10/17/2011 10:29:49 PM
10/17/2011 10:30:10 PM
10/17/2011 11:05:44 PM
Refresh my memory, are you a gold standard kind of guy?
10/17/2011 11:12:23 PM
10/17/2011 11:14:35 PM
Good, they don't rate any sympathy.
10/17/2011 11:21:47 PM
10/17/2011 11:32:58 PM
10/18/2011 12:17:03 AM
I kinda have a problem with ending corporate personhood actually. I mean, let's say you work for a company as a mid-level employee, and you get stock options. Or maybe you work for a co-op, and the employees are the owners. Which is all well and good in theory, until someone higher up the chain commits fraud or something, and then you're personally liable for it as a shareholder.We definitely need ways to make the actual decision-makers accountable for their actions, but I'm not convinced that ending corporate personhood is a feasible one.
10/18/2011 12:30:30 AM
Or even necessary. A corporation is an association of people, anyway.The only legitimate gripes these douchebags have are (1) undue corporate political influence, and (2) the complaint championed by Warren Buffett regarding overall tax rates of the very rich (though I don't care for his proposed solution).
10/18/2011 12:48:11 AM
The income disparity between the lower and upper class (or even middle and upper class) isn't a legitimate gripe?
10/18/2011 12:58:17 AM
1% of the population owns 99% of the bootstraps
10/18/2011 1:06:23 AM
10/18/2011 11:37:19 AM
And, in typical fashion, you contribute nothing of value or substance. Stick to chit chat where you actually are smarter than the average poster.
10/18/2011 11:47:33 AM
lmao whatever dude, keep never reading anything of worth on the very subject you continue to dribble on and on and on about. It's not my desire or responsibility to provide you with the education you deny yourself, I have better shit to do. But if you are ever curious why people legitimately disagree with you, you should check up on it. That's MY horse to beat: insisting that people read their own intellectual tradition as a prerequisite to pontificating about it
10/18/2011 11:52:08 AM
Man, I tried to go the Farmers Market here in SLC on Saturday, and Occupy SLC had taken over the whole damn square and appeared to have scared the Farmers Market away Only thing left was the stand selling Thai Tea. God bless the Asians, nothing phases them.In all seriousness though, the whole Occupy movement has already been a massive success. It's managed to completely shift the national political debate from the debt to fixing the inequality in our society. Not bad for a bunch of dirty jobless hippies with no real message.Hell, they actually got Eric Cantor to mention "income inequality". That's like getting a Muslim to say something nice about Israel.[Edited on October 18, 2011 at 12:35 PM. Reason : :]
10/18/2011 12:26:55 PM
^ Good point, the protesters have always maintained that they just want to start a dialogue and now that they have they are showing some sway in the topics of discussion. The political debates are going to start focusing more and more on addressing the Occupy Together protesters' demands because they generally do represent the majority of voters.
10/18/2011 1:49:05 PM
http://rt.com/usa/news/professor-cornel-west-people-037/ I like this guy
10/18/2011 3:41:43 PM
I don't see income inequality as a problem in itself. It's quite conceivable that you could have a great deal of income inequality while still having rising standard of living across the board. The "wealth gap" isn't the problem, it's what drives the wealth gap. If people are getting filthy rich because they invented a product that improves life for most or all people, then I'm fine with that. If people are getting filthy rich because they're getting bailed out (they are and you supported this, Shrike), then that's wrong and it should be stopped immediately.We don't have a steadily rising standard of living in this country. In fact, our standard of living is going down. In every area where the government has tried "stimulus," we get out of control prices. There is no recovery. There will be no recovery until we say enough is enough and allow greed to be curtailed by loss.This movement needs to be about dismantling corporatism, not anger towards the 1%, whoever they may be. We don't want to tear down the Steve Jobs' of the world; they improve our lives. We want to destroy the war profiteers, the bankers, the politicians that give away our money to them, and the justice system that enforces unjust laws.
