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Occupy Wall Street (1 Viewer)

Yeah, but who really gives a #### what you think... especially after you think its fine to blast that girl with the baton repeatedly and then insinuate about her being the cause and what she did wrong.... because she was peacefully protesting, which according to you, should be made illegal.
If she was home writing to her congresswoman, attending various open forums, doing something remotely constructive instead, she doesn't get the baton.
:shrug:
That's a big part of the problem.... the congresswoman is bought and paid for. Money has superseded Votes.It just may take "getting the baton" to effect the needed change to America away from corporate-fascism.
is the premise that all lawmakers are bought and paid for? If so, a full-on rebellion is the only fix, no?What do we burn first, the banks or the courthouses?
The brothels
decent choice. hit em where are all the pedophile lawmakers (state and federal btw) hang out. You might be onto something here sac.
 
Yeah, but who really gives a #### what you think... especially after you think its fine to blast that girl with the baton repeatedly and then insinuate about her being the cause and what she did wrong.... because she was peacefully protesting, which according to you, should be made illegal.
If she was home writing to her congresswoman, attending various open forums, doing something remotely constructive instead, she doesn't get the baton.
:shrug:
That's a big part of the problem.... the congresswoman is bought and paid for. Money has superseded Votes.It just may take "getting the baton" to effect the needed change to America away from corporate-fascism.
is the premise that all lawmakers are bought and paid for? If so, a full-on rebellion is the only fix, no?What do we burn first, the banks or the courthouses?
Dont act like you are trying to help. :rolleyes:
whoa. is that the goal here?
 
maybe all the dissatisfied folks can move to Texas/Ariona/New Mexico/Southern Cal and start up a New Republic or something. Put the 1% of the 99% who actually care about this nonsense together in one spot. Maybe even build a wall to keep the rich folks out.I've got a decent life, my kids should end up having a tolerable one too. We don't need no Cal baton magnets mucking that up.
HEY!
 
maybe all the dissatisfied folks can move to Texas/Ariona/New Mexico/Southern Cal and start up a New Republic or something. Put the 1% of the 99% who actually care about this nonsense together in one spot. Maybe even build a wall to keep the rich folks out.I've got a decent life, my kids should end up having a tolerable one too. We don't need no Cal baton magnets mucking that up.
HEY!
you have no business being down there. Good excuse to leave.
 
maybe all the dissatisfied folks can move to Texas/Ariona/New Mexico/Southern Cal and start up a New Republic or something. Put the 1% of the 99% who actually care about this nonsense together in one spot. Maybe even build a wall to keep the rich folks out.I've got a decent life, my kids should end up having a tolerable one too. We don't need no Cal baton magnets mucking that up.
HEY!
you have no business being down there. Good excuse to leave.
I don't care so much about that. Just watch where the CA line is drawn. I get most of my wine from there, you know.
 
Yeah, but who really gives a #### what you think... especially after you think its fine to blast that girl with the baton repeatedly and then insinuate about her being the cause and what she did wrong.... because she was peacefully protesting, which according to you, should be made illegal.
If she was home writing to her congresswoman, attending various open forums, doing something remotely constructive instead, she doesn't get the baton.
:shrug:
That's a big part of the problem.... the congresswoman is bought and paid for. Money has superseded Votes.It just may take "getting the baton" to effect the needed change to America away from corporate-fascism.
is the premise that all lawmakers are bought and paid for? If so, a full-on rebellion is the only fix, no?What do we burn first, the banks or the courthouses?
I don't know how to get money completely out of politics, but I know where to start....
 
Yeah, but who really gives a #### what you think... especially after you think its fine to blast that girl with the baton repeatedly and then insinuate about her being the cause and what she did wrong.... because she was peacefully protesting, which according to you, should be made illegal.
If she was home writing to her congresswoman, attending various open forums, doing something remotely constructive instead, she doesn't get the baton.
:shrug:
That's a big part of the problem.... the congresswoman is bought and paid for. Money has superseded Votes.It just may take "getting the baton" to effect the needed change to America away from corporate-fascism.
is the premise that all lawmakers are bought and paid for? If so, a full-on rebellion is the only fix, no?What do we burn first, the banks or the courthouses?
I don't know how to get money completely out of politics, but I know where to start....
Can it be as simple as a hard cap on campaign finances and expenditures for a candidate?
 
