

(Quoting Limbaugh) "The most creative and industrious people had no incentive to work any harder than anyone else, unless they could utilize the power of personal motivation!"

The tide turned, according to Rush, when the colony's governor, William Bradford, assigned a private plot of land to each family, thereby setting loose the beneficient powers of the marketplace in the People's Republic of Plymouth Rock.

This revisionist history is greeted with bemusement by professional historians.

That link to "professional historians" leads to a New York Times story by tea-party basher Kate Zernike, headlined "The Pilgrims Were ... Socialists?"

Interesting parallel between Schiffman's post and Zernike's article -- neither one cites from "Of Plymouth Colony," the remarkable and authoritative journal written by William Bradford, the Pilgrim leader who provided every family with a plot of land three years after the colonists came to America and were still struggling.

Prior to departing from England, the Pilgrims signed a contract with their financial backers. Every person age 16 and older would invest 10 pounds in money or other provisions, Bradford wrote, and "be accounted as having 20 pounds in stock and in the division shall receive a double share."

The contract lasted seven years, "during which time all profits and benefits that are got by trade , traffic, trucking , working, fishing, or any other means of any other person or persons, remain still in the common stock until the division."

Not only that, Bradford wrote, but "all such persons as are of this colony are to have their meat, drink, apparel, and all provisions out of the common stock and goods of the said colony." Once the agreement expired, the "capital and profits" were to be equally divided "betwixt the Adventurers" -- their backers in England -- "and Planters," the Pilgrims.

That first Thanksgiving in the fall of 1621 provided a brief respite from the harrowing difficulties facing the fledgling colony. Two years later it was barely surviving, Bradford wrote --

It may be thought strange that these people should fall to these extremities in so short a time ... many sold away their clothes and bed coverings; others (so base where they) became servants to the Indians, and would cut them wood and fetch them water for a capful of corn; others fell to plain stealing, both night and day, from the Indians, of which they grievously complained. In the end, they came to that misery that some of them starved and died with cold and hunger. One in gathering shellfish was so weak as he stuck fast in the mud and was found dead in the place. At last most of them left their dwellings and scattered up and down in the woods and by the watersides, where they could find ground nuts and clams, here six and there ten. ...

Bradford describes the end of the "Common Course and Condition" --

So they began to think how they might raise as much corn as they could, and obtain a better crop than they had done, that they might not still thus languish in misery. At length, after much debate of things, the Governor (with the advice of the chiefest amongst them) gave way that they should set corn every man for his own particular, and in that regard trust to themselves; in all other things to go on in the general way as before. And so assigned to every family a parcel of land, according to the proportion of their number ...

The results?

This had very good success, for it made all hands very industrious, so as much more corn was planted than otherwise would have been by any means the Governor or any other could use, and saved him a great deal of trouble, and gave far better content. The women now went willingly into the field, and took their little ones with them to set corn; which before would allege weakness and inability; whom to have compelled would have been thought great tyranny and oppression.

The experience that was had in this common course and condition, tried sundry years and that amongst godly and sober men, may well evince the vanity of that conceit of Plato's and other ancients applauded by some of later times; that the taking away of property and bringing in community into a commonwealth would make them happy and flourishing; as if they were wiser than God.

For this community (so far as it was) was found to breed much confusion and discontent and retard much employment that would have been to their benefit and comfort. For the young men, that were most able and fit for labour and service, did repine that they should spend their time and strength to work for other men's wives and children without any recompense. The strong, or man of parts, had no more in division of victuals and clothes than he that was weak and not able to do a quarter the other could; this was thought injustice. The aged and graver men to be ranked and equalized in labours, victuals, clothes, etc., with the meaner and younger sort, thought it some indignity and disrespect unto them. And for men's wives to be commanded to do service for other men, as dressing their meat, washing their clothes, etc., they deemed it a kind of slavery, neither could many husbands well brook it. Upon the point of all being to have alike, and all to do alike, they thought themselves in the like position, and one as good as another; and so, if it did not cut off those relations that God hath set amongst men, yet it did at least much diminish and take off the mutual respects that should be preserved amongst them. And would have been worse had they been men of another condition. Let none object this is men's condition, and nothing to the course itself. I answer, seeing all men have this corruption in them, God in his wisdom saw another course fitter for them.

Before Bradford ended the "common course and condition," the Pilgrims planted 26 acres in 1621 and 60 acres in 1622. After the families began working their own plots of land, the Pilgrims planted 184 acres, according to Bellevue University economist Judd W. Patton. A year later, Patton writes, the Pilgrims were exporting corn.

Suffice it to say, Bradford's finely observed account of what saved the Pilgrims isn't talked about much at the Huffington Post, New York Times, or Occupy protests.