10/18/2011 3:51:53 PM
West is an evil racist
10/18/2011 4:04:28 PM
^^It's really sad that false equivalence is all your ilk have left to support your incoherent views. Also, Steve Jobs was a pot smoking progressive Democrat who supported Barack Obama. He got fucked by corporate America until they literally begged him to come back so he could save their asses. He wasn't one of you. He would be donating money to OWS if were alive today. Don't use his name to support your intellectually disingenuous bullshit.[Edited on October 18, 2011 at 4:25 PM. Reason : :]
10/18/2011 4:17:24 PM
Actually, Steve Jobs would not be donating anything to anyone, he was anti-charity.Also d357r0y3r is dead on in his explanation what the movement is fundamentally about.
10/18/2011 4:25:01 PM
10/18/2011 4:29:55 PM
we didn't just get a dick in the ass, we're now being lent back our own money with interest. shit's pretty gangsta, when you think about it.
10/18/2011 4:42:48 PM
^^Yeah, but the bailouts weren't the problem, they were a necessary action that was the end result of all that bad bank behavior you mentioned. Without the bailouts, that figurative dick in the ass would have been a jack hammer, and the people responsible would still have kept their profits (actually most of them got away with their bags of money well before the bailouts were even discussed). The behavior that caused it all was motivated by a trend of deregulation, out of whack incentive structure, and absolutely no fear of reprisal. It all comes back to "trickle down economics", the theory that if we let the top 1% accumulate unlimited wealth, eventually prosperity will rain down on all of us. Instead, we ended up with an all new class of aristocracy who control all the wealth, and use it to gain power in politics so they can keep it that way. The wealth gap absolutely is the problem because sound economic policy (progressive taxation, infrastructure investment, universal access to health care and education, strict rules governing finance, etc...) that actually promotes a strong middle class would never allow 450 people to have more wealth combined than 150 million others in the same country.[Edited on October 18, 2011 at 5:07 PM. Reason : :]
10/18/2011 4:59:31 PM
What will happen to Steve Job's wealth?
10/18/2011 5:04:35 PM
I think an even bigger problem is that the deregulation was sold to the American public as a means of competing with third world countries which pretty much endorse slave-labor. It's been a race to the bottom ever since 1980.To think of where this nation might be if it weren't for the Iran-Contra affair
10/18/2011 5:05:10 PM
Multinational corporations have been able to pit governments against one-another for 30 years now and have fled to countries with minimal human rights standards to increase their bottom line. Unless there is some united effort to raise worker rights across the globe, then we can continue to watch the American middle class evaporate.
10/18/2011 5:08:01 PM
Necessary is debatable. Necessary to delay the inevitable? Yes. We will never know what the best solution would have been.And saying it was because of deregulation alone is misleading. There were several government regulations and acts that significantly contributed to the cluster fuck of bad loans/toxic assets.And no, I don't know what the solution is. But I have a suspicion that injecting more debt in to the economy to "stimulate" it isn't the answer. Nor is it a good a idea to increase the risk for businesses to grow.
10/18/2011 5:10:47 PM
the guy fawkes masks are really driving the point home.http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1011/66259.htmlahahahaha...http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2011/oct/18/obama-passes-meeting-occupy-activists/ahaha x2[Edited on October 18, 2011 at 5:18 PM. Reason : -]
10/18/2011 5:11:49 PM
Yeah, JesusHChrist is right, Reagan and Bush I effectively destroying the manufacturing industry in the United States by encouraging out sourcing was a big part of it. Of course, it all comes back to helping the rich increase their bottom line. My dad saw this first hand. When he first started working at his company, a multinational corporation that builds security hardware, they did the entire process from A to Z. From metal fab all the way to finally assembly. By the time he retired, they got basically the entire lock housing and all the mechanical parts from China, already plated and finished. Basically all the plant in Winston Salem, NC did was slap their name on it and put it in a box.[Edited on October 18, 2011 at 5:26 PM. Reason : :]
10/18/2011 5:20:56 PM
10/18/2011 5:38:28 PM
The problem is that we need to raise the global human rights standard. as long as their are countries that effectively endorse slave-labor, we'll never be able to compete with them.