Yeah, but who really gives a #### what you think... especially after you think its fine to blast that girl with the baton repeatedly and then insinuate about her being the cause and what she did wrong.... because she was peacefully protesting, which according to you, should be made illegal.
If she was home writing to her congresswoman, attending various open forums, doing something remotely constructive instead, she doesn't get the baton.
:shrug:
That's a big part of the problem.... the congresswoman is bought and paid for. Money has superseded Votes.It just may take "getting the baton" to effect the needed change to America away from corporate-fascism.
is the premise that all lawmakers are bought and paid for? If so, a full-on rebellion is the only fix, no?What do we burn first, the banks or the courthouses?
I don't know how to get money completely out of politics, but I know where to start....
Can it be as simple as a hard cap on campaign finances and expenditures for a candidate?
That would limit corporate money, not get it out entirely.
 
Yeah, but who really gives a #### what you think... especially after you think its fine to blast that girl with the baton repeatedly and then insinuate about her being the cause and what she did wrong.... because she was peacefully protesting, which according to you, should be made illegal.
If she was home writing to her congresswoman, attending various open forums, doing something remotely constructive instead, she doesn't get the baton.
:shrug:
That's a big part of the problem.... the congresswoman is bought and paid for. Money has superseded Votes.It just may take "getting the baton" to effect the needed change to America away from corporate-fascism.
Money has never superseded votes. Money buys votes, but it's still the votes that count. Informed people can see through it, but unfortunately most people aren't informed and many of those that are choose to be partisan hacks anyway.
 
'BigSteelThrill said:
'Zeff said:
'JerseyToughGuys said:
'BigSteelThrill said:
'JerseyToughGuys said:
'BigSteelThrill said:
Look at them absolutely #### that poor li'l asian girl up...http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=buovLQ9qyWQ
why were they crowdin the cops with the sticks? Seems sorta like putting your hand as close to a flame as possible for the sake of it.
Doesnt really matter, they're locked arm-in-arm in peaceful protest.Though, they had their belongings a few feet away in a park, and the cops came in and tried to keep them separated them from their belongings.
maybe we should ban "peaceful protest" then.
Seems like a pretty typically conservative response to state brutality.
today's American conservatives are pro-fascism. not really debatable. (though it should get a laughie emoticon)
It deserves more than one.
 
Loving all this police brutality occurring in cesspools like Berkeley which are 100% under the rule of left-wing nuts, and somehow the argument becomes it's the conservatives who are the fascists. :lmao:

 
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Yeah, but who really gives a #### what you think... especially after you think its fine to blast that girl with the baton repeatedly and then insinuate about her being the cause and what she did wrong.... because she was peacefully protesting, which according to you, should be made illegal.
If she was home writing to her congresswoman, attending various open forums, doing something remotely constructive instead, she doesn't get the baton.
:shrug:
That's a big part of the problem.... the congresswoman is bought and paid for. Money has superseded Votes.It just may take "getting the baton" to effect the needed change to America away from corporate-fascism.
is the premise that all lawmakers are bought and paid for? If so, a full-on rebellion is the only fix, no?What do we burn first, the banks or the courthouses?
I don't know how to get money completely out of politics, but I know where to start....
Can it be as simple as a hard cap on campaign finances and expenditures for a candidate?
That would limit corporate money, not get it out entirely.
That wouldn't just be corporate. Make a hard cap that includes it all, individual, corporate, and personal.

You wouldn't "get it out entirely", they could still run a campaign on donations, but you would crush the influence purchasing.

