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New Documents Detail FBI, Bank Crack Down On Occupy Wall Street

jvillain writes "The Guardian has up a story detailing the crack down on Occupy Wall Street (OWS). It goes on to show how the FBI, DHS, Terrorist Fusion Centers and the banks all worked together to stifle dissent. From the article: 'This production [of documents], which we believe is just the tip of the iceberg, is a window into the nationwide scope of the FBI's surveillance, monitoring, and reporting on peaceful protesters organizing with the Occupy movement These documents also show these federal agencies functioning as a de facto intelligence arm of Wall Street and Corporate America.' The next question is how many Americans are now listed as part of a 'terrorist group' by the government for their support of OWS?"

584 comments

  1. "Stifle descent?" by Joehonkie · · Score: 5, Funny

    Really? "Stifle descent?" You couldn't have corrected that to something that makes sense?

    1. Re:"Stifle descent?" by WillerZ · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What I find odd is this: "stifle" is a relatively obscure word to use and yet they can't spell "dissent".

      --
      I guess today is a passable day to die.
    2. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      I bet you all the people on the doomed Concorde flight wished someone could have stifled their descent.

    3. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Well it is based on an article from The Grauniad

    4. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're obviously trying to keep the OWS movement in the higher floors, and stopping their descent to the streets.

    5. Re:"Stifle descent?" by shking · · Score: 2, Funny

      The editors fell down on the job

      --
      -- "At Microsoft, quality is job 1.1" -- PC Magazine, Nov. 1994
    6. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Presto+Vivace · · Score: 3, Funny

      death to typos!

    7. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Presto+Vivace · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      mod parent up!

    8. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Culture20 · · Score: 4, Funny

      The editors fell down on the job

      If only there was someone who could stifle descent for them.

    9. Re:"Stifle descent?" by cvtan · · Score: 3, Funny

      I thought "stifle" was not that obscure, but I didn't get the reference to Descent when Descent 2 has been out for quite some time.

      --
      Sorry, but gray text on gray background is making my eyes bleed.
    10. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's because most of these people are "uneducated".

    11. Re:"Stifle descent?" by slashmydots · · Score: 0

      It's a lie! They're causing descent, lol. They're actually trying to stifle dissent.

    12. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What?

    13. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? "Stifle descent?" You couldn't have corrected that to something that makes sense?

      Well, the original term was "stiffy descent," but then the context of the summary was changed, and the inuendo didn't fit as well, and then someone ran spellchecker...

    14. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's because "stifle dissent" is a very common idiom when discussing such issues, and "stifle" is easy to sound out. I think it's a sign that they go to a lot of rallies and speeches and meetings, but do little or no actual reading (apart from forums, possibly, where similar people congregate to mangle the same word).

      Captcha: Investor

      Look out, hippies!

    15. Re:"Stifle descent?" by NatasRevol · · Score: 2

      That's not a typo!

      Or a moon!

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    16. Re:"Stifle descent?" by History's+Coming+To · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's the oblivious mistake that's inserted into all /. headlines and/or summaries. 15% of all /. posts are regarding these mistakes, so it's important to make sure they're included in each and every article to keep the comment levels up.

      --
      Please consider this account deleted, I just can't be bothered with the spam anymore.
    17. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Wireless+Joe · · Score: 1

      Found a picture of the submitter. http://img159.imageshack.us/img159/7673/descent.jpg/

    18. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Don't fall for it : the FBI has hacked the above summary, in an attempt to ridicule the above truth about their operation.
      The reasoning is simple : If it's full of typos, no one will take it seriously.

    19. Re:"Stifle descent?" by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 4, Funny

      "stifle" is a relatively obscure word

      we used to think so, but then edith and the meathead helped us learn the true meaning of this word.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    20. Re:"Stifle descent?" by gavron · · Score: 1

      YEAH BROTHER!
      I couldn't believe I read that.

      Well said.

      I think I will start my dissent to Hell now.

      E

    21. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      For sure dude! They were just chillaxin' on the Concorde, them BAM!, fuckin' ground comes up and rudely interrupts their flamin' death with blunt force trauma, crush injuries and amputations.

    22. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "oblivious"?

      Don't you mean "obvious"? Or is that too obvious! LOL!

      Surely it was the descent over the 'fiscal cliff' that they wanted to stifle...

    23. Re:"Stifle descent?" by hendersj · · Score: 2

      Looks like the author of the summary didn't RTFA, since they actually got it right in TFA.

      --
      Insanity is a gradual process; don't rush it.
    24. Re:"Stifle descent?" by hendersj · · Score: 4, Funny

      And there's a huge difference between "detailing the crack down on [OWS]" and "detailing the crackdown on [OWS]".

      --
      Insanity is a gradual process; don't rush it.
    25. Re:"Stifle descent?" by argStyopa · · Score: 0

      Clearly you have a vested interest in the elitist patriarchy that believes they get exclusive power to decide the meanings of words.

      Perhaps using 'descent' instead of 'dissent' wasn't simply a moronic Left-Wing protester so ginned-up by their rage that they made what amounts to about a 3rd-grade homonym mistake, but was in fact a PATRIOTIC OWS'ian effort to rail against corporate America's lockdown on something as fundamental as the definitions and use of our language?!

      --
      -Styopa
    26. Re:"Stifle descent?" by MagusSlurpy · · Score: 1

      He's just trying to demonstrate why no one took OWS seriously.

      --
      My sister opened a computer store in Hawaii. She sells C shells by the seashore.
    27. Re:"Stifle descent?" by icebike · · Score: 1

      Whoosh.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    28. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They spelt descent correctly, however you are ALSO correct in that they really (theoretically) meant dissent... sad days at /.

    29. Re:"Stifle descent?" by okmijnuhb · · Score: 0

      Slashdot is dissenting into illiteracy.

    30. Re:"Stifle descent?" by reboot246 · · Score: 1

      I thought they originally meant "decent stiffy".

    31. Re:"Stifle descent?" by mystikkman · · Score: 3, Funny

      Slashdot summaries are dissending into chaos.

    32. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Nobody took OWS seriously because the media portrayed it as a bunch of pot smokers with no job and no goal of the movement. If you actually read the history of the movement, and listened to the real people that worked in the movement (as opposed to who they showed you on Fox News claiming to be leaders) you would realize that you were duped and shammed.

      Grats dude, you have proved to us all that you are a mindless sheep. You are either too ignorant to realize that you have been duped or to moronic to care.

      I'm guessing that you are the same kind of idiot that believed Ron Paul was dangerous and insane, because Fox News told you "He's crazy" (yes, that is a quote from numerous Fox News shows) and played cobbled together clips of his speeches making him look crazy. Worse than being a stooge, you think you are hip and smart. Well, congrats ****INTERRUPTION****

      Keep up the good work citizen, we'll make sure that you get a cell with a heat vent when the time comes. Keep enjoying the puppet show, new show after work as always.

    33. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      I am all for stifling descent. I would rather go up.

    34. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "... the oblivious mistake..."

      Helping to keep up that 15%, I see.

    35. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Really? "Stifle descent?" You couldn't have corrected that to something that makes sense?

      Don't knock it; it worked against Apollo 13
       

    36. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      deth too typoes!

      The real problem is that English needs to be reworked into a phonetic language.

    37. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Descent 3 came out in 2001

    38. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      :)

    39. Re:"Stifle descent?" by oDDmON+oUT · · Score: 1

      This just goes to show, once again, spell check â proof reading.

      --
      Some days it's just not worth
      chewing through my restraints.
    40. Re:"Stifle descent?" by History's+Coming+To · · Score: 1

      See "whoosh", above ;)

      --
      Please consider this account deleted, I just can't be bothered with the spam anymore.
    41. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is true"All in the family"

    42. Re:"Stifle descent?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, Ron Paul is crazy. I live very close to his district and he's been a nut job for a very long time. It's a pretty crazy part of Texas too.

    43. Re:"Stifle descent?" by xenobyte · · Score: 1

      404

      --
      "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
    44. Re:"Stifle descent?" by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      The real problem is that English needs to be reworked into a phonetic language.

      No, the real problem is that people need to stop trying to treat English as a phonetic language. It's a mongrel hybrid ; it always has been, and probably always will be (at least, it will be until it bears as much resemblance to current English (or even A'merkin) as current English does to Old English).

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  2. Yes we can! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is this the hope or the change?

    1. Re:Yes we can! by epSos-de · · Score: 1

      More hope than change probably.

    2. Re:Yes we can! by MrHanky · · Score: 3, Insightful

      American satirists must be in a sad state if that's the best they can come up with.

    3. Re:Yes we can! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God this has gotten old.

    4. Re:Yes we can! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Four more years! Four more years!

    5. Re:Yes we can! by bytesex · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The excuse that Obama is still busy cleaning up Bush's mess is wearing a bit thin, I suppose.

      --
      Religion is what happens when nature strikes and groupthink goes wrong.
    6. Re:Yes we can! by houghi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The fact that he was the best option of the two does not mean he was the best option.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    7. Re:Yes we can! by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sadly, it's hard to clean something up when you're blocked by the house of representatives and a filibuster happy senate.

    8. Re:Yes we can! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah, it's just that Republicans are congenitally humor-impaired for some reason. I don't know why, Democrats are such hilarious, easy targets, yet the Rs still flub it again and again. *shrug*

    9. Re:Yes we can! by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      Sadly, it's hard to clean something up when you're blocked by the house of representatives and a filibuster happy senate.

      Stop making excuses for him. The FBI is under the direct control of POTUS.

    10. Re:Yes we can! by MrHanky · · Score: 2

      That might be true, but Obama is just as easy to attack from the left.

    11. Re:Yes we can! by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 2

      You're dreaming if you think the POTUS micro-manages the FBI.

    12. Re:Yes we can! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No kidding. But the guy who wrote that unfunny thing in the GGP was obviously coming from the right.

    13. Re:Yes we can! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "The documents, released after long delay in the week between Christmas and New Year, show a nationwide meta-plot unfolding in city after city in an Orwellian world: six American universities are sites where campus police funneled information about students involved with OWS to the FBI, with the administrations' knowledge (p51); banks sat down with FBI officials to pool information about OWS protesters harvested by private security; plans to crush Occupy events, planned for a month down the road, were made by the FBI – and offered to the representatives of the same organizations that the protests would target; and even threats of the assassination of OWS leaders by sniper fire – by whom? Where? – now remain redacted and undisclosed to those American citizens in danger, contrary to standard FBI practice to inform the person concerned when there is a threat against a political leader (p61)."

      Hope without reason is a tool for rulers to dominate you.

    14. Re:Yes we can! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just the best option with an actual chance of winning, which is practically the same thing.

    15. Re:Yes we can! by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      The FBI is under the direct control of POTUS.

      Well, if you misuse "direct" as badly as TFS misuses "descent", without the excuse of phonetic similarity to the intended word, maybe.

    16. Re:Yes we can! by Cederic · · Score: 2

      Hmm. Private companies co-operating with law enforcement to mitigate criminal behaviour and damage to the economy? Surely not!

      The document seems pretty haphazard and it's hard to give credibility to the 'sniper' plot without the context and further information. Shit, it's not even clear who came up with the plan to use snipers, whether they worked for the government, for commercial interests, a political party or a secret global conspiracy intent on keeping down the plebs.

      If anything the tone of the document is "shit, you need to know about this idiot" and I couldn't see any support at all for the plan.

      I'm also unaware of any Occupy movement leaders being shot to death by suppressed sniper fire.

      There were enough issues from both sides without raising entirely pointless conspiracy theories. If this shit matters so much to you, stop giving banks your money and stop voting for the incumbent politicians.

    17. Re:Yes we can! by RR · · Score: 3, Funny

      Just the best option with an actual chance of winning, which is practically the same thing.

      And who decided that these particular idiots were the ones with an actual chance of winning?

      So far, from the limited times I was paying attention, my most ridiculous experiences were in the Democratic primary of 2004 and the Republican primary of 2012.

      In 2004, Howard Dean had enough personal conviction to yell out his passions. Suddenly, he's labeled a lunatic, no chance of winning. Let's go with the silver-haired and tall John Kerry. Never mind that he has no positions worth writing about.

      In 2012, Ron Paul was immediately labeled The Other and given no chance of winning. Even when he won 2nd place in Minnesota and Maine, it was treated as an anomaly, "The Other" has won 2nd place, not a real candidate with a name. Let's go with the steady-voiced and rich Mitt Romney. Never mind that he has no positions worth writing about.

      --
      Have a nice time.
    18. Re:Yes we can! by BoberFett · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why does he have to micromanage? Go to the head of the FBI or DEA and say:

      "Stop prosecuting marijuana dispensaries or you're fired."

      "Stop spying on OWS supporters or you're fired."

      It's that simple, but Obama supporters keep making every excuse in the book for that spineless weakling. "Waaaaah, the awful Republicans are spoiling everything!" News flash Sparky, Obama is just another big government, corporate stooge.

    19. Re:Yes we can! by Unknown+Lamer · · Score: 1

      I counted three options for President on my ballot, and many states have five or nine (NC has particularly bad ballot access laws).

      --

      HAL 7000, fewer features than the HAL 9000, but just as homicidal!
    20. Re:Yes we can! by ahabswhale · · Score: 1

      Maybe, but it's true.

      --
      Are agnostics skeptical of unicorns too?
    21. Re:Yes we can! by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      In this case he is a little different in that he marketed himself as being the opposite ie hope and change, which of course makes him an uncle tom rather than a straight up stooge.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    22. Re:Yes we can! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Obama is a corporate stooge, no doubt. One doesn't get to be President without that particular qualification.

      However, it is an absolute falsehood to say that the Republicans don't have a LOT to do with the serious lack of progress lately, and anybody who seriously can't see that the world record number of fillibusters, not to mention general obstructionism of every last thing doesn't play a role in things is a low grade moron.

      Also, if I thought I could get an intelligent answer, I'd ask you to define "big government" because it's a catch all term that means "government doing whatever it is I don't like". For instance, to a Republican, "big government" is laws saying they can't throw used motor oil into a river--might hurt small businesses don'tcha know. To a more progressive (aka "thinking") person, "big government" really equates to "big law enforcement stomping on my personal liberties" as in OWS, as in marijuana dispensaries, etc. Republicans generally don't have a problem with that sort of "big government" because it's directed against people they tend not to like.

      So let's maybe dispense with the name calling and baby talk because, trust me, conservatives are more deserving of it than most after 30+ years of attempts to enforce their coprorate and religious morality on the rest of us.

    23. Re:Yes we can! by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      He can issue presidential directives without the legislative branch and fire the director. That's direct control.

    24. Re:Yes we can! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do we have to choose someone elses candidate of whom most of us commoners never seem to know much about. The last good president was Richard Nixon!

    25. Re:Yes we can! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just the best option with an actual chance of winning, which is practically the same thing.

      And who decided that these particular idiots were the ones with an actual chance of winning?

      So far, from the limited times I was paying attention, my most ridiculous experiences were in the Democratic primary of 2004 and the Republican primary of 2012.

      In 2004, Howard Dean had enough personal conviction to yell out his passions. Suddenly, he's labeled a lunatic, no chance of winning. Let's go with the silver-haired and tall John Kerry. Never mind that he has no positions worth writing about.

      In 2012, Ron Paul was immediately labeled The Other and given no chance of winning. Even when he won 2nd place in Minnesota and Maine, it was treated as an anomaly, "The Other" has won 2nd place, not a real candidate with a name. Let's go with the steady-voiced and rich Mitt Romney. Never mind that he has no positions worth writing about.

      Just goes to so you that the politics of the last 40 or so years is actually theater, and it really doesn't matter who we think won.

    26. Re:Yes we can! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why does he have to micromanage? Go to the head of the FBI or DEA and say:

      "Stop prosecuting marijuana dispensaries or you're fired."

      "Stop spying on OWS supporters or you're fired."

      It's that simple, but Obama supporters keep making every excuse in the book for that spineless weakling. "Waaaaah, the awful Republicans are spoiling everything!" News flash Sparky, Obama is just another big government, corporate stooge.

      Waaaaah, just like the guy before him, and BTW I think that guy was a republican. I suppose everything was perfect under Bush?

    27. Re:Yes we can! by kmoser · · Score: 1

      Don't blame me; I voted for Kony in 2012.

    28. Re:Yes we can! by obscuro · · Score: 1

      The heads of the FBI and DEA report DIRECTLY to POTUS. The original commenter use the term properly.

      --
      Every rule has more than one consequence.
    29. Re:Yes we can! by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      You sound like an Obama support and a fucking idiot at that.

    30. Re:Yes we can! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe that in a democracy the Executive is not supposed to directly control/coerce/dictate anything to the Justice branch of the government. They have to pass a law for that. So no, he can't say that. Well, officially anyway.

  3. Stifle descent? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    As long as they don't stifle dissent, we'll be ok!

    1. Re:Stifle descent? by NotSanguine · · Score: 1

      "Stifle yourself, Edith!" --Archie Bunker

      --
      No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
  4. FUCK WITH THE MAN WILL YOU !! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And you pay the price !! Don't Treat On Me !! Go back to commie land you hippie commies !!

  5. Re:Who Cares? by penguinstorm · · Score: 2

    What the hell does an "astroturf movement" mean?

    --
    Skot Nelson music is my saviour / i was maimed by rock and roll
  6. This is your chance, patriots by paiute · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you love freedom of speech and association, here is your chance to do something concrete about it. Make out a physical check in the amount of $1 or $5 or whatever you want. Mail the check to OWS (http://occupywallst.org/donate/) and copies to the FBI and the DHS.

    --
    If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
    1. Re:This is your chance, patriots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      The OWS "movement" has plenty of Soros Money. It doesn't need any from me. Try taking a bath and getting a job, too.

    2. Re:This is your chance, patriots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about something more anonymous then a check? Why not take Bitcoin? It seems tailor made to the OWS movement.

    3. Re:This is your chance, patriots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You mean the money George Soros and the other radical far-left marxists give OWS isn't enough?

    4. Re:This is your chance, patriots by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 0

      Nah. This is backwards. You know, the FBI is protecting us (the real people) from OWS (weird nutbags). I would expect them to perform such investigations. If they didn't, then people should be fired for incompetence. After all, OWS did advocate revolution, presumably including the overthrow of the U.S. government. Seeing as OWS couldn't even create a functioning toilet system in their camps, I'm not really sure they were ready to seize control of a nation of 300 million people. I mean, sewage is a solved problem from 100 years ago.

      I appreciate the FBI looking out for us. By "us" I mean everyone who didn't attend an OWS camp or sympathize with their goal of revolution. If you did, then I would really suggest getting a wider social circle including people who disagree with your political opinions. Too much agreement results in a narrow, parochial worldview where you can't understand why anyone would ever think differently.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    5. Re:This is your chance, patriots by paiute · · Score: 2

      Nah. This is backwards.

      I don't totally agree with OWS. But the FBI targeting political assemblies of any stripe is unacceptable.

      --
      If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
    6. Re:This is your chance, patriots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I love free speech, therefore I should donate money to lazy people." You guys don't have to look far to see why OWS failed.

    7. Re:This is your chance, patriots by poity · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't the ACLU be a better cause, since they send legal observers to ALL controversial protests, no matter their politics? When is the last time these politically affiliated organizations did anything to protect the rights of those with whom they disagree?

      --
      your thin skin doesn't make me a troll
    8. Re:This is your chance, patriots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love free speech. I don't love hippies camping in public parks. Quit squatting, go home and take a shower.

    9. Re:This is your chance, patriots by GameboyRMH · · Score: 2

      A radical far-left marxist? Soros crashed the British economy to make his fortune, that's pretty damn capitalist.

      If you guys have to choose a Dark Lord of the Left, can it be Michael Moore? Because at least he's actually leftist and it would be way funnier.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    10. Re:This is your chance, patriots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I will never give these idiots one cent of my money. Even if they ever manage to think of what they actually want to accomplish, I am pretty sure that I do not want them to accomplish that nor let them state that that would be desirable in my name.

    11. Re:This is your chance, patriots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well put. I completely agree.

  7. assasination by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    do you all read the bit about assasination?

  8. Re:Who Cares? by VortexCortex · · Score: 2

    What the hell does an "astroturf movement" mean?

    Seems like it would be sort of like an earth quake, except then you realize that there's actually someone to blame for your fall because someone yanked the rug you were standing on.

  9. Re:The problem with protests. by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Our Constitution guarantees us a number of ways to work through government for change.

    One of those constitutional guarantees is freedom of speech to say you disagree with what the government is doing. Nothing about that "damages" the constitution.

  10. Re:Who Cares? by TheOldBear · · Score: 5, Informative

    Astroturf == Fake Grass
    astroturf movement == fake 'grass roots' movement

    --
    Caution: Do not stare into laser with remaining eye.
  11. Re:Who Cares? by Presto+Vivace · · Score: 2

    and the evidence that it was an astroturf movement would be?

  12. Re:Who Cares? by Freddybear · · Score: 1

    It's called "astroturf" because it's fake, manufactured "grass roots".

  13. Re:Who Cares? by Marxdot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Obviously a scare-term that imbeciles have made up on the spot to 'justify' cracking down on protests & activists who don't cheer about rampant corruption between the government and the financial sector.

  14. Re:Who Cares? by haruchai · · Score: 4, Funny

    You're confusing them with the Tea Party protests.

    --
    Pain is merely failure leaving the body
  15. America was Founded by Terrorists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously we can't try and bullshit our way out of this one. It is merely fact.

    Main Entry:
    terrorist [ter-er-ist]
    Part of Speech: noun
    Definition: subversive
    Synonyms: bomber, guerrilla, incendiary, radical, rebel, revolutionary, thug

    1. Re:America was Founded by Terrorists by Jiro · · Score: 2

      Any reasonable definition is going to include terrorists primarily targeting civilians or using civilians for shields. The founders didn't do that.

    2. Re:America was Founded by Terrorists by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      That's just redefining terms to suit your argument. The No True Scotsman fallacy, I believe it is usually called.

    3. Re:America was Founded by Terrorists by osu-neko · · Score: 2

      Any reasonable definition is going to include terrorists primarily targeting civilians or using civilians for shields. The founders didn't do that.

      This "reasonable definition" is rarely used in practice, which makes the definition suspect. Most people use the word to refer to enemies using unconventional tactics, even when they target legitimate military targets. I first learned about "terrorism" as a kid when a lot of kids of my generation did, when a suicide bomber attacking a Marine base in Beirut. Apparently marines are civilians now. The apparent justification for considering this terrorism regardless is that the marines were off-duty. If attacking soldiers while they're off-duty is terrorism, you're completely wrong about "the founders didn't do that". Few wars are won by those who wait at the battlefield patiently for their enemies to show up on their own schedule, and we've bombed plenty of military bases ourselves, barracks and all...

      --
      "Convictions are more dangerous enemies of truth than lies."
    4. Re:America was Founded by Terrorists by Beeftopia · · Score: 1

      Terrorists terrorize civilian populations to reach political ends. The Founders didn't do this.

      Instead, the founders could correctly be described as revolutionaries, rebels or insurgents.

    5. Re:America was Founded by Terrorists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any reasonable definition is going to include terrorists primarily targeting civilians or using civilians for shields. The founders didn't do that.

      Blatantly ignoring the copy-pasta'd dictionary definition and synonyms, and making up new definitions that are inconsistent with the predefined dictionary values, is clearly trolling. To add to the insult you claim the founders didn't do any of the aforementioned, which is also blatantly a lie. If I had mod points I would mod you troll appropriately.

    6. Re:America was Founded by Terrorists by gmuslera · · Score: 1

      Today those same founders would be set up to make them look as terrorists, probably with the help of the FBI. would be far easier than what was done with OWS or Wikileaks. And would be faster if they could be attributed with something that could be seen as a weapon of mass destruction (i.e. one of them sneezing in public)

    7. Re:America was Founded by Terrorists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Terrorists terrorize civilian populations to reach political ends. The Founders didn't do this.

      Well, they did expel the British officials and formed their own ruling bodies. I highly doubt that all of those officials were combatants, and/or that none of them felt terrorized and did not face any threat of force or coercion.

      Besides, your definition is just what's "commonly" used. There's no definitive authority on who is or isn't a terrorist

      In my view, "terrorist" is somebody who fights below the threshold of social norms.

      One man's terrorist is another's revolutionary.

    8. Re:America was Founded by Terrorists by Jiro · · Score: 1

      Suicide bombing usually requires having the suicide bomber disguised as a civilian. Being disguised as a civilian is a variety of using civilians as shields.

    9. Re:America was Founded by Terrorists by dryeo · · Score: 1

      While it is true that the founders often used legal means such as letters of attainment (passing a law declaring someone guilty so they can be stripped of their property, freedom and often whipped or hung) or by people such as Judge Lynch who would pretend that their court was legal (the Continental Congress passed a law retroactively giving Charles Lynch immunity) to terrorize those opposing the revolution there was also the common practice of painting boiling tar on Conservatives then covering them with feathers.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    10. Re:America was Founded by Terrorists by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      Any reasonable definition is going to include terrorists primarily targeting civilians or using civilians for shields.

      The broadest definition of terrorism does not require civilians to be targeted.

      At its most basic level, terrorism is (A) tactics intended to create fear and (B) some kind of political goal to be furthered by that fear.
      Most people now equate terrorism and civilian targets, but reasonable people can easily disagree with that portion of the definition.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
  16. dickzing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mark any and all posts containing hogwash as spam! For the greater justice!

  17. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That would be all nice and dandy ... if it weren't for the issue of corporate America buying the elections ...

  18. Perhaps you forgot by mozumder · · Score: 4, Funny

    that "Descent is the highest form of Patriotic"?

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/unpossibles/3462246191/

    1. Re:Perhaps you forgot by NatasRevol · · Score: 0

      It's the ONLY form of Patriotic!

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
  19. Um, what? by Slyfox696 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So the FBI silently investigated people who reasonably could have resorted to lawlessness, and that's now stifling dissent? As someone who supported the idea of OWS, even that doesn't make any sense to me. As the saying goes, civil disobedience is still disobedience. When you walk the thin line of breaking the law, you should expect the organizations which investigate crimes to be interested.

    The summary, and the article attached to it, seem nothing more than sensationalist in order to drive web traffic. More than sensationalist, outright biased. Just reading a few paragraphs of the summary pretty well shows this article was not at all interested in truth, but rather just spreading biases against the many agents and officers who were simply doing their job.

    This article and summary make very little sense. Or, would that be "since", in order to keep in step with stifling descent?

    1. Re:Um, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      No, its stifling "descent".

      That should make it clear that the article is the paranoid ramblings of a buffoon, shamelessly copy-pasted by the utterly incompetent morons who call themselves "website editor" as a job title.

    2. Re:Um, what? by VortexCortex · · Score: 2

      Right, now re-read what you said and keep in mind the fact that the FBI was coordinating and conspiring with the Banks that you're protesting against...

      Personally, I don't think we need "Terrorist Fusion Centers" at all. We're more at risk from dying in a car accident. We need more "First Responder Centers".

    3. Re:Um, what? by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think there are several things in the article that are pretty much impossible to defend. Maybe you did not read it, or you have a very different worldview to me.

