Occupy

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I hardly think anything backed by Unions, George Soros or the like is hardly a grassroots effort.

All you say may be true but last time I borrowed money nobody made me sign but me. We need to back up to that pivotal point and examine that factor before we blame anyone else, clean your own house first before you call another's dirty.

If there was a coherent message it has been lost in the shuffle by the crowds that these policies seem to attract which in and of itself tells me that it is not good for America. Why did these people not come out for the Tea Party? maybe because the Tea Party says pull up your boots America and get to work and this crowd says gimme gimme or at least that is what I have seen.

I was 28 years old before I could afford a home and I worked my butt off to get it and have been working my butt off to keep it. As long as I make my payments it is mine. Some people for a host of reasons cannot afford a home and somehow that is the bank's fault I just do not see that being the case. Banks and lenders did do some shady things and under the watchful eye of the Government I would agree but loaning money or rather borrowing money (they always say lending but in reality the emphasis is on borrowing) the responsibility is on the borrower not the lender, do we not have a choice?

There is another word for a movement that has no leadership or organization and that is a mob or riot anmd that is exactly what it would be if not for our law enforcement.
mom'sfolly :

Occupy is a grass roots activity, and as such has bottom up organization. This means that while the message seems incoherent, it is coming together a consensus builds. I have seen news stations say that the movement is "incoherent", "has no clear message" and then to extrapolate that they "want nothing less than the end of capitalism". Which is silliness in the extreme.

Unfortunately, much of the current recession is directly tied to corporate greed, deregulation and bailout money NOT being returned to the economy. Banks willingly loaned money on mortgages that were interest only and zero down payment, gambling on a market that any rational person could tell was not sustainable. They bundled high risked loans and sold them as highly rated securities. Banks lied to investors, lied to regulators and lied to the public. The same year they got government bailouts they were giving bonuses to the people who got them into this mess. To help matters along the government repealed Glass Steagall, removing the separation of investment banking and commercial banking. Our tax system also favors corporations moving money out of the country and provides many loopholes for corporations. The end result is that many major American companies effectively pay no income tax at all, and that corporate income taxes are at the lowest rate since the 1950s (as a percentage of GDP). Banks are also not loaning money. These means that the money they are sitting on is not being used in the economy.

There are three foreclosed homes on my block. One turns out to have been illegal; the original foreclosure, over a year ago, was done by a bank that didn't actually own the loan. The owners could have challenged the foreclosure and won; but they couldn't afford a lawyer. One foreclosure was on a house that the sellers knew the buyers couldn't afford, but the bank loaned the money to the buyers anyway. If the sellers could tell they couldn't afford it, why couldn't the bank? And in the case of the third; the primary bread winner lost his job, and has a wife with chronic health issues who couldn't work, and a small child. Ten years of equity down the toilet.

My friends who have participated in the Occupy movement include a rabbi with a family and a congregation, a school teacher, a working soccer mom who run the biggest PTA fundraiser at our school, and a modern hippie who is gainfully employed in an organic food farm.

I think the whole movement scares people. Because it is a truly grassroots movement, because it has no clear leadership, and because it is asking for accountability, and a playing field that isn't weighted to the rich.


http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/03/business/economy/03rates.html
 
mom'sfolly :

Occupy is a grass roots activity, and as such has bottom up organization. This means that while the message seems incoherent, it is coming together a consensus builds. I have seen news stations say that the movement is "incoherent", "has no clear message" and then to extrapolate that they "want nothing less than the end of capitalism". Which is silliness in the extreme.

Unfortunately, much of the current recession is directly tied to corporate greed, deregulation and bailout money NOT being returned to the economy. Banks willingly loaned money on mortgages that were interest only and zero down payment, gambling on a market that any rational person could tell was not sustainable. They bundled high risked loans and sold them as highly rated securities. Banks lied to investors, lied to regulators and lied to the public. The same year they got government bailouts they were giving bonuses to the people who got them into this mess. To help matters along the government repealed Glass Steagall, removing the separation of investment banking and commercial banking. Our tax system also favors corporations moving money out of the country and provides many loopholes for corporations. The end result is that many major American companies effectively pay no income tax at all, and that corporate income taxes are at the lowest rate since the 1950s (as a percentage of GDP). Banks are also not loaning money. These means that the money they are sitting on is not being used in the economy.

There are three foreclosed homes on my block. One turns out to have been illegal; the original foreclosure, over a year ago, was done by a bank that didn't actually own the loan. The owners could have challenged the foreclosure and won; but they couldn't afford a lawyer. One foreclosure was on a house that the sellers knew the buyers couldn't afford, but the bank loaned the money to the buyers anyway. If the sellers could tell they couldn't afford it, why couldn't the bank? And in the case of the third; the primary bread winner lost his job, and has a wife with chronic health issues who couldn't work, and a small child. Ten years of equity down the toilet.

My friends who have participated in the Occupy movement include a rabbi with a family and a congregation, a school teacher, a working soccer mom who run the biggest PTA fundraiser at our school, and a modern hippie who is gainfully employed in an organic food farm.

I think the whole movement scares people. Because it is a truly grassroots movement, because it has no clear leadership, and because it is asking for accountability, and a playing field that isn't weighted to the rich.


http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/03/business/economy/03rates.html

You say that they are asking for accountability. Shouldn't they start by showing a little of it. Clean up their mess, on a daily basis....Oh, look, a trashcan. Let's throw it through a window....I know, I know, they haven't started to riot. Yet.

Maybe they could start by offering to buy their food from local shops, instead of thinking that they deserve it for free, because they are supporting such a great cause. Maybe, when they use some shop owner's bathroom, they could clean it up, offer to wipe some tables, sweep a floor, but then, that would probably be too much giving back.

Giving back; that's a whole other rant, in itself.​
 
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Wow! quite a list, everything they want is what contributed to the mess we are in now. I did not see a porta-potti or garbage service on the list though.
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i havent paid attention to it and i am sure after reading the posts its not really worty of paying attention to
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Boy....I'm sure hearing a lot of "nasty, dirty liberal' kind of comments.

The fact of the matter is this is a grass roots movement. While several unions have come out in support of the Occupy movement, they are not "backing" it in terms of promotion or financial support. The unions have only come out in the last week, while this has been going on for a month. And while George Soros says he supports the Occupy movement, so does Ron Paul. I don't know if that makes them backers, but there you are.
 
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Hey, they missed one. Leave right to work states alone, I.E. allow private contracts between individuals and employers, for an agreed amount.

Here's one, which would literally cause a boom....Release mineral and oil rights to the individual states, as Alaska has, and a portion of the profits go the each citizen of that state. Now, we are talking competition in the market place.
 
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There are a few good points. More Libertarian leaning, which is about personal freedom, but these people just can't get away from the group mentality of Big Daddy Government and Big Daddy Union. All the while, the fat cats, in both entities are scraping off the cream and leaving the worker with the tailings. Sorry for the mixed metaphor.
 
mom'sfolly :

Boy....I'm sure hearing a lot of "nasty, dirty liberal' kind of comments.

The fact of the matter is this is a grass roots movement. While several unions have come out in support of the Occupy movement, they are not "backing" it in terms of promotion or financial support. The unions have only come out in the last week, while this has been going on for a month. And while George Soros says he supports the Occupy movement, so does Ron Paul. I don't know if that makes them backers, but there you are.

How many times have you seen when the unions get involved, that it didn't eventually turn ugly....Sorry, but unions thrive on the group thug mentality.....I'm sure you despise bullies, right?​
 
occupy has some demands that almost sound right but when you listen to their 'whole' list of demands, you can see them for what they are.
 
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