 
'BigSteelThrill said:
'Zeff said:
'JerseyToughGuys said:
'BigSteelThrill said:
'JerseyToughGuys said:
'BigSteelThrill said:
Look at them absolutely #### that poor li'l asian girl up...http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=buovLQ9qyWQ
why were they crowdin the cops with the sticks? Seems sorta like putting your hand as close to a flame as possible for the sake of it.
Doesnt really matter, they're locked arm-in-arm in peaceful protest.Though, they had their belongings a few feet away in a park, and the cops came in and tried to keep them separated them from their belongings.
maybe we should ban "peaceful protest" then.
Seems like a pretty typically conservative response to state brutality.
today's American conservatives are pro-fascism. not really debatable. (though it should get a laughie emoticon)
It deserves more than one.
:lmao: So empty.
 
'Matthias said:
Ok. Now this is just dumb.

PASADENA, Calif. -- Pasadena police say they're well-equipped to handle protests or any surprises planned by the Occupy movement at the upcoming Rose Parade.

A website for the Occupy group instructs protesters to get to the parade at 8 a.m. on Jan. 2 with large signs bearing slogans.
"I OVER BET THE WISCO MONEY LINE LAST YEAR AND NOW I CAN'T REPAY MY STUDENT LOANS, I AM THE 99%!"
 
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'Matthias said:
Ok. Now this is just dumb.

PASADENA, Calif. -- Pasadena police say they're well-equipped to handle protests or any surprises planned by the Occupy movement at the upcoming Rose Parade.

A website for the Occupy group instructs protesters to get to the parade at 8 a.m. on Jan. 2 with large signs bearing slogans.
What's dumb? The police being prepared or the Occupy group protesting at the Rose Bowl Parade?
 
'Matthias said:
Ok. Now this is just dumb.

PASADENA, Calif. -- Pasadena police say they're well-equipped to handle protests or any surprises planned by the Occupy movement at the upcoming Rose Parade.

A website for the Occupy group instructs protesters to get to the parade at 8 a.m. on Jan. 2 with large signs bearing slogans.
"I OVER BET THE WISCO MONEY LINE LAST YEAR AND NOW I CAN'T REPAY MY STUDENT LOANS, I AM THE 99%!"
Corso has a baby arm.I am of average endowment.

I am the 99%

 
Yeah, but who really gives a #### what you think... especially after you think its fine to blast that girl with the baton repeatedly and then insinuate about her being the cause and what she did wrong.... because she was peacefully protesting, which according to you, should be made illegal.
If she was home writing to her congresswoman, attending various open forums, doing something remotely constructive instead, she doesn't get the baton. :shrug:
And accomplishing even less. That much of the point. Her congresswoman likely couldn't give a damn about what she or most of her constituents want. She will do whatever she has to do to keep the special interest money coming in so she can throw ads everywhere next election. People vote for who they see more. It's the main reason so many incumbents get reelected even though the people despise Congress.
Here's the thing though--they don't have official demands that could be met to make them go home. That just makes them a permanent blight.
 
every week or so I check in here and ask the same question:What's been accomplished other than "awareness" of "stuff" (and a bunch of claimed police brutality beatings)?What's the end game here? The election? Unless they move south to Washington (which appears to be the plan maybe?) the NYC faction is going to dwindle very very quickly once the cold weather hits.
What's been accomplished is the Democrats firing up their left wing base for the election with a bunch of class warfare rhetoric. This all started when Obama effectively launched his campaign for 2012...As far as the end game, I think the pivotal moment will come during the Democratic convention when Obama will be forced to endorse or disavow the group. If he disavows it and doesn't acquiesce to what they want, it will get ugly.
 
'Matthias said:
'Matthias said:
Ok. Now this is just dumb.

PASADENA, Calif. -- Pasadena police say they're well-equipped to handle protests or any surprises planned by the Occupy movement at the upcoming Rose Parade.

A website for the Occupy group instructs protesters to get to the parade at 8 a.m. on Jan. 2 with large signs bearing slogans.
What's dumb? The police being prepared or the Occupy group protesting at the Rose Bowl Parade?
Good to know you're not totally unreasonable ;)
 
'Matthias said:
Ok. Now this is just dumb.

PASADENA, Calif. -- Pasadena police say they're well-equipped to handle protests or any surprises planned by the Occupy movement at the upcoming Rose Parade.

