1. Our governments are bankrupt. Our politicians worry more about re-election than fixing the economy or maintaining public services. In the United States corporations, unions and individual donors can donate as much money as they want to a campaign; effectively bankrolling politicians in a way that hasn’t been seen here since Tammany Hall. All the while the wealthiest get tax cuts while the middle and lower classes get spending cuts- they get to keep more money and we get cuts to medicare, medicaid, social security, education and infrastructure.  
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    “No Work, No Shopping, Occupy Everywhere”: May Day Special on OWS, Immigration, Labor Protests.
    http://www.democracynow.org/2012/5/1/no_work_no_shopping_occupy_everywhere #ows #p2 #m1 #M1GS
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  4. In Montreal on April 26th, 2012, an estimated 15,000 students marching against tuition hikes were teargassed and driven from the streets by riot police.
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  6. May Day has its roots in the 1886 general strike in which union workers demanded the eight-hour workday that so many enjoy today. Since then it has become an international workers’ holiday for demonstrations regarding working conditions, wages and benefits. Predictably, in year when the economy fares better, there is none-so-much activity in the United States. This May Day however, estimates of 10,000 to 30,000 people gathered in New York City alone as unions, immigration reform groups and the champions of the cause of wealth and opportunity disparity- Occupy Wall Street- rallied along with groups inmore than 80 other countries.  
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  8. Many have made the comment that they find it ironic that the people protesting the corporations are using their iPhones to tweet about it. On its face this would see to be a valid point. This viewpoint has been promulgated by ineffective mainstream media coverage. Firstly, it must be understood that while there are people of all ages and colors participating on Occupy, there are two subsets of youth. They are disenfranchised  lower class youth that are generally politically motivated, yet they feel that the voting system is broken and therefore refuse to participate in what they view as a rigged election to begin with. These youth tend to idealistically lean towards communism and various anarchist philosophies. Youth Subset 1 could be broadly classified as punk rockers and hippies. The other subset of the youth are generally college educated from middle or working class families. They have many friends that belong to the first subset, and those friends were never able to go to college for whatever reason. Having grown up together with common interests in music and art, these college youth gleaned some of that revolutionary spirit and apply it to their views of politics. Youth Subset 2 could be broadly characterized as Democrats and Libertarians. Of course, all of these characterization will break down at a point, but those are the broad-brush strokes. Though there are the idealistic anarchists and communists, the vast majority of occupiers and those who support them are centrists (for whom there is no party). Some members of the movement are returning military veterans who question who our country does what it does overseas. One such veteran was Cpl. Scott Olson who was hospitalized after a teargas canister was fired at his head in Oakland, CA. Now that we have a vague understanding of some of the ideologies floating around in this disenfranchised soup, we can get down to brass tacks: Most of the Occupy protestors and sympathizers have little to no problem with corporations creating products and selling them for a profit. The problem is when those corporations get involved in our political system, lobby congress, and now with the passage of Citizens United vs. FEC they can for all intents and purposes legally bankroll and bribe politicians. In essence: I like to buy Apple products, but i don’t want Apple buying my politicians, kthx.  
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  10. To illustrate my point about the incestuous relationship that has developed between the government and big corporations:
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  12. Seeing the chart above, many would conclude that Occupy and the Tea Party share a common complaint. This is very true, it is merely the vitriolic rhetoric of some of those in the “news” that continues to divide and attempt to conquer two groups with a popular sentiment. Little known fact, the Tea Party was originally started by a group of  Libertarians raising funds for Ron Paul in 2007. It was soon-after co-opted by wealthier interests and political action committees. It was then promoted by a “news’ network majoring Propagandist Arts and turned it into a mouthpiece for the far right fringe of the Republican party, rendering it nearly unrecognizable to those Libertarians who first started it. Many on the right characterize Occupy as some Leftist conspiracy conjured up by the Obama Administration, but I assure you that most of the people in the movement have no love for either party, and we often refer to the two as “Republicrats,” by which we mean to say that they are two sides of the same coin, the preponderance of them are bought and in all likelihood, they’re the same behind closed doors; they just play partisan political football games to divide and conquer the electorate. It’s an ancient tactic used by the Romans and the British to great effect. Personally, I feel that either Congress is bought by corporations that are creating the illusion of a republic, OR there is a serious epidemic of gross incompetence in this country. 
