#OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Bruce Dazzling » Wed Nov 02, 2011 11:09 am

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Occupy Toronto goes high style with $20,000 yurts
Published On Tue Nov 01 2011
Josh Tapper
Toronto Star


They’re circular, adorned with esoteric symbols and often spotted on the windswept steppes or high-mountain pastures of Central Asia.

But yurts — insulated felt huts favoured by Turkic nomads in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan — are now also installed in St. James Park, where Occupy Toronto protesters have camped out since mid October.

The huts weren’t cheap either. The unions, including the Ontario Public Service Employees Union, picked up the $20,000 tab. Yurts are en vogue these days: a plush, snow-white version also appears in the chichi Nieman Marcus Christmas catalogue. Price tag for that one is $ 75,000.

With winter fast approaching, the three yurts, erected over the weekend, are meant to provide warmth, shelter and a communal space for the ever-growing tent city in downtown Toronto. Despite their humble nomadic roots, the stylish yurts are a far cry from the chilly tents where most protesters sleep.

Splashed with bright red, orange and blue, the roofs and doors are embroidered and hand-painted with curvy patterns, like the alkhan khee, which represents strength. While Central Asian felt yurts are made of re-purposed sheep wool, these North American iterations are much more advanced. Your average Kyrgyz herder isn’t weathering subzero temperatures with foam thermal sheeting and Plexiglas windows.

One yurt serves as a post office-slash-library, where protesters can borrow titles by Bill Bryson, Al Franken and Canadian journalist Judy Rebick. A how-to guide to yurt building is among the stacks of books.

A yurt, which roughly means “house” in Turkic languages like Kyrgyz and Kazakh, differs from its Mongolian cousin, the ger. Groovy Yurts, the Quebec-based company that manufactures the houses, produces a sort of yurt-ger hybrid.

It remains to be decided how the largest yurt, next to the food station, will be used. Some proposals include a safe space for women, a general assembly area or a warm place for people to hunker down at night. The last option, though, could pose problems.

“Who gets priority access to sleeping in a yurt?” asked protester Jeff Wong.

Occupy Toronto organizers keep the large yurt under lock and key.

“We have to make sure [the yurts are] policed properly so they don’t turn into crack dens,” said Antonin Smith, who works on the Occupy Toronto food team.

The ins and outs of living in a yurt:

Materials: Groovy Yurts are handmade in Mongolia, according to the company’s website. Pieces of wood are latticed together and secured with horse hair to form the walls, which are covered with canvas and insulated with felt. Mongolian gers feature ornate wooden doors; Turkic yurts often use a felt flap. The glass-windowed ceiling peak – toono in Mongolian – is propped up by wooden beams, or baagans.

Design: Dome-shaped and sturdy, Mongolian gers are often embroidered with colourful Buddhist symbols. Kyrgyz and Kazakh versions might have a thatched design, akin to a family crest, in place of the ceiling window. Wong suggested the symbols on the Occupy Toronto yurts represented “peace, love, respect, unity and delicious food.”

Comfort: That’s a matter of debate. Nomads will throw canvas on the ground and drape the floor with blankets, mattresses and cushions. Occupy Toronto yurts are built on wooden platforms.

"Arrogance is experiential and environmental in cause. Human experience can make and unmake arrogance. Ours is about to get unmade."

~ Joe Bageant R.I.P.

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby gnosticheresy_2 » Wed Nov 02, 2011 11:54 am

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby barracuda » Wed Nov 02, 2011 11:59 am

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^^Front page of Karl Denniger's Market Ticker site. In the last two weeks, Denniger has transformed from Tea Party maître d’ to full-blown #occupy supporter.
The most dangerous traps are the ones you set for yourself. - Phillip Marlowe
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby 2012 Countdown » Wed Nov 02, 2011 1:09 pm

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===

LIVE STREAM- #OccupyOakland
http://www.livestream.com/occupyoakland
George Carlin ~ "Its called 'The American Dream', because you have to be asleep to believe it."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=acLW1vFO-2Q
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby JackRiddler » Wed Nov 02, 2011 1:21 pm



http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/11/02/ ... land/print

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only.