A website for the Occupy group instructs protesters to get to the parade at 8 a.m. on Jan. 2 with large signs bearing slogans.
"I OVER BET THE WISCO MONEY LINE LAST YEAR AND NOW I CAN'T REPAY MY STUDENT LOANS, I AM THE 99%!"
Corso has a baby arm.I am of average endowment.

I am the 99%
lmao

:herbstreitearthquakeeyes:

 
'guderian said:
'JerseyToughGuys said:
every week or so I check in here and ask the same question:What's been accomplished other than "awareness" of "stuff" (and a bunch of claimed police brutality beatings)?What's the end game here? The election? Unless they move south to Washington (which appears to be the plan maybe?) the NYC faction is going to dwindle very very quickly once the cold weather hits.
What's been accomplished is the Democrats firing up their left wing base for the election with a bunch of class warfare rhetoric. This all started when Obama effectively launched his campaign for 2012...As far as the end game, I think the pivotal moment will come during the Democratic convention when Obama will be forced to endorse or disavow the group. If he disavows it and doesn't acquiesce to what they want, it will get ugly.
gonna be good times in Charlotte next summer @ the DNC, literally in the shadows of Bank of America.
 
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'guderian said:
'JerseyToughGuys said:
every week or so I check in here and ask the same question:What's been accomplished other than "awareness" of "stuff" (and a bunch of claimed police brutality beatings)?What's the end game here? The election? Unless they move south to Washington (which appears to be the plan maybe?) the NYC faction is going to dwindle very very quickly once the cold weather hits.
What's been accomplished is the Democrats firing up their left wing base for the election with a bunch of class warfare rhetoric. This all started when Obama effectively launched his campaign for 2012...As far as the end game, I think the pivotal moment will come during the Democratic convention when Obama will be forced to endorse or disavow the group. If he disavows it and doesn't acquiesce to what they want, it will get ugly.
It's a little odd that Dodds hasn't been bumping his "Look how good Obama is for Wall Street!!! He's making those bankers tons of cash!!!" thread recently...
 
GB Tyler.

Jay Z, Michael Moore cash in on Occupy

As it says on their “about” page…

(Occupy Wall Street) is fighting back against the corrosive power of major banks and multinational corporations (and) aims to expose how the richest 1% of people are writing the rules of an unfair global economy.
“Yeeaahh”, says fattie Michael Moore, who addressed an Occupy crowd in Denver last week and railed against “greedy” corporations. Though that isn’t why he went to Denver in the first place.
Moore was in Denver on a tour to promote his $27 memoir, ‘Here Comes Trouble: Stories from My Life.’
By the way that book is published by Grand Central Publishing, a subdivision of the French company Hachette, which is the second largest publisher in the world. Hachette is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Lagardère Group, a multinational conglomerate headquartered in Paris which does business in nearly 40 countries. Among other things they hold a 7.5% stake in EADS, a global defense and military contractor, which absorbed the Lagardère subsidiary Aérospatiale-Matra, a French missile and aircraft manufacturer. Also some claim that Moore is worth 50 million dollars. But I’m getting off track. “Heese hiant companies are ewol,” Moore says between bites of food!And now Jay Z wants to cash in Occupy too, though he just said #### it and isn’t even gonna pretend that he’s trying to help in someway.

The millionaire rapper and entrepreneur is launching a line of Occupy Wall Street-themed t-shirts featuring the phrase “Occupy All Streets,” that go on sale on Jay-Z’s Rocawear website on Friday.
But the genius behind “99 Problems” isn’t sharing the profits with the 99 percent. A spokesperson from Rocawear told Business Insider in a statement that the company has not “made an official commitment” to support the movement financially.I’d also like to encourage these dirty hippies to Occupy All Streets. Since that’s where I drive.
 
It's all over but the crying.