      • Classifying OWS as "domestic terrorists" and having agents in those parts of the FBI investigate them. This flatly contradicts common sense. People protesting against banks are not terrorists, unless you warp the meaning of "terrorist" to encompass any politically motivated crime. It's obviously very convenient if you can classify people you don't like as terrorists, but that doesn't mean they should be allowed to do it.
      • The fact that the government apparently lied in response to FOIA requests by claiming no such documents existed, when those documents later turned up. Lying in response to requests for citizens from transparency is a major warning sign of bad things to come.
      • The general line-blurring that apparently occurred between state and private security. Law enforcement is the domain of government for a reason!
      • The general point made about financing of WikiLeaks is sound. Going via the judicial system, passing laws which are not bills of attainder, building a case, prosecuting it, allowing for a defence etc .... all very messy and inconvenient compared to simply adding the people you don't like to a banking blacklist. Exclusion from the financial system should not be allowed, period - if somebody has broken the law, then it's the judicial systems job to handle that, not the banks.
    4. Re:Um, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      pretty much impossible to defend

      If I've learned anything from watching the Republicans over the last couple of decades, it's that they're more than happy to defend anything... as long as it's their guys doing it.

      Democrats are more than happy to rail against their own, too bad they're too dumb to do anything about it.

    5. Re:Um, what? by sageres · · Score: 1

      That's true. When I read that the article came from Naomi Wolf, a pseudo-feminist leftist apologist of the oppression of women in Islamist regimes and defendant of the leftist rapists, I knew -- this information holds as much water as Naomi Wolf's convictions.

    6. Re:Um, what? by Rakishi · · Score: 0

      I was point blank told by a guy in OWS that he wants to firebomb the houses of people who like to eat at expensive restaurants. Not joking, not hyperbole, that was his honest view and desire. He wants to commit violence, thinks violence is the answer but is merely waiting for the best opportunity. He's hardcore OWS. Quit his job, quit school and so on.

      That is why the FBI is watching OWS. People like him.

      If you think they don't exist then you can continue living in your fantasy lala world but I won't. And I prefer that the FBI doesn't and that it protects me from getting killed.

    7. Re:Um, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're overgeneralizing. Think why you didn't separate a single nutjob's insanity from the entire group. It's a false equivalence. Think why you made a decision to argue for their surveillance and treatment over the general population when crazy people are everywhere. It sounds like you just don't like the goals or ideals of the group and are using FUD against them. OTOH if you end up demanding surveillance and screwing up rights for everybody because of the few crazy people in our entire population then you're just another scared fool trying to take us to a future where none of us have rights anymore, but we're "safe".

    8. Re:Um, what? by liquidsin · · Score: 1

      i was told by a guy who votes republican that he wants to eat a baby. your move, anecdote-guy!

      --
      do not read this line twice.
    9. Re:Um, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -and Jay Gould said 'I can hire one-half of the working class to kill the other half.' Yet the FBI isn't putting wealthy capitalists on watch lists and calling them domestic terrorists now are they?

      Fallacy of composition goes both ways, but it seems only the uneducated are blamed for abusing it.

    10. Re:Um, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      soo.. how many of your yuppie friends *have* been lynched the last year? not a one? weird.

    11. Re:Um, what? by Jessified · · Score: 2

      I think the concern is less with the investigation and monitoring and more with the FBI walking-hand-in-hand with (for) private entities.

      If the FBI were working for the people, they would have been doing everything to protect the public from extremists as well as defending the right to PEACEFUL PROTESTS. But since they work for private entities, they do everything in their power to undermine peaceful dissent which their true bosses find undesirable.

      I mean if they are going to stifle free speech just for the sake of it, why not stifle the racists (i.e. KKK and such)? Because the racists don't naturally find themselves in the crosshairs of Corporate America, that's why.

    12. Re:Um, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "People protesting against banks are not terrorists, unless you warp the meaning of "terrorist" to encompass any politically motivated crime."

      People protesting against banks are not terrorists, unless you live in a Fascist state.

      FTFY. Welcome to the USA in the 21st century.

    13. Re:Um, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As the FBI and other organizations can also resort to lawlessness: it would be great is we could also silently investigate them, right?

    14. Re:Um, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you speak of disobedience as if it is a bad thing. Since when are We The People supposed to be obedient to the government? I think you have the cart before the horse on this one.

    15. Re:Um, what? by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      So the FBI silently investigated people who reasonably could have resorted to lawlessness...

      Your definition includes every person alive.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    16. Re:Um, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think there are several things in the article that are pretty much impossible to defend. Maybe you did not read it, or you have a very different worldview to me.

      • Classifying OWS as "domestic terrorists" and having agents in those parts of the FBI investigate them. This flatly contradicts common sense. People protesting against banks are not terrorists, unless you warp the meaning of "terrorist" to encompass any politically motivated crime. It's obviously very convenient if you can classify people you don't like as terrorists, but that doesn't mean they should be allowed to do it.
      • The fact that the government apparently lied in response to FOIA requests by claiming no such documents existed, when those documents later turned up. Lying in response to requests for citizens from transparency is a major warning sign of bad things to come.
      • The general line-blurring that apparently occurred between state and private security. Law enforcement is the domain of government for a reason!
      • The general point made about financing of WikiLeaks is sound. Going via the judicial system, passing laws which are not bills of attainder, building a case, prosecuting it, allowing for a defence etc .... all very messy and inconvenient compared to simply adding the people you don't like to a banking blacklist. Exclusion from the financial system should not be allowed, period - if somebody has broken the law, then it's the judicial systems job to handle that, not the banks.

      I think you people are mis-informed. about OWS. One of the organizers in Greenwich New York was busted with terrorist documents, explosives, and guns.

    17. Re:Um, what? by Slyfox696 · · Score: 1

      Your definition includes every person alive.

      In your haste to bold the word "could", you seemed to have skipped over the qualifier "reasonably". Read a little closer.

    18. Re:Um, what? by WOOFYGOOFY · · Score: 1

      Exactly. The FBI and Homeland Security have a duty to to look into lawlessness and guess what, plenty of OWS people were all for the kinds of "direct action" which, however you feel about their goals (I supported and do support them given my admiration of the European socialist democracies) basically represent lawlessness. The EXACT SAME type of investigation and procedures were and are used against Wall Street in connection with the events inspiring OWS. Law enforcement has to build up knowledge about the world and the people in it. How ELSE do you expect them to do their jobs? This is not J Edgar Hoover's FBI fabricating crimes against political opponents.. The left in the US has the bad habit of always fighting the last war, of looking for the keys where the light is shining, of framing things in terms they are comfortable with, well worn tropes, rather then framing things in terms of how they actually are. The problem with that is it's a form of reality denial. Every time you deny or distort reality you lose credibility not only with your enemies, but with people who would have otherwise taken you seriously.

    19. Re:Um, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. The FBI should have also been coordinating with OWS to crackdown on corporations that might do unlawful things...... sigh.

    20. Re:Um, what? by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      Your definition includes every person alive.

      In your haste to bold the word "could", you seemed to have skipped over the qualifier "reasonably". Read a little closer.

      'Reasonably' is subjective, 'could' is not. Analyze a little better.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    21. Re:Um, what? by Slyfox696 · · Score: 1

      Your definition includes every person alive.

      In your haste to bold the word "could", you seemed to have skipped over the qualifier "reasonably". Read a little closer.

      'Reasonably' is subjective, 'could' is not. Analyze a little better.

      Subjective or not, it's still a qualifier, which clearly indicates it does not refer to every person alive. As I said, read a little closer.

    22. Re:Um, what? by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      Your definition includes every person alive.

      In your haste to bold the word "could", you seemed to have skipped over the qualifier "reasonably". Read a little closer.

      'Reasonably' is subjective, 'could' is not. Analyze a little better.

      Subjective or not, it's still a qualifier, which clearly indicates it does not refer to every person alive. As I said, read a little closer.

      And I'm saying that it could apply to anyone alive because 'reasonable' can be twisted however one wishes because 'reasonable' is subjective.

      There aren't many people alive over the age of twenty who have not 'resorted to lawlessness' in some minor way at the very least in their lives.

      Peaceful people legally demonstrating were investigated, harassed and eventually smashed because they were going up against (for lack of a better word) the establishment. This should not be the way things work in a country that is supposed to be free.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
  20. Re:The problem with protests. by amiga3D · · Score: 1

    As long as you don't consider rock throwing as speech. That's when things get ugly.

  21. In U$A, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the FBI occupies you.

  22. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.verumserum.com/?p=33490

  23. Re:Who Cares? by roninmagus · · Score: 1

    Obviously a scare-term that imbeciles have made up on the spot to 'justify' cracking down on protests & activists who don't cheer about rampant corruption between the government and the financial sector.

    The term is often used in reference to the exact opposite groups, as well. For instance, the Tea Party (who don't necessarily support a crackdown like this) were called an astroturf movement. Generally any case in which a conspiracy theory can be put forward in order to discredit the group is an astroturf movement.

  24. Re:Who Cares? by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 1

    What the hell does an "astroturf movement" mean?

    The reference is to Astroturf, a kind of artificial grass once used for sports fields. It means a campaign run by or at the behest of an organization to generate the appearance of grassroots support or opposition to a product or policy positions.

    It's most often used in marketing, but also increasingly in politics.

  25. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't be an activist! Don't protest! Don't voice your displeasure! Protesting is uncool! Just go and vote for either of the two main parties! Reasoned political argument!

  26. Re:peaceful protesters? by LordLimecat · · Score: 2, Troll

    "Cracking down" as in "allowed an illegal occupation of a private park for months before getting fed up with the ghetto that resulted"?

    Wow, super harsh. OWS was full of itself from day 1.

  27. Re:The problem with protests. by LordLimecat · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Corporations cant vote, only people can. Stop giving the voters a free pass simply because you deem their intelligence less than yours; it reeks of arrogance and a superiority complex.

  28. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Joe McCarthy, is that you?

  29. Re:Who Cares? by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 1

    Occupy Wallstreet was an astroturf movement, who the heck cares about an astroturf movement?

    If the FBI was investigating it, who would be the group behind the astroturfing? Are you imagining it as a trick to bring out the people who don't support the government's policies so the government can identify who they are?

  30. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How many videos have you seen? How many minutes, total? Do you realize that the protests have been ongoing for well over a year? Can you comprehend how utterly stupid it is to extrapolate the motivations and behavior of a movement with thousands of people, spanning millions of man-hours, from a few minutes of cherry-picked video?

    No, I suppose you can't... because Fox News hasn't explained that to you.

  31. Re:The problem with protests. by Marxdot · · Score: 1

    LordLimecat lives in a fantasy land where all parties have equal exposure and corporate malfeasance is Absolutely Not A Thing and massive businesses cannot sway elections or influence the government in any way.

  32. A bit of advice to OWS types by mikein08 · · Score: 1, Informative

    1. Do not carry any kind of ID on you. None. And remember, personal cell phones, esp. smart phones, are a form of ID. If you absolutely MUST have a phone with you, make sure it's not registered to you. 2. Do not talk to the cops. Not one word. 3. And, instead of "occupying wall street", you might try "occupying a job". Lastly, a question: did you vote for Obama? Remember, it's his minions who are spying on you.

    1. Re:A bit of advice to OWS types by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Hehehe occupy a job also you're all Obama voters hahahehe!!!" Pull your head out of your arse, you tittering cunt.

    2. Re:A bit of advice to OWS types by broken_chaos · · Score: 1

      Lastly, a question: did you vote for Obama? Remember, it's his minions who are spying on you.

      The bureaucracy, which the FBI, DHS, etc. are a part of, is essentially unchanged for many, many years. Individuals come and go, but a change in the executive branch does not replace the entirety of the government structure, not by a long shot.

      Furthermore, Obama actually doesn't have anywhere near as much power domestically as you give him credit for. His domestic power is essentially limited to what his charisma can do, not his actual legal powers -- so you can blame him for international incidents and issues, but it's very difficult to legitimately blame him, especially by placing the entirety of the blame on his shoulders, for domestic problems.

    3. Re:A bit of advice to OWS types by Microlith · · Score: 1

      instead of "occupying wall street", you might try "occupying a job"

      That would require the jobs be there. But for a great many people, their jobs have been sent out of the country by the "job creators."

    4. Re:A bit of advice to OWS types by kosty · · Score: 1

      "(Y)ou might try 'occupying a job.'" Wow. Thanks! You condescending pr$ck. Apparently not being able to do that left loads of free time for protesting in the first place. But, obviously, you'll *NEVER* have to worry about YOUR position being downsized / made redundant / insert-your-own-euphemism-here. Because..., why? You're just so damn good at what you do that you're immune to that sort of thing? I'm pretty proud of ya.' Or -- just maybe -- you'll be a job-loss statistic one day. And when it happens, maybe you get as much "helpful" advice as you appear to give. Then again, maybe not. All of my vitriol aside, right there with you on your other points...

      --
      "Democracy." It's just a slogan.
    5. Re:A bit of advice to OWS types by tftp · · Score: 1

      for a great many people, their jobs have been sent out of the country by the "job creators."

      The job creators did not send your job abroad because they hate you. They did that because the foreign country offered them better terms. You lost on the global labor market.

    6. Re:A bit of advice to OWS types by The+Master+Control+P · · Score: 2

      Corporations once threatened any US state or country that did anything about improving the lives of its workers with moving the factory out of town. This was a central argument of Theodore Roosevelt calling for national regulatory laws.

      Now they threaten any (developed) country that attempts to protect its workers in exactly the same manner, and we're supposed to just suck it up as we're reduced to poverty and the .1% go from controlling half the wealth in the country to controlling three quarters of it?

    7. Re:A bit of advice to OWS types by inode_buddha · · Score: 2

      Even tho I voted for Reagan and Bush senior, they indirectly put me out of a job via NAFTA/GATT. I highly doubt many middle-calss actually wanted those agreements. Now that the Rust Belt is gutted and people are having to turn to the gov't you're gonna scream about that too?

      I *used* to be a Republican... you Wall St bastards need to start making good on what all your pet politicians said re trickle down and job creation. Or else STFU.

      Hint, some of us are well into our 40's and 50's and we have *long* memories of the Carter malaise and what the 1986 tax reform act *actually* said. Noticed the Tea Partiers never seem to mention that.

      --
      C|N>K
    8. Re:A bit of advice to OWS types by tftp · · Score: 1

      Now they threaten any (developed) country that attempts to protect its workers in exactly the same manner, and we're supposed to just suck it up as we're reduced to poverty and the .1% go from controlling half the wealth in the country to controlling three quarters of it?

      Corporations are not people. They are abstract, mathematical entities. Your complaint has as much weight as the one about water flowing downhill. Nobody is forced to form a corporation here, and nobody is forbidden from forming a corporation there. How do you fight that? If you make it economically inefficient to open a company in the USA ... guess what, there won't be any new companies open in the USA. This already happened to the established businesses, and the businesses reacted predictably - they opened overseas branches and moved all the work there. Plenty of commercial buildings in the USA stand vacant, with not a worker in sight.

      Or, to put it in other terms, how much beating do you need to do until the morale improves?

    9. Re:A bit of advice to OWS types by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh yeah, He's a Saint. "if only the Führer knew".

    10. Re:A bit of advice to OWS types by king*six · · Score: 1

      Pull your head out of your arse, you tittering cunt.

      You're obviously not from the US, so why do you care? Just curious...

    11. Re:A bit of advice to OWS types by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now they threaten any (developed) country that attempts to protect its workers in exactly the same manner, and we're supposed to just suck it up as we're reduced to poverty and the .1% go from controlling half the wealth in the country to controlling three quarters of it?

      Corporations are not people. They are abstract, mathematical entities. Your complaint has as much weight as the one about water flowing downhill. Nobody is forced to form a corporation here, and nobody is forbidden from forming a corporation there. How do you fight that? If you make it economically inefficient to open a company in the USA ... guess what, there won't be any new companies open in the USA. This already happened to the established businesses, and the businesses reacted predictably - they opened overseas branches and moved all the work there. Plenty of commercial buildings in the USA stand vacant, with not a worker in sight.

      Or, to put it in other terms, how much beating do you need to do until the morale improves?

      Actually, quite easily. You have a GAT, 10-15% sounds about right. All items entering the US are immediately charged a GAT on changing hands (ie, entering the country.) Yes, this would be "double taxation" if you support moving jobs out of the country. The "entry tax" is to cover lost taxes from companies and people that would otherwise have been paid. Will this make things more expensive? Yes. Will it stop the jobs move by corporations to the lowest labor cost locale? Probably not entirely. Will it stop corporations from completely evading taxes? It will certainly put a major dent in it. GE paying $0 to the IRS is something to be ashamed about, not proudly hold up to stockholders during a banner year. Will it allow income taxes to drop? Certainly, or at least raise the floor. The top 10% will probably be minimally affected and pay almost what they pay today. It could certainly end talks of deficits and move to how to decrease the debt, the real discussion that needs to happen.

    12. Re:A bit of advice to OWS types by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been there, twice. But instead of moaning, bitching, and complaining (although I probably did some of that too) I went out and got another job. The first time with a cut in pay, the second for an increase, but a somewhat less than desirable type of work, for me anyways. I've also bailed on 2 other jobs prior to the company closing or those looming cuts that you could see coming.

    13. Re:A bit of advice to OWS types by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up. And GP's "limited to what his charisma can do" my ass. Take a look at all of Obama's Czars making regulations that bypass the law making process.

    14. Re:A bit of advice to OWS types by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jobs are created because of sufficient, future customer demand for a product or service, and are priced as a part of production costs. Your use of "job creators" as a synonym for business owners/managers indicates that you either didn't take MicroEcon 101 or you failed to understand its basic concepts.

    15. Re:A bit of advice to OWS types by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, +2 for a disjointed, incoherent rant. I love Slashdot. Since you hinted at your age, I'm in my 60's, still working and not yet senile.

      BTW, the "gov't" is your neighbor paying taxes. Why don't you just go next door and ask your neighbor directly to write you a check each month? See how far that gets you.

      And don't leave out the current crop of Democrats in your rant. We're still waiting for Obama's Hope and Change to drop the US U-6 (underemployment) rate lower than it's current 14.4% (Nov DOL stats). The 14.4% does not include those permanently dropped out of the work force, either. The number of newly on disability and/or early retirement is up. Dems control the Presidency and Senate. And for two years they controlled the House, too. Not much got done then except Obamacare. And the bill for that starts real soon.

      Have a nice day.

  33. Paranoid Much? by MNNorske · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I mean seriously this reeks of paranoia. There's a very valid reason for banks cracking down on OWS. In the USA there are really only two ways to legally create a bank account. One is as an individual the other is through an incorporation. Individuals can obviously have multiple co-signers such as in a family. And, incorporated entities can be businesses, non-profits, cities, etc... OWS organized itself as the antithesis of any incorporated entity. There were no official leaders, no board or leadership who was legally responsible for filing taxes, nothing. Their use of banks to collect donations, organize and pool funds, and then disperse them therefore broke pretty much all the laws that were put in place to stop groups like organized crime and terrorists from utilizing banks in the same way. The folks who work at banks can lose their jobs and face criminal prosecution if they don't report activity that looks exactly like what OWS was doing with the bank accounts they were opening. So please, use your brain and think things through before you post an article like this that simply reeks of paranoia. You may not like the system or the laws, but they exist, and the banks and FBI are simply following them.

    1. Re:Paranoid Much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It sounds like OWS is discovering some of the rationale for having corporations to begin with, even if they may not realize that's what it is: to "hold property without the perplexing intricacies, the hazardous and endless necessity of perpetual conveyances for the purpose of transmitting it from hand to hand." (Dartmouth College vs Woodward). Too bad they'll probably never really understand, on account of the para-religious doctrine stating that Corporations Are Bad (and should not have free speech rights and the like, because they might exercise them to support the Republican party or something like that).

    2. Re:Paranoid Much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, I can't believe you posted that in a serious manner. Are you seriously suggesting that OWS should be treated like terrorists, because the banks and FBI are "simply following" laws put in place to deal with organized crime?? I do believe this is the very sort of thing the organization is protesting!

    3. Re:Paranoid Much? by Tristfardd · · Score: 1

      Gosh. The power to do good comes intertwined with the ability to do evil. So what if Occupy was using techniques frequently used by criminals? Most of life is grey and the powers that be will cheerfully point at the dark in some grey in order to ban the white, all done to benefit a particular group, most often a group in power looking out for itself. The Guardian posted a vile tale, all too believable.

    4. Re:Paranoid Much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Paranoid?

      Do you see those "laws" being enforced the same way with other groups of similar loose protest? No.

    5. Re:Paranoid Much? by davecb · · Score: 2

      Actually you forgot at least charities and political parties/associations. They can create a legally recognized entity as well, and so have bank accounts. An unincorporated club like the York Fencing Association can have an account too, if it has an officer who will assume responsibility for the account.

      --
      davecb@spamcop.net
    6. Re:Paranoid Much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe he's saying something more like "If we let people just deposit and withdraw money in banks randomly, it's stupidly convenient for terrorists / tax evaders / money launderers; it may be convenient for OWS but that's too bad." It doesn't say that OWS should be "treated like terrorists" per se, except insofar as terrorists are denied these techniques of banking. There are two alternative banking techniques available: use a corporation, or use a bunch of individual accounts. The former is more convenient but probably less in line with OWS's general conception of Good and Evil. The latter may be wildly inconvenient but there you go - THIS is the FIRST sort of thing that you get when you ask for banking regulations, crackdowns on banks and the like.

      Dissection of this irony is left as an exercise to the reader.

      (Additional defense of treatment of OWS that is similar to the treatment of terrorists is not addressed by this reply.)

    7. Re:Paranoid Much? by abigsmurf · · Score: 1

      That attitude was great until the mob used it to control the unions...

    8. Re:Paranoid Much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is why OWS rages against the machine by re-electing it.

    9. Re:Paranoid Much? by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      OWS organized itself as the antithesis of any incorporated entity

      Actually, here in NH a splinter group of ONH incorporated itself as a non-profit. I think they still rail against corporations...

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    10. Re:Paranoid Much? by bcrowell · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You do not have to be paranoid to be extremely mistrustful of the FBI. In fact, "paranoid" would be a word that would be more accurately applied to the FBI itself.

      Read up on COINTELPRO. The FBI actively worked against the civil rights movement, targeting individuals and organizations such as Martin Luther King and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. They built up an 1800-page file on Albert Einstein, who was involved with "communist front" organizations such as the American Crusade Against Lynching. They tracked his phone calls and went through his trash. The FBI has a long history of anti-union activity, starting from the era of the Palmer Raids, continuing through the McCarthy era, and on to the present day, with, e.g., arrests in 2010 of peace and labor activists of the Twin Cities Anti-War Committee.

      No way would I ever cooperate with the FBI in any way. They're a threat to democracy. Always have been.

      Your explanation of their surveillance and infiltration of Occupy is awfully naive. Trying to open a bank account on behalf of a group of people isn't the kind of thing that merits the creation of a "network of coordinated DHS, FBI, police, regional fusion center, and private-sector activity."

    11. Re:Paranoid Much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You really think we don't recognize you, you COINTELPRO piece of shit?

      Go die in a corner! You're America's number one enemy!

    12. Re:Paranoid Much? by radio4fan · · Score: 2

      I mean seriously this reeks of paranoia. There's a very valid reason for banks cracking down on OWS. In the USA there are really only two ways to legally create a bank account...

      You may not like the system or the laws, but they exist, and the banks and FBI are simply following them.

      Insightful, my arse.

      I'd like to say that you are living in cloud cuckoo land if you think this is anything to do with following banking regulations, but it's clear that in fact you're just bending reality to fit your dislike of OWS.

    13. Re:Paranoid Much? by MNNorske · · Score: 1

      Oh, I readily admit that I personally dislike OWS. However I am in no way bending reality to fit my dislike. Rather I'm trying to point out the reality of the situation and how OWS is simply running afoul of that reality. I think some of the folks who are in it have some very valid points that they are protesting. The overall problem with this group is that it is too loosely organized and completely lacking in any direction. When you look historically at groups that have successfully protested for change there is a pattern to their success. Women's suffrage had a very clear goal, gain the right to vote for women. The Civil Rights Movement wanted the abolition of various segregationist policies and discriminatory hiring practices. Their goals were clear, there was a defined end state to which they were working and therefore their success could be measured. OWS on the other hand has not stated end state to which they would like things moved. They simply protest everything, and therefore will never obtain concrete action on anything.

      As for following banking regulations. Yes, I do truthfully believe it has everything to do with that. I have multiple friends who work in varying levels of several fairly large regional banks. Every single one of them has told me about the training they've had to go to regardless of how high or low their position is to learn about fraud, how to detect it, and what they have to report. It was pretty interesting to hear from them some of the things that they were instructed to be aware of. The laws are there to stop money laundering, trafficking money to terrorist or criminal organizations, tax evasion, ponzi schemes, etc... There are more ways than you can possibly imagine that people have used and abused financial systems. While we may not always appreciate why many of them exist, usually they were crafted to stop or control a certain practice. Some of them may definitely seem stupid to us as individuals. But, they do exist.

    14. Re:Paranoid Much? by MNNorske · · Score: 1

      Thank you for that laugh. No, I do not work for any government agency or shadowy secret organization. I'm simply a rational thinking cubicle dwelling software engineer. I just don't happen to see conspiracies everywhere I look, rather I look for the logical explanation behind things. More often than not I usually find a reasonable explanation.

    15. Re:Paranoid Much? by sjames · · Score: 1

      I yse techniques frequently used by criminals all the time. Just this morning, I chewed my food before swallowing it JUST LIKE AL CAPONE! OH the humanity!

    16. Re:Paranoid Much? by MNNorske · · Score: 2

      Oh the FBI has definitely been misused in the past. Under J. Edgar Hoover he used the organization as his own personal tool to attack anyone or anything he didn't like. Like any organization it has people who are truly dedicated to doing a good and honest job, and it will also have people who actively try and use it for their own self centered goals. While I know the latter exist I choose to believe the vast majority of the people working at the FBI are there to try and do good.

      To the best of my limited knowledge on the subject there are only two federal law enforcement agencies that are charged with enforcement of banking regulations. The Secret Service gets involved if there is suspected counterfeiting involved. And, I believe the majority of the other types of incidents fall under the purview of the FBI. Anything that crosses state lines falls under federal law whereas things that remain within a single state typically fall under state law enforcement's purview.

      So by that reasoning the FBI would definitely become involved in any action that looks to be enforcing federal banking or money laundering laws.

      Now, as to building dossiers on people within the organization and the organization as a whole. Well some of that is understandable and some is not. I'm not going to sit here and try and justify those actions because frankly I don't know enough to argue one way or another on the subject.

      I would like to point out that the FBI does do a lot of good. Good that you may not typically think of. The FBI is primarily responsible for bringing down most of the major mafia families and their criminal enterprises. They are the ones who handle all child kidnappings in the US. They provide assistance to local law enforcement whenever there is a suspected serial murderer and take over the case when the crimes extend across state borders. You might want to consider that when you make your blanket assertion that you'll never cooperate with them.

    17. Re:Paranoid Much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't have freedom without economic freedom.

      The financial surveillance state imposed in the name of fighting crime is just as detrimental to freedom and as filled with unintended consequences as the physical surveillance imposed in the name of terrorism.

    18. Re:Paranoid Much? by MNNorske · · Score: 1

      When those organizations officially form themselves I believe it is still called incorporation. There's just different levels of paperwork and tax reporting that have to occur. The verb to incorporate actually covers a great many types of entities.

    19. Re:Paranoid Much? by MNNorske · · Score: 1

      Most "loose protest" groups have not tried to utilize banking the way that I have heard OWS did. I recall a number of stories talking about how committees had been formed to handle their cash flow. Some of the groups had a bit more formalized arrangement than others. But, with the amount of money they had coming and going to pay for food, kitchens, fuel for generators, generators, etc... there was probably a higher amount of cash moving through OWS than most "loose protest" groups. And, the fact that the news had also reported on several occasions that OWS had set up bank accounts that also puts them into a different category.

