10/11/2011 12:17:11 AM
10/11/2011 12:39:31 AM
10/11/2011 1:21:32 AM
Japan must be running real lean and efficiently since they've kept the fat off the payroll for 20 years. One might say that the vast majority of the military is made up of fat since the military is a jobs program for people who would not be that competitive in the private market. Is there really any difference between someone with an english degree on unemployment and someone with an english degree in the military? In both cases, we are spending money to get negative returns. Luckily, we are about to slash defense spending.Productivity doesn't grow by cutting jobs. Productivity grows by developing technology that produces more output per unit of input. The technology develops through investment. In fact, you are more likely to develop a technology when you hire more people, not fewer.The cutting back that is going on is simply to clean up balance sheets. It is not to free up money for future investment. Money is not a problem. Credit is freely available at low rates to anyone who wants to invest, but companies don't make investment decisions based on credit availability. They make investment decisions based on expected revenue. Since no one expects to sell anything, no one is investing in anything (other than the stock market, which has gone up while income has remained flat).
10/11/2011 1:34:41 AM
^^That's the kind of silly shit that will rightfully doom this movement to comical footnote status.You want to demand that businesses primarily not primarily be in the business of making money?Also, if someone wants to get a history degree or an English degree, then that's great. We need that. Just recognize that highschool teacher and editor are not jobs that, on average, pay as much as engineer or chemist. Hard science and engineering are fucking hard, for one thing--the supply is lower because there are fewer people that can do it. Also, it's a little more important that the bridge doesn't collapse than it is for the sentence structure to flow well. Finally, corporations haven't "tricked" anyone--nobody's laying claim to the most noble pursuit, the most valuable ones (in terms of dollars) are pretty well established and not a secret.
10/11/2011 1:35:05 AM
10/11/2011 1:47:43 AM
^^ Productivity isn't up. Where are you getting that impression from?
10/11/2011 1:56:10 AM
10/11/2011 1:56:30 AM
10/11/2011 2:18:54 AM
The solution, I imagine, would be to analyze what factors were in play during the mid 90's when unemployment was at a record low of 5%.That's to put it bluntly. We've done it before. I don't know the specifics that led to that, but the case-study is already out there somewhere.Of course, all of this is predicated on the O-man growing a pair and saying "fuck the haters"
10/11/2011 2:25:25 AM
10/11/2011 9:13:15 AM
I'd say spending levels became out of hand once immigration went out of control and we funded a few wars.
10/11/2011 9:51:33 AM
10/11/2011 1:56:17 PM
^ Not a terrible metaphor, although clearly not perfect. Rebelling against slave owners will (and did) get no where. Given that slavery was not possible with the help of the police, what was needed was to rebel against the legislature which wrote unjust laws on the slave-owners behalf. Similarly, rebelling against wall street is not going to accomplish anything. What is needed is to rebel against the legislature which has written unjust laws, such as corporate welfare and wall street bailouts.
10/11/2011 3:24:03 PM
The point of that picture wasn't to compare OWS to slavery (that's absurd), it was just meant to point out the stupidity of the argument in the original picture. Being able to afford cheap Chinese crap doesn't void anyone's complaints about corporations. It's like when a member of the right argues that the poor don't need any help because most of them have a refrigerator.
10/11/2011 3:41:59 PM
And I told you your complaint was not with corporations, but with congress.
10/11/2011 5:17:56 PM
Yeah, but the dirty little secret that some in this thread seem to be ignoring is that the current incarnation of the Republican party would cease to exist without corporate money. It doesn't take much polling research to conclude that the quickest way to get elected in this country is to at least pretend to be progressive. A majority of Americans want things like universal healthcare, higher taxes on the rich, more stimulus spending, less war, and even to legalize pot. The only thing keeping this from happening are the "true believers" in Washington who still cling to the belief that prosperity can only be achieved by allowing the top 1% to accumulate unlimited wealth. So they oppose everything contrary to that goal, which includes progressive taxation, entitlements of any kind, and regulations on private business.The only thing keeping these people from being completely run out of Washington is the millions of dollars that continue getting thrown their way by corporations (namely financial services and health care), who want to keep the status quo. Granted, they also throw their money behind some Democrats, the so called "Blue Dogs" who are really just Republican doppelgangers. So yeah, my complaint is with congress, but it's with the part of congress that wouldn't be there if not for corporations essentially bank rolling their campaigns to ensure nothing ever changes.
