Now for something I've never done before: a double-inquiry to a nested quotation.ranyilliams said:It is very refreshing to see more people on the escapist that take my point of view. The system we live in is beyond broken, it needs to be changed.Harley Duke said:I feel it's a movement that's misunderstood mostly because it refuses to explain what it's all about to the (loud) people demanding answers.
So very true! XDCM156 said:Heck, one of my friends dressed up as a Occupier for Halloween
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Todd Ralph said:The people and movement are ridiculous. The majority sound like spoiled rich kids and idiots who either never read the fine print line or insisted on living out of their means. Both of which I have absolutely no pity for.
Vicarious Vangaurd said:A bunch of self-entitled hipsters that don't actually know what they are talking about, but are rather upset about it. The real problem is that they are occupying Wall Street when Wall Street can't fix the economy (or socioeconomic tiers that are a part of pretty much all society) any more than the protesters can.
Actually, thats ALL wrong. They have no jobs, is the first one. Simply put, the MAN [which in this case is coporations] control such a large amount of wealth and don't put out any jobs. So many people are out of jobs and homeless or even worse because of it. There are not many jobs out there that will hire people, very little will pay well, and mostly fire people off because having a key team of 7 or 8 people working a store is better then 12. If people could get a job and somehow nail it down, its may be better, you probably won't move from your position. And then are stuck back in the lower or maybe middle class if you get lucky.isometry said:The occupy movement is a sad confirmation of the dismal expectations I had for my generation. Moral subjectivity in the form of "whatever you want is true for you" and "everyone's opinion matters" is a road that leads to nothing.
Writers in past ages have analyzed the corrupting influence of wealth on government, they've described/predicted the problems we are in and outlined great solutions. The occupiers don't read these books, because they are lazy and use the excuse that all ideas are equally true / deserve equal weight to justify their laziness. Reading books is hard, it's easier to believe that ideas pulled out of their uneducated asses are just as good.
They can't really do anything. I bet they don't trust it to hold up in court or in the judicial system for long. All they can really do is sit and wait for it to change. Hell, we have constantly seen our Judicial system swayed towards corporations time and time again. Even happened a few times with the Protect IP act, to where internet professionals wanted to talk about making the bill fair, and were shunned out. Theres so very little you can do that won't be completely changed. Its not the governments fault for not supplying jobs, its business's for not doing so.FaceFaceFace said:The problems they are bringing up are legitimate. In America only 5% of people ever change social class (determined by tax bracket, I think). Rich people's kids invariably end up rich, middle-class kids end up middle-class, and poor and impoverished kids end up poor and impoverished, through no fault of their own.
That said, the protesters are just standing around yelling about this stuff. What are they trying to change? How do they think rich people who work hard for their money (I never said they don't work hard, just that working hard doesn't guarantee you success or even ends-meat) are going to fix these problems, even if they wanted to? I don't understand what they hope to accomplish by occupying anything.
I did say "some of these people", but yeah that is pretty blatant generalization...Acrisius said:I'd just like to point out that there's a difference between the majority and the vocal minority. Peace out.
I ask every occupy person this. 'You wanted to raise awareness. Okay, we're aware, now what?' and none of them can tell me.lord.jeff said:My main problem with them is the lack of a clear goal, if members of the group starting petitioning for specific bills to pass or against certain laws then I could get behind them but right now it's just a lot of people yelling "we want things to be better, make it so for us."
Zachary Amaranth said:If you're not paying attention, that's probably exactly how it sounds.Todd Ralph said:The majority sound like spoiled rich kids and idiots who either never read the fine print line or insisted on living out of their means.
You should probably learn the tiers of force that the Police use. Mace is right above verbal. and below pulling out the night sticks. If you are told by the police to disperse and refuse then they will mace you its protocol. There isn't anything they can really do because they are going to be reprimanded for not following protocol. If the protests take place on public property and are deemed to disrupt the ability for the public to function they will be asked to disperse and if not they will be maced. These protocols have been in effect for a lot longer than you may think but apparently when it comes to people protesting they are all of a sudden a bad thing.Harley Duke said:But something we're doing is working, because you see police deployed to "keep the public safe" from us. You can look on YouTube for videos of peaceful protesters being approached and subsequently maced by police for the serious crime of "just sitting there." Why does just sitting in public to protest economic disparity and frustration with a corporate government present a significant danger to anyone, significant enough to warrant such a heavy police presence and such violent reactions? Clearly we're disturbing someone deeply; someone who controls the police perhaps, who isn't so interested in our cause. Napoleon wouldn't have sent in his dogs if he didn't think Snowball was a menace somehow, right?