      I know the majority of the articles I read about Tea Party groups and how they were organized they had done so as non-profits. In fact there was some hullabaloo this past year where some federal agency was going back and requesting more documentation from various Tea Party groups and questioning their incorporation. So, yes, the government has been giving them grief too. The main difference from what I can see though is that they followed the process of incorporating themselves and appointing leaders who were specifically responsible for accounting and tax filings whereas OWS never has.

      Those are really the only two protest groups that I know enough about how they are structured to comment on. There may very well be others that you could cite that either have gone through the process of incorporating themselves and others that haven't. But, I would guess that most other groups if they have tried to set up a bank account have filed some modicum of paperwork.

    20. Re:Paranoid Much? by MNNorske · · Score: 1

      Thank you for your comments. You hit the point exactly.

    21. Re:Paranoid Much? by thoughtlover · · Score: 2

      The folks who work at banks can lose their jobs and face criminal prosecution if they don't report activity that looks exactly like what OWS was doing with the bank accounts they were opening

      What a fucking joke. 1994: UBS execs got a slap on the wrist for laundering Colombian drug money --a low-level exec was reported to be arrested. 2012: HSBC laundered billions for Mexican drug lords and Iranian banks via American subsidiaries --no arrests have been made. I'm not even going to get into the mortgage fraud side of the story in the USA. Go ahead and search for bank fraud before the 1990s. There are many accounts of internal mismanagement and relatively few arrests.

      Nothing has stopped these unaccounted accounting practices to be slowed or even stop. The biggest falsehood that's circulating now is 'criminal prosecution of criminal bankers will only destabilize the economy' --pardon my French, but really....what a fucking joke. This country is falling apart at the seams and you are getting down on OWS banking practices? Truthfully, I'm surprised that the feds didn't declare OWS protesters as a terrorist group allowing the banks to freeze all their assets

      --
      No sig for you! Come back one year!
    22. Re:Paranoid Much? by thoughtlover · · Score: 1

      Actually, here in NH a splinter group of ONH incorporated itself as a non-profit. I think they still rail against corporations...

      Now that's the way to do it! Unfortunately, you have to play by the rules, but you protect yourself and your personal assets by doing so.

      In the article, the author asks, "why are nonprofits now some of the only entities in America left breaking major civil liberties news?"

      A: Because they're not beholden to a group of shareholders who may not like what the board is doing!

      --
      No sig for you! Come back one year!
    23. Re:Paranoid Much? by thoughtlover · · Score: 1

      The overall problem with this group is that it is too loosely organized and completely lacking in any direction.

      I can say the same about our legislative body. However, OWS did not form because they were "lacking in any direction." They formed because they had a direction: The main issues are social and economic inequality, greed, corruption and the perceived undue influence of corporations on government—particularly from the financial services sector.

      I'm pretty sure that you can agree that corporations have more influence over the body politic than the lowest people on the totem pole do. OWS has goals, yes. Does everyone associated with OWS agree with those goals? Probably not, and I'll wager it's rare for any group of people to see eye-to-eye on all issues. OK, so you have friends that work in the financial sector. If one of them noted possible fraud and told their manager, would they be 'let go' a little later for some complex and undefined reason or would they be 'rewarded' because they found the loose thread so it could be better hidden? I really can't say, but I can imagine that no bank president wants to tell regulators that they found a case of impropriety, lest he lose his job in the end.

      --
      No sig for you! Come back one year!
    24. Re:Paranoid Much? by Jessified · · Score: 1

      Buddy: nothing in your post has anything to do with why any bank anywhere wanted OWS gone. The banks didn't like OWS because it represented lowly commoners daring to challenge their power and authority. It's as simple as that.

      You're story of the banks "just trying to do their jobs" in the face of evil, evil peaceful protestors saying mean things is heart wrenching, truly. The article talked about cracking down on the protests themselves, not about the banks trying to ensure donations were made in a legally sound manner.

      There is no valid reason to crackdown (your word choice) on peaceful protest. That's why the right to peaceful protest is enshrined in the constitution, rather than as some addendum to some bylaws.

      You're either extraordinarily naive or dishonest. So tell us, which is it?

    25. Re:Paranoid Much? by MNNorske · · Score: 2

      In my opinion that's too many things to try and effect change on at one time. People who are not directly invested into those causes are for the most part very easily distracted and if you bombard them with too many inputs at once they naturally start to drown out some or all of those inputs. Have you ever been in a meeting where you had a dozen things on the agenda and everyone wanted to talk about their own particular agenda item and were unwilling to yield to other other agenda items? I have. Nothing got done. In those circumstances someone has to clearly steer the conversation to give time to each point and address them. By directing the conversation the meeting suddenly becomes more effective, and while they end result is that some things get deferred you will stand a much better chance of accomplishing something.

      I've also been in situations where people simply complained about something and said "fix it." My question to them always is "how do you want it fixed?" If there is no direct answer then I can't fix it. OWS suffers from this same exact problem. Simply complaining about something is not enough. Giving a stated list of suggestions on how to fix something is effective. You may not get your ideal solution, but you may get something instead of just getting ignored.

      Because OWS eschews formal organizational structures and leadership and tries to lead everything by committee their message is lost, diffuse, and ultimately ignored.

      Some corporations definitely do hold too much sway in politics. As I would argue many special interest groups and even unions do. I would love to see all these groups have their influence dialed back. But, I would argue without term limits and campaign finance reform you won't see any of them lose their sway. Politicians who "serve" indefinitely are in my opinion the real problem. It invites a class of individuals whose only true goal is to continue to be re-elected. They then cater to some mix of these groups and accept their money happily to fund their campaigns. If politicians were limited in the length of time they could serve in federal elected offices and prohibited from then moving into appointed positions you would likely see a return of the citizen legislator that once (very early in our republic) dominated. And, perhaps a bit of a return to sanity and common sense. Or at least so I hope.

    26. Re:Paranoid Much? by MNNorske · · Score: 1

      Oh, the banks definitely have skin in this game. And, many of the big banks have quite likely many reasons to dislike OWS. I personally was not trying to attribute any nobleness to the organizations as a whole. Legal compliance is rarely a noble quality in large organizations. It's usually enforced by internal legal departments who are paranoid about the potential of lawsuits or fines. I deal with such internal legal paranoia quite often in my role, it can be quite stifling and lead to actions that can seem quite irrational. It usually boils down to a company trying to do what they think their job is.

      As for cracking down on the protests can you really blame anyone working in management at these banks for wanting to? You have an angry group of people who will not so much as give a cohesive list of demands that could sensibly bring an end to the protest. All you have is a large group of people with no defined leadership, which makes them impossible to even negotiate with, and a list of ideas/concepts/whatever that they are protesting for or against that's so general and broad that there is literally no way possible that any of the targets of their protest could reasonably assuage them.

      Peaceful protests? Sure, parts of the protests have been peaceful. Parts have been less so. Blocking traffic, causing such a disruption that small employers like the local restaurants and coffee shops were unable to do business, beating drums at all hours of the night so the local residents cannot sleep in their own homes. (Yes, there are people living in those neighborhoods too.) These don't strike me as particularly peaceful. The folks living there can in no way effect the operations of the businesses so beating drums in the middle of the night when there aren't any office workers there is pretty much just a nuisance activity. Destroying the business of the folks who may very well have their entire livelihoods tied up in those local businesses that were unable to operate because of the disruption is also not in line with peaceful protests. Based on the tenor of your comment I'm going to guess that you'll probably justify all those actions in some manner though.

      As for your question I'm not going to answer it. You define only two possible answers and assume that my reasoning must fall into one those and therefore try to constrain me to fit within the categories which you define. If I answer in any way other than you would accept you're just going to assume that I ultimately fall back into one of those two categories. By defining naivete and dishonesty as the only two possible answers you show that your mind is already closed.

    27. Re:Paranoid Much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      charities and political parties are generally incorporated.

    28. Re:Paranoid Much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Peaceful protests? Sure, parts of the protests have been peaceful. Parts have been less so. Blocking traffic, causing such a disruption that small employers like the local restaurants and coffee shops were unable to do business, beating drums at all hours of the night so the local residents cannot sleep in their own homes. (Yes, there are people living in those neighborhoods too.) These don't strike me as particularly peaceful. The folks living there can in no way effect the operations of the businesses so beating drums in the middle of the night when there aren't any office workers there is pretty much just a nuisance activity"

      Um, from the very beginning protests are meant to be DISRUPTIVE. That is how they work at all.
      The entire idea that the founding fathers saw fit to include in our founding documents is that there must be a way for the people to create such a ruckus, but without violence (the peaceful part), that leaders no matter how corrupt or 'captured' by private interests will be forced to address the issues.

      You commute take too long? Pester your congress person. Business deliveries messed up? Contact your mayor.
      Noisy protesters keeping you up at night? Send a letter to the president.
      It might seem silly, but yes that is the way it should work.
      If enough people are pissed off enough to make such a racket about it count yourself lucky that you live in a nation that has a built in relief valve.
      Others just fester and rot until their is a bloody change in power, or warring factions develop or the like.
      Here all we have to do is scare some politicians and business people that they will lose money and change can and has happened.

    29. Re:Paranoid Much? by davecb · · Score: 1

      I was suggesting that...

      --
      davecb@spamcop.net
    30. Re:Paranoid Much? by bcrowell · · Score: 2

      The FBI is primarily responsible for bringing down most of the major mafia families and their criminal enterprises.

      In the U.S., the existence of organized crime has historically been largely due to the government trying to dictate to people what substances they could put in their bodies (as well as prohibitions on other victimless crimes, such as prostitution). The government created Al Capone by prohibiting alcohol, so I don't really think we should be falling over ourselves to thank the government for catching him and putting him in jail. And it wasn't the FBI that caught Capone, it was the IRS and the Bureau of Prohibition, which was a separate organization at the time.

      The end of Prohibition could have put organized crime out of business, but luckily there was another illegal substance, heroin, that people wanted, and ca. 1950 the Sicilian mafia started profiting heavily from that. I don't know how accurate it is to say that the FBI brought down the Sicilian mafia. Joseph Bonanno disappeared. Carmine Galante was originally caught by the NYPD, and was in and out of jail for parole violations; the New Jersey State Police brought him in at one point. But even if the FBI did play some role, it's just another case of the government creating organized crime with drug prohibition.

      Today we have various other drug gangs, such as the Crips and Bloods and whatever. Drug gangs will continue to exist for as long as the government decides to continue the War on Drugs. The day they give up and start looking at drugs as a public health issue, the drug gangs will evaporate. Until then, it'll just be more of the same.

      The US has the world's highest incarceration rate. (South Africa used to hold the title, but now we're the champions. Go, USA!) Determinate sentencing has started to make jury trials a thing of the past. In some federal jurisdictions, as few as one out of 200 criminal defendants goes to trial. Defendants are so afraid of going to jail for life that they will plead guilty to virtually anything. Defendants are manipulated into giving evidence against other people in return for not going to jail. Those other people may or may not be guilty -- if A can avoid life in prison by accusing B, that's an awfully strong incentive for A, even if B is innocent. We've had the right to trial by jury since the era of the Magna Carta; now we're losing it because of an obsession over the victimless crime of drug use.

    31. Re:Paranoid Much? by Fned · · Score: 1

      The folks who work at banks can lose their jobs and face criminal prosecution

      [citation needed]

    32. Re:Paranoid Much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Supporting the totalitarian, anti-human and inherently and structurally rights-violating ideology of communism, at a time when its main proponent was the Soviet Union whose human rights abuses and harm to humanity was so staggeringly monumental that it beggars belief, was not something that should lead to people being placed under surveillance?

      Can this be generally extrapolated or is it a principle created for the occastion? If there arose a new Nazi Germany that invaded several nations and if White Power groups sprang up all over the US generally sympathetic to this then keeping files on their leaders would be to cause harm to democracy?

    33. Re:Paranoid Much? by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      I mean seriously this reeks of paranoia. There's a very valid reason for banks cracking down on OWS. In the USA there are really only two ways to legally create a bank account. One is as an individual the other is through an incorporation. Individuals can obviously have multiple co-signers such as in a family. And, incorporated entities can be businesses, non-profits, cities, etc... OWS organized itself as the antithesis of any incorporated entity. There were no official leaders, no board or leadership who was legally responsible for filing taxes, nothing. Their use of banks to collect donations, organize and pool funds, and then disperse them therefore broke pretty much all the laws that were put in place to stop groups like organized crime and terrorists from utilizing banks in the same way. The folks who work at banks can lose their jobs and face criminal prosecution if they don't report activity that looks exactly like what OWS was doing with the bank accounts they were opening. So please, use your brain and think things through before you post an article like this that simply reeks of paranoia. You may not like the system or the laws, but they exist, and the banks and FBI are simply following them.

      You confuse bullshit justifications with valid reasons.

      If bank accounts were opened, then there must have been individuals or companies opening them otherwise said banks would never have opened them in the first place.

      If there were tax issues, then those who opened the bank accounts could be investigated for such.

      You say "Their use of banks to collect donations, organize and pool funds, and then disperse them therefore broke pretty much all the laws that were put in place to stop groups like organized crime and terrorists from utilizing banks in the same way"

      Using banks 'in the same' way as organized crime and terrorist organizations does not make an organization either criminel or terrorist. If it did then political parties would also qualify.

      The reality is that a peaceful movement exercising the American constitutional First Amendment right to assembly was persecuted by the government and private industry (go Pinkertons!), denied the constitutional right to assembly and aggressively if not violently broken up.

      It's cliche but it's true - you're not paranoid if they are actually out to get you.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    34. Re:Paranoid Much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I mean seriously this reeks of paranoia. There's a very valid reason for banks cracking down on OWS. In the USA there are really only two ways to legally create a bank account. One is as an individual the other is through an incorporation. Individuals can obviously have multiple co-signers such as in a family. And, incorporated entities can be businesses, non-profits, cities, etc... OWS organized itself as the antithesis of any incorporated entity. There were no official leaders, no board or leadership who was legally responsible for filing taxes, nothing. Their use of banks to collect donations, organize and pool funds, and then disperse them therefore broke pretty much all the laws that were put in place to stop groups like organized crime and terrorists from utilizing banks in the same way. The folks who work at banks can lose their jobs and face criminal prosecution if they don't report activity that looks exactly like what OWS was doing with the bank accounts they were opening. So please, use your brain and think things through before you post an article like this that simply reeks of paranoia. You may not like the system or the laws, but they exist, and the banks and FBI are simply following them.

      You're obviously not aware of the surveillance state we have become after 9/11. Are you aware that NDAA now allows locking up someone and detaining them via the military indefinitely if they are suspected to be part of a "terrorist" group? Bashar Al Assad also claims the protesters of his regime were "terrorists." There is a massive spying effort of reading emails and listening to phone conversations of American citizens and building a database of every known activity of everyone so that it can be used against them. That is not paranoia - it is fact. But most of America is uninformed as to this effort, just as you are.

    35. Re:Paranoid Much? by WOOFYGOOFY · · Score: 1

      Yeah you're reacting to actions that are going on 50 years old now done by people whose world views were formed 80 years ago now who were born going on 100 years ago now. Your attitude is how never-ending wars are perpetuated. Every generation recites the offenses for yonder days . IN the uS it' susually accompanied (poorly) with the quote "those who don't know history are doomed to repeat it.". You know what? Those who cling to history's real and perceived offenses are doomed to repeat it that same history. Figure it out.

    36. Re:Paranoid Much? by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Now that's the way to do it! Unfortunately, you have to play by the rules, but you protect yourself and your personal assets by doing so.

      Unfortunately, in this case they did it to file trademarks with the State and launch lawsuits against the 'other' faction of ONH who they had philosophical disagreements with (no surprise - the degree of involvement of the State in resolving their complaints).

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    37. Re:Paranoid Much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know, I know, this is /., but c'mon: RTFA. the issue is that the banks had close cooperation and access to internal workings of the government law enforcement apparatus. the article is actually the antithesis of paranoia -- it presents good and valid evidence that these accusations (the US government is entirely in the pocket of the financial system) reflect reality.

  34. Re:OWS was a joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    tl;dr, you're dissatisfied with them and hence you are fine with them being silenced by the powers that be.

    Did I get this correct?

  35. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, I'll get right on that. Oh wait, you mean my voice doesn't matter compared to the billionaires and Super PACS funding the elections? Yeah, I thought so.

  36. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    people start believing that dramatic public attention-getting is more important than reasoned political argument.

    And in a democracy of sorts, that would be the case. Ultimately, the masses elect the ones that stand for their desires and ideals (and in a few nations and for some issues, vote on those issues directly).

    Maybe the current generation of politicians wouldn't understand the needs of the dramatic public attention-getting, well, public. But they'd be replaced in large parts, if they don't.

    Of course, that's just the theory. Seems harder to realize in practice in the USA and a few more countries. My observation with regards to that is that true democracies have quite a lot of parties in their national parliaments; it can't be that people only need 1-2 of them.

  37. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and the evidence that it was an astroturf movement would be?

    That most of its members are bums looking for a warm place to sleep? That most of the members that are not bums are still surfing mom's couch after 6 years in college that Uncle Sam paid for?

  38. Any desent will be quelled by PlanetX+00 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Back in the day Janet Napolitano put out a report warning of right-wing extremist at the time of the Tea Party. Here is a bit of ranting by the progressives on how it should have been pursued: http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/08/06/1117242/-Remember-the-DHS-Right-Wing-Extremist-Report

    At the time that the crackdown happened to the OWS people I wrote the following:

    "I’m very sorry to hear about your forceful removal from Zuccotti park where you were peacefully demonstrating against what you see as what is wrong with our country. You were exercising your free speech and free assembly rights and I hate to see this taken from you. Let me tell you that I know how you must be feeling right now. About two and a half years ago several of my friends and I joined a movement to protest the government bailing out the bankers that you are so upset with (first time I ever protested anything BTW). We had rallies around the country with the theme of promoting individualism over corporate cronyism. This movement was attacked by the press and government as being racist, gay-bashing, “Astroturf” (term for grass-roots effort sponsored by big money sources), and heartless (I’m sure there were cases where people on the fringe were causing such issues, the same can be said about the fringe in the OWS crowd, but for a majority of people I met while involved this was not the case) but now the whole movement has been marginalized. It is unfortunate that we were unable to convince you at the time of the importance of the issues we were facing and that you chose to sit on the sidelines mocking us as “Tea Baggers” and such. I do hope we can find some common ground now that you are awake and we can take our government back from the statist and big money influences we’ve ceded it to."

    1. Re:Any desent will be quelled by TheCarp · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I have seen some interesting polls that show clearly, the street level people in OWS and The Tea Party both agreed on a number of issues that totally fly in the face of the media portrayal of either. The sad part is, while each side hates the way they are portrayed in the media and feels it unfair....each seems to buy the portrayal of the other as complete astroturf and ignorance....division is well achieved.

      http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2011/11/a-majority-of-americans-including-both-ows-and-the-tea-party-agree-on-the-most-important-issues-we-just-dont-realize-it.html

      In fact, its the majority of people agree on these issues. OWS and The Tea Party are manifestations of the same outrage, just from different groups, and with different groups of spinsters trying to profit from them.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    2. Re:Any desent will be quelled by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 0, Troll

      except, you WERE DUPED by the koch brothers, faux news and you WERE funded by big money. you were mostly left alone 'with your guns' and you had your little fun. you really wanted no change other than the black man out of office (lets be real, here). your protest, for the majority of you, was just a social gathering.

      OWS was really up against the forces they were protesting. the cops did NOT sit by idly like they did on your put-on-for-show fake teabagger protests. THAT is the difference. one was a real protest, the other some stupid social event for the older and more hateful crowd.

      don't even try to compare them. they are nothing alike.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    3. Re:Any desent will be quelled by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The problem with your idea is that you weren't promoting anyone worth voting for either. Voting for Obama was a waste of time, but it didn't actually harm anyone. If it wasn't Obama, it would be someone else doing the same things to us. Besides, Obama was clearly in the script. Look who they gave us against him, look at all the stupid shit they wrote for him to say at the last second.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    4. Re:Any desent will be quelled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      except, you WERE DUPED by the koch brothers, faux news and you WERE funded by big money.

      Actually the original Tea Party (well, not the actual Boston Tea Party) was started by libertarians and Ron Paulites before the mainstream GOP + Koch managed to hijack it for their own purposes.

      This is an analog to OWS which did start out as a genuine grassroots movement on the left by culturejammers before it was hijacked by bankster George Soros.

      you really wanted no change other than the black man out of office (lets be real, here).

      See, people like you are what is wrong with politics. Needlessly promoting division to forever pit two groups of people against each other so that no effective change can take place in society.

      Were there some racists in the TP? Definitely. Did they characterize the TP? By no means.

      If you really want to play this game, I can trot out examples of OWS protesters who promoted bigoted statements about Jews. Do I think that OWS is inherently anti-semitic? Definitely not. All political movements have whackos in them.

      OWS was really up against the forces they were protesting. the cops did NOT sit by idly like they did on your put-on-for-show fake teabagger protests

      I'm not criticizing you guys when I say t his but understand that the reason why OWS was so resented by the police is that they set up encampments and refused to leave when asked. TP went home at the end of the day and were mostly cooperative with authorities. Again this is not a criticism or a justification for police behavior I just want you to understand why the Tea Party was treated with kid gloves and why OWS was treated so badly.

    5. Re:Any desent will be quelled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was protesting the Federal Reserve Act a hundred years ago. Where the fuck were you?

    6. Re:Any desent will be quelled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The really sad thing is OWS vs Tea Party was pretty much a microcosm of Democrat vs Republican: any sane voice on either side was "drowned out" (not really, but more on that in a second) by Cop Car Poopers and God Botherers.

      It's like we're so used to an incompetent government full of extremists that we only pay attention to the most batshit loonies of any group any more.

    7. Re:Any desent will be quelled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is, of course, that certain conservative-populist politicians tried to use the Tea Party as a platform to gain power. They gave their f(e|a)ces to the movement. The OWS people had only the "babes of OWS" as far as I could see.

    8. Re:Any desent will be quelled by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 0

      Sure, you can find extremists on either side. The problem was that the tea party had far more extremists per capita.

      Yeah, you could probably find a few bigoted OWS people, but everywhere you looked you could find bigoted TPers. Seriously, I got caught in one of those TP rallies and the number of people wearing T-Shirts of Obama with a bone through his nose was oppressive. What was worse, is they were like "What? That's not offensive..."

      Why is it that a large percentage of self-proclaimed Tea Party members believe Obama was born in Kenya? Or that he's a muslim? I mean, come on.. You can't tell me you don't see this everywhere in your party.

      The reason we think you're racists is because *ALL THE PRO TEA PARTY REPUBLICAN NEWS OUTLETS ARE FILLED WITH RACIST AND MYSOGENISTIC PROPOGANDA". The Bill O'reilly's and the Glen Becks and for sure the Rush Limbaughs. Come on, calling a woman a slut for 4 hours a day, day after day, hour after hour?

      If you want people to take you seriously, as an objective and non-hate inducing organization, then get your god damned media mouth pieces to tow your party line...

    9. Re:Any desent will be quelled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem was that the tea party had far more extremists per capita.

      Do you have an objective measure of that claim?

      Seriously, I got caught in one of those TP rallies and the number of people wearing T-Shirts of Obama with a bone through his nose was oppressive. What was worse, is they were like "What? That's not offensive..."

      Does that automatically mean it's racism though?

      It's a criticism of ObamaCare and analogy to voodoo witch doctors who wear bones through their noses, face, etc.

      I don't really agree with the absurd characterizations of ObamaCare but just because Obama is black doesn't mean you can legitimately label every right-wing criticism of Obama as being racism.

      Why is it that a large percentage of self-proclaimed Tea Party members believe Obama was born in Kenya? Or that he's a muslim? I mean, come on.. You can't tell me you don't see this everywhere in your party

      Not "my party"; I'm more of a liberal-leaning libertarian. I'm not a birther either, but birtherism != racism.

      Look, Obama is part black with a father who was born in Kenya. Obama himself had a rather busy childhood and adolescence where he + his family trotted around the globe. I'm not saying it's fair to claim Obama is born in Kenya, but a little GOP paranoia + Obama's background makes it easy for these claims to surface and take root.

      I have a very good memory of past presidencies and I remember the Clinton years very well. While Clinton did not have the sort of background to make the legitimacy of his citizenship easy to question, he nonetheless was the recipient of heaps of criticism, accusations of conspiracies, claims of being a communist, and what not much like Obama is. I just don't see the racism that you seem to be seeing.

      The reason we think you're racists

      Don't lump me in with groups I never claimed to be a part of.

      is because *ALL THE PRO TEA PARTY REPUBLICAN NEWS OUTLETS ARE FILLED WITH RACIST AND MYSOGENISTIC PROPOGANDA". The Bill O'reilly's and the Glen Becks and for sure the Rush Limbaughs. Come on, calling a woman a slut for 4 hours a day, day after day, hour after hour?

      I've listened to all of these people and I don't believe they are racist. I've never once heard any of those men utter words claiming that they believe their race is superior to others. Limbaugh's call screener is black and loves black football players and Beck bloviates about civil rights and MLK being a conservative.

      As for Limbaugh and Fluke, while I don't entirely agree with Fluke's activism (free birth control for rich college girls, seriously?), I didn't agree with Limbaugh's slut comments either. Limbaugh has an odd history with women (failed marriages, and if you've listened to his early years in radio, he wasn't nice to women calling into his show either).

    10. Re:Any desent will be quelled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how many Teabaggers were black?

      Thought so.

    11. Re:Any desent will be quelled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What was worse, is they were like "What? That's not offensive..."

      You mean, kind of like thousands of people running around with "Bushitler" t-shirts on? That sort of thing?

      ALL THE PRO TEA PARTY REPUBLICAN NEWS OUTLETS ARE FILLED WITH RACIST AND MYSOGENISTIC PROPOGANDA

      Do you think that if you type in all caps and spell things wrong it somehow makes it true?

      Have you ever listened to the vile, vitriolic claptrap that oozes forth from lefty hot spots like Bill Maher's show? Give it a taste, sometime, just for fun and for a sense of how unbalanced/unhinged you sound, and how without perspective you are.

    12. Re:Any desent will be quelled by DeadCatX2 · · Score: 1

      I have often thought something similar. Really, I see Democrat, Republican, Tea Party, and Occupy Wall Street as a grid of left/right and corporate/public. Generally, people see OWS and Dems as "left" while TP and GOP as "right" (columns of the grid). However, Dem and GOP represent corporate America, and in turn OWS and TP represent public America (rows of the grid).

      I want both OWS and TP to succeed at the expense of corporate parties. I think that public America needs more support right now. One great way that they can synergize is the focus on small businesses; fewer CEOs with massive compensation, not too big to fail, profit stays in the local economy instead of being shipped out-of-state, smaller companies have a harder time buying politicians...I mean what's not to like about e.g. patronizing your local grocery store instead of Wal-Mart? (case in point: the owners of Wal-Mart have as much combined wealth as the bottom 40% of Americans)

      I can identify with the best parts of each camp, but I also cringe at the worst parts of each camp, people calling for free shit (come on guys this shit costs real money) or people trying to enforce their religious views on me. These worst parts are then exploited by corporate parties to get the public fighting amongst themselves because when it really comes down to it, most people will be more offended by one camp's worst than the other's and this fact will be exploited by corporate parties to keep the public camps from realizing what they have in common.