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Re: Occupy Wall Street

Postby styky » 11/ 26/ 11 10:48 pm

Gay Porn Movie Filmed at Occupy Oakland
http://newsbusters.org/blogs/noel-shepp ... py-oakland

Occupy Miami Spokesman Led 'Nuke Israel' Rally
http://www.wnd.com/?pageId=370849

UC Davis Student Admits Protesters Surrounded Cops and Wouldn't Let Them Leave
http://newsbusters.org/blogs/noel-shepp ... dnt-let-th

Report: Occupy Protests Have Cost Cities $13 Million and Rising
http://biggovernment.com/publius/2011/1 ... 3-million/

The Entire Occupy Movement Summarized in 1 Sign
http://pjmedia.com/tatler/2011/11/23/th ... -one-sign/
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Re: Occupy Wall Street

Postby Ogopogo » 11/ 28/ 11 11:35 pm

http://www.theblaze.com/blog/2011/11/27 ... christmas/

‘The Night Before Occupy Christmas’

* Posted on November 27, 2011 at 4:52pm by Mike Opelka Mike Opelka


(This beauty of a parody poem appeared in my email in-box today.

I had to share it… THANK YOU Elmo… wherever you are.)

The Night Before Occupy Christmas

By Elmo Machiore

(With apologies to the OTHER Moore—Clement Clarke)

________________________________________

Twas the night before Christmas and all through Zucotti

Not an Occupier was stirring—even in the Porta Potty.

The stockings were hung on the fences with care,

In hopes that St. Michael Moore soon would be there.

We Occupy kids snuggled up—sans our tents—

But visions of iPads still danced in our sense.

My girlfriend and I ate our free meal, then peed,

And then settled our brains with a few hits of weed.

When out on the corner there arose such a clamor,

I sprang from the ground to see why all the drammer.

An old rag on my head and no shoes on my feet,

I tore a mad dash out to Liberty Street.

The snowflakes and moonlight were totally awesome.

(I texted my friends: “Dude, I finally saw some!”)

When what to my bloodshot-red eyes should appear

But a big honkin’ limo, with eight Dems in the rear.

With its ballcap-clad driver as big as a store,

I knew in a moment it must be St. Moore.

More rapid than Twitter, out the Democrats came,

And he whistled and shouted and called them by name:

“Now Nancy! Now Harry! Now, Schumer and Sherman!

On, Sanders! On, Boxer! On, Baucus and Berman!

To the midst of the park For our great photo call!

Now tweet away! Tweet away! Tweet away all!”

With the speed of a monkey digesting a kiwi

Or of Anthony Weiner when sexting his wee-wee,

So into the park all the Democrats flew

With their big bags of toys, and St. Michael Moore, too.

And then in a twinkling I felt the earth quake

As if all of Zucotti had started to shake.

My unwashed head turned toward the source of the din:

Down the sidewalk St. Michael had just waddled in.

He was dressed like a bum, from his head to his feet,

The cunning disguise of the Limo Elite.

A bundle of iPads he’d flung on his back.

To us poor helpless souls he was carrying crack!

His eyes tried to twinkle with socialist zeal,

but his cheeks said it all—“I do not miss a meal.”

His mouth—when not running—wore the arrogant smirk

Of a man working hard to appear out of work.

The ball-cap, the tee-shirt said “I’m one of you!”

(Just ignore all those millions my movies accrue.)

He shook when he laughed, like a bowl full of jelly—

But his 401-K was as big as his belly.

I started to doubt our dear Savior’s intent.

And I said to myself “HE’s the ninety-nine percent?!”

But St. Michael, inferring my disquietude,

Gave a wink of his eye that said “No, really, dude!”

Amid mumbling “George Bush,” he went straight to his bag

And filled all our stockings with great techno-swag.

Then slurping a Starbucks and looking quite spent,

to the warmth of his limo, St. Michael Moore went.

He started the engine in his big, bad-ass ride,

while Schumer and company all piled inside.

But I heard him exclaim, ‘ere he started to flee,

“Merry Socialism to all—except of course, me!”

Holiday Graphics H/T To Barry Meyer



For the tradtionalists, we offer Perry Como’s rendition of the real Christmas classic.
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Re: Occupy Wall Street

Postby styky » 11/ 30/ 11 12:00 pm

Video: Occupy Dayton rages at Wal-Mart and Target customers
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By Michelle Malkin • November 29, 2011 10:53 AM http://michellemalkin.com/2011/11/29/vi ... customers/
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"The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other peoples money." Margaret Thatcher They say it takes a minute to find a special person, an hour to appreciate them, a day to love them, but then an entire life to forget them.
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Re: Occupy Wall Street

Postby styky » 12/ 02/ 11 2:35 pm

Occupy L.A.: 30 tons of debris left behind at City Hall tent city

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2 ... -city.html
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All the great things are simple, and many can be expressed in a single word: freedom; justice; honor; duty; mercy; hope ~ Sir Winston Churchill
"The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other peoples money." Margaret Thatcher They say it takes a minute to find a special person, an hour to appreciate them, a day to love them, but then an entire life to forget them.
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