it's pretty excessive for cock-fighting too, in all honesty.But yeah, my gripe is that failure to disperse is handled in the same line as failure to disperse a riot. Especially when other misdemeanors have about a $100 charge with them. Seems excessive. And the definition of a riot seems pretty suspect. And of course, there's also the issue of some of them being held for a few days while being processed.[Edited on December 6, 2011 at 11:02 PM. Reason : ]
12/6/2011 10:59:49 PM
^again, do we have documented proof that they indeed used this 'disperse from a riot' charge in these cases?or are you assuming based on our tww-research of an LA county PDF that we have 100% identified the chargethat's still an assumption at this point until we have evidence of the actual charge and not just a media report or 'tww research'
12/7/2011 8:12:41 AM
^^, ^^^Yeah, a lot of those amounts seem pretty insane. I couldn't find any statutory amounts for NC (apparently bail is always at the discretion of the judge), but some counties have guidelines. In one case, I found that Alamance county recommends that bail for a Class 2 Misdemeanor (failure to disperse) be capped at $500, with the judge capable of going above or below that amount as they see fit.That said, I imagine that bail amount for such a charge in LA is based more on the fact that LA has a history of rioting (real honest to god riots) and that when someone is charged under 409, they're charged with failure to disperse from a riot, not failure to disperse from an unlawful gathering.There's also the fact I assume that there is a lot more money flowing about LA than NC so some of the bail amounts are probably set as high as they are because of that.^ Until evidence surfaces to the contrary, or you find another failure to disperse charge in the statutes, it's a reasonable assumption that the charge listed in the paper is the charge we found, and the charge they faced. But both you and JHC seem really hung up on the word riot. The law, as I have said before, covers more than just riots.
12/7/2011 9:45:10 AM
^yeh i'm basically rhetorically asking him that because he's being purposefully ignorant of your statement that the charge covers all unlawful assembly including riots.he doesn't like that OWS is technically defined as a riot and therefore mentally clears these criminals of their charge since he doesn't agree with the definition of 'riot' in LA, and therefore keeps prodding the term.
12/7/2011 10:44:49 AM
haha some protesters are starting to use this as an opportunity to pass out resumes-some are getting employed ON WALL STREET while their compatriots call them traitors and sellouts.but i thought getting jobs was one of their objectives?what a bunch of clueless goons- kudos to those who used this as a springboard though.(HLN is really enjoying this story today- made better with robin meade's chest)
12/7/2011 11:05:32 AM
Occupy our Homes is awesome! After all the people who took on huge mortgages (that banks WERE being predatory about as well) on tiny salaries should be absolved from their stupidity completely!!
12/7/2011 1:29:29 PM
^^ Many occupiers do have jobs already. Sure there is a general goal of increasing employment overall, but working for the scum that created the mess we are in is tough for some to swallow.
12/7/2011 1:49:21 PM
so who replaces the scum?
12/7/2011 2:08:32 PM
12/7/2011 3:06:08 PM
thinkprogress / huffingtonpost / nytimes / russian tv seem to be your main news outlets.<pass>this is like me refusing to read anything but drudge report for 100% of my news sources.
12/7/2011 4:28:30 PM
We will probably never know how many of those foreclosure documents are fraudulent eitherhttp://news.yahoo.com/robo-signed-mortgage-docs-date-back-1990s-213439564.html
12/7/2011 4:30:16 PM
christ almighty
12/7/2011 4:42:18 PM
12/7/2011 5:39:23 PM
12/7/2011 6:08:49 PM
You're right. The business savvy banker who gave a mortgage to the bus driver on a fixed income had absolutely ZERO fiduciary responsibility to disclose the details of the mortgage. Why do that, when he can just turn around, bet against the borrower, and cash-in with his insider information when he knows that person will be unable to make the payment.Oh, and if they're poor, illiterate, and foreign and can be convinced to take a sub-prime loan even when they qualified for better loan, fuck 'em, more money for the banks.[Edited on December 7, 2011 at 6:31 PM. Reason : ]
12/7/2011 6:15:34 PM
Can you tell me which of these banks gave out subprime loans and then "bet against the borrowers" as you put it? Selling securitized mortgages to investors is not the same as betting against them. In fact, the lenders were probably the hardest hit when the bottom fell out (followed closely by the Wall Street banks which bought the toxic mortgages), since they couldn't unload their current balance of CDOs and had to write them off.[Edited on December 7, 2011 at 9:28 PM. Reason : 2]
12/7/2011 9:09:21 PM
fair point. The lenders sold off the mortgages to wall st, who then sold them and bet against them (or, that's my understanding). But some of the original lenders, like Wells Fargo were bailed out, so they didn't really get hit when the bottom fell out. In fact, some were rewarded for their predatory lending.So when NyM says:
12/7/2011 9:56:18 PM
so can anybody tell me if OWS has yet to make an ultimate goal?why don't they fight against fracking or something. i'd join them then. but no. they have to keep begging for entitlements, and free shit that backfires in your face.hell, tell them to argue your points on here JHC. you're finally starting to make some sense. tell your buddies on the streets to follow suit and you might make it worth your while. no lie.