      --
      :(){ :|:& };:
    13. Re:Any desent will be quelled by Richy_T · · Score: 1

      You are part of the problem.

    14. Re:Any desent will be quelled by Ozeroc · · Score: 1

      Wish I had mod points today. +1, I agree with you! (would that be insightful?) There's probably more factors involved overall but the truth is a lot of people are being screwed and we shouldn't fight but find the common ground and work together on those things. I really dislike wedge issues that have little to do with where our country is heading.

      --
      ...
  39. Re:The problem with protests. by joss · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Are you out of your fucking mind ?

    Can you name any major political change that happened through normal democratic methods without widespread protests ?

    Getting rid of the monarchy, getting rid of slavery, votes for women, civil rights, whatever. None of these happen through people simply going through the motions of voting. "Change must come through the barrel of a gun ..." might be an exaggeration, but it is not far off. Non-violent protest is sometimes sufficient, I hope that this is all it will take to reduce the current "government by Goldman Sachs" but sitting on your backside righting letters to congress or voting for a particular candidate definitely is not going to do it.

    --
    http://rareformnewmedia.com/
  40. Re:peaceful protesters? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

    Oh, good comeback. Bravo.

    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  41. Re:The problem with protests. by TheCarp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yup, and another, tight beside that speech, is the right to peaceful assembly.

    Hmm right to speak out, and a right to assemble.... sounds like protest to me!

    --
    "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
  42. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    You've got a point about the cherry-picked behavior, but he has a point that either nearly 100% of OWS were completely dishonest hypocrits, or else none of them voted in the last election.

    Republicrats won by such a landslide and OWS was so large, that if even half of them had voted for reform, it would have been easily visibile. There was nary a blip, with less dissent shown in the last election, than average.

    OWS either stayed home on election day, or they're corrupt liars, working to advance the interests of those they claimed to be protesting against. Either way, it's a disgrace.

  43. Re:Who Cares? by daem0n1x · · Score: 4, Funny

    They're not comparable.

    The poor bankers and oil companies behind the "grassroots" Tea Party don't have a chance against the overwhelming financial might of the tree-hugging hippies!

  44. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    That's because a) the Tea Party is not an ongoing protest movement, b) it does not suffer the kind of scrutiny that OWS does, and c) your confirmation bias blinds you to the very real poor teabagger behavior that has been caught on tape to date.

    Of course, you knew all of that, and just wanted to regale us with your unoriginality once again. By all means, please serve up some more copypasta.

  45. Answer: Zero. by Dputiger · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The next question is how many Americans are now listed as part of a 'terrorist group' by the government for their support of OWS?

    Get some historical perspective and look at the stings the FBI ran on MLK Jr and the Civil Rights Movement. This is nothing.

    1. Re:Answer: Zero. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I *hate* complete idiots like you, who think stating that somebody murdered millions of people would make even a single murder OK for some reason.

      The existence of the number -1000 doesn't make the number -1 a 0. It's still a -1. Where <0 is: NOT ACCEPTABLE!

  46. Re:Who Cares? by aurispector · · Score: 0, Troll

    Kind of like the term "useful idiot", huh? Besides, who "cracked down" on the ows hippies? They were simply left to rot in their little camps until it was clear that their only remaining purpose was to occupy public spaces and make a mess.

    But it really takes an imbecile to believe that ows could spring into existence fully formed, complete with a slick web site and well orchestrated publicity. Perhaps the better term would be "McMovement".

    --
    I have mod points. The reign of terror begins now.
  47. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Seriously, for a bunch of squatters that were not always civil, they were allowed to get away with way, way more than any other protest I can remember.

    Aside from a delusional persecution complex, I can't believe anyone would think the government "stifled dissent".

  48. Welcome to capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Welcome to capitalism, where he who has the capital makes the rules.

    Besides who cares what happens to a bunch of jobless hipsters anyway.

    1. Re:Welcome to capitalism by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      There's an older version. It's called the 'golden rule.' He who has the gold, makes the rules.

  49. FBI = cointelpro, Pres Reagan's private police etc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Nothing new. The FBI has always viewed anybody that questions the prevailing powers as subversive.

    Cointelpro was a widespread illegal operation to quash civil rights and other movements. The documentation that proved this illegal operation existed was found by accident when some anti-war protesters broke into a selective service office that was shared with an FBI station, and found boxes of documentation which they removed, and distributed to media. Poor article, but you can google cointelpro and look around for better information.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COINTELPRO

    The FBI also went after the head of the University of California, and eventually, under governor Ronald Reagan (who had acted as an FBI informant when he was in Hollywood), was able to have the head of the UCs fired. The UC head's only crime was not _completely_ stifling free speech rights of students-- he had made it an expulsion offense to protest any non-UC business on campus, but that didn't go far enough for the FBI. They wanted him to expel any students who protested anything on or off campus.

    The FBI has a long storied history in anti-labor.

    The FBI doesn't just engage in legal and illegal repression, it also is corrupt as in the connected being able to call in favors. Ronald Reagan suspecting that his daughter was living with an older married man, asked the FBI to check into this. The FBI sent multiple agents (at taxpayer expense) to stalk her, and report back to her father and mother.

    The FBI has, since its inception, been an instrument of the rich and powerful to stifle dissent (and at times, even act as a personal police force to select members of the rich and powerful classes).

  50. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Aye, because unlike the Tea Party protesters and their corporate backers and media conglomerates with special interests, OWS hasn't singled out a political movement/activist group as its supposed mortal enemy and started compiling lists of every time a member of that enemy group goes to sleep, goes to the toilet, scratches his or her arse, and everything else in between. Of course you're going to document some of them smoking weed (etc.) if you're watching them like a hawk. You're also going to document particularly nasty things like murders, rapes, and assaults that happen in the area and are not, in fact, caused by the protest, as websites like that would have us believe.

    If the Tea Party protests were subject to such unhealthy, obsessive scrutiny, I can guarantee that you would find a similar frequency of crimes documented.

    Here's one example of that unhealthy interest, across the pond:
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2053463/Occupy-London-90-tents-St-Pauls-protest-camp-left-overnight.html

    Looking through tents with heat-detecting cameras, FFS. If that isn't an unhealthy and chilling manifestation of the special interests of a media conglomerate, nothing is.

    And for the record, "some of the protesters are committing petty crimes" is not a justification for clearing protests. It is unconscionable to support the silencing of either political movement.

  51. lol by pastafazou · · Score: 0

    I'd mod you up if I had any points!

    1. Re:lol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Freerepublic posters, please leave.

  52. Re:The problem with petitioning for redress by davecb · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Our various governments propose ways of "petitioning for redress of grievance", and, as each becomes popular, strive to cut them off.

    In British law, as applied to the 13 colonies, a signed petition could be presented to a governing body and it had a duty to respond. As the Yale law journal points out, that was so heavily used in response to slavery that it was withdrawn in the U.S. (see http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/796438?uid=3739448&uid=2&uid=3737720&uid=4&sid=21101604364957) A certain well-known president is trying to bring it back, but that's a different discussion.

    With organized petitioning unavailable, personal appeals to one's representative became popular. It soon became impossible to meet your representative, and written letters turned into counts pro and con that their staffs reported.

    Groups and companies then banded together and hired lobbyists, to button-hole legislators in the lobby of their building, where the public was allowed. When these became too bothersome, only selected lobbyists were invited to meetings, and the general public was excluded from the buildings.

    The press is still allowed in some selected lobbies, but there is always a back corridor available for legislators to use to bypass them.

    Groups then started petitioning in person, on the front lawn of the parliament buildings, and occasionally their representatives would come out and meet them. More often, the police closed off access to the building and its vicinity.

    No organization, whether legislative or commercial, enjoys hearing criticism. As soon as they get too much from a given channel, that channel will be cut off. Only the occasional brave, duty-oriented legislator will ask their electors for comments.

    In my own country of Canada, this last happened when the government of the day asked for broad comments on amending the copyright law, when my local city councilman needed opinions and options on a garbage-collection proposal, and most recently when the CRTC asked for suggestions to moderate the bad practices of cell-phone providers.

    Redress of grievance still exists, but it's genuinely rare.

    --dave

    --
    davecb@spamcop.net
  53. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Right letters, write wrongs.

  54. to be fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OWS was directionless, disorganized, and really had no chance of making a difference.

  55. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You would have preferred that they throw their vote away on the Libertarian candidate, who, by the way, caucused with the GOP? Or the Green candidate, who didn't even manage to get press coverage? Face it: we're in a two-party system, and they voted in the lesser of the two evils. Unless you're in it for the GOP to take over all branches of government, then voting Dem. was the only viable option.

    Don't let a little thing like reality get in the way of a good self-righteous rant, though.

  56. (re)define corruption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    In my view a government, totally controlled by 'the big money' in the form of campaigning money, support money for senators and representatives, can be named corrupt. It is not interest in the country or people that drives them, it is only money.

  57. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its not Republicrats, Its Republicans.

    And you better believe that the OWS either voted Democrat, as shown by the senate races, or Green. But the fuck if they're going to vote Libertarian; which has essentially become part of the Republican party.

  58. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    HAHAH Not suffer the kind of scrutiny??? What networks do you watch? They are heavily scrutinized. They even had false accusation brought up against them, such as the "N" calling incident. But no one could provide proof, even with ALL the cameras rolling. And it's not an EVERYDAY protest because those people actually have jobs that they go to and don't have the luxury of rich daddy and mommy tits to suck on as they sit in their little tents and play on their phones. But I guess you are sitting in your moms basement right now cheering them on. So by all means keep being a leech.

  59. Re:The problem with protests. by macbeth66 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Can you name any major political change that happened through normal democratic methods without widespread protests ?

    Sure.

    Women getting the vote.

    Many were arrested at protests and rallies and these had the intended consequence of shocking the public. In many cases, the intention of the protestors were to be arrested, thereby ensuring that the press would cover the story and get publicity for their cause.

    But there was no violence against the movement by the government or by the movement itself.

    Really, you need to learn your history before popping off.

  60. Peaceful demonstrators? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ask the women who were raped how peaceful this movement was.

  61. Re:Who Cares? by Marxdot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, precisely like the term "useful idiot". Both are cop-outs that are thrown around to trash entire groups; "they're just [bogeyman term here], ignore them or laugh at them and cheer when they get their skulls split open by police batons".

    But it really takes an imbecile to believe that ows could spring into existence fully formed, complete with a slick web site and well orchestrated publicity.

    What, is this the same movement that has been criticised a million times for not being organised, having no leadership, and having "no clear message"? Are you sure you know what you're talking about?

  62. Re:The problem with protests. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 2

    Can you name any major political change that happened through normal democratic methods without widespread protests ?

    Sure, the political changes that led to this for starters (if you count lobbying your representative as part of the democratic process). If you mean changes for good, then no, I haveno examples.

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
  63. yes, peaceful, 'Capt James' by globaljustin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    From *personal experience* Occupy was peaceful and never physically antagonistic...

    See, here's your problem, "Captain"...you're judging a the behavior of a few and applying it to a large group. It's false equivalence...

    Sort of like if I were to, say, claim that the US military is a murderous organization based on what I'd "seen and heard" of one soldier going house to house murdering civilians.

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
    1. Re:yes, peaceful, 'Capt James' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

      You must consider rape, murder, and robbery "peaceful". Not to mention crapping on cop cars, trashing the public parks with garbage, and don't forget the stashes of molotov coctails and safe houses filled with bombs and explosives.

    2. Re:yes, peaceful, 'Capt James' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See, here's your problem, "Captain"...you're judging a the behavior of a few and applying it to a large group. It's false equivalence...

      Sort of like if I were to, say, claim that the US military is a murderous organization based on what I'd "seen and heard" of one soldier going house to house murdering civilians.

      You mean like labeling all guns as bad because one crazy kid uses one to shoot up an elementary school?

    3. Re:yes, peaceful, 'Capt James' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. I worked downtown in one of Occupy's biggest cities. What resulted was a smelly tent city in parks.

      Occupy should have gotten their parade permits, just like every other organization does (be it the KKK, the Nazis, the teabaggers, or any other place that causes traffic disruption.) Then, protest, and dress the part. After the protest, take down the signs, and GTFO so people can get back to day to day business.

      Because Occupy members violated laws (mainly criminal trespass) and became a major hindrance for day to day operation, they lost all voice they would have had with any political officials.

      Now, thanks to Occupy, any voices on the left are silenced because they are immediately associated with bums defecating on police cars (regardless if that incident is real or not), and tent cities full of pot smokers. The local police now have better experience at mass arrests and taking out organization leaders.

      Thank you Occupy... you have helped the right wingers far more than two million people on the DC steps at a Beck's Restoring Honor gathering could ever do.

    4. Re:yes, peaceful, 'Capt James' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "US military is a murderous organization"

      Isn't that kind of its purpose?

    5. Re:yes, peaceful, 'Capt James' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or if you were to say, "All those Tea Partiers are a bunch of racists, gun-toting religious zealots."....

    6. Re:yes, peaceful, 'Capt James' by Jessified · · Score: 1

      To be fair, I think we're talking about more than one soldier, especially if you expand your search to include rape.

      You broad brush of the military is probably more fair than the brush of the OWS movement.

    7. Re:yes, peaceful, 'Capt James' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since it bears repeating, from the very comment to which you are replying...
       
      .you're judging a the behavior of a few and applying it to a large group. It's false equivalence...

    8. Re:yes, peaceful, 'Capt James' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See, here's your problem, "Captain"...you're judging a the behavior of a few and applying it to a large group. It's false equivalence...

      And yet, the same reasoning is going to be made over the next several months for limiting me from having the kind of rifle I want to have.

      If the standard of "a few bad apples spoils the bunch" can be applied to one group, then it should be applied to all groups. Otherwise, it should be applied to none. I prefer the latter.

    9. Re:yes, peaceful, 'Capt James' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sort of like if I were to, say, claim that the US military is a murderous organization based on what I'd "seen and heard" of one soldier going house to house murdering civilians.

      You know, for much of the world, that's *exactly* how the US military is viewed.

      And who can blame them?

    10. Re:yes, peaceful, 'Capt James' by Cederic · · Score: 1

      And yet the actions of law enforcement to quell those actions of a few are deemed to be the only response to the many?

      It's false equivalence.

    11. Re:yes, peaceful, 'Capt James' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or that all bankers are thieves..., oh wait that ones right.

  64. Re:Who Cares? by SuricouRaven · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Fake grassroots. People have gotten quite skeptical these days, in some ways - they always expect a lie. Espicially in politics and advertising. Astroturfing refers to the increasingly common tactic of creating an apparently populist or spontainous movement while hiding the support of a large sponsor (government, pressure group, business, etc) which would have something to gain.

    For example, and using entirely fictional elements to avoid getting into politics, imagine that the manufacturer of a particular widget starts taking public criticism for the negative social or environmental impacts of their product (Maybe the widget causes cancer with prolonged use, or the manufacturing process produces toxic waste) and race the possibility of expensive regulation. The company executives could well go on national TV and try to explain that the fears are overblown (truthfully or not), but no-one is going to believe them because they have a personal stake, and corporate PR departments are not respected for their objectivity right now. So they might instead organise an apparently independant 'Widgets for America' fan club to talk of how widgets make the country great, or they might find a group which is opposed to regulation in general terms and anonymously donate money to a 'Hands off Our Widgets!' campaign. If they PR department is feeling particually slimy, they may create a movement from scratch - supplying the funding, designing websites, paying people to attend protests. All to create the impression in the minds of the public that there is massive popular support for widget production, and attempts to regulate them are ill-considered.

    It seems unlikely that Operation Wall Street was an astroturf movement though, because there was no-one in a position of power or money to gain from it. Who would benefit from orchestrating such protests?

  65. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For proletariat of the people kick all the Left-SR commies like Marxdot to the Gulaks!

  66. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, you do know about the poor teabagger behavior caught on tape to date. You aren't blind; you're just a liar. Good to know.

  67. Re:The problem with protests. by swv3752 · · Score: 1

    No, you are confusing the second admendment with the first. Though they do go hand in hand.

    --
    Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
  68. Re:Who Cares? by sageres · · Score: 1

    Perhaps they wanted to identify the people who were responsible for creation of such AstroTurf movement.

  69. Corporations provide WHO you vote for by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Limiting your choices: Who puts the 'candidates' there via contributions in the MULTI-MILLIONS, funding both sides, thus hedging their bets (making sure they win, either way).

    1. Re:Corporations provide WHO you vote for by LordLimecat · · Score: 0

      I believe theres this thing called "the primaries" where voters ALSO have a say.

      Everyone trying to act like its a few millionaires causing the problem du jour is just acting the enabler for voters who dont care enough to make a difference. Have some backbone and hold people accountable.

    2. Re:Corporations provide WHO you vote for by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone trying to act like its a few millionaires causing the problem du jour is just acting the enabler for voters who dont care enough to make a difference.

      Well, when people keep being told the rich are primarily responsible for all the GOOD things (job creators, trickle down, Steve Jobs, etc), it's hard to doublethink and not consider the possibility that they are also responsible for the bad.

  70. Re:OWS was a joke by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

    So, basically, what you're saying is that you want a bunch of random people to not only give up their time, but give up their lives for you while you sit on the sidelines criticising?

    wow.

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
  71. Re:The problem with protests. by macbeth66 · · Score: 2

    And crap!

    I should never post before my coffee. I've said that before. I had two different posts in mind and blended them together into a mess. I'll go away now and hide.

    My apologies, Joss.

  72. hyperbole and hysteria by abigsmurf · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You mean the FBI and police sat down with business owners to talk about a large-ish scale protest outside their premises directed at them? Screw that, if there's a mob outside your front door, why would you ever want advice and reassurances from police, it's not like it's their job or anything!

    Police drawing up plans in case the OWS potentially resorted to criminal or terrorist behaviour ? How dare they! I demand a police service that doesn't prepare for any eventuality and is always taken by surprise!

    It is rather shocking that the police didn't inform the leaders of an organisation that prided itself in having no leaders that they had vague threats of violence against them. Imaginary people have the right to information too!

    1. Re:hyperbole and hysteria by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Finally a reasonable person. A person who isn't speaking of OWS as either a savior organization or criminal scum. And the use of sarcasm is masterful! Thank you for making /. look smart again.

    2. Re:hyperbole and hysteria by mounthood · · Score: 2

      Irony: denying the collusion of money and power, regarding the occupy wallstreet protests.

      --
      tomorrow who's gonna fuss
    3. Re:hyperbole and hysteria by DeadCatX2 · · Score: 1

      Outside of the outrageous fringe stuff, the large-ish scale protests were engaged in many-weeks-long non-violent protest in public areas, with generally small-ish scale protests outside the actual businesses themselves.

      It's one thing to be prepared, but I would hope that the police force would prioritize threats better. I honestly think most of the money spent dealing with OWS (such as police overtime) could have generally been reduced by 90% without the general outcome changing, and that money could have been spent on better things like fighting Mexican drug lords instead - you know, dealing with people who actually engage in criminal and terrorist behavior - or even (gasp) not being taken from the taxpayers in the first place?

      --
      :(){ :|:& };:
    4. Re:hyperbole and hysteria by abigsmurf · · Score: 1

      Peaceful protests can turn violent in minutes if they're not well managed and controlled. An example of this was The Tottenham riots where the police decided a peaceful protest didn't need many officers. A few people turned violent, there weren't enough police to stem it quickly, large numbers of people realised the police couldn't cope and saw the chance to riot and loot.

      Quite often these protests are peaceful seemingly without need for large numbers of police largely because, almost paradoxically, there are large numbers of police there.

    5. Re:hyperbole and hysteria by abigsmurf · · Score: 1

      irony: accusing someone of denial when they're actually saying there was collusion and that you'd expect collusion.

    6. Re:hyperbole and hysteria by mounthood · · Score: 1

      collusion: Secret or illegal cooperation or conspiracy, esp. in order to cheat or deceive others.

      So you were arguing that we should "expect collusion" and that it's OK? That might account for the "Troll" mods...

      --
      tomorrow who's gonna fuss
    7. Re:hyperbole and hysteria by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      You mean the FBI and police sat down with business owners to talk about a large-ish scale protest outside their premises directed at them? Screw that, if there's a mob outside your front door, why would you ever want advice and reassurances from police, it's not like it's their job or anything!
      Police drawing up plans in case the OWS potentially resorted to criminal or terrorist behaviour ? How dare they! I demand a police service that doesn't prepare for any eventuality and is always taken by surprise!
      It is rather shocking that the police didn't inform the leaders of an organisation that prided itself in having no leaders that they had vague threats of violence against them. Imaginary people have the right to information too!

      There's a big difference between drawing up contingency plans and acting on them for no legitimate reason.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
  73. Becasue all the OWS were so peaceful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, maybe not all

  74. Re:The problem with protests. by rubycodez · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Freedom of speech does not mean you get to squat in the town's park after hours and poop all over the place. As a taxpayer I find that kind of behavior on the part of non-taxpayers to be offensive.

  75. OK, very clever people. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You've found a spelling mistake.

    Have a bikkit.

    Now, what do you think about the TSA FBI and bank private security conspiring to shut down protest as if it were Cold War Russia or Lybia putting down the rising of the populace?

    As the "leader of the free world", how does this fit in?

  76. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    1) OWS was not "non-violent".

    2) They want to get rid of capitalism, but have no idea what they want to replace it with. The people behind OWS are far-left communist groups, but the "useful idiots" that showed up at OWS to blindly chant about taking down wall street don't even understand who they are chanting for.

    3) OWS doesn't need money. They are well funded by George Soros shadow groups.

  77. Enemies of the State by stsp · · Score: 1

    a window into the nationwide scope of the FBI's surveillance, monitoring, and reporting on peaceful protesters

    Here's another such window:
    http://events.ccc.de/congress/2012/Fahrplan/events/5338.en.html
    http://mirror.fem-net.de/CCC/29C3/mp4-h264-LQ-iProd/29c3-5338-en-enemies_of_the_state_h264-iprod.mp4

  78. Re:Who Cares? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

    Marxist AGW scientists?

    #include <irony.h>

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  79. Um, yeah by globaljustin · · Score: 1

    I agree that the tone of the BBC article was a bit flamebait, however you are giving the FBI, etc more benefit of the doubt than is rational...

    "Stifling dissent" is accomplished through many means...we only know what was declassified.

    The FBI was warning bankers about things they heard Occupy planning, but the FBI didn't say jack shit about the assassination plot to the protesters...that's a big one.

    Of course law enforcement should look in on what groups like this do...it's their job. But **what they do with the information** is the crime here. I made a few LE people who attended Occupy meetings that were open to the public...I felt that was fine.

    A second point, notice how geographically FBI etc. had vastly different responses. FBI agents in, say Houston, TX are understandably more likely to view 'occupy' as a terrorist org than say, FBI agents in Seattle. America is a big place with regional cultures that vary widely along the political spectrum. It stands to reason that FBI agents who work in the South are more Fascist-minded than those who elect to work in more liberal areas.

    --
    Thank you Dave Raggett
  80. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    His initial question does not mention violence just protests. You even state that these changes happened due to widespread protests. You really need to read before spouting off.

  81. Re:peaceful protesters? by MightyMartian · · Score: 0

    When were the Libertarians ever not part of the Republican Party. They have long been American Conservatism's useful idiots.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  82. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Police officers. Need more to "contain" them. Overtime pay my dear SuricouRaven. Kinda funny how you can make up almost anything to sound reasonable.

  83. Re:OWS was a joke by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

    What would you have done? Stormed the citadels? Great idea: A small army of protesters could probably rush through the doors of some banking headquarters and take over the building. What happens then?

    The police get called in. A large-scale protest of a business handling such money and of such importance would be considered a serious event. There may be a brief period of standoff, but it wouldn't be long before the SWAT teams go in. Highly trained, experienced police officers with the best civilian equipment around vs political activists. Half an hour after the first door breach most of the protestors will be in cuffs and on their way to jail, with a few who tried resisting on their way to hospital or waiting for forensics to come along to document their corpse. And that's where it ends - because two days later the security is tightened, the employees are back and business is back to running as usual. At best - and this is a very optimistic scenario - you have shut down the bank headquarters for, oh, a week. Well done. Total achievement: Nothing. Really nothing, because while OWS is jamming one building operations are just shunted off to various sub-offices and regional headquarters.

    Well, one thing would be achieved. A month or three later, someone in congress would propose a bill making it a criminal offense to organize an attempt to enter a place of business with intent of causing disruption to business operations. That way the FBI would be able to better infiltrate any grassroots movements and arrest anyone who do much as tried to rally support for doing it again.

    Life isn't like the movies. There have been times, historically, when the underdog revolutionary managed to break the system, overthrow the oppressive powers that be and build afresh something new and better. But this is a rare event. Far more revolutions have ended quickly, with the rebels imprisoned or executed.

  84. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would rather they poop in the town's park than all over the sidewalks. Have you BEEN to San Francisco?

  85. What about these folks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  86. Re:The problem with protests. by drinkypoo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Corporations cant vote, only people can

    People can't decide who we get to vote for, only corporations can.

    There are exceptions at the low levels of politics, where it doesn't cost so much to get a good percentage of the vote if you're on target. But the higher up the ladder you go, the more it costs to participate, until only corporations can even (effectively) have that much money.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  87. This is nothing new by Beeftopia · · Score: 5, Interesting

    'This production [of documents], which we believe is just the tip of the iceberg, is a window into the nationwide scope of the FBI's surveillance, monitoring, and reporting on peaceful protesters organizing with the Occupy movement These documents also show these federal agencies functioning as a de facto intelligence arm of Wall Street and Corporate America.'

    A highly decorated Marine Corps General, and one of only a handful of men to receive the Medal of Honor twice wrote:

    "It may seem odd for me, a military man to adopt such a comparison. Truthfulness compels me to. I spent thirty- three years and four months in active military service as a member of this country's most agile military force, the Marine Corps. I served in all commissioned ranks from Second Lieutenant to Major-General. And during that period, I spent most of my time being a high class muscle- man for Big Business, for Wall Street and for the Bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism.

    I helped make Mexico, especially Tampico, safe for American oil interests in 1914. I helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys to collect revenues in. I helped in the raping of half a dozen Central American republics for the benefits of Wall Street. The record of racketeering is long. I helped purify Nicaragua for the international banking house of Brown Brothers in 1909-1912 (where have I heard that name before?). I brought light to the Dominican Republic for American sugar interests in 1916. In China I helped to see to it that Standard Oil went its way unmolested."

    -- General Smedley Butler

    1. Re:This is nothing new by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Typical OWS loon: "Peaceful" spoiled child of wealthy doctors busted by FBI with bomb-making materials and a weapons cache

      http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/manhattan/bombmaking_in_the_village_LoRDqNzP02SDZyfC1pLVXN

    2. Re:This is nothing new by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Way to go, dude, you totally invalidated the point made in the parent comment. USA! USA! USA!

    3. Re:This is nothing new by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what?

      The intellectual capacity and political insight of this person isn't any greater than anyone elses. His word has no greater significance than a grocery clerk's opinion of "When I work in my store I rape America with the phallus of Wall Street".

  88. Re:Who Cares? by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 2

    Who would benefit from orchestrating such protests?

    no one with power benefits, directly. if you have say in this world, you would not benefit in OWS's objectives, initially. over time, if things ever got more equal and fair, everyone would benfit (ie, society goes up a notch).

    everyone who needs the system to change but whose voice is never heard, they are the direct beneficiaries of OWS. if their voices counted, we would have had change by now. but those in power hear us, ignore us and continue on with the same-old same-old.

    yes, its a class war. what are you going to do about it? ignore it? help things get better? or fight to keep your precious status quo?