November 02, 2011
An Eye-Witness Account By Security Guard and Photographer Bill Lo
What the Cops Really Did in Oakland


by DENNIS BERNSTEIN

In a heavily armed pre-dawn raid, on Tuesday, Oct. 25, with back up from armored vehicles and helicopters, the Oakland Police Department in conjunction, with over 15 other police departments from Northern and Central California, stormed the sleepy Occupy Oakland Encampment.

Asleep inside tents of the makeshift Occupy encampment, were over a hundred men, women and very young children. The heavily armed police force, dressed in black ninja-like outfits, and special forces helmets, with full face-shields down, and armed with and assortment of latest riot gear, fired tear gas canisters and concussion grenades into the camp, as helicopters circled above.

Police then attacked and ransacked the entire encampment. In a short time, the camps library, soup kitchen, and children’s center were left in ruins, and over a hundred of the inhabitants were roughed up, arrested and held on high bail. The activists suffered many injuries, including broken bones.

The police chief, and Oakland Mayor, Jean Quan, was out of town during raid, and justified the raid based on safety and health concerns. The Mayor repeatedly claimed that the police acted properly and with restraint, in wiping out the camp and arresting over one hundred of the peaceful protestors. The Mayor claimed that the police were there to protect property, and guarantee the safety of all Oakland’s citizens, and to defend local banks and businesses that were under attack.

In a statement following the police raid, Quan said “…Over the last week it was apparent that neither the demonstrators nor the City could maintain safe or sanitary conditions, or control the ongoing vandalism. We want to thank the police,” the Mayor stated, “fire, public works and other employees who worked over the last week to peacefully close the encampment…I commend [Police]Chief Jordan for a generally peaceful resolution to a situation that deteriorated and concerned our community. His leadership was critical in the successful execution of this operation.”

On Thursday, Oct 27, I was contacted in person by Bill Lo, a seasoned security guard and photographer, who was on duty directly across the street from Oakland’s Frank Ogawa Plaza where the raid on the camp took place. He observed and filmed the entire raid. Lo’s compelling, soft-spoken eyewitness account, contradicts much of what the police said, and local corporate media parroted, about what happened at the camp, and about the dangers that the protestors presented to the city and local residents.

DB: Today on Flashpoints an exclusive eye witness account of the police savaging of the Occupy Oakland encampment and arresting over a hundred peaceful activists in their heavily armed, pre-dawn raid on that camp last Tuesday in the wee hours. The testimony comes from a security guard who watched the entire raid from his vantage point on the second floor of a building right across the street from where the police acted.

BL: My name is Bill Lo. I work as a security officer in a high-rise building that’s directly across from the Ogawa Plaza. The reason I came to Pacifica, the word Pacifica means peace. And what I witnessed Monday night, I witnessed the raid on the Occupation Oakland, at a little bit after 4:30 in the morning, and it was just an outrage what I saw.

Now from my vantage point, well, initially I started from the lobby I was able to see all the police gathering in the middle of 14th and Broadway. From the lobby entrance I have a direct view of that. Then, from there I went upstairs to a good vantage point where I was able see everything that happened from the building across the street.

And it was terrifying to see this because, I mean, there were just so many policeman. I mean just the numbers were incredible. And they lined up almost like in a phalanx, on the street, and then they moved in. Now I thought that, I was able to take video of this, so I thought that the video would speak for itself.

There were helicopters flying about and with high beams on the camps. So, you know, the beams were moving across every which way. Young people were waiting at the entrance to the camp; they were prepared to be arrested.

So then, the police did make an announcement over the horn to disperse in a very frightening manner, of course. But the part that was just so appalling was when they moved in, before moving in they shot these, what I, I couldn’t tell from a distance, I thought they were smoke bombs, later on I found out that it was tear gas.

Now there were young people in these camps and children, infants in a lot of the tents and this was just, seemed like this was completely out of whack with the situation. These people had demonstrated that their intent was peaceful for the entire two weeks that they were at the camp.

So they shot the tear gas into the middle of the camp, and at the time, there were dumpsters lined up in front, at the entrance, on the corner because the occupiers were trying to conform to the new regulations that the city of Oakland had given to them. So they were trying to get rid of a lot of junk, in the common area.