12/7/2011 11:21:38 PM
As long as OWS keeps away from associating with the left then it is a very productive movement.The minute they get behind the evil Obama empire they will die immediately because no one will take them seriously anymore.I'm amazed that people actually think these riots will fizzle out quickly. This is only the beginning. I have no idea if OWS will be what we're talking about a few years from now. My guess would be that they fall in line with the democrats in 2012 and that after that we never hear from them again.But they will be replaced by something much stronger. It's hard to start a sustainable movement, but it's much harder to kill it. I don't think the American people will tolerate a lot of police brutality or assassinations, honestly.
12/8/2011 12:21:01 AM
If OWS dropped all of the leftist hippy horseshit and focused strictly on undue and dirty corporate influence in Washington, and framed the argument at least from time to time as a promotion of capitalism in the sense that it would free the markets to work properly, as opposed to the crony capitalism often in place now, then I think they would gain a lot more traction by picking up support across most of the political spectrum.The problem is that's not what OWS is really about, despite what some of its supporters claim. It's a populist, far-leftist movement that happens to prominently be focused on one or two legitimate points (that they then approach in entirely the wrong way).(I mean, I'm sure there are some individual OWS people who are more or less what I describe in the first paragraph...I'm talking about the problems of the broader, collective group.)
12/8/2011 12:40:29 AM
12/8/2011 8:14:23 AM
Good thing the NCSU school of management students applauded Wachovia when John Stumpf spoke:http://blogs.newsobserver.com/business/wachovia-to-pay-5875-million-in-settlementWachovia Bank, now Wells Fargo, will pay $58.75 million to North Carolina and 25 other states as part of a multistate settlement for its part in a bid rigging scheme that defrauded local governments, hospitals and schools, Attorney General Roy Cooper said Thursday. The settlement resolves allegations that Wachovia defrauded cities and counties, schools, colleges, hospitals and other entities that purchased a type of investment through the bank called municipal bond derivatives.Wachovia will pay $54.5 million in restitution to affected municipalities, school districts and not-for-profit organizations. In addition, the bank will pay a $1.25 million civil penalty and $3 million for fees and costs of the investigation to the settling states. Under the settlement, governments and non-profits that were affected by the scheme will get money back, including Barton College, Blue Ridge Health System, the City of Charlotte, Dare County, Orange County, Cumberland County, Fayetteville Memorial Hospital, the Goldsboro Housing Authority and the RDU Airport Authority. The states’ settlement is part of a global settlement worth $148 million that Wachovia is entering into with the U.S. Department of Justice, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and the Internal Revenue Service, according the state's AG's office.Read more: http://blogs.newsobserver.com/business/wachovia-to-pay-5875-million-in-settlement#ixzz1fyHRkHXr[Edited on December 8, 2011 at 2:15 PM. Reason : .]
12/8/2011 2:01:26 PM
This probably deserves it's own thread, but what a completely and totally fucked statistic.http://www.salon.com/2011/09/29/2012_gop_money/
12/14/2011 1:23:40 PM
I was on a job site yesterday and a homeless guy that we'd previously paid to do odd jobs walked by.He said that he'd been camping out with Occupy Raleigh.
12/14/2011 1:27:17 PM
12/14/2011 2:16:54 PM
is OWS still going on?