10/11/2011 5:43:30 PM
And you'd still vote for Obama over Ron Paul? Holy shit, man. Corporations don't donate shit to Ron Paul because they know they won't get kickbacks. They'd rather send it over to Perry, Romney, or Obama, because they'll get a return on their investment.I get that you think Ron Paul would turn the country into a theocracy, but you can bet your ass that his supporters would turn on him in a heartbeat if he made abortion/same sex marriage his priority. I know I would.
10/11/2011 5:58:50 PM
In case anyone is unclear as to why people are protesting:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2X9tkKVDQdwAnd a word from your friendly neighborhood Marines:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0aaTGsGdp4c
10/11/2011 6:04:39 PM
^2nd video..FORCED into student loan debt?2 degrees?Full time job?Can't pay bills?PROTEST YOURSELF YOU FUCKING IDIOT
10/11/2011 6:46:39 PM
10/11/2011 7:01:31 PM
From page five:
10/11/2011 7:20:13 PM
10/11/2011 7:23:13 PM
well obama's job bill wont be helping them in the near future!
10/11/2011 7:29:03 PM
^^^There's a significant difference (both legally and logically) between journalistic reporting, whether via citizen journalism like youtube or CNN and edited, scripted, and staged programming like Jersey Shore.The first amendment sets a pretty clear precedent for the right to a free press, and only a very few states still have both party consent laws for recording and those laws are being constantly eroded when it comes to interactions in public spaces or between private citizens and public officials in the course of their functions as public servants.I can appreciate not wanting to be filmed, but when you explicitly put yourself in the center of a very public event that is newsworthy you should expect that there is a possibility you will be filmed or recorded. If you don't want your identity to be public then obscure your face/voice.
10/12/2011 3:18:58 AM
I'm very curious at the Marine's credibility, had to fight for his GI bill? Barely covered his expenses? Does not compute. If he served at least 36 months or was medically discharged, he would have gotten full compensation under Chapter 33 of the GI bill
10/12/2011 6:04:05 AM
posted this in the chit chat thread, but it probably makes more sense to put it in here. this thing is gonna come to a head soon, methinks.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rR3TvDZA2kEhttp://youtu.be/bgtFFQNddwIhttp://www.boston.com/Boston/metrodesk/2011/10/boston-mayor-says-sympathizes-with-protesters-but-they-can-tie-the-city/GFmOU1qwApiGhBNsNSzMIL/index.htmlhttp://rt.com/news/usa-protests-revolution-reform-063/http://rt.com/usa/news/occupy-boston-pramas-immortal-629and yeah, the last one is a russian news station. interesting to see their take on the whole thing though, those shifty commies.[Edited on October 12, 2011 at 7:24 AM. Reason : ]
10/12/2011 7:16:36 AM
Al Jazeera's take on the top 1%, deficit plan, party politics:http://youtu.be/XdVODFombco
10/12/2011 5:02:26 PM
Al Jazeera got some great cinematorgaphers on board, apparently! Very nice
10/12/2011 5:57:32 PM
It's sad that i'm getting more quality news out of the state-run media of Russia and from Al Jazeera.If this shit was going on in the middle east, Anderson Cooper would have already put on his smallest shirt and headed out to the streets with his hand-held camera. Only in America could an 80s pop-icon/baby rapist be headlining the news a full year after he died.[Edited on October 12, 2011 at 6:19 PM. Reason : ]
10/12/2011 6:18:19 PM
So do conservatives railing against this movement support the corrupt banksters who tanked the economy without consequence?
10/12/2011 10:10:03 PM
No.
10/12/2011 10:30:31 PM
No. I hate all the hippies/hipsters and others that have leached onto this movement and further convoluted an already unclear message.
10/12/2011 10:35:35 PM
I really don't think the message is all that unclear when you look at the basics of it.
10/12/2011 10:46:39 PM
It's not, but the current media narrative is that there isn't an overriding message and that the Occupy movement is just an assortment of complainers with completely different agendas (if any agenda at all).Its the sort of rhetoric that helps the "STFU and GBTW" shouts sound better.
10/12/2011 11:02:23 PM
Umm, it's the "media narrative" in the same sense that the date at the top of today's paper is the "media narrative" of today's date.