So the police moved those dumpsters to the side and then they moved to the next stage of taking the barricades and kicking them down. And then they moved in and the first thing they hit was the information tent, and they just started just tearing everything down. And then they just progressively moved further and further in, and you saw all the people in the middle ground, young people moving every which way, right and left, and you could hear all the voices.

DB: And did they begin to make arrests?

BL: Yes, they did make arrests of the people who were prepared to be arrested.

DB: And did it look like a military action? Was there any….You’re sure, there were kids inside?

BL: Well, there were kids who were living in the camp, so they were further in. Make no doubt about it, this was a military type operation, the way they moved in. It harkened back to old footage I had seen of Nazi Germany where you know you had the Nazis, the SS going in and picking up innocent people. It had that tenor. And even the helicopters, and the lights, and the loud speaker, all those were all intended to create panic and terror for the people inside, and it was totally uncalled for.

DB: And how were the cops dressed and say a little bit more about how they were acting.

BL: It was something like out of a Star Wars movie except instead of being in white they were all in black. You know they were all in riot gear, you know with the visors, they looked like automatons, that they just moved in, in a line.

DB: Having been there for a while, you’ve observed the process of the camp over several weeks, you were observing, you were in close range, you saw what was going on.

Did you have any sense, as somebody who works there on a regular basis, that this was a violent community, that these were dangerous people that would require this kind of expansive police action, heavily armed, there were helicopters you said flashing lights down.

How would you describe, say a little bit more about who was being arrested?

BL: I tell you downtown Oakland has never been safer because we had a community there. At other times, actually downtown, it’s shady, and it’s actually very dicey, if you take the chance to walk around.

But violence…the thing about the occupiers was that whenever there was an incident, if there was someone who misbehaved themselves, twenty, twenty-five people would surround the person and say “Hey, you know, you can’t do this, this is not acceptable behavior at this camp.” I saw incidents like that.

I live downtown Oakland and I saw this thing from its inception on a rainy Monday evening. Five hundred some people gathered at the plaza and the next thing you know they were putting their tents up.

And I attended meetings. I sat in at the amphitheater, everyone was welcome, it was very peaceful, this is the thing I can’t emphasize enough. That this was all intended to be peaceful. And anyone who was violent, the group got on them, and said, you know, “This is not acceptable here.”

DB: And did you hear the cops say anything? Were there loud speaker announcements? You said there were helicopters with lights flashing around, spotlights. Vehicles, police vehicles?

BL: Yes, they had these vehicles that looked like armored boxes, black, special riot vehicles.

DB: And, say a little bit more about what was going through your mind as you were watching it, in your city of Oakland.

BL: Well, to tell you the truth, I really, I watched this microcosm develop and it was something that was so extraordinarily humane that happened in there…. the way that they accepted people, homeless people from downtown Oakland, with open arms. They fed people. They prepared two thousand meals a day. People who lived in neighboring hotels came for free meals.

The kids who were, a lot of times, a little rough in behavior actually started behaving themselves because of the peer pressure. Their friends would say “ Hey look, that’s not acceptable here, so you have to behave.” It was extraordinary, just a friendly positive energy.

And you asked me, yes, the police did make the announcement “You have so much time to disperse.” But the way that it was done, it was like Shock and Awe. I mean something that’s terrifying even to hear that.

DB: Did you see any activist committing any types of violence? This was a peaceful resistance, that you are saying?

BL: Absolutely, they were peaceful. But the reason why I wanted to show/present this video was because, thank God, no one was killed. And that’s the thing that was an outrage. That this operation didn’t have to take place in the dead of night, when it was dark, when there was low visibility. People are still sleeping in tents.

Heaven forbid if someone pulled something out of their pockets and the police said “Oh, we thought that he pulled out a weapon.” Something like that, it’s just amazing, that although a lot of people got hurt, there were a lot of broken bones and that kind of thing. But for them to go into the military fashion against U.S. citizens; young people, old people, infants, you know, young people, it’s just outrageous.

This is state terrorism without exaggeration. And I was just, I just really couldn’t believe that the mayor had actually allowed this to happen.

DB: Anything that comes to mind.