10/18/2011 5:48:11 PM
10/18/2011 5:57:46 PM
10/18/2011 5:58:58 PM
10/18/2011 6:11:28 PM
10/18/2011 6:22:15 PM
Both of those points are a reason to regulate banks, though.They've been allowed to inflate bubbles for short-term gain, which manipulates markets, which keeps them from working as they were intended to work. So why are you against that?[Edited on October 18, 2011 at 6:27 PM. Reason : i wasn't trying to be a dick, the home-ownership insuation just struck a nerve]
10/18/2011 6:26:06 PM
I'm not against regulating banks, especially when they get unlimited access to the public trough. I just happen to think that regulation isn't a permanent solution; we need to remove the government props that enable banks to get super-leveraged and not pay the full price when they overextend.Do you think that banks should be able to borrow money at 0.25% and loan it out for 5-20% interest? That's what they can do at the Fed. It's obvious that low interest rates are part of the problem.[Edited on October 18, 2011 at 6:29 PM. Reason : ]
10/18/2011 6:28:31 PM
10/18/2011 6:36:25 PM
^^I am of the opinion that regulation needs to continuously evolve as a measure against market manipulation. It'll never end, in my opinion. Cat and mouse. Cops and robbers. Cowboys and Indians. Crips and bloods.As to your point about the FED, I have no idea. No, I don't think banks should be able to usurp middle-class pensions and then lend it back to us at absurd interest levels. But I have a hard time falling in line with the "end the FED" arguments. I'm assuming that's your position on it, but I can't remember. I would think just making it more transparent and having oversight would make them more accountable, though. But I'm not versed enough in the topic to really have a strong opinion either way.[Edited on October 18, 2011 at 6:42 PM. Reason : ]
10/18/2011 6:39:53 PM
10/18/2011 6:45:57 PM
10/18/2011 6:48:47 PM
http://www.forbes.com/sites/christopherhelman/2011/10/18/some-tips-for-the-simpletons-of-occupy-wall-street/
10/18/2011 6:54:25 PM
^Haha, what a smarmy little fuck.
10/18/2011 11:29:25 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2011/10/19/rnc-says-dems-silent-as-anti-semitic-tone-emerges-at-occupy-wall-street/?test=latestnews
10/19/2011 4:36:42 PM
ocupieay dat waal skreeet
10/19/2011 10:39:22 PM
https://www.facebook.com/occupyjudaismhttp://tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com/2011/10/the_rnc_jumps_on_the_occupy_wall_street_is_anti-se.phpThe right has been saying that the protests are anti-Semitic for a few days now, but the idea is really gaining momentum because of an ad put out by Bill Kristol and Gary Bauer’s Emergency Committee for Israel (ECI), which calls on Obama and Pelosi to condemn Occupy Wall Street for anti-Semitism.It’s true, there have been a few instances of protesters at Occupy Wall Street making anti-Semitic remarks and holding anti-Semitic signs, but even the Anti-Defamation League said that there is “no evidence that these incidents are widespread.”“Thus far, however, anti-Semitism has not gained traction more broadly with the protestors, nor is it representative of the larger movement at this time,” the ADL said in a statement that condemned the instances of anti-Semitic remarks.And Dan Sieradski, an OWS protester and spokesman for a group called Occupy Judaism that is trying to rally the Jewish community to the protests, told TPM that the anti-Semitic remarks were exceptions to the generally welcoming attitude the protesters have toward Jews. “There is anti-Semitism everywhere in the world, and no more here than anywhere else,” he said.
10/20/2011 2:12:21 AM
I mean...dude, even you should be able to see what's stupid about those quotes."There is pro-slavery sentiment everywhere in the world, and no more here than anywhere else."-South Carolina, 1790[Edited on October 20, 2011 at 2:16 AM. Reason : again, I don't think OWS is anti-semitic, but let's quit citing stupid things as evidence]
10/20/2011 2:16:23 AM
Greece is showing these hippies how it's done. Until skulls start getting smashed on the pavement nothing will change.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CRmrxYvm7iY[Edited on October 20, 2011 at 2:38 AM. Reason : .]
10/20/2011 2:30:32 AM