    "which side are you on?"

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  89. Re:The problem with protests. by Qzukk · · Score: 2

    on the part of non-taxpayers

    I'm going to go out on a limb here and guess that they pay taxes.

    --
    If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
  90. Re:Who Cares? by paiute · · Score: 2

    But it really takes an imbecile to believe that ows could spring into existence fully formed, complete with a slick web site....

    Really? What site did you think you were posting to? Yes, making a slick web site. That must take a team of computer nerds and years of labor.

    --
    If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
  91. Re:The problem with protests. by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Our Constitution guarantees us a number of ways to work through government for change.

    And if the Government obeyed its restrictions in the Constitution, those would be valid methods.

    "But whether the Constitution really be one thing, or another, this much is certain - that it has either authorized such a government as we have had, or has been powerless to prevent it." - Spooner

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  92. OWS - Peace movement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OWS a peace movement? http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/manhattan/bombmaking_in_the_village_LoRDqNzP02SDZyfC1pLVXN

  93. Re:OWS was a joke by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    Isn't that pretty much how every revolution ever has worked?

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  94. Re:The problem with protests. by broken_chaos · · Score: 1

    Can you name any major political change that happened through normal democratic methods without widespread protests ?

    Canada.

  95. Re:OWS was a joke by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    They wanted to make sure nothing was going to happen and look, it didn't.

    Could it be that they failed because they were infiltrated, manipulated, and de-funded?

    But to the larger point, most of the recent successful revolutions (Orange, Velvet, Icelandic) were non-violent.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  96. Re:The problem with protests. by bossk538 · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately I don't have the points to mod you up for pointing out something that is true, though it seems the majority of slashdotters can't figure that out. But I will say that, although corporations can't buy elections, they can and do buy the politicians.

  97. If you're a real patriot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... then you better toss a few dollars to the NRA also. If you think the 1st Amendment is being infringed upon by the govt now, just wait until after they neuter the 2nd Amendment, then you'll see the complete and utter elimination of what's left of the 1st, the 4th, the 5th, the 6th, the 7th, the 8th, the 9th, and the 10th as well.

    I even begin to suspect that the 3rd Amendment might even get quashed as well now that the govt is broke, they might start seizing our very homes to house and office their jackbooted thugs.

  98. Re:peaceful protesters? by NotSanguine · · Score: 1, Troll

    Seriously, for a bunch of squatters that were not always civil, they were allowed to get away with way, way more than any other protest I can remember.

    Aside from a delusional persecution complex, I can't believe anyone would think the government "stifled dissent".

    Get away? Yes. I mean it's not like there's some kind of precedent for this like, any sort of right of the people to "peaceably assemble." Oh, wait. Moron.

    --
    No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
  99. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Peaceful protest is a democratic method. It allows individuals who feel they may be in a miniority or feel they hold an unpopular opinion to see that they have a support base. Gay rights and immigration reform protests come to mind as current examples.

    You right to peaceful protest as part of the democratic process is also gauranteed by the first amendment,

  100. Re:peaceful protesters? by NotSanguine · · Score: 0, Troll

    Seriously, for a bunch of squatters that were not always civil, they were allowed to get away with way, way more than any other protest I can remember.

    Aside from a delusional persecution complex, I can't believe anyone would think the government "stifled dissent".

    Get away? Yes. I mean it's not like there's some kind of precedent for this like, any sort of right of the people to "peaceably assemble." Oh, wait. Moron.

    Oh, and since you're obviously not aware of what I'm talking about, cf. First Amendment to the US Constitution.

    --
    No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
  101. Re:OWS was a joke by cdrguru · · Score: 1

    No, I am dissatisfied with any group that offers only a pretense of action towards their goals. Sort of like someone selling Girl Scout cookies would be a joke if they only tried to sell them at their neighborhood homeless shelter - no money, no sales and no real effort at sales.

    What OWS (and any similar group) should have been able to foresee was that the government would come down on them with both feet hard because their goals are the diametric opposite of what the government in power wants. So of course they are going to be monitored, tracked and observed. If they tried to do anything real it would be a race to see who won - the government in stopping them or their achievement of their objectives.

    Sadly, their objectives were so pie-in-the-sky without any real plan for implementation that the government didn't have to do anything at all, just sit back and watch. The news media figured out there was no story there and never would be one sometime about a week after the group emerged.

    What I am fine with is a pretense of action being exposed as a pretense. You want to see action? How about Bloody Sunday as an example of action - what Kent State could have turned into, only it didn't.

  102. Being called a "terrorist" by the FBI becomes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...more and more of a compliment.

    Meanwhile, the real global terror comes from these agencies and the corporations that control them.

  103. I know it's not cool to RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but...if you follow it to the source documents and read them. You won't see anywhere near what is being described by the summary. What it seems to show is that law enforcement investigated crimes against OWS protestors and threats against them. They also answered questions by various groups inquiring about OWS and threats related to groups that were riding on the OWS movement and advocating violence.

    So please don't spread an interpretation that doesn't match the source documents.

  104. Re:OWS was a joke by Rakishi · · Score: 1

    We would be picking up the pieces and might actually be figuring out how to make the world work with a lot fewer people - a big economic crash and restructuring would kill millions if not billions.

    You wouldn't be picking up the pieces, you'd the the slave of an army general who decided to take over whatever place you were unfortunate enough to be in. Or a gang leader. Or a police chief.

    Someone with a dedicated trained loyal armed forced under them. You'd be their bitch.

    And they wouldn't be nice like you're used to the government being. They think you're complaining? They torture you publicly and then shoot you (if you're lucky).

  105. Re:The problem with protests. by MrHanky · · Score: 2

    Er, the election is rigged before it gets to the vote. You can't win a U.S. election without tons of money for TV ads, and you won't get that kind of money without corporate support.

  106. What constitution is this? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is this the constitution written by slave owners who didn't allow the poor or female to vote?

    The constitution was NOT written to give freedom to all, it was written to give freedom to rich white males. NEVER FORGET THIS. NEVER forget the famous Greek democracy was build on slaves.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:What constitution is this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is probably the most naive post in the thread. Typical OWS loon who learns American history from Michael Moore movies.

    2. Re:What constitution is this? by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      And the Intel 386 processor was not developed to run Linux, but dang if that Finnish guy didn't make it so.

    3. Re:What constitution is this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are ignorant. Before posting on constitutional issues in the future, please get educated. Start with US History, but make sure you also look at other Governments that were around as the US was formed.

    4. Re:What constitution is this? by theArtificial · · Score: 1

      He's Canadian and likes to bash religion but believes in Aliens (something which there is no proof, hence, belief.) I think a more compelling argument would be how effective American media is at influencing opinion both foreign and domestic.

      --
      Man blir trött av att gå och göra ingenting.
    5. Re:What constitution is this? by theNAM666 · · Score: 1

      I see you've gotten the Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure version of history, no doubt from some place such as the Oakland Public Schools. I suggest you read on.

  107. Re:Who Cares? by Type44Q · · Score: 2

    It seems unlikely that Operation Wall Street was an astroturf movement though, because there was no-one in a position of power or money to gain from it.

    I guess you've never heard of "controlled opposition" and "manufactured dissent..."

  108. Re:Who Cares? by hey! · · Score: 4, Interesting

    People have gotten quite skeptical these days,

    Largely, I suspect, because having discovered how weak their critical thinking skills are they're applying their disbelief with a broad brush.

    Fake public demonstrations existed before the Internet, but they really took off with the Internet because a single person can pretend to be dozens using the anonymity of Internet forums. With technology and focus a half dozen people could appear to be hundreds, or even thousands.

    But there being tigers hiding in the jungle doesn't mean they're hiding under your bed.

    I went down to see the Occupy Boston encampment down in Dewey Square last year. I'm no expert in counting people, but there were clearly hundreds of people living in a constricted half-acre tent city -- the densest human habitation I'd ever seen. This is the *opposite* of the labor efficiency of Internet astroturfing. How much would it cost to pay hundreds of people to live like that for two months, or to be arrested as hundreds of the protesters were? Altogether there were over seven thousand arrests, and that was only a tiny fraction of the protesters.

    I think the reaction to the FBI documents is overblown. The FBI was keeping tabs on the movement, but that's part of the agency's job, and that *can* be done without violating anyone civil rights (whether it *was* done remains to be seen). But the movement itself wasn't overblown. It's the largest economic protest in this country since the Bonus Army of 1932.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  109. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    God save the queen...

  110. Lying piece of scum by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 5, Informative

    My god, your grasp of history is fucking flawed.

    READ up on the suffragette movement you fucking insane moronic piece of shit before you try spouting your lies.

    On November 15th, 1917, Alice Paul and Lucy Burns, founders of the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) were arrested along with 216 other women who had picketed the White House under the Woodrow Wilson administration, bearing signs for the right to vote. By morning, some of the incarcerated women were barely alive. Lucy Burns had been beaten. Her hands had been chained to the cell bars over her head, bleeding and gasping for air. When Alice Paul engaged in a hunger strike, guards tried to force-feed her, tying her to a chair and using a tube to pour liquids down her throat. Thirty-three women endured ongoing torture until word was finally smuggled out to the press.

    No violence by the government against the movement my ass.

    You are scum.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Lying piece of scum by benjfowler · · Score: 1

      Thanks SmallFurryCreature. Wish I had mod points.

      People are wont to forget how much blood was shed for freedoms that people literally take for granted, but came out through reforms that cost a LOT of shed blood. The Suffragettes shed blood on both sides of the Atlantic.

    2. Re:Lying piece of scum by mike1214 · · Score: 0

      You seem to be swimming in a deficit of contemporary references.

      Besides, the State was on the side of giving women the privilege of voting for an even larger State.

  111. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    A slick web site looks suspicious when the movement teemed with artists and designers? And the many unemployed college graduates among them could not possibly have any writing, technology and publicity skills, eh?
    Well orchestrated is what I would call the media response that belittled them from day one. No attempt at even trying to participate in the discussion. Just straight forward name calling of the sort you just did. To the point that you obviously completely missed the violent police crackdown that this article is about. Doesn't look like this 'McMovement' did much publicity orchestrating after all...

    Rene Kita
    can't be bothered to log in

  112. Get the Tea Party by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't the Tea Party the radically violent, racist, venom-spewing group that should be the headline here?

    Oh wait. There's rarely (if ever) been any violence, racism or otherwise from the Tea Party... although the press would like you to believe otherwise.

    This sounds about right for the FBI, etc... Violence, hatred, and murder.

  113. Re:The problem with protests. by rubycodez · · Score: 1

    Actually, half the things you named were done by legal means. MLK Jr. and the riots didn't give anyone civil rights, Republicans did that

  114. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know of ALLEGED behavior, but again where is the proof. All the video that was shown did not confirm any of the allegations. They only strengthened the position of it being FALSE accusations.. which makes THEM Liars.. not me

  115. Re:Who Cares? by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

    No, that is in fact exactly the idea he was responding to. What you didn't answer was his actual question. You know, who the supposed backers with something to gain were.

  116. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Our Constitution guarantees us a number of ways to work through government for change.

    One of those constitutional guarantees is freedom of speech to say you disagree with what the government is doing. Nothing about that "damages" the constitution.

    But President George Walker Bush said the United States Constitution was "[url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wmc60JmaLbE]a worthless piece of a paper[/url]."

  117. Re:The problem with protests. by rubycodez · · Score: 0

    the unemployed lazy slobs I saw probably didn't

    let me let you in on a little secret. our government is in the pockets of wealthy elite, and wall street is a part of that (though 2nd tier to the real power holders). but the OWS movement is also backed by those kind of people, it's just convenient thing for their particular agenda. in short, the whole thing is bullshit.

  118. Re:The problem with protests. by macbeth66 · · Score: 1

    Absolutely correct. And I'll do what I can to prevent it in the future.

  119. Re:Who Cares? by kosty · · Score: 1

    "Simply left to rot?" Are you high or just sadly..., hillariously ignorant of the coverage during that entire mess?

    --
    "Democracy." It's just a slogan.
  120. Laugh by koan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Step 0: Control media outlets and discredit all that are not under your power, Propaganda!!!
    Why is this step 0? Because with the media intact and doing what it is required by society, none of the other crap would have happened, however the buck stops with the people, if the people aren't going to do anything about it then they get what they get.

    Step 1: Create a crisis or allow one to happen.

    "You never let a serious crisis go to waste. And what I mean by that it's an opportunity to do things you think you could not do before."
    -Rahm Emanuel

    Create an enemy that will never go away (terrorist) and wage a war that will never end (terrorism) and define the enemy as "those without any rights" and can be held indefinitely (National Defense Authorization Act)

    Step 2: Promise to protect the populace from said crisis/enemy by any means necessary, begin by restricting rights in the name of security.

    Step 3: Implement a massive trillion dollar (data from The Economist) surveillance network HLS, TSA, NSA, DIA OMG, WTF, BBQ ), record all calls, maintain facial recognition database (thank you Facebook) fill the air with drones and the ground with cameras.
    Monitor for dissent. (see: fbi-coordinated-crackdown-occupy below)

    Step 4: Dis arm populace (http://www.feinstein.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/assault-weapons)

    Step 5: Tighten grip further via martial law or other "required security protocols", rename political protest groups as "terrorist" deregulate corporations, dismantle workers rights, remove environmental protections, and finally ammo up. (Department Of Homeland Security Is Buying 450 Million New Bullets)

    Anyone not complying or protesting is a terrorist. (see step 1)

    http://www.economist.com/blogs/gulliver/2011/09/costs-homeland-security

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Defense_Authorization_Act_for_Fiscal_Year_2012

    http://www.theatlanticwire.com/national/2012/12/fbi-treated-occupy-terrorist-group/60289/

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/dec/29/fbi-coordinated-crackdown-occupy

    http://articles.businessinsider.com/2012-03-28/news/31247765_1_atk-rounds-bullet

    http://www.sacbee.com/2012/12/27/5079151/california-gun-sales-increase.html

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    1. Re:Laugh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's actually left-crazy conspiracy theories like this that make me feel there is the potential for domestic terrorism in the US.

      I fully support whoever buys guns, because there may be a day they have to defend themselves against a mass of paranoid loonies like this.

      - European.

    2. Re:Laugh by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      Step 6: Profit!!

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    3. Re:Laugh by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      That was step 0a, 1a, 2a, 3a, 4a and 5a.

      It's part of the beauty of the plan.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  121. Reverse... by Kupfernigk · · Score: 2, Informative
    American Conservatives are the useful idiots of the "Libertarians". The Libertarians want, in essence, for people with money and power to be able to do what they like. They want the liberty to run private armies, to profit from the drug trade, and a whole lot of other "freedoms" that would be recognised by the corporate robber barons of the last two centuries.

    They have persuaded uneducated fundamentalist Christians and the same poor people who would suffer from their policies to vote for them in the belief that they are somehow aligned to "conservative values". Vote for me and I'll stop abortion. But hey, it won't matter because the rape victim will die for lack of medical treatment.

    The Libertarians are the spiritual heirs of Al Capone, and use the same schtick to energise the base.

    --
    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
    1. Re:Reverse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No no no, it's the Libertarians who are the idiots. The rich usually don't back Libertarians, and you don't get rich by being an idiot (even if you became rich by luck, you won't stay rich - the saying is: a fool and his money are soon parted)

      The rich in fact have no problems supporting both Republicans and Democrats.

      The Republicans use the Libertarians as useful idiots
      The Democrats use the masses who want "security" and "safety" (and thinks government can provide that) as useful idiots

      Combined, they cover most of the useful idiots in the population.

    2. Re:Reverse... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your top paragraph is mostly correct - but Al Capone was actually a pillar of his community, as far as taking care of the impoverished. It was the murdering rivals and protection rackets against other wealthy businesses that got him in trouble.

      In sum, complain about libertarian philosophy all you like, but don't draw false equivalencies to sum it up for people. It weakens the credibility of an otherwise strong case.

    3. Re:Reverse... by tbannist · · Score: 1

      I think the Coyote put it succinctly:
      "A libertarian is just an anarchist who wants the police to control his slaves."

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    4. Re:Reverse... by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      the saying is: a fool and his money are soon parted

      Libertarian spotted. This is the idea Ayn Rand used to lazily gloss over the issue of inherited wealth, detailed in about as many words. Perversely, many people think this is a Bible quote.

      To be fair, Donald Trump, Paris Hilton, Rupert Murdoch and the Jersey Shore cast weren't around at the time.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  122. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They might not pay federal income tax which is the only tax that exists as far as I'm aware. I let the little people handle that stuff.

    --Mitt Romney

  123. What I have to say about this... by 3seas · · Score: 1

    The Declaration of Independence: A Transcription

    IN CONGRESS, July 4, 1776.

    The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America,

    When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

    We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.--Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government. The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States. To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world.

    He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good.
    He has forbidden his Governors to pass Laws of immediate and pressing importance, unless suspended in their operation till his Assent should be obtained; and when so suspended, he has utterly neglected to attend to them.
    He has refused to pass other Laws for the accommodation of large districts of people, unless those people would relinquish the right of Representation in the Legislature, a right inestimable to them and formidable to tyrants only.
    He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and distant from the depository of their public Records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his measures.
    He has dissolved Representative Houses repeatedly, for opposing with manly firmness his invasions on the rights of the people.
    He has refused for a long time, after such dissolutions, to cause others to be elected; whereby the Legislative powers, incapable of Annihilation, have returned to the People at large for their exercise; the State remaining in the mean time exposed to all the dangers of invasion from without, and convulsions within.
    He has endeavoured to prevent the population of these States; for that purpose obstructing the Laws for Naturalization of Foreigners; refusing to pass others to encourage their migrations hither, and raising the conditions of new Appropriations of Lands.
    He has obstructed the Administration of Justice, by refusing his Assent to Laws for establishing Judiciary powers.
    He has made Judges dependent on his Will alone, for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries.
    He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harrass our people, and eat out their substance.
    He has kept among us, in times of

  124. Re:Who Cares? by kosty · · Score: 2

    PS: How in God's name are all the Fox-News-Hounds & fairly obvious trolls getting 5-point mod's/ratings here while those who point out the facts on the ground are scoring "2, Interesting?"

    --
    "Democracy." It's just a slogan.
  125. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pfft, do you really think that anyone they voted for would have done anything differently? Much like the presidency, anyone local that they're voting for is doing the exact same the presidential nominees did. Promise whatever the hell they think will get votes, then do whatever the fuck they want when they're voted in. Oh, they'll have their key "wedge" issues that don't actually affect anything in the big scheme of things that'll keep most of society at least kinda happy, but they'll still be pushing their original agenda in the long term.

    Why do you think voter turnout is so low? A lot of it is laziness, but I'm sure a lot of it is also going to be exactly the above. Voting doesn't actually serve a purpose when you realize that you have to vote in liar A, liar B, or liar C. All you can do is try to read them as people, and see if you can guess who will do the *least* damage.

    Personally, I still "vote" though, but it's either for a third party like green so that I can at least see someone *new* fail us for once, just for a change of pace (I have absolutely zero faith that they wouldn't be just as corrupt if voted in), or 'ruin' the ballot by checking no names, and writing "none of these people are fit to represent me" on it, purely so that I can say I voted, and can therefore complain about who was voted in.

  126. Re:Who Cares? by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What, is this the same movement that has been criticised a million times for not being organised, having no leadership, and having "no clear message"? Are you sure you know what you're talking about?

    It doesn't need that to have been organized by someone. Check it out, it was formed by the anarchist group Adbusters. They carefully planned it as well. Lawyers gave them the advice to stage it in Zuccotti park because it is a privately owned public space, which made it confusing whose responsibility it was to clear it.

    Of course, to start a movement, you need people who will go along with you, to carry the movement along. It's not like all those protesters were manipulated into being there, they wanted to protest.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  127. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, because everyone here knows how hard it is to make a slick website.

  128. Re:OWS was a joke by cdrguru · · Score: 1

    Far more revolutions have ended quickly, with the rebels imprisoned or executed.

    Absolutely. Revolution is hard and dangerous. So stop saying you are for a revolution that will kill millions of people unless you are really, really serious about it. So far, I haven't seen anyone that I would call serious about it in the US.

    Some folks came close to being serious in 1968-1970 between the riot in Chicago and Kent State. There were too few people to really accomplish much and the people that were really committed to revolution were just a little too far gone to get anything done other than make a few bombs and generally blow themselves rather than others up.

    What an occupy movement could have done is to stage a 1968-style sit-in protest and block business from getting done on Wall Street. Sure, after the first couple of rounds with the police arresting hundreds of people it might have gotten more and more difficult, but this would have forced both government and business to stop what they were doing - business of the day - and focus on protecting infrastructure. Armed guards everywhere, ID checks at every door, security, security and more security. The result would have been a lot of security and not a lot of real work getting done - hence at least a part of their objective achieved. It would take more than 30-40 people to do this - it would have taken hundreds.

    Look, supposedly this was a movement by "the 99%" against 1% of the country's elite. If that were true there would be no way it couldn't succeed because at some point the guards (part of the 99%, after all) would be joining with the protesters. Once that happened, it would all be over. That's what happened in Russia - the army and police stopped fighting against the protesters and joined with them.

    Now, to be real, it is very very unlikely anything like that could happen in the US. People subconciously know which side of the bread is buttered and that their interested lie in the status quo. Some people would actually figure out that an economic collapse like what OWS seemed to be going for would result in millions, hundreds of millions or even billions of people dying. So while it might seem like a good idea for a few moments, it would be quickly shown to be a disaster. So it wouldn't really work. One thing the American Revolution didn't do was try to wrench the social order too much - that is what leads to a lot of people dying. Again, as shown by Russia and a bunch of other places.

    An important point is in Russia the elite fled the country. In France today they have decided to tax the rich to support the government - a futile policy that Mr. Obama seems to be leaning towards. Of course, anyone with portable money in France is looking for somewhere to go - check out Google. Stir up things enough in the US and similar things will happen here.

    You want a peaceful revolution? First thing right off is don't try to destroy the social order and don't try to collapse the economy that is feeding 300 million people.

  129. Uh, no by rsilvergun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    he's mentally ill. OWS was just the thing he latched onto. There would have been something else. Also, the FBI wasn't watching guys like him, it was watching the leaders of the movement in an obvious effort to shut it down.

    OWS had one unforgivable sin: it offered a working and likable alternative narrative. Right now the only narrative in American society is that if you work hard and play by the rules you'll succeed, and if you didn't it's your own damn fault and you're a bad person. It's prosperity gospel by any other name. OWS and the 'We are the 99%' was catchy, simple and made sense. It was a movement that had a real chance, which is why we're even talking about it, and also why it was crushed relentlessly.

    In short, you didn't think speech was really free, did you?

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:Uh, no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please describe the mechanism by which the FBI acted to shut down the rudderless bunch of ranting buffoons that make up most of the OWS street party scene and self-involved look-at-me I-hope-someone-hot-likes-my-blog social media incest-fest.

    2. Re:Uh, no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      working alternative... lol nice.

    3. Re:Uh, no by mlookaba · · Score: 1

      "OWS had one unforgivable sin: it offered a working and likable alternative narrative"

      Unless the money they wanted to take away was yours, in which case it wasn't likable at all.

    4. Re:Uh, no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By not talking about it even though it's still going on. There's a media blackout for a reason, because people don't know it exists if it's not on TV. Read this and be enlightened: http://cryptome.org/2012/07/gent-forum-spies.htm

    5. Re:Uh, no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you are the 1%, that money you call "yours", isn't. You leeched it off other people who actually worked to make something productive. So - cry me a river?

  130. Lets see what 'our' President has to say by Giant+Electronic+Bra · · Score: 3, Funny

    http://wh.gov/UCL9 sign on folks! I can hardly wait to see the mealy mouthed BS answer to this... Oh, and expect to be on some FBI troublemaker list, if you're not yet. Consider it a badge of honor. ;)

    --
    "Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem." -- Jefferson
  131. Re:peaceful protesters? by nbauman · · Score: 4, Informative

    I went down there (Zucotti Park) and spoke to them too. Their message was pretty clear, so I'll repeat it:

    The wealthiest 1% of Americans have most of the income, most of the wealth, and control the political system through their campaign contributions and power generally.

    They're not running it very well. They've used health care, education, and housing as a way to make money, driven the costs up, and made them unaffordable to the rest of us.

    There's more of us than there are of them. We can vote. We don't have to vote for politicians that will sell us out (50/50 divided on Obama). We can organize to teach people how they're being exploited by the 1%.

  132. In the UK at least... by Kupfernigk · · Score: 1

    There was Government violence against the Suffragettes, and shows of force intended to intimidate them.

    --
    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
  133. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Okay, we're back to blind.

  134. How are they suppose to see that... by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    when we're told from day one as children that America is the greatest country on Earth? It was mostly young people that aren't as jaded as you and I, and You're taught to believe that we're all basically Americans and in the end we'd come together, work together and prosper together. I seriously doubt they were expecting to have counter terrorism groups hand them their asses. That's the sort of thing that happens in Syria, not America...

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  135. I have one word to say here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.lawfulrebellion.org/2012/01/29/lawful-rebellion-in-2012-the-clock-is-ticking/

  136. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, it's not like they were squatting on private property or anything. Oh, wait.

  137. Re:The problem with protests. by Bob9113 · · Score: 2

    Our Constitution guarantees us a number of ways to work through government for change.

    Yes, there are. There's even a little ditty to remember them by: Soap box, ballot box, jury box, ammo box.

    The problem with protests is that by working around these methods,

    Protest is the most elevated form of the first method we are supposed to use for change, as documented in The Constitution. The soap box is first because it is least injurious. The second box, electing officials based on their position on a single issue, constrains our ability to choose leaders based on their principles, their wisdom, their honesty, or other issues -- you get corrupt, polemic demagogues whipping people into a frenzy over wedge issues like abortion and gun control. The third box, petitioning the government for redress of grievances, weakens the public trust, especially if the predictable response from government is refusal to hear the petition for redress based on a decree of national security or lack of standing. The fourth box is revolution, which is extremely disruptive to the economic engine of the nation, and it kills people.

    Given that we have already been using the second and third methods, to no avail, and are loathe to resort to the fourth, an elevated form of the first method is exactly what is appropriate. The correcting mechanism is working perfectly, exactly as the people who were pushed all the way to the fourth box -- the founders of the nation -- documented them. The part of our nation that is causing the distortion is not We The People. We The People are doing exactly what we are supposed to be doing, and the engines of the political parties are driving down a different path. Protest is exactly the most responsible action in our current context.

    Consider the consequences: If the leadership is responsive to protest, things change and maybe they get better or maybe they get worse and we have to correct again. If the leadership is not responsive, the public grows more unsettled and their propensity to use the other boxes increases. The way the public uses the second and third box will become more disruptive, and there will be a greater risk of people resorting to the fourth.

    One great reason to support piracy is to weaken the profits of Hollywood and the news-entertainment media.

    A fine example of using the soap box to advocate for disruptive change to a system that you feel has become distorted, and which you believe is unresponsive to less disruptive attempts to use the second and third boxes.

  138. Re:peaceful protesters? by nbauman · · Score: 4, Informative

    There was nothing illegal about it.

    Zucotti park was a private park open to the public 24 hours a day, according to a legally binding agreement between the City and the original developer. The local Community Board voted to support the occupation. There were court decisions in the past allowing similar protests.

    In addition, there's the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which gives people the right to peacefully protest, as other people here have mentioned.