BL: Well, I have to be careful here. This was the acting police chief, is the person that she picked. And I attended the summit meeting for combating violence in the city of Oakland the week before, so I know that they work very closely together. So it really kind of pushes ones’ creduality that she didn’t know, maybe she didn’t know specifically what night, this action was going to take place, but I couldn’t believe that there wasn’t some coordination.

DB: Did you see any protestors attacking police?

BL: That night, on the night of the raid? Absolutely not, absolutely not because the young people who were at the front of the camp were sitting down at the steps, they were prepared for a raid. We just didn’t know when it was going to take place.

So I was down in the lobby, you know, checking every five minutes, and then when the police did appear within four minutes just hundreds of people converged right in the middle of fourteenth and Broadway, like nothing you’ve ever seen before.

DB: Now, you are an observer, both as a security person, you work in security, and you’re an artist.

BL: Yes, I am, I’m a photographer

DB: Sort of through the senses, what you heard, what you saw, what you were feeling as it was unfolding. Tell us a little bit more about the impact on you as you watched this untold.

BL: Well, I don’t want to sound maudlin here, because I had grown to really love Occupy Oakland. And when I saw this thing happen, I mean, and when I saw this thing happen I was struggling to hold my little Canon video to shoot this film, because I was just so upset. I know really sounding really sappy. But I was close to tears but I said “No, just you have to control your emotions, because you want to get this video.”

And I didn’t know, I wasn’t thinking that I was going to send the video to any outlet. I was really very, very angry with the way that the corporate media has been presenting this whole thing and the negative spin that they have been putting on this thing is just bogus.

DB: You think that what you’ve been seeing by the corporate media is essentially a contradiction to what really happened?

BL: It’s totally slanted. They take things….there might have been certain incidents which they blew out. I mean when you have so many people, from so many different backgrounds you are going to find some people who are out in left field. There are isolated incidents. But the group, the group tried to control any kind of violence in the camp. And everyone was welcome in there. But when I was shooting I was just trying not to cry, to tell you the truth.

DB: Anything incident/details that would help us understand better what happened that night.

BL: Well, for the night of the raid I can’t really think of anything specific it’s just the thing that stays in my minds eye is in the middle ground with the lights from the helicopters, the police moving in and just stomping on these tents, and moving in one layer, after another, moving in deeper and deeper, and the young people who really had basically stayed put, but then you can see the movement laterally, to the right, to the left. It was just like something out of a film, someone told me as I described it to him, people moving around like that.

So in this complete chaos it’s just amazing, I don’t mean to be redundant, it’s just amazing that a gun was not pulled out and people were not shot.

DB: Clearly no demonstrators, no protestors, no occupiers pulled out any guns.

BL: No ,absolutely not. Absolutely not.

DB: Could you see the different police forces, or they all just looked like one heavily armed force?

BL: All heavily armed. Almost unified, I don’t know how they were able to work that out, but that was definitely as a visual, that was definitely an advantage to create that impression.

DB: All looking exactly the same

BL: It looked like an army of people in black. And anonymous, just like robots, you know, just moving right in. And that’s designed to create terror. You know they call it shock and awe. You want to scare the hell out of the people . Why do you want to scare the hell out of these people who are peaceful and trying to do good.

DB: Thank you for sharing all this.

BL: I thank the fact that there is a Pacifica here, because I was not going to take this to the corporate media. You know those people, the occupiers, opened those media, they welcomed those media people with open arms. They showed all the intimate facets of life in the camps. But so many reporters are like reptiles , you know, almost like opportunistic. Because then they had a whole different line on what happened here.

DB: And they saw the camp shredded, destroyed in the aftermath, they took them in for the tour. Thank you for sharing this with us.

BL: Thank you.

DB: Anything else you might like to say?

BL: I would just say on the sanitation thing and the rats. You know, I live in downtown. The rats were a problem here all the time. When I would come back from San Francisco at night time, I’d pass the plaza, you’d see rats just scurrying across the grass. I mean, really, dozens of these things going around.

The thing that was unfortunate was that, I think, I mean it was a phenomenal feat of organizing that these young people did. I as an older generation person, you know, I’m fifty-nine years old, I look at that and say wow these young people are really showing up the older generation because they are making, se ce purde, they are making possible things here that we almost just dream about. So it was just an enormous thing the way they were able to organize every facet of life at camp.

