JackLuis
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Sep 21, 2008
- Posts
- 21,881
In the last week or so the rage has spread across America as thousands of citizens protest the double shuffle instead of the new deal they voted for three years ago.
Yeah, and in the land of the Second Amendment, the proletariat have guns. You remember Mit, don't you?
I find it interesting that since the protestors haven't made any demands, specifically that they have ignited a storm of indignation across the land.
Very suave.
As the demonstrations spread, we see a lot of City Officials supporting the peaceful demonstrations. In LA the Mayor handed out ponchos, as rain threatened to chill some in the crowd. Very civil, after the pepper spray incident in NYC.
Will this general protest, "I'm mad as Hell, and I'm not going to take it, ANYMORE!" really lead to the Hope and Change, or will it be co-opted by the professional politicians as the Tea party has been?
I'd say it could be the most significant social movement since the Viet Nam War protests. I wonder how long it has to go one before Washington reacts?
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney — who has raised $2.3 million from the financial sector — is no fan of the “Occupy Wall Street” demonstration in lower Manhattan.
“I think it’s dangerous, this class warfare,” he said at a retirement community in Florida.
Yeah, and in the land of the Second Amendment, the proletariat have guns. You remember Mit, don't you?
“To the young men and women who are braving the overreaction of local authorities to raise their voices against the corruption and manipulation of our nation that emanates from Wall Street: I say to you that your presence is making a difference,” he said. “You are exercising the right every American holds most dear, the right of freedom of expression, and with that expression you are finally getting the attention of the nation.”
“Wall Street banks got billion dollar bailouts but the American people get austerity,” he continued. “Fourteen million Americans are out of work. 50 million people don’t have health insurance and a million people a year lose their homes to foreclosure. Our policies take the wealth of the nation and accelerate it into the hands of the few.”
I find it interesting that since the protestors haven't made any demands, specifically that they have ignited a storm of indignation across the land.
In a statement on Tuesday, Seattle mayor Mike McGinn said he supported the protest and that it could continue, but that the demonstrators could not erect permanent tents in the park.
“Like all of our parks, Westlake Park is owned by the people of Seattle,” he said. “No one group can use a park to the exclusion of others, no matter how worthy the cause.”
When police officers arrived on Wednesday and attempted to remove the tents, protesters linked arms around a tent and chanted anti-police slogans, such as “police are tools of Wall Street”, “cops are not people” and “cops, pigs, murderers.” They were forcefully removed.
Very suave.
As the demonstrations spread, we see a lot of City Officials supporting the peaceful demonstrations. In LA the Mayor handed out ponchos, as rain threatened to chill some in the crowd. Very civil, after the pepper spray incident in NYC.
Will this general protest, "I'm mad as Hell, and I'm not going to take it, ANYMORE!" really lead to the Hope and Change, or will it be co-opted by the professional politicians as the Tea party has been?
I'd say it could be the most significant social movement since the Viet Nam War protests. I wonder how long it has to go one before Washington reacts?