    I could come down to Zucotti Park at all hours of the day and talk to people about politics. What better use could anyone make of a public space?

  139. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its not Republicrats, Its Republicans.

    Assuming GP isn't a troll, he probably meant how Republican and Democrat behaviors seem to be nearly identical even though their stated preferrences differ. As such, if OWS actually stood for a real change instead of Change (TM), there should be a non-trivial increase in the number of votes recieved for Libertarians or (more likely) Greens. Since there was no statistically significant effect on the election results in such a direction, OWS was simply sculpted propoganda.

  140. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a tax-payer, I think they're damn well in their right to protest, because I'm sick of my taxes going to pay for fucking everything in the country while the wealthiest pay such a horrendously low percentage.

    Let's say 15% comes off each and every paycheque of mine for taxes. In my mind, it'll at least be slightly more fair when corporations pay the same or more (since taxes shouldn't be a static number irrelevant to how much you make, the more pay more, the less pay less, etc) when every single dollar that's even slightly associated with them is taxed 15%. The second they hide even a single dime of it from taxes, the playing field is no longer equal, and THAT is why they should be allowed to protest.

    But hey, if you're cool with fixing all the roads and infrastructure and letting the 1% remain your upper caste, whatever floats your boat man. Just don't try to force others to believe the same things as you.

  141. I have one thing to say by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This sums up pretty much everything going on in the US as well. This is the problem that needs to be fixed, and we can do it, and they know we can, and they are scared that we will.

    http://www.lawfulrebellion.org/2012/01/29/lawful-rebellion-in-2012-the-clock-is-ticking/

  142. Lack of Granularity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This talks a lot, but doesn't give any defining details. Of course police organizations are going to talk to each other, (the US has like 50 just as the national level, nevermind individual states and cities). Of course they are going to talk to the object of the protest, (the banks). And peaceful protests can turn violent VERY quickly, so of course police are going to have their terrorism / riot units get involved.

    Did they purposefully illegally arrest peaceful organizers?, were those "peaceful" organizers stopping lawful business, (which no protest, no matter how "peaceful" is allowed to do, hence making the arrests perfectly legal)?

    Did any protestors actually get shot?

    Was anything the police did purposefully planned illegality?, or did they just react with a bit of a heavy hand?

    Did the protestor who got hit see a line of riot police banging their shields, after they have say, crossed the legal bounds for protests?

    Did the collusion with the private interest involve the FBI telling the private interests what the protestors are legally allowed to do?, when the police will have to step in?, contingincy plans if the shit hits the fan, you know, stuff you EXPECT the police to talk about with people who are about to receive what might be the largest protest in human history?

    1. Re:Lack of Granularity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize that the article had links to all of the granularity you claim it lacks right? Follow a few of the links, you will get the details. It would not be a readable story if all of the details were embedded.

  143. Re:The problem with protests. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Can you name any major political change that happened through normal democratic methods without widespread protests ?

    Outlawing the slave trade in/by the United Kingdom, followed by outlawing slavery in the UK.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  144. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who would benefit? Who was it who called a meeting with wall street bankers and said "I'm the only thing standing between you and the mob."
    And then the mob shows up to "occupy wall street".

  145. Re:The problem with protests. by rubycodez · · Score: 1

    you seem to be deluded that OWS somehow will fix that problem. you are deluded that anyone who says something bad about OWS is against fixing that problem you mention. OWS won't fix that problem, OWS will change nothing. OWS is backed by mostly wealthy people who probably pay less taxes than you do. only either changing the law or changing the government will fix the problem you mention.

  146. Re: Who Cares? by Urza9814 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Zucotti park wasn't planned. I was there on day one, originally the plan was to occupy Wall Street itself...but the entire area around it for several blocks was barricaded by the NYPD requiring a corporate ID to walk down the public streets...So we marched for a while until coming across Zucotti, at which point people basically decided "screw it, let's camp here!"

    Lawyers wouldn't have made that decision. Zucotti is private property, while there is case law on the books protecting coming on sidewalks for protests.

    As for occupy having a fully formed website....big Fuckin deal, so does everything these days. Not hard to find a college kid to buy a domain and install WordPress. Please tell me what corporations were funding the dozen student orgs I did that for in college....because we sure could have used that money....and why the hell did I pay for all those out of my own pocket?

  147. Re:peaceful protesters? by sjames · · Score: 3

    In other words, they were out there minding their own business getting on with their Constitutional right to petition the government and peacfully assemble and some screeching cuckoo jibbers at them for 15 minutes and they were polite enough not to dump you head first into a trash can?

  148. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So you're saying a major political change happened with widespread protests, in that particular instance.

    Really, you need to think harder about what you're posting before popping off.

  149. Re:The problem with protests. by nbauman · · Score: 3, Informative

    1. Zucotti Park was open to the public 24 hours a day, according to a contract signed between the developers and the City. There was no "after hours."

    2. Occupy Wall Street wanted to bring portable toilets like every other big event in New York City. The City denied them a permit. So they used the bathrooms in the MacDonald's across the street and the neighboring restaurants.

    3. I was at Zucotti Park a couple of times during the demonstration. They organized a volunteer cleanup crew that cleaned every inch of the park continuously. If you threw a candy wrapper on the floor, somebody would sweep it up within 5 minutes.

    4. The local Community Board voted to support the demonstration. So the local taxpayers approved.

    5. There were surveys of demonstrators which found that most of them were employed, and their average income was probably higher than yours. So they pay more taxes than you do.

    6. You find it offensive. Too fucking bad. That's how we do things in America. If you don't like it, go back where you came from. (If they'll have you.)

  150. Re:Who Cares? by BancBoy · · Score: 2

    Mod Parent 2 - Interesting.

    --
    [UID-HeinzIntel]
  151. Re:The problem with petitioning for redress by russotto · · Score: 2

    Our various governments propose ways of "petitioning for redress of grievance", and, as each becomes popular, strive to cut them off.

    Of course. We (those of us in the US and Western Europe, anyway) have a stable system of government. What this means is that there are negative feedbacks in the system which counter any attempt to change it. Furthermore, the systems learn: When a tactic manages to overwhelm the existing feedback mechanisms and cause an actual change, new feedback mechanisms are set up to render that tactic ineffective in the future. Thus the more the system changes, the more stable it becomes.

    It follows that any technique for change actually sanctioned by the system (such as voting) will not work, as those techniques have long since been countered. They still serve a purpose, however -- they waste the energy of those seeking change, and they present an excuse for barring other techniques.

  152. Re:peaceful protesters? by NotSanguine · · Score: 1

    Yeah, it's not like they were squatting on private property or anything. Oh, wait.

    Except for the fact that Zuccotti Park is required to provide public access 24/7. What was that I said before? Oh yes. Moron. And you've proved me right. Again./p

    --
    No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
  153. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, but a lot of things work different in Canada (although Harper is trying damned hard to make it like the USA).

    I obviously don't know everything, but I can't possibly fathom that getting rid of the caste system in the USA will be possible non-violently. What that means in the long run, I have no idea, but I've long, long lost all faith that the USA can have an internally non-violent future, unless it's outright slavery of all non 1%ers and the corporations win.

    Don't worry, Canada's not far behind.

  154. Re: Who Cares? by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Zucotti park wasn't planned. I was there on day one,

    You mean you didn't plan it.

    Lawyers wouldn't have made that decision. Zucotti is private property, while there is case law on the books protecting coming on sidewalks for protests.

    It's not private property, it's privately owned public space. There's case law on the books for clearing people who try to occupy sidewalks overnight.

    As for occupy having a fully formed website....big Fuckin deal, so does everything these days.

    It's not a big deal, but if you think OWS was a spontaneous protest, then you're ignorant.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  155. Re:Who Cares? by thoughtlover · · Score: 1

    Really? What site did you think you were posting to? Yes, making a slick web site. That must take a team of computer nerds and years of labor.

    You're making the word 'nerd' sound derogatory. And you're not making yourself look any better by building incomplete sentences. What site do you think you're posting to? 4chan? Reddit?

    --
    No sig for you! Come back one year!
  156. Re:Who Cares? by Marxdot · · Score: 1

    Check it out, it was formed by the anarchist group Adbusters

    OK. Now, what's the problem there?

  157. There are teabaggers demanding Obamas death. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And Senators demanding the assasination of a foreign civilian under military law.

    Does this mean that teabaggers and the Senate House are all full of violent psychopaths?

    Actually, it pretty nearly does.

  158. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I came on YOUR MOM'S back.

  159. Re:OWS was a joke by The+Master+Control+P · · Score: 1

    In France today they have decided to tax the rich to support the government - a futile policy that Mr. Obama seems to be leaning towards.

    Now let's be honest: Hollande's proposed confiscatory 75% tax (which was just ruled unconstitutional) is in no way comparable to President Obama saying that we should let the top income tax bracket rise a few percent as a result of the profoundly ill-advised Bush tax cuts expiring.

  160. Maybe I am now an incurrable cynic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DId you really think anything would change ? Really ? You basically have in the US two corporatist party. One is more conservative, the other slightly more liberal, but basically doing both blow job to corporation for election money and power. You the folk don't even enter the equation. Back in 2008 I was laughing hard at people stating it was a new deal, things would change and so forth. I am still laughing hard now. And the next president in 2016 ? It will be all the same. And so forth for any subsequent election until the folk got enough and destroy the corporate/politic/plutocraty bloodily. Then a few decades of destabilisation and a new regime will come by. Which will generate loser and winner, winner which will get to be the new aristocraty over decades, the new 1%. And so forth. It is all bsut and expansion following each other not economically, but politically. After a revolution some of the old 1% are clever enough to get in the new 1% , but basically the "bottoms" stay there no matter what. And certainly no matter what soothing slogan they get told.

  161. Re:The problem with protests. by houghi · · Score: 1

    It is allowed if you agree with the Politburo. Then you can assemble and speak as much as you like.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  162. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "peaceable assembly" does not mean "set up a squalid camp and make a public nuisance of yourselves". Seriously, they couldn't even organize proper sanitation for themselves. The tea party left it's meeting places cleaner than when they showed up, they didn't trash the place and attract every bum and grifter for miles around.

  163. Re:Who Cares? by Concerned+Onlooker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That's the real astroturfing going on here.

    OWS was about holding the financial goons responsible for wrecking our economy. The FBI, et. al. was about cracking down on legitimate dissent, and that is unconstitutional.

    --
    http://www.rootstrikers.org/
  164. Re:The problem with protests. by houghi · · Score: 1

    Can you name any major political change that happened through normal democratic methods without widespread protests ?

    Election of Hitler.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  165. Re:peaceful protesters? by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1

    They were there for at least a month and a half before the camp was initially cleared and then restarted again later for few more months, for a total of almost 6 months. It's not as if the police stormed the camp on the first day. In fact the city was quite accommodating to the protesters and provided all sorts of services. At some point it just became too much for the local residents to bear: "residents at a community board meeting complained about inadequate sanitation, verbal taunts and harassment by protesters, noise, and related issues", not to mention assaults on police officers, widespread theft and drug use, vandalism and not least, enough reports of rape that "women only" separate tents were set up. Don't pretend that they were angels.

    --
    Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
  166. Not much there by Animats · · Score: 1

    Just read though all the documents provided. There's the possibility that there's other activity in the "redacted" documents, but what's reported isn't that interesting.

    There's some material on the attempt to shut down the Port of Oakland, but it's mostly after the fact. That was mostly handled by the Oakland PD. The FBI was interested, but doesn't seem to have done much. There are some monthly reports of meetings with banks along the lines of "well, that's what Occupy is up to, now back to that check fraud problem you've been having". The Richmond Fed was apparently worried, but the FBI didn't see any real threat to them.

    There are a few incidents that were investigated. Someone threw something burning over the White House fence, and it turned out to be a road flare. Some white powder was dumped in some protest, and it turned out to be uninteresting. One protester came in to the FBI to report that the leaders were holding secret meetings and she was worried about what they were up to. There was a concern that a right-wing group was going to attack an Occupy group.

    There was apparently at least one one terrorism investigation. The FBI was concerned that a known suspected terrorist might use an Occupy group as cover to get close to a target.

    It would be more interesting to see what Homeland Security was up to. The FBI has a real job, catching crooks, and measures success by convictions. So they don't want to devote too much effort to time-wasting activities. That doesn't up your stats, which is how you get promoted in the FBI. Homeland Security's anti-terrorism operation, on the other hand, has few terrorists to chase and too many people chasing them. So they're looking for work to keep themselves busy. Most of the troubles with law-enforcement come from the parts that generate their own work, not the parts that are complaint-driven.

    1. Re:Not much there by s.petry · · Score: 1

      Lets not clear the FBI so quickly. This is worth reviewing before you dismiss them from guilt.

      The FBI engaged in political repression almost from the time of the agency's inception in 1908, and antecedents to COINTELPRO operated during the FDR and Truman administrations. Centralized operations under COINTELPRO officially began in August 1956 with a program designed to "increase factionalism, cause disruption and win defections" inside the Communist Party U.S.A. (CPUSA). Tactics included anonymous phone calls, IRS audits, and the creation of documents that would divide American communists internally.[14] An October 1956 memo from Hoover reclassified the FBI's ongoing surveillance of black leaders, including it within COINTELPRO, with the justification that the movement was infiltrated by communists.[15] When the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) was founded in 1957, the FBI began to monitor and target the group almost immediately, focusing particularly on Bayard Rustin, Stanley Levison, and Martin Luther King, Jr.[16]

      Did you see the part I underlined and put in bold? Kind of obvious perhaps, but collaboration between government agencies is not new.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

  167. Re:Who Cares? by Phrogman · · Score: 0, Troll

    Because /. has a huge population of Right-wing extremist thinkers. Anything remotely sensible or even vaguely liberal in expression gets shot all to shit by an endless stream of dismissive posts, usually without any real content. Some o of those same individuals get Moderation points every once in a while and use them extensively to reflect their views.
    Its very difficult to be a sensible person here in my opinion (yes, that means I think the vast majority of gun-toting right-wing crackpots are not sensible). If you get into anything remotely political, you had better be the next thing to fascist to be left alone, if you talk about technology you had better hate Apple (and now seemingly *like* Microsoft for some reason, despite years of vitriol directed at Redmond in the past on this site) etc. Dissent is punished
    I will thus be moderated down to oblivion for my opinion. Wait for the endless stream of comments first...

    --
    "The first time I got drunk, I got married. The second time I bought a chimpanzee, after that I stayed sober" Arian Seid
  168. Re:Who Cares? by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This has got to be the stupidest thing I've ever heard. Seriously. Stupid. Moronic. This "information" had to have come from Fox.

    First, understand that Unions are self-funded. They're funded from dues paid by the members. They don't take anyones taxes.

    Likewise, pensions are largely funded by contributions from the employees. I know, I was a member of government union. Yes, the government chips in a portion as well, but only to a certain point.

    While people that are high up in the ranks may get a 6-figure pension (I doubt it though), 99% of the rest of the union employees don't. And what money the do get comes largely from their own contributions, interest and investment gains.

    Fox news pretends that pensions are entirely funded by taxpayers, and that's simply not the case. Most Public employees pensions end up less than $30k per year.

    http://www.seiu.org/a/publicservices/fact-check-on-public-sector-pensions.php

    Finally, Public Employee Unions taking over OWS? Seriously? Where do you get this shit? Oh yeah, Fox. If you had spent any time there, you would know that this to be flat out wrong. What is the motivation exactly for a PEU to do this? There was absolutely nothing there in the interest of a PEU, either for or against.

    This Is just ridiculous. and you're a fucking moron for believing it and worthy of ridicule.

    Second,

  169. Re:The problem with protests. by cpm99352 · · Score: 1

    Violence in suffrage movement actually happened, so I don't understand your post.

    This post argues there was no violence on the part of the movement, but they certainly endured violence.

    However, over in England violence on the part of the movement was a tactic. "Meanwhile, and in striking contrast, the woman suffrage movement in Great Britain under such leaders as Emmaline Pankhurst, escalated its militant tactics. By 1910, it had moved from mass meetings, marches, and heckling of cabinet ministers, to arson, violence, and hunger strikes. The radical tactics enacted by British suffragists captured the media's attention and helped gain their victory."

  170. Re:Who Cares? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    It's only a problem if you believe OWS was spontaneously formed.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  171. Re:The problem with protests. by Renraku · · Score: 1

    It's not even that easy, because 15% to you or I is worth a lot more to us than 15% to a corporation. To you or I, that 15% is the difference between living in a so-so apartment to living in a GOOD apartment. To them, that 15% is just less money in the pockets of the already super rich who want golden toilets and new yachts every year.

    --
    Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
  172. Re:Who Cares? by Entrope · · Score: 1

    Were Aaron Greene and Morgan Gliedman arrested recently for legitimate dissent? Or were they arrested for illegally possessing destructive devices (and apparently planning to use them against others)? Also, don't you find it ironic that OWS is so heavily staffed by children of privilege like those two?

  173. Just like the sixties by whitroth · · Score: 1

    The FBI, and military police, and the CIA, did it back then. It was a large enough scandal that Congress passed laws against it.

    Too many years of pro-crime (white collar, please), pro-totalitarian (corporate, please) Republicans, and they did it again. I'm *so* surprised.

    "Support, protect, uphold the Constitution", if it doesn't bother the people that own you.

                  mark

  174. Re:peaceful protesters? by Phrogman · · Score: 2

    You know, I am always surprised at how often those who dismiss OWS choose to do so by pointing out that the people that showed up at the camps were unemployed.
    Who the fuck else can show up there? The employed supporters of OWS had jobs to go to. I would love to have participated in my local OWS protest but it didn't jibe with my work hours at all.
    Nonetheless I support the need for change in our system (here in Canada as well as down in the US and over in Europe). The concentration of wealth in the hands of a select few based on their historic control of the political system to leverage things to their own advantage has not and is not working out well for our society. The money the extremely wealth folks earn doesn not trickle down worth a shit, bailing out companies that failed due to massive mismanagement/greed does not work to the public advantage (oh sure, some jobs are preserved, but since the bulk of the money comes from the middle and lower classes taxes its stealing from Peter to pay Paul).
    Unfortunately, I think its too late. The Rich (tm) control things and nothing is going to change that.
    The only thing that baffles me is the number of folks who flock to support the Republicans down in the US (or the Conservatives up here in Canada) and in effect are saying with their support "Ok, so the rich are trampling on the bulk of the population and fucking the economy up severely so they can keep their position, oh and they are removing our rights to privacy, destroying health care, ruining the environment and all for their own personal gain - but you know? I am okay with that". Blows my mind every time I read a sincere post from some fucking idiot that just doesn't see whats going on around them.

    --
    "The first time I got drunk, I got married. The second time I bought a chimpanzee, after that I stayed sober" Arian Seid
  175. Re:Who Cares? by lucm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They're not comparable.

    The poor bankers and oil companies behind the "grassroots" Tea Party don't have a chance against the overwhelming financial might of the tree-hugging hippies!

    If history keeps repeating itself, today's tree-hugging hippies are tomorrow's bankers and big oil executive.

    --
    lucm, indeed.
  176. Re: Who Cares? by Urza9814 · · Score: 2

    First, way to take partial, out of context quotes. The first point you make I've already responded tip of you actually read what I posted.

    Secondly....Nothing is spontaneous. Obviously you're not going to get hundreds of people out just by....Not doing anything. So yea, the idea was published by adbusters. That doesn't make it astroturf. First, anyone who was there, anyone who spent more than five seconds looking at it knows that. Astroturfers generally try to hide who is behind the campaign. Secondly, they published an idea...that's all. They didn't pay people to attend, not did they provide any material support for the event. What they did is pretty much equivalent too creating a Facebook event.

    Finally, if the park is fully public, why was the nypd able to force everyone out at the request of the property developer and with the help of private security? That's why OWS later moved to union square and other parks before the permanent occupation finally dissolved.

  177. Double gold standards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So why have none of the bankers / bank workers been sent to jail for behaviors which led to the current economic catastrophe? Outright theft goes unpunished, but they strictly enforce policy when it comes to preventing protesters from protesting their theft...?

  178. Re: Who Cares? by lucm · · Score: 0

    So you were there? Please tell, besides annoying working people and costing lots of money in NYPD overtime, what exactly did you achieve with this action?

    This was nothing else than a party for stoners, lefties and greeners. Woodstock without music - on somebody else's dime, as usual.

    --
    lucm, indeed.
  179. Re:The problem with protests. by rubycodez · · Score: 1

    you're talking about one place. there were many places the protests happened, and park hours violated. That is not how "we americans" do things, just a few.

  180. Re: Who Cares? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    So yea, the idea was published by adbusters. That doesn't make it astroturf.

    This is a strawman, I never said it was astroturf. I said it was planned.

    Finally, if the park is fully public, why was the nypd able to force everyone out at the request of the property developer and with the help of private security?

    It isn't a public park. It's a privately owned public space. I mentioned this earlier, please stop being confused by this point.

    The first point you make I've already responded tip of you actually read what I posted.

    Yes, but you were wrong. It was planned, but not by you. Adbusters did a lot of work to make it a success.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  181. Re:Who Cares? by lucm · · Score: 1

    PS: How in God's name are all the Fox-News-Hounds & fairly obvious trolls getting 5-point mod's/ratings here while those who point out the facts on the ground are scoring "2, Interesting?"

    Since mods are a numbers game, I would say that this may suggest that the 99% figure was a bit overinflated...

    --
    lucm, indeed.
  182. Re:Who Cares? by chthon · · Score: 1

    Baader and Meinhof were also descendants of well to do people. However, I do not think OWS compares to the Baader-Meinhof group.

  183. Re:The problem with protests. by LordLimecat · · Score: 0

    Everything influences voters; but at the end of the day each voter has free will, makes their own decisions, and is responsible for what they choose.

    Stop trying to minimize that, it just enables apathetic voting.

  184. Re:Who Cares? by istartedi · · Score: 1

    Large portions of your argument are ad hominem so I won't address those portions. Your cited source has obvious bias. Anything that's "self funded" was ultimately derived from taxation. It might be more correct to say, "taxation, with the government as an intermediary", but that's obvious.

    AFAICT, the motivation for individuals in PEUs to join OWS (as opposed to the organization itselff, which probably didn't endorse it, but I haven't got a source) was that they identified with it as being part of the Progressive movement.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  185. Re:The problem with protests. by LordLimecat · · Score: 0

    People can't decide who we get to vote for, only corporations can.

    I guess that "primary" thing I kept hearing about was just my imagination.

  186. Re:The problem with protests. by LordLimecat · · Score: 0

    The only requirement for being elected POTUS that I am aware of is that you receive enough electoral votes, and you get hose based on your popular vote in each area.

    Ads help by encouraging popular vote, but to say "its all the advertisers" once again removes responsibility from the one place it should be put: the actual voters.

    Dont you realize that always saying "its that guys fault" when you share some blame just makes the problem worse? Advertising has such an effect because so many voters dont care, and so many voters dont care partly because the problem is seen as not worth trying to fix. Maybe if the finger were pointed at the voters more people would care a little bit more and advertising wouldnt be such a big deal.

  187. Re:peaceful protesters? by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

    First amendment does not allow you to squat on private property.

  188. Re:peaceful protesters? by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

    It remains PRIVATE PROPERTY. The public has access, but there are rules, like, I dont know, not setting up your tent and grill.

    "Allowing public access" swings both ways, when OWS basically prevents any other use of the park.

  189. Re:The problem with protests. by Kymermosst · · Score: 1

    I would think that the transition from Articles of Confederation to the U.S. Constitution was a rather major political change that happened through democratic means without widespread protests.

    --
    "Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives" should be a convenience store, not a government agency.
  190. Re: Who Cares? by Urza9814 · · Score: 2

    "Dissent is the highest form of patriotism"

    We engaged and educated a large number of people about political issues that the mainstream media refuses to cover.

    We provide food and some semblance of shelter to many who had neither.

    And above all we did what any political action must - make noise and make change. We've purchased and abolished millions of dollars of debt. We've stopped home foreclosures. We filled (and continue to fill) the gaps of mainstream disaster relief organizations. We provided networking and training for activists. And we altered the political discourse of the nation.

    And even if we'd accomplished nothing, who cares? It wasn't "on someone else's dime" -- nobody was forced to pay for a thing related to occupy, except for the police's repression. Everything else was donated by supporters.

  191. Re:peaceful protesters? by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

    In addition, there's the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which gives people the right to peacefully protest, as other people here have mentioned.

    The first amendment sets up boundaries that legislatures cannot cross to "stifle dissent". That doesnt mean you can just randomly go onto private property and reserve it for the exclusive use of your own group at any time and then claim "But FIRST AMENDMENT!"

    Im quite sure the Zucotti Park agreement did not entitle members of the public to turn it into a campground, and Im quite certain that the first amendment doesnt get rid of zoning laws.

  192. OWS no way Libertarian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    there should be a non-trivial increase in the number of votes recieved for Libertarians

    No fucking chance in hell of that. From an economic standpoint the Libertarians are worse than the Republicans; if possible. Remember the Libertarian Poster Boy, Ron Paul had the most conservative post war voting record on anybody in congress between WWII and 2002, and is a Republican. So hell no they aren't going to vote Republitarian.

    And giving their choice between pissing away their vote on the Greens and helping the Republitarians win, they vote Democrat, which is what those who were old enough to vote last time voted.

  193. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's Republicrats because the Republicans and Democrats are the same side of the same coin. They don't even really attempt any pretense of being different anymore.

  194. Ahhh, Wikipedia of course by istartedi · · Score: 1

    Union reaction to occupy. Question the motives all you want; but the association is right out there, and even involves an SEIU local. OK, have a ball guys. AFK for a while. Happy New Year. Lucky '13.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    1. Re:Ahhh, Wikipedia of course by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 2

      Did you actually read that? It says the unions supported OWS, and were in agreement with it. It didn't say that OWS was commandeered by PEU's.

      If you're going to cite something, make sure it actually supports your argument.

    2. Re:Ahhh, Wikipedia of course by istartedi · · Score: 1

      BAK. OK, "commandeered" is subject to interpretation. There's plenty of material out there.

      Draw your own conclusions.

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    3. Re:Ahhh, Wikipedia of course by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, how else can you interpret "Then within a few days the Public Employee unions moved in and that's the bulk of the movement that persisted"?

      How can one NOT read that to mean "took over" or "commandeered"?

      Do you NOT get how when you say shit like that, you are being inflammatory?

  195. Re:peaceful protesters? by sageres · · Score: 1

    Do you know what the alternative is? Blanket socialism / communism or whatever other marxist system that does not allow for private ownership and encourages income distribution.

  196. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know or have personally met many people who joined the OWS movement in Madison, WI. All of them had lost their jobs, been unemployed for a very long time, unemployment ran out, and they became homeless. So, they joined the OWS movement to force the politicians to remember there are still people who are unemployed, homeless, and need the government to do something positive about the current situation.

    Are there kids who have very little life experience amongst the OWS populace? Sure, but around here they are the vast minority.

  197. Re:peaceful protesters? by sageres · · Score: 0

    Sure, I do not belong to 1%, but I belong to the top 53% of the people. The working people (thank you very much) who work and support the bottom 47% of the population (who really do not pay taxes).
    I do not want you to identify me as part of YOUR group. I worked hard to get where I am today without taking a dime from the government.
    If you want a system where the wealthy do not control the government -- I think you should just go away and establish your own social country or move to the "Best" Korea because even in the best days of the Soviet Union, those in power were those who were in the power of controlling the money (go figure).