Dennis Bernstein is the Executive Producer of Flashpoints on Pacifica Radio.

We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby elfismiles » Wed Nov 02, 2011 2:31 pm

Hmmm ... "Uploaded by remhq on Oct 18, 2011"

Interesting timing. :evilgrin




http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g7tdQEgpi94

WELCOME TO THE OCCUPATION by REM
(Berry/Buck/Mills/Stipe)

Hang your collar up inside
Hang your dollar on me
Listen to the water still
Listen to the causeway
You are mad and educated
Primitive and wild
Welcome to the occupation

Here we stand and here we fight
All your fallen heroes
Held and dyed and skinned alive
Listen to the Congress fire
Offering the educated
Primitive and loyal
Welcome to the occupation

Hang your collar up inside
Hang your freedom higher
Listen to the buyer still
Listen to the Congress
Where we propagate confusion
Primitive and wild
Fire on the hemisphere below

Sugar cane and coffee cup
Copper, steel and cattle
An annotated history
The forest for the fire
Where we open up the floodgates
Freedom reigns supreme
Fire on the hemisphere below
Listen to me
Listen to me
Listen to me
Listen to me
Listen to me
Listen to me
Listen to me

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby ShinShinKid » Wed Nov 02, 2011 2:42 pm

Could we please stop posting the same thing over and over again?
Well played, God. Well played".
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Bruce Dazzling » Wed Nov 02, 2011 2:45 pm

What are you referring to, ShinShin?

Juggalos Rally for Scott Olsen, Critically Injured Iraq Vet Who Has Insane Clown Posse Tattoos

It's been less than a week that the world has known Scott Olsen, the 24-year-old US Marine and Iraq veteran critically injured during last Tuesday night's Occupy Oakland debacle. A peaceful protestor hit in the head by police-fired teargas canister, the young Midwesterner has quickly become a rallying point for the global Occupy movement--even cited as the movement's possible Kent State moment. Though Olsen isn't currently able to speak, he's expected to make a full recovery and did offer a thumbs-up to all the well-wishes he's received. Like support from polarizing filmmaker Michael Moore, former Black Panther Angela Davis, and ScottOlsen.org sign-holders. But another group of Scott Olsen supporters who hasn't gotten as much notice? Juggalos.

Olsen has two Insane Clown Posse tattoos on his upper arms, his roommate Keith Shannon told the Associated Press. The AP, in turn, used the detail to illustrate how Olsen wasn't politically minded before his Iraq tours:

The lanky man with a dry sense of humor and sarcastic wit did not show a lot of interest in politics as a teen -- he has two tattoos for the group "Insane Clown Posse" on his upper arms, Shannon said.

His tours of duty in Iraq made him more serious, Shannon said.

"He wasn't active in politics before he went in the military, but he became active once he was out ... the experience in the military definitely shaped him," Shannon said.


Whether or not Olsen still identifies as a Juggalo is unclear--he was wearing fatigues and a Veterans For Peace T-shirt the night he was hit--but Juggalo sites like TrueJuggaloFamily.com have claimed him as their own. "Please keep this ninja in your thoughts/prayers (if ya pray)," True Juggalo Family's Mr. Hatchet posted. "He's a fellow juggalo and war vet." (We reached out for clarification to Shannon, who's since posted a note on his Facebook page asking the media to "please stop calling.")

This is strangely timed development, considering that last week the FBI officially declared Juggalos a "non-traditional gang" in its 2011 National Gang Threat Assessment report. "I guess the FBI would consider this war vet a gang member as well?!" scoffed Mr. Hatchet. Unfortunately, probably, yes.
"Arrogance is experiential and environmental in cause. Human experience can make and unmake arrogance. Ours is about to get unmade."

~ Joe Bageant R.I.P.