12/14/2011 2:48:42 PM
12/14/2011 3:38:38 PM
So the only way to satisfy you is to have a society without money.I don't see any other way to solve the fundamental problem you present. It takes energy and knowledge and power(aka work?) to become president. (Just like any other job???)We just transfer resources and knowledge through credits called 'money'.
12/14/2011 4:05:07 PM
12/14/2011 10:02:45 PM
"remember when that one democrat was paid out to vote for the oil pipeline since the oil company offered him and his family so much money?"just an example. but shit. if this is happening.... we need to research the fucks we are voting into office and not just vote in some schmuck who will sell his soul and the nations for a few bucks for him and his family
12/14/2011 11:54:25 PM
12/14/2011 11:56:55 PM
12/15/2011 10:13:10 AM
hey str8foolish... lets do an experiment... i like xbox. pretend like you like playstation str8 and hate xbox, and let's just replace nouns and have a lexical party lol.QED: if you don't 100% agree with str8foolish he resorts to simple childish insults. i guess that's because of his extreme confidence on the issues. lol
12/15/2011 10:16:23 AM
A bloo blooo blooooooooooooooo ;_;
12/15/2011 10:39:00 AM
Need a reason for the existence of Occupy?http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2011/12/fbi-estimates-80-of-mortgage-fraud-involved-industry-insiders/
12/15/2011 11:39:23 AM
That the managers decided to cut the fraud detection budget is grounds to fire them, but is not fraud by itself. The federal government cuts its own medicare fraud detection department on occasion, should members of congress be arrested?
12/15/2011 11:46:12 AM
and what if fraudulent lending was a part of the business plan?
12/15/2011 11:53:27 AM
Then arrest and charge with fraud.
12/15/2011 1:24:49 PM
and wouldn't you agree that, given the 80% figure in the link above, as well as the links I posted a few posts above (75% of mortgages on the books were fraudulent/invalid) that the Department of Justice should be peeling back the facade of every major bank in the US, most especially those that received bailout funds? Shouldn't we be hiring more investigators to comb through every transaction since the mid-90's? Its unfortunate that this is not how our system works.Instead the SEC tiptoes around and sometimes slaps people on the wrist. It handed out one of its largest fines ever to wachovia/wells fargo, but most of the analysis I've seen put wells fargo still making 3x the settlement amount from their dealings.Two things:-This is basically Obama's Iraq war moment IMO; atleast until the DOJ gets off its fat ass and actually attempts to bring evidence against someone (I realize they've tried to prosecute one person so far, but thats laughable). Its a concious decision by his administration to only use the SEC (which has no bite, business as usual etc) instead of sending some of these crooks to jail. So why in the hell are people that are anti-obama at nearly every turn not bringing this up constantly, but are instead all "nothing to see here, just a few bad apples"? Is it because they are more pro-business than anti-obama? A hard choice to make, for sure-Can we finally admit that atleast some (if not a majority) of the responsibility for the crisis belongs to the banks? Its becoming increasingly obvious that there were huge incentives for them to extend shitty loans (both incentives for executives and the mortgage industry in general). eyewall41's link says it more eloquently then I:
12/15/2011 3:06:20 PM
12/15/2011 3:45:47 PM
12/15/2011 4:36:59 PM
12/15/2011 4:53:19 PM
12/15/2011 5:42:06 PM
12/15/2011 5:51:53 PM
12/15/2011 6:10:41 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xnx-MiRtngA[Edited on December 17, 2011 at 8:29 AM. Reason : ]
12/17/2011 8:13:28 AM
Lonesnark you have a chance to redeem yourself. Stop standing up for banks and corporate interests. You can make that decision whenever you feel comfortable.
12/17/2011 10:30:37 PM
^^His remarks about the internet after the 19min mark are great. I'm gonna be dropping "intellectual ghettos" in conversations all the time now [Edited on December 19, 2011 at 12:43 PM. Reason : .]
12/19/2011 12:39:55 PM
How is this still going on? How have these "occupiers" been supporting themselves financially while they lazily protest for reform?
12/24/2011 12:23:08 PM
most of them have jobs they just occupy in shifts.pretty obvious really...I didn't think anyone was dumb enough to really believe that the jokes (While funny) were real about them all being jobless.
12/24/2011 12:39:55 PM