Cities struggle to deal with occupy movementBy the CNN Wire StaffSan Francisco (CNN) -- Police in riot gear moved into the Occupy Oakland encampment early Monday, tearing down tents and arresting some protesters, the latest effort by city officials across the country to gain control over a movement that some leaders say has become a public safety and health threat.Oakland, California, police, aided by dozens of officers from nearby jurisdictions, arrested 32 people in the effort to clear Frank Ogawa Plaza near City Hall before dawn Monday, Interim Chief Howard Jordan said. There were no reports of injuries or complaints of abuse, he said.The camp had become an unbearable drain on city resources, an economic threat to nearby businesses and a danger to public safety, Mayor Jean Quan said."The encampment became a place where we had repeated violence and this week a murder. We had to bring the camp to an end before more people were hurt," she said.The developments in Oakland come amid rising concern from city officials around the country that the protests drain resources and threaten public health. What started as the Occupy Wall Street movement in New York in September has spread across cities worldwide as a call to action against unequal distribution of wealth and other issues.In Philadelphia, Mayor Michael Nutter said Sunday that what started as a peaceful protest 39 days ago has given way to increasing public safety and public health concerns."Occupy Philly has changed," Nutter said. "We're seeing serious health and safety issues playing out on an almost daily basis. ... The people of Occupy Philly have also changed and their intentions have changed. And all of this is not good for Philadelphia."A woman reported she was sexually assaulted Saturday night in a tent at the encampment, Nutter said. CNN affiliate WPVI reported a suspect was arrested in the alleged assault.The mayor also cited the threat of fire near historic City Hall and concerns about litter, public urination, defecation and graffiti.Numerous reports of thefts and assaults in the encampment have been made, and 15 emergency medical runs were made between October 6 and November 11, he said.Protesters are also blocking a planned $50 million renovation at Dilworth Plaza, where they are camping, threatening jobs of workers on the project, Nutter said.The protesters are "purposely standing in the way of nearly 1,000 jobs for Philadelphians at a time of high unemployment," Nutter said. "They are blocking Philadelphians from taking care of their families.""We have things we need to do," Nutter said. "I understand that they have things on their mind as Americans and wish to express their free speech. I understand that, I get that, I've defended that. The things we're talking about, the activities that are going on, are not about free speech. They're public health and public safety concerns that have nothing to do with Wall Street and corporations."In Oregon, Portland police made more than 50 arrests Sunday as they cleared two parks -- Chapman and Lownsdale Square -- of protesters.Police called in reinforcements from surrounding jurisdictions, and more than 300 officers took part in the sweep -- which went off without incident, authorities said.In Denver, police arrested three protesters on Sunday, a day after taking 17 people into custody in a dispute over clearing furniture and tents that city officials said were blocking a right of way.Police in Tulsa, Oklahoma, arrested six people and issued four citations for remaining in a park past curfew Sunday night, Officer Jason Willingham said.In Salt Lake City, police said on Twitter that 19 people were arrested Saturday night as authorities moved in to clear an Occupy Salt Lake encampment at a downtown park.Police had ordered protesters to leave the park after a man was found dead late Thursday night. The cause of death was thought to be carbon monoxide poisoning and a drug overdose, CNN affiliate KSTU reported."We can no longer tolerate individuals camping on our streets," Salt Lake City Police Chief Chris Burbank told reporters.Since camping began at the park, "local law enforcement has responded to a dramatically increased amount of criminal activity in the park and has made over 90 arrests in the area since early October," Mayor Ralph Becker's office said in a statement.City officials said that protests would be allowed, but not camping.In Nashville, authorities dismissed charges against 55 Occupy protesters who had been given trespassing citations. The protesters had been demonstrating at the state Capitol grounds.The prosecutor in the case asked that the charges be dismissed, and the judge agreed, Tennessee General Sessions Court administrator Warner Hassell said.The Oakland operation will likely cost the city between $300,000 and $500,000, City Administrator Deanna Santana said.City officials planned to clean up the plaza and reopen it to protests by Monday evening.Jordan said city officials will enforce a ban on camping in the park with an around-the-clock police presence. But he said peaceful demonstrators would be allowed to remain at the site around the clock, if they wished, so long as they don't bring tents, sleeping bags or other "lodging equipment.""If you're not breaking the laws, we're not concerned about your presence," he said.The plaza was one of two Occupy camps in the city. The other, at Snow Park, remained standing Monday. Jordan said police would not move against that camp on Monday, but added it could be dismantled later.Protesters are meanwhile looking for a private space from which to protest, city officials said.The decision to clear the plaza prompted a longtime friend of Quan who described himself as her legal advisor to resign."No longer Mayor Quan's legal advisor. Resigned at 2 am. Support Occupy Oakland, not the 1% and its government facilitators," attorney Dan Siegel said in the post, which Siegel confirmed to CNN was accurate.City spokeswoman Susan Piper described Siegel as a "volunteer advisor."
 