  198. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can you name any major political change that happened through normal democratic methods without widespread protests ?

    Sure.

    Women getting the vote.

    Many were arrested at protests

    Er...am I missing something?

  199. Re:peaceful protesters? by sageres · · Score: 0

    I had a few friends ready to back me up really severely standing next to me if they were to lay a finger on me. However if I were to meet you I would not need a few friends near me to express my constitutional right of free speech and a natural right to punch your smug liberal face, were you try to even mention a trash can, Steve.

  200. Re:The problem with protests. by MrHanky · · Score: 1

    Slightly wrong: Advertising has such an effect that the voters don't care. It's a system that makes propaganda mandatory but inaccessible outside the corporate loop, but it also makes it independent of the state, and as such it is yet another example of your great freedom. Of course the voters won't think of it as a big deal. That would be anti-American.

  201. Re:peaceful protesters? by nbauman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The issue is whether it was legal. The answer is yes. It was legal. Zucotti Park was in an unusual legal situation in that they had an agreement with the City to make the park available to the public 24 hours a day. There were also court decisions giving demonstrators the right to sleep in the streets.

    Gordon Crovitz, a former Wall Street Journal editorial writer, lives in Battery Park City and went to Community Board hearings to complain about OWS, as he wrote in the WSJ. They heard him out and voted him down. The OWS representatives heard the complaints, and made changes. The Community Board supported OWS. In a democracy, we follow the majority decision.

    This is New York City. We have lots of big events. Mayor Giuliani used to declare public celebrations, which tied up the City and disrupted traffic, after his favorite sports team won a game. We put up with it. We have Fashion Week, in which clothing companies put up tents in Bryan Park, a little bigger than Zucotti Park, for a couple of weeks and deprive everyone else of the use of that popular park. We put up with it. The crime in Zucotti Park was no worse than other large events. (There were several reports that police encouraged troublemakers and mentally disturbed people to go to Zucotti park.)

    Occupy Wall Street had some money and wanted to rent portable toilets, the way every other big event in New York City does (including Fashion Week). The City refused to issue them permits. So they used the toilets in MacDonald's down the street, and some of the other local bars and restaurants. So first you refuse permits for toilets, then you complain about inadequate sanitation.

    Oh, yeah. Then there was the First Amendment to the Constitution. Zucotti Park was the best example I've seen in my life of people from everywhere assembling to discuss their complaints with the political system and decide what they were going to do about it. That's not only legal, it's one of our basic American rights that we were supposed to have been fighting those wars for. So it's legal. No question about it.

  202. Re:The problem with protests. by eth1 · · Score: 1

    Can you name any major political change that happened through normal democratic methods without widespread protests ?

    How about corporate America taking over the government?

  203. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "When were the Libertarians ever not part of the Republican Party."

    At least since they have voted differently, I suspect. A more rigorous treatment of the question(ignorantly rhetorical though it may be) would likely prove even earlier still.

  204. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the city didn't like the ghetto, why did it keep dropping homeless people off at the OWS camp?

  205. Re: Who Cares? by lucm · · Score: 1

    Don't flatter yourself, you "educated" nobody. This was just like a NRA event or a pro-life protest or a Westboro Baptist Church picket line - people who agreed before still agree, people who disagreed before still disagree. No change whatsoever, just noise and waste. This whole thing was people playing revolution without a cause (and without risk).

    You got away with being a public nuisance. If that gives you a hard-on, good for you. But you changed nothing except help a bunch of NYPD cops to get a fat overtime bonus for their "repression" (which I prefer to call: enforcing the democratically agreed-upon social order), and that money did not come out of your pockets.

    Next time you want to change the world by repeating the same empty propaganda, give everyone a break and just open a fucking blog. Who knows you may get +1s.

    --
    lucm, indeed.
  206. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't apologize or make up some stupid excuse. Admit you were wrong. Admit that you made an assumption based on your own ignorance, and used it as a "gotcha" to invalidate a point that still had numerous other examples to generalize from.

    And you weren't just wrong, you were serving the agenda that wants people not to know the truth of what joss said.

  207. Re:Who Cares? by Bigby · · Score: 1

    The Koch brothers. After all, their company isn't on Wall Street. So the enemy of my enemy is my "friend".

  208. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Cracking down" as in "allowed an illegal occupation of a private park for months before getting fed up with the ghetto that resulted"?

    Actually, the owners of the private park did NOT complain to police that OWS were trespassing. It was NOT illegal.

    Get your facts straight.

  209. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First, understand that Unions are self-funded. They're funded from dues paid by the members. They don't take anyones taxes.

    The OP was talking specifically about public employee unions (PEUs). You know, the people whose salaries are paid by tax dollars. You must be a member of the media, as your omission of this fact in bit that I quoted is exactly the sort of thing that is practiced widespread in all big media, not just Fox News.

    It doesn't take much mental capacity to realize that tax dollars become salary, and salaries become dues in the case of PUEs. Transitively, public employees unions are therefore funded by tax dollars.

    Also, while it may not be the norm for public employees to have 6-figure retirements, it does happen. The highest public retirement pension payout in Oregon is to a college football coach whose annual salary exceeded $1.9 million, and likely doesn't need any retirement income from the system. Yet, he is paid over $41,000 per month in retirement benefits. That's about $1/2 million per year. Definitely near or in the 1%. Over 800 people in the Oregon PERS system make over $100K a year. It turns out you can get rich working for the government.

  210. Great! A good job done well. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank you FBI and all for keeping track of these want-to-be's who can't contribute to the welfare of mankind, only to destroy what they can't have.
    How many people are being watched? Probably not enough of you dirtbags!

  211. Re:peaceful protesters? by nbauman · · Score: 1

    Actually, there were surveys of the people at OWS, and about half were employed. (You can find references in the Wikipedia article on OWS.) Surprisingly, a lot of them were professionals who had fairly high incomes -- and thought they should pay more taxes themselves.

    I'm not yet convinced that it's too late.

    I agree with you otherwise.

  212. fascism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "These documents also show these federal agencies functioning as a de facto intelligence arm of Wall Street and Corporate America"

    The word they were looking for is fascism.

  213. Re:The problem with protests. by nbauman · · Score: 1

    There were other places where demonstrators were arrested by the police even though they were there legally. At UC Davis, they held a demonstration on their own campus lawn -- at a place that was designated for such events. It's hard to get more legal than that. The university police pepper-sprayed them. As a result, the university settled a damage suit for $1 million http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0912/81699.html

    At any rate, the First Amendment overrides a lot. Gathering to protest the government is a pretty basic right in America.

  214. Re:The problem with protests. by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

    Can you name any major political change that happened through normal democratic methods without widespread protests ?

    I would say the EPA and Clean Air/Clean Water acts were major changes. The WPA, Social Security, the TVA all were fundamental shifts. Hell, getting off the gold standard was huge.

    Getting rid of the monarchy, getting rid of slavery, votes for women, civil rights, whatever. None of these happen through people simply going through the motions of voting.

    I must point out that on the state level, all these happened without protest in the early-adoption states. Well, except getting rid of the monarchy. Hell, women had the right to vote in some states in the 1700's, long before slavery was abnolished in those states. Slavery was peacefully abolished in 1/2 the union without violence or protests. And civil rights came about in some areas (e.g. the military) quickly and painlessly.

    --
    Your ad here. Ask me how!
  215. Re:peaceful protesters? by miroku000 · · Score: 1

    In addition, there's the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which gives people the right to peacefully protest, as other people here have mentioned.

    The first amendment sets up boundaries that legislatures cannot cross to "stifle dissent". That doesnt mean you can just randomly go onto private property and reserve it for the exclusive use of your own group at any time and then claim "But FIRST AMENDMENT!"

    No, but you can go to the owner of the property and ask permission. This is what happened. The city asked for permission to have public access 24/7 and the owner agreed to it.

    Im quite sure the Zucotti Park agreement did not entitle members of the public to turn it into a campground, and Im quite certain that the first amendment doesnt get rid of zoning laws.

    Why do you think that the agreement didn't allow people to camp there? From the wording of the agreement, it seems pretty clear that it did exactly that.

  216. Re:peaceful protesters? by NotSanguine · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It remains PRIVATE PROPERTY. The public has access, but there are rules, like, I dont know, not setting up your tent and grill.

    "Allowing public access" swings both ways, when OWS basically prevents any other use of the park.

    Do such rules exist? I am not aware of them. You may well be correct. But, at least for me, that's not really the point.

    I posit that you're looking at this backwards. That's not intended as an insult, BTW. Rather than looking for ways to limit and discourage our fellow citizens (and no, I did not take part in any OWS activities) from expressing themselves and their points of view, I believe we should expand and encourage opportunities to do so for all of us.

    The NYC government should have provided sanitation facilities and police *assistance* with security to the OWS (and any others, regardless of their point of view) protestors, rather than treating them as criminals for exercising their constitutional rights.

    As a native (and life-long) New Yorker, I was ashamed of my city government for debasing the ideals of our once-great nation.

    Feel free to disagree with me. I don't expect that everyone should share my point of view. What I do expect is that we, as a society, and our government should be accommodating, assisting and expanding the ways that peaceful protests, dissenting opinions and alternative ideas can be expressed and discussed.

    Your thoughts?

    --
    No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
  217. Re:peaceful protesters? by miroku000 · · Score: 1

    But the people on very top who finance this -- thought to destabilize political process and banking in the United States to create either a pressure on a certain political leaders through their direct actions or, to a lesser extent, to create a large enough backlash to pressure them into the opposite actions.

    So, the people behind this are trying to enact change to the system by organizing a bunch of followers in a peaceful protest. Is that a bad thing for some reason?

  218. Re: Who Cares? by Urza9814 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Tell that to the people who received aid from Occupy Sandy when FEMA and the Red Cross were nowhere to be found; or to the people who have had thousands of dollars of debt erased by Rolling Jubilee. Or those facing foreclosure who had their homes saved by Occupiers.

    I get it, you don't think political activism can ever bring change and nothing I say will change your mind....but OWS has done quite a lot of good with real, concrete action as well:

    current.com/groups/news-blog/93963203_four-occupy-offshoots-making-a-difference.htm

  219. Re:The problem with protests. by The+Moof · · Score: 1

    Primaries aren't as honest as you think. Games can (and are) played to help sway votes in a certain way.

    Closed primaries disallow the general public from choosing a candidate, and only registered party members are permitted to vote. If the party wants a certain candidate to gain ground, but feel the general public will not vote in their favor, they have a closed primary vote.

    The flip side of this is poisoning the well. The opposition party votes in an open primary to attempt manipulating a candidate's popularity. They attempt to create false competition, or get a less-than-favorable candidate elected. This trick can also be used by the party itself if an unpopular party choice is winning.

    Then there's the actual candidates themselves. Any real choice of candidates has been far removed for a while. The only candidates who end up in a national primary are ones who've already committed to the party's views and demonstrated their willingness to "play the game." Anyone with a real chance of winning with moderate party views or won't cooperate with lobbyists were pruned out of the process on the local/state level. Candidates like Paul or Huntsman aren't seriously considered contenders (reflected by both the parties and the media).

    So no, those primaries are not the bastions of democracy you think they are. I would say, in my region, the highest level of government I see is probably sparsely at the County-level election, but mostly the town/city level. Admittedly, I'm from a fairly skewed state for this (Illinois), so I'm probably a bit more pessimistic than most. It's possible other regions might get more honest elections up to the state level.

    If you ever want a real sobering realization on the subject, befriend someone in your state's official party committees. They can tell you, to a much more detailed extent, the games that are played with elections to ensure certain candidates never get anywhere, while others get groomed for higher offices.

  220. Re:peaceful protesters? by miroku000 · · Score: 2

    Do you know what the alternative is? Blanket socialism / communism or whatever other marxist system that does not allow for private ownership and encourages income distribution.

    So, that is the only alternative to the 1% controlling the government? You can't think of any other possible solutions? How about the 99% starts being more politically aware of the corruption of the politicians and votes the ones giving tax breaks to the wealthiest 1% at the expense of everyone else out of office?

  221. Re:peaceful protesters? by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

    When were the Libertarians ever not part of the Republican Party.

    The big-L Libertarians still aren't, they are part of the Libertarian Party. Small-l libertarians split among the LP, both major parties, no party, and some other parties. Its true that libertarian-ish rhetoric has been part of the Republican schtick starting around the time of (and mostly as a reaction to) the New Deal, and more intensely, IIRC, from about 1980 on.

  222. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And, let's face it, if MSNBC, Fox, and CNN refuse to acknowledge your existence as a candidate (cover your campaign, invite you to debates), you will likely never get more than 1% of the vote in a national election. So, again, corporations.

  223. Re:Who Cares? by Concerned+Onlooker · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "Also, don't you find it ironic that OWS is so heavily staffed by children of privilege like those two?"

    No. The investment banker takedown of our economy put lots and lots of middle to upper middle class people out of work. Besides, what is your point? That children of privilege should not care about the country? Or that children of privilege are trying to overthrow the government?

    The real conspiracy is that OWS got labeled as a bunch of dirty hippies when in fact they were regular people who were fed up, and the whole country should have been behind them.

    --
    http://www.rootstrikers.org/
  224. Re:Who Cares? by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

    Your argument is so insightful. There's no waythey can be right. Because they're on one side and they will be on the other. That's so cool. Reminds me of that fable about the wolf and the lamb.

    I wonder, if they are the 99%, that's a LOT of people. How will they find oil company executive jobs for all that people?

    Well, if I have to choose one side, at least I know one thing. The Tea Party guys are, and will always be, wrong.

  225. Pot, kettle... by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

    See, here's your problem, "Captain"...you're judging a the behavior of a few and applying it to a large group. It's false equivalence...

    The problem "global", is that you're making the same mistake by extrapolating from your "personal experience" to the whole movement.

  226. Re:peaceful protesters? by nbauman · · Score: 1

    Im quite sure

    Well, you're quite wrong.

    I've talked to lawyers and I'm somewhat familiar with First Amendment law as it applies to New York City.

    The Zucotti Park agreement said that the park was open to the public 24 hours a day.

    Once it's open to the public, everyone has a right to exercise First Amendment activities, exactly as they were doing.

    There was a court decision that also ruled that demonstrators have a right to sleep in the streets.

    The City allows commercial operators to put up tents.

    I knew that neighborhood from before the demonstrations. Zucotti Park is a lightly-used park.

    The opponents were basically saying, "We want you to leave that park so that it can be empty and unused."

  227. Re:peaceful protesters? by nbauman · · Score: 2

    I worked hard to get where I am today without taking a dime from the government.

    You didn't get there on your own. I'm always struck by people who think, well, it must be because I was just so smart. There are a lot of smart people out there. It must be because I worked harder than everybody else. Let me tell you something -- there are a whole bunch of hardworking people out there.

    If you were successful, somebody along the line gave you some help. There was a great teacher somewhere in your life. Somebody helped to create this unbelievable American system that we have that allowed you to thrive. Somebody invested in roads and bridges. If you've got a business -- you didn't build that. Somebody else made that happen. The Internet didn't get invented on its own. Government research created the Internet so that all the companies could make money off the Internet.

  228. Re:peaceful protesters? by sjames · · Score: 1

    I see, now the truth comes out. You were the one wanting to bring violence to the party and you're all butthurt that they wouldn't fall for the trap. Chill out, eat a few good books!

  229. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whether it was legal or not is not the issue. The Occupy protests were unfocused and became a nuisance to people who also have rights when it comes to using public property. Listening to people bitching about not being able to find a job and spent thousands of dollars on a worthless philosophy degree or other liberal arts degree that provides no skills for today's economic and labor environment is annoying. If you took 100% of the world's wealth a divided it equally you would only ensure everyone is equally poor. Expecting a society or economy to support people who contribute nothing but demand everything is a losing proposition. Temporary public assistance in the form of unemployment benefits is not supposed to be a career goal. It's easy to blame the government and anyone else except yourself when you run into problems mostly of your own making. The big housing crash a few years back was the result of people deciding to take out huge mortgages from anyone offering them. The availability of large mortgage loans did not mean that the customer had to accept the terms and take the money. People chose to all by themselves to assume the responsibility of repayment. People making 50K a year had no business taking out 400K mortgage while also continuing their deficit spending and that was the root of the problem. Deciding to spend 100K on a college degree without choosing a field of study that would benefit them in today's job market was also a personal choice and not a government mandate. Since this is supposed to be a tech related site I assume most people on this site have no problems finding jobs in programming, system integration, and other tech related areas. Even someone with no more than a little knowledge but a willingness to put forth a serious effort can find a relatively high paying job in today's technical job market. After all web programming is not a difficult skill. Even old school tech such as the millions of lines of COBOL code still require maintenance and updating.

    Protesters in the pictures and news clips represent a tiny minority of people. Online activism is a lazy mans way of affecting change. Just becuase people can now post their thoughts on any situation does not mean they know what the hell they are talking about. And yes that includes me as well. Today's "Twitter" generation has to be the stupidest generation to appear in quite a while. Access to information is damn near instantaneous but also frequently skewed or out right wrong. Being able to use the Internet and other information channels is NOT a skill that will ensure a successful future. Destructive online activism in the form of breaching computer security or launching DOS attacks are equivalent to throwing a brick through a window and not something that shows any great intellect or generates any thing other kick back form law enforcement agencies. While people are using twitter and other social media sites to organize protests the vast majority of people are busy working to better themselves, provide for their families, and basically live their lives. The vocal complaints and wide scale distortions of US government actions when it comes to upholding the citizen rights outlined in the Constitution and Bill of Rights do not reflect reality in the slightest. The system is not perfect and will never be. The US government is not efficient enough or competent enough to launch and maintain ll these supposed schemes to keep the "little" people down. The US President is not an Emperor whose edicts are automatically obeyed internally or internationally. The legislative branch is the most incompetent of all and it is better that they stay that way rather than unite which could lead to edicts harmful to the general public. The average IQ of the people in the US Capitol building becomes smaller every time a Senator or Representative enters the building. The more there are the stupider they become.

    Sometimes bad things happen to people who do not deserve it but for every 1 person treated unjustly their are thousands who face no inj

  230. Re:Who Cares? by lucm · · Score: 1

    if I have to choose one side, at least I know one thing. The Tea Party guys are, and will always be, wrong.

    According to Wikipedia: "Tea Party supporters are mainly white and slightly more likely to be male, married, older than 45, more conservative than the general population, and likely to be more wealthy and have more education."

    Somehow this does not jive with the fact that they picked Sarah Palin and Michele Bachmann as their leaders. Maybe they just watch them on tv with no sound.

    --
    lucm, indeed.
  231. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OWS was hijacked. Initially it was a protest movement demanding a legal accounting for all of those involved in scamming people out of their life savings. OWS is, and was not, the problem. The following quote from the article explains the real problem.

    The crackdown, which involved, as you may recall, violent arrests, group disruption, canister missiles to the skulls of protesters, people held in handcuffs so tight they were injured, people held in bondage till they were forced to wet or soil themselves –was coordinated with the big banks themselves.

    Of course those same people have told you that OWS is a problem, and you believe them. *sigh*.

  232. in the end by slick7 · · Score: 1

    The tighter the grip, the faster everything slips through.

    --
    The mind conceives, the body achieves, the spirit manifests.
  233. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stay in your fantasy land.

  234. Crack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I came here to see some bank crack.

  235. Re:Who Cares? by maestroX · · Score: 1

    Astrochicken == self-replicating chicken exploring space for Andromeda (yes, i spelled chicken in the exam)

  236. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You should really mark comments like this with *sarcasm* or something. Nobody that studies any history can say this with a straight face.

  237. Homophone! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I smell a homophone conspiracy! :))

    r

  238. Re:peaceful protesters? by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

    "Access to the public" does not mean unrestricted access. Prostitution in the park would neither be protected by the park agreement, nor by the first amendment. Likewise, just because a park is "public" does not mean that you can legally camp there.

  239. Re:peaceful protesters? by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

    Do such rules exist?

    Havent done specific reasearch, but if they did not there would be no reason I couldnt simply go to Zucotti park now and tape the entire thing off for my personal use for a game of football or something.

    Again, just because they signed an agreement allowing public access 24/7 does not mean anyone can do whatever they want in the park. It COULD, but I would be suprised if anyone could find any documentation saying that was the case.

  240. Re:The problem with protests. by theNAM666 · · Score: 1

    I indeed hope this was sarcase: Hitler was appointed Chancellor.

  241. Re:peaceful protesters? by silentbrad · · Score: 1

    You do realize that the person you replied to is from Canada (a Socialist country), right? Socialism, unlike Communism, does allow for private ownership.

  242. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, public union employees only contribute about 3-10% of their pension funds, the rest comes from taxpayers, and dues are also paid for by taxpayers along with many qualifying "grants" for such things as outreach and union building. Public employee pensions are far more generous than private worker pensions, and are immune from bankruptcy, generally not negotiable through legislation and subject to steady annual increases regardless of the economy or tax revenue. Public employees also receive benefits beyond pensions, such as lifetime medical care. This has all been well documented.

  243. Re:peaceful protesters? by NotSanguine · · Score: 1

    Do such rules exist?

    Havent done specific reasearch, but if they did not there would be no reason I couldnt simply go to Zucotti park now and tape the entire thing off for my personal use for a game of football or something.

    Again, just because they signed an agreement allowing public access 24/7 does not mean anyone can do whatever they want in the park. It COULD, but I would be suprised if anyone could find any documentation saying that was the case.

    You continue to focus on the narrow, unimportant issue. That's your privilege, but I'd prefer to discuss the more important ones. Thanks.

    --
    No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
  244. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we built it

  245. Re:peaceful protesters? by nbauman · · Score: 1

    That's the law in New York City, established by the contract between the City and the owners of Zucotti Park, the court rulings on the rights of demonstrators, and the decision of the Community Board on how to balance the rights of the demonstrators against the concerns of the community.

    I doubt that you've discussed the right of assembly under First Amendment law with many lawyers.

  246. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the government wanted all of this stopped, all they had to do was listen to the people: Enforce the law and prosecute the bankers responsible for the mess.

    But here you are arguing about stupid, irrelevant shit like "they were in the park TOO long!" and other minor misdemeanors as a distraction to take people's discussion away from the real crimes, the big crimes, that are committed by the banks with the consent of the government.

  247. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Spend the time to read the article. Like so many others, you are either a clueless ignoramus or someone so apathetic you should really move away from society and never come back. Corporate controlled media told you the movement was bad, and you believed them. The same corporations collaborated with the FBI, DHS, and local police to stop people from gathering.

  248. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Whether it was legal or not is not the issue. The Occupy protests were unfocused and became a nuisance"

    Stopped reading right after this.

    If you can't comprehend the point of a protest is to be a "nuisance" to get those in power to take notice and listen, then you don't even deserve to be in this country. Seriously. Everything that was fought for and people died for to obtain, and little shits like you just piss it all away. Disgusting.

  249. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, no, don't discount liar just yet.

  250. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have been brainwashed in to believing that you have no voice and no choice. You spew it as if it's fact, but it is not fact and not how we were founded. Stop believing what you are told and think for yourself! Read the constitution! We are not a 2 party system, we are a Democratic Republic. You can vote for anyone you wish, and if the party gives you shit you pencil in a better person.

    You fucking clueless morons make me sick. Learn to critically think or get the fuck out of my country and go to China or Russia where mindless drones have no Constitution and have no choices.

  251. If You Don't Succeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    An American Nazi Empire is inevitable. The Banksters screwed up Germany in the 1920s and at some point it was rational for everyday people to vote for Adolf Hitler. He was the only man who had a credible plan and resolve to help the common man.
    You know the rest.

    So, I hope for America that Occupy Wall Street will succeed.

  252. Descent vs. Dissent.. Only on Slashdot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Home of the readers who think they know everything, and the editors that clearly know nothing.

  253. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Police in Germany enforced the contracts of Banksters in the 1920s against people who were broke to each character in the paper.
    People were told "that you should not eat if you have not worked." There was no work and 30 to 50% of people were unemployed.
    People voted a fix for the problem. His name was Adolf Hitler. Don't tell me you have not seen it coming.

  254. Re:peaceful protesters? by Unknown+Lamer · · Score: 1

    As someone who was hauled off for similar offenses ("standing in the wrong place near an object the police decided was not permitted on the ground that day" basically), I can tell you that you are wrong. If anyone is ever permitted to put up a tent in the area, anyone engaged in political protest has a right to put up a tent. You can only restrict political speech with clear regulations that are enforced universally, and serve a major public interest. Whether you like it or not, damned smelly hippies can set up tent cities and protest their hearts out, unless your state wants to ban even permitted use of tents. There are other precedents regarding spontaneous demostrations that weaken permit requirements.

    Source: a year of sitting in court listening to the same trial about nine times over.

    In the U.S., if you actually get access to the legal system, political speech is our most protected right.

    --

    HAL 7000, fewer features than the HAL 9000, but just as homicidal!
  255. American-Sponsored Terrorism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Americans aid "Terrorism" in Northern Ireland through various means. The IRA and its factions kill real people with or without uniform.
    America sponsors Terrorism in Iran. At least that is the view of Iran, when American-sponsored killers kill people on Iranian soil. (And, yeah, I know about the Zionist excuses why that is "OK")

    America sponsors the terrorist actions of the Israeli Army to ethnically cleanse Arabs from the land they owned for hundreds of years. America aids Israel in torture and illegal,indefinite detention of Arabs (Muslim, Christian and others).
    America condones Israeli terror commandos suffocating people in Dubai with their own pillow. As a reward for terrorism, America sends billions every year to Israel.

  256. Re:peaceful protesters? by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

    Except for the fact [wikipedia.org] that Zuccotti Park is required to provide public access 24/7. What was that I said before? Oh yes. Moron. And you've proved me right. Again./p

    But, of course, if a corporation seized control of Zucotti Park and used it for employee housing, you'd bellow something about the "tragedy of the commons" and complain about how long it took the police to charge the executives with loitering and/or trespassing.

    Right?