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  14. I’ve often heard grumblings about all the taxpayer dollars being wasted on police resources and overtime while rapists and murderers ran amok whilst the police were forced to deal with Occupy encampments. The truth is, way back in September of 2011 there had been no violence whatsoever from the Occupiers- they did nothing more the peaceably assemble. When their megaphones were taken away in those first few hours of September 17th, they turned to using “The People’s Mic.” As the crackdowns came with police brutality and mass arrests, the aforementioned “Youth Subset 1,” took grave exception to those actions and some responded with defecation on police vehicles and petty vandalism. Those kinds of tactics have never been condoned by the broader movement, though some media outlets have continued to pigeonhole it as an unAmerican riotous mob with no respect for the rule of law. Unfortunately, in may cities the police have done nothing to help remove the truly undesirables from the midst of those who honestly want a peaceable assembly. I feel that the kind of “news coverage,” that has pigeonholed the movement has lent itself to the actions resulting in police brutality and to the enumerable instances in which I have been called unAmerican or a domestic terrorist. As a Son of the American Revolution, this both deeply appalls and disturbs me and makes me fear for the relevance of such notions as civil discourse and compromise.     
  15. JP Morgan donated $4.6 million to the NYPD just as the encampment in Liberty Square (Zuccotti Park- formerly named Liberty Plaza Park before 2006) was beginning to swell and gain national attention as hundreds of other encampments began to pop up from Portland, Maine to San Diego, California to Toronto and London and even Antarctica (True story! See below).
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  20. A “black bloc,” shown below- are usually groups of anarchists  or anarcho-sydicalists who attend protests and perform tactical functions while never being officially with or condoned by a movement. At “The Battle of Seatle,” during the 1999 WTO conference, it was the black blocs that took strategic intersections in the early morning hours  so that the student and labor marches could surround the convention center.  When things turn nasty between police and protestors, these are usually the people that end up engaged in throwing back teargas canisters or lobbing molotovs, throwing rocks, overturning cars, etc.  These folks are a mixed blessing: if the police have overstepped their bounds the black blocs clash with police while everyone else has the opportunity to disperse. However, their tactics usually lead to pigeonholing of protest movements by the media. Sometimes the more hotheaded ones will be the ones to start things with the police. They’re an unpredictable element that is difficult to remove from a protest movement, especially one with very populist causes. They are the quintessential example of the aforementioned “Youth Subset 1.” 
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    May Day was a success, but Occupy needs to rethink itself if it wants to change America. http://mojo.ly/JT5JRX #ows
  24. If Occupy and its affiliates are to be successful, it must coalesce into a strong third part, and soon. This is a time of great social change, and just as 1913 was for the Labor Movement. Times of great social change come with a great many debates and partisan divisions. This was true in the ten years leading to both the American Revolution and our Civil War. When huge paradigm shifts occur in a nation’s history there are only two alternatives: renaissance or civil war. Let us pray for the former.

    I will leave you with one final posting- a YouTube video uploaded on October 16, 2011, the day before Occupy Wall Street’s one month anniversary. Hundreds had already been arrested, blood had been spilt, some had been hospitalized, authorities were inventing new rules over night about prohibition of tents, sleeping bags, blankets, megaphones, and even having flagpoles for American flags. Sgt. Shamar Thomas had come home from war and did not like how the NYPD was treating peaceful protestors. He had sworn an oath to uphold and protect the Constitution and he felt that the police actions were not consistent with that of a nation which encourages civil discourse, debate, demonstration and all manner of expression. He may not agree with the protestors, but he knows the every American has their rights and wealthy interests do not have the right to shut up, defame and violently put down the little guy. I don’t care what the Supreme Court says, money does not equal speech. It is because of men like Sgt. Thomas that I have the right to think and write and say what i feel. It is because of men and women like him that we wake up to find out that we still have a Bill of Rights. Should Sgt. Thomas and his fellow veterans ever wake up to find out that The Constitution and the Bill of Rights has been sold to the highest bidder, God help the auctioneer that sold it. 
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    [Orignal full version] 1 Marine vs. 30 Cops (By. J. handy)
  26. When Liberty Square was raided and torn apart in the middle of the night, journalists weren’t allowed within two blocks of the park, airspace over the park was closed to news choppers and when one reporter tried to get close saying “I’m with the press, don’t we have the freedom of the press?” that reporter was met with the reply from a police officer: “not today you don’t.” In these days of camera phones and blogging, aren’t we all the press? Last I checked, the Bill of Rights doesn’t enumerate exceptions to those rights… Sleep well America.