From Tyler:

As you probably know, Frank Miller is the one who created ‘300’ and ‘Sin City’, and his ‘Batman: Year One’ helped inspire the tone in the Christopher Nolan ‘Batman’ movies. He’s never been one to conform to convention, so you might think he’d support the Occupy movement.That would be incorrect, as it turns out.

Everybody’s been too damn polite about this nonsense:“Occupy” is nothing but a pack of louts, thieves, and rapists, an unruly mob, fed by Woodstock-era nostalgia and putrid false righteousness. These clowns can do nothing but harm America.This is no popular uprising. This is garbage.Maybe, between bouts of self-pity and all the other tasty tidbits of narcissism you’ve been served up in your sheltered, comfy little worlds, you’ve heard terms like al-Qaeda and Islamicism.And this enemy of mine — not of yours, apparently - must be getting a dark chuckle, if not an outright horselaugh - out of your vain, childish, self-destructive spectacle.In the name of decency, go home to your parents, you losers.
‘Occupy’ wouldn’t be so bad if they had some clear purpose other than, “stuff sucks”. It seems like no two people are there for the same reason. One sign will say NO BLOOD FOR OIL, the next will say BRING BACK NEW COKE.
 
Wow. Who would have thought that an ill-defined, leaderless Woodstock sequel would fall out of the consciousness as soon as the next big media event came along???

Now who are we going to make fun of?

:kicksrock:

 
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'Rayderr said:
From Tyler:

As you probably know, Frank Miller is the one who created '300' and 'Sin City', and his 'Batman: Year One' helped inspire the tone in the Christopher Nolan 'Batman' movies. He's never been one to conform to convention, so you might think he'd support the Occupy movement.That would be incorrect, as it turns out.

Everybody's been too damn polite about this nonsense:"Occupy" is nothing but a pack of louts, thieves, and rapists, an unruly mob, fed by Woodstock-era nostalgia and putrid false righteousness. These clowns can do nothing but harm America.This is no popular uprising. This is garbage.Maybe, between bouts of self-pity and all the other tasty tidbits of narcissism you've been served up in your sheltered, comfy little worlds, you've heard terms like al-Qaeda and Islamicism.And this enemy of mine — not of yours, apparently - must be getting a dark chuckle, if not an outright horselaugh - out of your vain, childish, self-destructive spectacle.In the name of decency, go home to your parents, you losers.
'Occupy' wouldn't be so bad if they had some clear purpose other than, "stuff sucks". It seems like no two people are there for the same reason. One sign will say NO BLOOD FOR OIL, the next will say BRING BACK NEW COKE.
So you are a student of the philosophical teachings of Frank Miller?
 
Yeah, but who really gives a #### what you think... especially after you think its fine to blast that girl with the baton repeatedly and then insinuate about her being the cause and what she did wrong.... because she was peacefully protesting, which according to you, should be made illegal.
If she was home writing to her congresswoman, attending various open forums, doing something remotely constructive instead, she doesn't get the baton.
:shrug:
That's a big part of the problem.... the congresswoman is bought and paid for. Money has superseded Votes.It just may take "getting the baton" to effect the needed change to America away from corporate-fascism.
is the premise that all lawmakers are bought and paid for? If so, a full-on rebellion is the only fix, no?What do we burn first, the banks or the courthouses?
I don't know how to get money completely out of politics, but I know where to start....
Can it be as simple as a hard cap on campaign finances and expenditures for a candidate?
That would limit corporate money, not get it out entirely.
That wouldn't just be corporate. Make a hard cap that includes it all, individual, corporate, and personal.

You wouldn't "get it out entirely", they could still run a campaign on donations, but you would crush the influence purchasing.
I assume you'd also implement term limits since a hard cap would be a HUGE benefit to incumbents?
 

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