10/12/2011 11:49:39 PM
Basically, their demands are retarded.If they got their way, no one would lend any money, and there would be no incentive to invest. So there would literally be no economic growth.kind of like Cuba, lol
10/12/2011 11:51:47 PM
The basics as I see it are:The current system has failed. Both parties and bought and paid for by the special interest and in the end we are handed illusions of change when nothing of consequence actually gets done.Corporate personhood and decisions like Citizens United will only make the above far worse.The endless and useless wars continue. The money spent on these ventures has cost us a great deal at home. (For example this kind of money could have been spent on modernizing our infrastructure or movement toward more sustainable/renewable energy).There has been no real accountability for the banksters who tanked the economy in the first place. Not a single indictment has come out of the 2008 crash, or from contributing factors to it.Income disparity between the top few and the rest of us is worse than ever with middle and working class wages in relative decline (the lost decade). The top 1% has seen their incomes rise at record rates during this time.I fully realize there are some demands on the list that are just outright idiotic and unrealistic but these basics are where a lot of the anger is coming from. Hopefully some of that crap can be weeded out in the end. We can worry about working conditions in the organic cat food factory later.
10/13/2011 8:43:43 AM
^ So, other than ending the wars, which I suspect everyone here would agree with, what would you have us do, policy wise? Its too late to not bail out the banks. But we sure do keep bailing them out. We just bailed out the Federal Financing Bank over Solyndra.
10/13/2011 10:24:10 AM
^^This
10/13/2011 10:26:56 AM
cnn
10/13/2011 10:37:24 AM
So why rally in New York?
10/13/2011 11:32:31 AM
Convenient. A lot of those types of people live in New York. And a bus ride to Washington would be too expensive.
10/13/2011 11:40:50 AM
How to fake an Egyptian Riot inside the United StatesBy: George Soros1. George Soros Soros was actually convicted of insider trading in France. His opinion moves markets. He is one of the most powerful people in the world entirely due to his ability to get other people to part with their money. His tentacles are everywhere. He uses numerous foundations and associations to keep money flowing and spread around. It’s no secret that George Soros is fond of deceit and subterfuge. He is a radical in the mold of Saul Alinsky. For all of the nonsensical blathering he does about how he can make the world a better place, he has no real plan to do any such thing. Soros loses interest in a project after the demo phase is over. According to Horowitz and Poe, Soros candidly admits he finds destruction easier than creation.2. Soros invests 3.5 million in the Tides CenterSoros' Open Society gave grants of $3.5 million to the Tides Center, a San Francisco-based group that acts almost like a clearing house for other donors, directing their contributions to liberal non-profit groups.3. Tides Center sends money to Adbusters to fund the planning of OccupationDisclosure documents also show Tides, which declined comment, gave Adbusters grants of $185,000 from 2001-2010, including nearly $26,000 between 2007-2009.4. Adbusters organizes occupation protests"It came out of these brainstorming sessions we have at Adbusters," Lasn told Reuters, adding they began promoting it online on July 13. "We were inspired by what happened in Tunisia and Egypt and we had this feeling that America was ripe for a Tahrir moment.""We felt there was a real rage building up in America, and we thought that we would like to create a spark which would give expression for this rage."5. Who will 'occupy' our protests in the streets? Of course, hipsters with very little real world experiencehttp://www.adbusters.org/magazine/79/hipster.htmlby adbusters themselves
10/13/2011 11:49:35 AM
http://www.businessinsider.com/what-wall-street-protesters-are-so-angry-about-2011-10?op=1I have no idea about the source, having never looked at Business Insider's website before. Also, they quote the 350x salary difference that I thought had been discredited so of course take this with a grain of salt.
10/13/2011 1:11:00 PM
voter turnout was 40.9% in 2010.....couldn't the 99% just actually vote for candidates who support their agenda. As horrible as the TEA party is/was they voted in candidates who shared their absurd views.so if OWS views are right, surely they can find candidates who support their views. Instead of sleeping in tents like jackasses, why not have voter registration/turnout drives?
10/13/2011 1:21:05 PM
Rally in New York because Wall St. is the hub of the corporate interests that actually run our government. If you haven't noticed there is an Occupy DC as well and I believe there is a major event scheduled for Saturday there as well as cities all over.
10/13/2011 1:35:10 PM
LOLd hard at the OWS demands...
10/13/2011 2:10:28 PM
http://www.economist.com/node/21531481?fsrc=scn/tw/te/ar/theinkblotprotests
10/13/2011 2:13:48 PM
10/13/2011 2:24:59 PM