  257. Re:peaceful protesters? by sageres · · Score: 1

    I know, it is something like it is not the speech that you said. Someone else said it before. It is OK, I'll help deal with your plagiarism by giving the source (as you should have)
    Barack Obama, July 13, Roanoke, Va
    But he was wrong. Just like you ripped off his quote without giving him a credit, you are ripping off other people's money without giving them credit claiming that government did it.
    And He was wrong too.
    There are a whole bunch of hardworking people out there but remember that 47 percent of the population still do not pay the income tax, and the top 10% of the population pays more than 50% of the income tax.
    I am successful, and I did not ask for anyone's help. Asking for help would be "gimme food-stamps", "gimme money", "gimme welfare". My family came in America with literally 1 dollar in our pockets and twenty years later we own two houses four cars and successfully multiplied.
    Yes there was a great teacher somewhere in my life. She, he and many others of them got paid for their work and retirement. My parents paid for it.
    The "Somebody" who helped to create this unbelievable American system is capitalism that produced and maintain this place of opportunity where anyone can make a business and be successful. Try that in the old Soviet Union, the "Best" Korea, the handful of the socialist states that still exist. You can not create your own business in many of them unless it allows for private ownership. Many of the old Socialist states did not allow for private ownership.
    Yes somebody invested in the roads and bridges. Many of them are toll roads and many are built on a tax money collected by the state or the federal government. We are still paying with our tax money to maintain them. Every time we renew our driver licenses and license plates we pay for their maintenance. Don't make me feel guilty for a service that I have paid for.
    When you come to a five star hotel, receive a great service for a waiter and tip them generously for it you do not come around and say, "We should be ashamed for even thinking that we bought the stay at that hotel room and that food and that food service for that night because the waiter really did us a favour by bringing in that food." Makes sense? not to me.
    And another reason why Obama is wrong. He said, " If you've got a business -- you didn't build that . Wrong, this is the exact same way that the Soviet system were telling us that in capitalist-based system every single business owner became rich by exploiting the working class. Now you understand what Obama was really trying to say by that?
    Yes, of course if you got your own business -- you absolutely built that.
    I know of a certain Korean immigrant who came into this country 10 years ago. For the first three years he was breaking his back trying to feed kids and save up. He worked probably 16 hours a week, later on paying for their education.
    Eventually he had 100,000 dollars that he saved up and bought a laundry-mat with adjacent dry-cleaning store. His family, his extended family is now working in that store. He bought nearby office spaces and opened a restaurant. His family now works that restaurant too. He also just bought another building space, and from what I heard it will be a drugstore. The guy now lives in a big house, his children are going to school, and all-in-all he is employing at least fifty people, including some natural born Americans who are not part of his family. He absolutely built that business, and paid for building it. Not by exploiting the working class, not by anything that the President is trying to make us guilty for.
    The Internet case is special, was invented by the Army. But the individual networks existed way before the Internet. There were many different networks prior to the Internet and in alternative to the Internet as well. Also US universities were the first websites to expand into the internet.
    The government had very little to do with the Internet, only by sponsoring the initial implementation of Darpa-Ne

  258. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why shouldn't he make that extrapolation, when the same kind of extreme cherry picking led to accusations of racism and other nonsense within the tea party? Or didn't MSNBC or ABC explain that anyone? It goes both ways. From what I saw on Youtube, and pictures across the web, one didn't have to cherry pick that hard to find examples of civil breakdown in the OWS movement.

  259. Re:peaceful protesters? by sageres · · Score: 0

    Heck no. I am capable of holding an argument without need to resort to violence. But considering the cases of people being beat up and women being raped at the camp -- we did not DARE to go down to the camp alone. In truth my friends and I wanted to tell them exactly what we think of their dirty hippy flea-bagging ways without being molested by someone like you and your friends for speaking our mind.

  260. Re:peaceful protesters? by sageres · · Score: 1

    That depends on the type of socialist system used.
    In Soviet Union we were not allowed to own property. Well some did. Well some absolutely did. Well you see, in Soviet Union some people are more equal than others.
    In Best Korea too.
    But it really all depends on the country.
    Marxist-Leninist socialism most likely does not allow private ownership. And there are only four countries right now.
    China, Cuba, Laos and Vietnam. China has limited shared ownership (many companies are owned or co-owned partially by the state or state-based organizations such as the Chinese Red Army), Cuba -- none, Laos -- none, Vietnam -- I don't know.

  261. Re:peaceful protesters? by sageres · · Score: 1
  262. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your full of shit. People who want a better life should concentrate on doing something to reach their goals instead of putting all the responsibility onto the government or anyone else for their ineptness and short sightedness. The overly broad sense of "entitlement" manifesting in today's society is the problem. Engaging on "echo" chamber righteousness to alleviate your feeling of inadequacy will gain you nothing in life. And although I have made plenty of mistakes in my life I have not pissed away anything that someone has fought for. I was born into a society where I could create a decent life without any noticeable government interference. Protesting for "rights" you already have is pure folly. People who refuse to take responsibility for their own choices and blame the system for their failures create nothing more than ruthless animosity of the "other" and accomplish nothing. There are times when public protests are warrantied and I have seen no evidence the government is preventing people from protesting. But keep in mind your right to protest is no greater than my right to think of you as a nuisance.

  263. documents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does anyone have the actual documents? The story that is supposed to have the documents attached is missing the attachments.

  264. Re:peaceful protesters? by Capt+James+McCarthy · · Score: 1

    Not from videos and reports I've seen. And I'm sure that those OWS folks who actually got off their sleeping bags and voted, put the current administration in office which is now cracking down on them.

    Imagine that. I have an opinion, and it is that I disagree with the actions of OWS (based upon what I've seen), I'm automatically labeled. Does no one see the level of hypocrisy that is out there. I an neither a lefty or a righty. I think both sides should get the hell out of the 'middle' and stop trying to tell others how to do things.

    And for the fact AC that tried to troll me with fox news line, pick your poison. You actually think there is an unbiased media out there? Are you that ignorant?

    --
    There are no loopholes. It's either legal or it's not.
  265. Re:peaceful protesters? by sjames · · Score: 1

    I am capable of holding an argument without need to resort to violence.

    Given that you couldn't even make it all the way through one reply to me without thumping your chest and uttering a threat, I doubt it.

  266. Nice Claim by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have been politically active in the past, as an individual. Mostly on the internet in discussion forums like these. Often with true name.

    From that, I got personal visits from government shit, advising me "to leave the country for a while, then we won't bother your". The country of my birth, Germany. I got dummy attacks with dogs.

    So yeah, fuck your claim of being an "office worker". I know 100% what the government sometimes does. Doing a little bit of disinformation is just the "basic measure".

    1. Re:Nice Claim by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And, you know what ? I was once sympathetic to America, but know I like Russia, Vietnam and China much more. I yearn for the day the last CIA criminal has left my country and we have ready-to-fire-on-hairtrigger-alert nuclear weapons just like Russians. Until then, we are just pawns.

  267. And whose watch was this on .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Barack Obama, the most fascist president ever. The people can't demonstrate against Wall Street or heck anywhere near him he changed the rules so the SS could arrest or shoo away protesters that were too near him. He certainly doesn't want dissent showing up in any of his video / sound bites.

    And you Slashdorks praise Obama and his policies like he is some kind of God. Sheesh.

  268. Nice Little Bankster $hill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..you are.

    I tell you something: These people are doing you, the banksters, your nation and the whole western world a major service. They are calling for the reform of a rotten system, so that it can again function somewhat.
    The alternative includes Guillotines, terror by guys like Feliks Tsershinsky (who ordered 17000 killed in three years), mass shootings and also Zyklon-B.

    So, make up your mind what you really want ? Reform or Revolution ?

    1. Re:Nice Little Bankster $hill by lucm · · Score: 1

      Of course I'm a bankster $hill. It's a well-known fact that Wall Street people have nothing better to do on New Year's Eve than promote on Slashdot the dirty, nasty, disgusting capitalistic agenda that so far has led the modern civilization fairly well.

      Could things be better? Sure. Could things be better by listening to stoners who have nothing else to do than go sit in a park and send tweets and instagrams of their little May 68 moment? I don't think so. Anyways whenever someone put a mike under their noses they always start babbling idiotic commie propaganda, it's probably not even possible to clearly establish what they stand for or how it could be enacted.

      And if you think that you have it as bad as the French people before the Revolution or as the victims of the holocaust, you are not only a loud mouth and a whiner but also a disrespectful brat. Get lost.

      --
      lucm, indeed.
  269. This is Freedom by MrKaos · · Score: 1

    in the land of the free.

    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  270. It isn't stifle.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is 'can happily accommodate a lack of dissent.'

  271. So, You Are In The Pay Of by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..Goldman Sachs ?

    Trying to spread your Collective Ad-Hominems (so to speak) here ? We know you Banksters are so fucking enormous, excellently smart. We can imagine you try to spread disinformation, lies and half-truths. You can afford the best propaganda specialists from all the money you have stolen from the common many in a way that cannot be punished by law.

    The only thing I do not understand is why you are so tremendously short-sighted. If you continue down this path of destructive egotism, you will one day be pulled out of your little castles and raised to the next street lamp with a rope. By the people whom you have destroyed their jobs and their little lives.

    1. Re:So, You Are In The Pay Of by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ..Goldman Sachs ... Banksters

      As soon as I see these phrases, I stop reading. It tells me that the author of that piece of text is not capable of making any sense whatsoever.

  272. Re:Who Cares? by Hutz · · Score: 1

    Knowing who is behind a protest is not "cracking down". All the article shows is intelligence gathering activities. Since some of the protesters did things like smash windows and block streets, intelligence is not unwarranted.

  273. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just ignore any modding, I just post AC. I load all comments. Why do you care ??

  274. Here Comes INSCOM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hi Mr Seargeant. Can I have an overflight by Guardrail, please ? I am an aircraft fan when I don't piss you and your corrupt buddies.

  275. Re:peaceful protesters? by NotSanguine · · Score: 1

    If there's any point in there beyond your ridiculous non-sequitur, please do share.

    --
    No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
  276. Re:peaceful protesters? by nbauman · · Score: 1

    Life is short, and there is not enough room in this brief post to correct your many mistakes.

    The easiest one, and the most appropriate one for Slashdot, is, "The government had very little to do with the Internet."

    Fortunately, Wall Street Journal editorial writer Gordon Crovitz -- the same asshole who lives in Battery Park City and complained about Occupy Wall Street at the Community Board meeting -- also wrote an editorial debunking the "myth" that the government invented the Internet.

    Crovitz has contributed to computer education and the history of technology by making an argument that is completely wrong, but has been the occasion for people who know far more about the Internet than Crovitz to explain it. Two of the better rebuttals are here http://articles.latimes.com/2012/jul/23/news/la-mo-who-invented-internet-20120723 and here http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/2012/07/23/yes-government-researchers-really-did-invent-the-internet/ As Hiltzik points out, those "university researchers" you cite did their work on government contracts.

    I don't know where your family came from, but I guess it wasn't the Soviet Bloc. The USSR had one of the best education systems in the world -- all free. Soviet emigres came here with their EE degrees and PhDs and were quickly hired up at good salaries. I know other Soviet emigres who came to this country with less marketable degrees who where shuttled off to free (welfare) housing, free (government-paid) job training, and often civil service (government) jobs. Immigrants from Communist countries got a better safety net here than most Americans, and they vote Republican and preach self-reliance from government.

    I've heard all these self-made immigrant stories and I don't believe them. Every time somebody looks at the facts behind the self-made myth, you find government handouts.

  277. Re:Who Cares? by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

    No you forget one important detail :

    If history keeps repeating itself, today's tree-hugging hippies are tomorrow's bankers and big oil executive.

    If history keeps repeating itself, 10-20 among today's tree-hugging hippies will shoot the rest and themselves become bankers and big oil executives.

  278. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Corporate greed will make paupers of us all that aren't playing the game of theirs OWS , FBI or not.
    Peaceful protest was supposed to be our right. And if enough people were not so intimidated, something might get done.
    What we need to do is overwhelm the media with a message and make it impossible to determine WHO is the threat.
    The banks are so afraid we might hate them. Why the secrecy of who is invested in the trading of futures, options, and hedge funds?
    The oil companies could be bidding up their own products. Duh!
    We need to make it a law that there can be no back room dealing the future of our goods around the world.
    World trade was created to take advantage of the unsuspecting. AND push our greed around to make it seem justified.
    Sooner or later it will bite us in the arse for being so nice to the poor 3rd world nations.
    But why should we care we are so big and powerful right? This whole thing stinks of bully sheeeite.
    Wait for the predator drones over our own skies described as "for our own good" my patriots
    and let's see who is so gung ho then. It will be too late because they will have your address and cell phone signal.
    Woooooooosh, Que Pasa?

  279. Re:Who Cares? by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 2

    So because someone's salary is paid by tax dollars, that means that tax payers have a right to say what they can do with the money they have earned?

    That's BS. Once that money goes into their paychecks, it's no longer "tax money". Whether or not they are a member of the union, they get their money and they can spend it however they choose. They choose to contribute to union dues with THEIR money.

    This is crux of the issue, greedy assholes that think they can dictate what people do with their money just because they happen to work for the government.

  280. Re:Who Cares? by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 2

    That's complete bull. I've worked for a public union in the past (I'm not a fan of them, as I feel I can negotiate my salary a lot better than a union can. In fact, in the private sector I make 3x more money).

    Pensions are about 40% funded by the employee, 30-50% funded from interest and investment gains, and only a small amount is matched by the employer (ie, the government, ie the taxpayers).

    I *WISH* my retirement had had more than 10-20% match from my employer. That would have made things a lot more palatable. As it was, I was making less than half what the private sector was paying for the job.

    The only reason I even took the job was because of the crappy economy, back in the early 2000's.

  281. Re:peaceful protesters? by Eglaelin · · Score: 2

    This is an interesting point. Why didn't the OWS people try to provide sanitation? Except that they did. Bette Midler even offered to pay for them, but the city of New York refused to issue a permit. The refusal to issue a permit stopped OWS from providing sanitation and de facto created the problem. Then they turned around and made sure the media knew that OWS was causing unsanitary conditions. The city of New York in cooperation with the media presented a situation which they could use to discredit the organization.

    The OWS movement had medical tents and cooking tents set up. The city of New York confiscated their generators and created yet another incident to use as media fodder in their battles to discredit OWS.

    There were also verified incidents of OWS members approaching NYPD officers to ask for help in dealing with disruptive people. The NYPD officers refused to help and helped create a situation where criminal activity was left completely to the OWS people in direct violation of their promise to serve the needs of public safety. They were also caught sending homeless people released from jail to the OWS protests to cause further problems.

    --
    Chance Favors The Prepared Mind
  282. Re:peaceful protesters? by Phrogman · · Score: 1

    We are not exactly Socialist (with a capital S) up here in Canada - we have some government controlled elements to our system (the health care system in part, some Crown Corporations etc) but we are primarily capitalist in nature.
    I know that in the US the general opinion seems to be that a society is either completely Capitalist (with a capital C), OR it is "Godless Communism"(tm) and threatening the existence of Democracy) but that's utter bullshit. There are plenty of countries where some elements are socialist and others are not that are proving quite successful (look to most of the northern European countries like Norway, Sweden or Denmark for instance).
    It works up here in Canada, although our current Conservative government (read very radical right-wing), are doing their best to ruin things as much as possible before they lose control.

    --
    "The first time I got drunk, I got married. The second time I bought a chimpanzee, after that I stayed sober" Arian Seid
  283. Re:Who Cares? by miroku000 · · Score: 1

    Large portions of your argument are ad hominem so I won't address those portions. Your cited source has obvious bias. Anything that's "self funded" was ultimately derived from taxation.

    I don't think union dues are taxes in that the government does not collect them or use them or touch them in an way. I don't think the government acts as an intermediary either. Likewise, pensions are not taxes. The government is not an intermediary for those either. As far as I know, your employer takes the money out of your paycheck and forwards it to your 401K or whatever.

  284. Re:OWS was a joke by miroku000 · · Score: 1

    No, I am dissatisfied with any group that offers only a pretense of action towards their goals.

    While many of the goals of the OWS movement are lofty, they have achieved great success. They crushed the Tea Party movement and gave Obama the support he needed to (at least partially) get rid of tax cuts for the rich. I would say that they have been much more successful than I thought they would be...

  285. Re:peaceful protesters? by adolf · · Score: 1

    So. Your answer to the seemingly-inherent tribulations of generally-peaceful things like OWS is for the government (be it local or national, administrative or legislative, or anything else "government") to supply trash cans, showers, hand-washing stations, toilets, and security?

    Seriously? What next, on-site education on how to properly and safely stay warm outdoors instead of proclaiming that all heating devices are disallowed? What sort of other sensible problem-solving does this slippery slope lead to?

    I like your concept on the basis that it supports what I believe are two basic tenets of government: To help ensure the health and safety of the public, while allowing free expression and congregation.

    And it's definitely cheaper than jail time (three squares, clean clothes, and a cot) and court action.

    Good luck. You've got my vote.

  286. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who would benefit from orchestrating such protests?

    How about George Soros, the man who broke the Bank of England? Mr. Soros has funded many left leaning groups over the years while remaining coy at best about his motivations for doing so. It's my suspicion that he funds these groups so that the disruptions which they help build and foment create additional currency speculation opportunities. Mr Soros and his Quantum fund benefit from volatility in the currency markets and nothing generates volatility and uncertainty like OWS or riots and street fighting in Europe. Through his funding of leftist groups and causes, Mr. Soros may be in a position to acquire insider information concerning the locations and timing of actions planned by these groups or those connected to them.

  287. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It seems unlikely that Operation Wall Street was an astroturf movement though, because there was no-one in a position of power or money to gain from it. Who would benefit from orchestrating such protests?

    Er, those whose political views is that harm should come to Wall Street?

  288. Re:peaceful protesters? by Kyusaku+Natsume · · Score: 1

    He is probably chicano, mexican-american. They are even worst than the WASP in the Tea Party against foreigners and immigrants. I suppose they have the same mental insecurity that makes bullies bullies.

    --
    Mexico: 100% conservative's America now!
  289. J. Edgar would be proud. by Rambo+Tribble · · Score: 1

    Thomas Jefferson? Not so much.

  290. Re:peaceful protesters? by silentbrad · · Score: 1

    Maybe it's just differences in education in different parts of the country (although, considering the political leaning of Alberta, and especially the town I grew up in, it was probably just my specific teachers), but I was taught that Socialism and Communism are not the same - Socialism being a combination of Capitalism and Communism using the selected best bits of each to form a mixed economy. And I agree (if I'm reading your "ruin things" correctly) that it's too bad that more people can't see Harper and the Tories he's leading for what they are. Although, with only 40% of the popular vote, I guess most of us tried to get rid of them and screwed ourselves through split-votes.

  291. Re:peaceful protesters? by nbauman · · Score: 1

    Please be advised that I have Mexicans in my close family.

    There are a great variety of Mexicans, ranging from great scientists http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1995/molina.html to criminal mobs.

    Immigration is a tricky balance and is usually unfair. I know a lot of immigrants. I don't mind if they come to this country, contribute to it and benefit from it. But some immigrant groups have strong lobbies, and are showered with government handouts as soon as they get here. I don't mind that too much, because that's what it took for every immigrant group to succeed. I want to see that same safety net for people in general.

    I do mind when they turn around and create a myth that they did it all themselves -- and use that myth to destroy the social safety net that has given the same benefits to other Americans. I don't hate the 1%. I do hate the 1% who got rich and are trying to make it worse for the rest of us.

  292. You missed the point by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    which is the narrative. Their Narrative was that unless you are part of the 1%, they aren't going to take your money, because you don't have any (the 1% has all the money). Whether you agree with the narrative or not, it was an effective one.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:You missed the point by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Effective? Maybe, there are a lot of idiots.

      Workable. LOL. No.

      Goalpost move noted.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  293. Re:Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They just wanted candidates they could fap to.

  294. Re:The problem with protests. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ohio State was "Non Violent"!

  295. Protest by NewYork · · Score: 1

    I think the best way to protest is http://www.lietaer.com/2010/03/the-worgl-experiment/

  296. Anything but peaceful by rhalstead · · Score: 1

    The OWSers were anything but peaceful. They also appeared to know little about what they were protesting and even less about remedies. Their encampments were cesspools of filth and crime, contrary to the observations of a few. They did more harm to creating a climate for change than good and in general displayed a lack of knowledge about the issues or decision making. They were the epitome of those not suited for college.

  297. Re:peaceful protesters? by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    All communists are socialists, not all socialists are communists.

    Your teachers taught you wrong, simple as that.

    What is practiced in most western nations is capitalism with a welfare state. AKA mixed system.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  298. Government THUGS at work by Troy+from+Montana · · Score: 1

    I see that picture with the local GOONS all suited up with billy clubs and it pisses me off. Maybe groups like OWS should invest in gas masks and riot shields along with other NON-WEAPONS purchases to become a more resistant and stubborn force. As they are now... any wanna be reserve cop can push them around. TOTALLY INEFFECTIVE TIME WASTERS!

  299. Re:peaceful protesters? by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    You were the one who first mentioned violence. Smoke less pot, your shot term memory is shot.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  300. Re:peaceful protesters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Peaceful my ass. They rape women and don't think twice about it!!! They are monsters!

  301. Re:peaceful protesters? by sjames · · Score: 1

    I MENTIONED a mildly violent act (really more of a deeply insulting act) that another might have felt tempted towards and suggested that it would have been poor form to employ it. He then volunteered that he brought along friends to act in an intimidating manner for the duration of the tirade and THEN uttered a direct (if not terribly credible) threat against me.

    Do read more carefully!

  302. But what does Fox News say? by cundare · · Score: 1

    Actually, the talking point that the Clear Channel talkshow entertainers have long been hammering is that the Federal government, i.e., Barack Obama hisself, covertly created and supports the OWS movemen, which promotes Socialist government policies, in order to counter the threat posed by the brilliant minds of the Tea Party. What, now you're saying no?? Next thing they'll be trying to tell us that the President isn't even a Muslim.

  303. Error by neoshroom · · Score: 1

    Marxist AGW scientists? #include "irony.h"

    error: conflicting declaration or overloaded equality operator /usr/include/logic/irony.h

    --
    Big apple, new Yorik, undig it, something's unrotting in Edenmark.
  304. Intelligence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too many people lost too much money for there to be any effective intelligence on Wall St. ... or perhaps it is an ethical failing.

  305. Re:peaceful protesters? by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

    I mean, considering my current and last couple of roommate are lawyers, and I (demonstrably) like discussion..... You can suppose and doubt all day long if it makes you feel better.

  306. Re:peaceful protesters? by nbauman · · Score: 1

    That's the law.

  307. Re:Who Cares? by lucm · · Score: 1

    Sarah Palin looks like a dentist's secretary and Michelle Bachmann reminds me of Shannen Doherty's mother in 90210, but overall it's a lot better than Hillary Clinton or Nancy Pelosi. I wonder what would happen if the Democrats had really hot female candidates.

    It's like Star Wars (the original movies); Carrie Fisher is okay-ish but I suspect that if they had picked a real knock-out for this role instead of a pouter my Star Wars experience would have been totally different. Natalie Portman did a lot to make the new movies easier to watch, if they had picked Drew Barrymore or Whoopi Goldberg I would have been bothered by Jar Jar Binks a lot more.

    Looks matter in show-business, and that includes politics.

    --
    lucm, indeed.
  308. Re:peaceful protesters? by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

    (Shrug) You're the one who seems to be saying that it's ethical to "occupy" a public or semi-private space.

    Is it, or isn't it? If it is, then the question becomes, who is entitled to do so?

  309. Re:peaceful protesters? by NotSanguine · · Score: 1

    (Shrug) You're the one who seems to be saying that it's ethical to "occupy" a public or semi-private space.

    Is it, or isn't it? If it is, then the question becomes, who is entitled to do so?

    I don't "seem" to be saying it. I do say it. And vehemently too. I'm also saying that not only should this be encouraged, but that we, as a society, should welcome it. Please let me know if you'd like me to clarify anything else for you.

    And best wishes for 2013. I hope it is a happy, productive and *free* year for you.

    --
    No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
  310. Re:'peaceful protesters'???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mods: Your disagreement with facts is not a reason to mod down.

    If you think his "facts" are only "opinions", then so are yours. At least he provided sources, even if you disagree with their editorial bias.

  311. Re:Really? Peaceful Protests? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mods: Your disagreement with facts is not a reason to mod down.

    If you think his "facts" are only "opinions", then so are yours. And these sources, unlike the ones provided in another post higher, include non-conservative ones.

  312. So Wall Street selling America out... by ibsteve2u · · Score: 1

    So Wall Street selling America's technology and manufacturing infrastructure/defensive arsenal/war reserve to the communists in the PRC directly (for example, Bain Capital is a leader in the field) is "OK", but Americans exercising their right to free speech and assembly is a "no-no"?

    Hey, NCIS/FBI? Think about it: Why bother? There isn't any America left to protect when the only thing that defines treason is whether or not you're making money at it.

    --
    Orwell: "In a Time of Universal Deceit, telling the Truth is a Revolutionary Act"
  313. Re:peaceful protesters? by Kyusaku+Natsume · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the reply. I'm mexican myself, and get amazed at the ones I met that formed my opinion of the conservative mexican-americans that I stated in the GP post. Personally, after getting and education thanks to the mexican, US, european and soviet taxpayer in a UN funded school I'm really grateful for the chance they gave me, and I'm sad that the people that gets the most to lose in the current environment doesn't want to give a chance to the poor kids that wont get a chance to improve their lives by honest means without community help. If not for that chance I would have ended cleaning windshields or in the mobs like many of the kids of my old neighborhood.

    We don't live or progress in a vacuum. For me is even more baffling that the american conservatives are so individualistic when the US Constitution begins with "We, the people of the United States.." not "I, the ruler of..." and the name of the country itself indicates an union of free self governed communities, not an empire.

    Best regards.

    --
    Mexico: 100% conservative's America now!
  314. Re:peaceful protesters? by nbauman · · Score: 1

    It's a puzzle why people act against their own interests. http://www.credoaction.com/comics/2010/09/the-tea-crumpets-party/ It is the job of psychologists to figure out why.

    I recently read about one psychological mechanism that may be operating.

    In normal functioning societies, people take care of each other and have a responsibility for each other.

    Sometimes, people see others in need and don't want to meet their responsibility. Or they don't want to face the fact that they too could wind up in the same situation. They respond by finding some way in which the person in need is responsible or at fault for his situation. Of course it's not logical, but right-wingers aren't logical.

  315. Re: Who Cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Zucotti park wasn't planned. I was there on day one

    Why? What did you think it would accomplish?

  316. OWS couple in Greenwich arrested with explosives by Shred303 · · Score: 1

    A Greenwich Village couple, affiliated with the Occupy Wall Street movement, was arrested yesterday for allegedly having a cache of weapons and bomb making materials in their apartment. A detective discovered a plastic container with seven grams of a white chemical powder called HMTD, which is so powerful, cops evacuated several nearby buildings. http://newmediajournal.us/indx.php/item/7929

  317. Re:peaceful protesters? by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

    Permission was never to my knowledge granted to allow multi-day residency of the park by anyone, nor to allow overnight camping.

    If you can find in the agreement where that was allowed, I think everyone would be on your side on this. Fact is, people are trying to conflate "access" with "completely unrestricted access"; they are not the same thing.

  318. Re:peaceful protesters? by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zuccotti_Park
    "In building this plaza, there was an agreement it be open 24 hours a day," Kelly said. "The owners have put out regulations [about what's allowed in park]. The owners will have to come in and direct people not to do certain things."

    A spokesperson for Brookfield Properties, the owner of the park, expressed concern: "Zuccotti Park is intended for the use and enjoyment of the general public for passive recreation. We are extremely concerned with the conditions that have been created by those currently occupying the park and are actively working with the City of New York to address these conditions and restore the park to its intended purpose."[17]

  319. Re:peaceful protesters? by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

    Why dont you read up here; as suspected, the agreement did NOT provide for "unrestricted access", and in fact the owner's right to restrict certain activities were upheld:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zuccotti_Park
    "In building this plaza, there was an agreement it be open 24 hours a day," [NYC police commissioner] Kelly said. "The owners have put out regulations [about what's allowed in park]. The owners will have to come in and direct people not to do certain things."

    Starting at roughly 1 am local time on November 15, NYPD began clearing Zuccotti Park.[20][21] After a court order was released allowing them to return,[22] police refused to allow them back in. Later that day, the New York Supreme Court that issued the injunction ruled against allowing protesters to camp or sleep in Zuccotti Park.

    My roommates aside, you are free to argue with the NYC police commissioner, the owners of the park, and the NY supreme court, but I would advise against it.

  320. Re:peaceful protesters? by nbauman · · Score: 1

    I'll let the National Lawyer's Guild argue it for me.

  321. Re:OWS couple in Greenwich arrested with explosive by WorBlux · · Score: 1

    So 7grams of a substance too unstable to be particularly useful in a bomb in now a cache? If a redneck did this it's hardly make the local news, much less national news.