OWS Photo Essay

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby elfismiles » Wed Nov 02, 2011 5:25 pm




Juggalos classified as a gang in FBI report
The National Gang Threat Assessment report says some Insane Clown Posse fans are engaging in gang-like criminal activity
http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/no ... s-gang-fbi

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby ShinShinKid » Wed Nov 02, 2011 6:14 pm

It's the eyewitness account of the Oakland Police thing...I've seen it at least three times in as many pages, not hyperlinked, which would be cool after the first complete rendering.
No worries, I don't mind seeing the same story a few times...I'll find a little more patience for repeat stories, I know many people don't fully follow some threads all the way through...
Well played, God. Well played".
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby 2012 Countdown » Wed Nov 02, 2011 6:47 pm

#OWS: The brand leaders cannot afford to ignore
2 November 2011

Cannes, France: I can sense very clearly here at Cannes that this is the moment "the masses" start shaping the policy response to the global financial crisis.

Why? Because everybody I speak to, interview or discuss background with keeps dropping the words "Occupy Wall Street" into the conversation. In fact if #OWS were a global brand, like the designer apparel shops that line the Rue d'Antibes here, it would have a profile to die for among the super-elite.

#OWS has, in just a few weeks, become global shorthand among policymakers for "what can happen" if they don't regain control of the situation. Once you get a coalition of perfectly ordinary people saying "we've had enough", and then you have to watch as the cops baton and taser them in the name of the trespass laws, you know you are in a reputational crisis.

Angel Gurria, boss of the OECD, who I've just interviewed, is not the first to say "they have a point". There needs to be a social aspect to the anti-crisis response: something to stimulate growth and give hope to a generation that have had their future cancelled: that is pretty much accepted among every one of the G20 nations that is a democracy.

FULL-
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-15562965

===

Goldman Sachs Threatens Small Community Bank For Banking With OWS Protestors
Posted on November 2, 2011

Last week, Democracy Now! and The Guardian ran our story about Goldman Sachs yanking financial support from a community credit union for honoring one of its largest customers. The customer: Occupy Wall Street.

Our report so enraged Goldman that, within days, it doubled down on its attack on the little community bank.

Goldman had already demanded the return of its $5,000 payment to the Lower East Side Peoples Federal Credit Union. Now, sources say, the trillion-dollar Wall Street mega-bank sent the following message to the not-for-profit community bank: ”You will never get a dime from any bank ever again.”
About those ”dimes” Goldman is taking away: They come from you and me, the taxpayers who put up billions into the Troubled Asset Recovery Plan (TARP), usually known as the Bank Bail-Out Fund.

For Goldman to suck its $10 billion from the TARP trough, Goldman had to change from investment bank to commercial bank. This change makes Goldman subject to the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) and requires it by law to pay back a notable portion in funds for low-income communities, abandoned by the big banks.

FULL-
http://www.moneytrendsresearch.com/gold ... rotestors/
George Carlin ~ "Its called 'The American Dream', because you have to be asleep to believe it."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=acLW1vFO-2Q
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Project Willow » Wed Nov 02, 2011 7:18 pm

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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby Plutonia » Wed Nov 02, 2011 7:37 pm

If this is true ...

TheOther99 TheOther99
UPDATE: Crowd is swelling on the way. Unconfirmed texts from Goldman employees, George W. Bush is IN the building.. #OWS #OO
9 minutes ago Favorite Retweet Reply


Can you say l-y-n-c-h-m-o-b? :twisted:



PS DHS: ^^^joke

Edit: Bldg is HQ Goldman Sachs
[the British] government always kept a kind of standing army of news writers who without any regard to truth, or to what should be like truth, invented & put into the papers whatever might serve the minister

T Jefferson,
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby barracuda » Wed Nov 02, 2011 8:17 pm

Just got back from the Oak-upy General Strike mass gathering. My conservative estimate on the crowd number there this afternoon is in the neighborhood of 30,000, at least from ground level. Maybe more. Huge march proceeded up Broadway to the plaza - I stood and watched people pour in twenty-five wide for at least a half an hour. Well over a hundred tents in the plaza, and police presence was negligible. Incredible energy, diversity and solidarity. Sorry I missed you, Operator Kos - we'll try it again soon!

Pictures to come, once I come down a little...
The most dangerous traps are the ones you set for yourself. - Phillip Marlowe
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Re: #OCCUPYWALLSTREET campaign - September 17

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Nov 02, 2011 9:29 pm

Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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seemslikeadream
 
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