Occupy Wall street
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It looks like the Occupy Wall Street movement is gaining momentum! More details can be had here, http://www.occupytogether.org/
It also looks to me that the 'powers' are quite afraid of this movement and not willing to put the troops / police in, to stomp it out as they would have done in the past. It appears Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg is afraid of You Tube! Maybe he was joking but I think not!
I feel something like this would have been unthinkable 20 /30 years ago but these days the power of the Net is practically untouchable. I imagine the 1% in financial control are wondering what to do next. No longer can they manipulate the economies of the World from behind closed doors with impunity. Its now quite easy to identify who these people are. I imagine they don't like this one little bit! There is only, so high, a security wall can be built and they know this. Anonymity has been a great security wall, pre the Net (You Tube, WiKipedia etc), but not any longer.
What's going to happen? I have a feeling this movement will grow simply because there is no 'head' to it. It reminds me the Ganhdi movement in a way but more effective because, as I say there is no 'head' that the 1% can try to 'buy off'.
Maybe we are getting closer to true Democracy in the Western World? A Democracy whereby each citizen will be able to cast their continuing support vote via their mobile phone on a regular basis also debate and table solutions on a regular basis that all can vote on. This probably sounds over simplistic in one way and very complicated in an other, but I feel some way possible with the standard of 'instant' communication we have these days.
In this day and age, it just does not make sense to me that I elect a politician based on what they stand for and says they will do and then they go back on their word and do as they please or are 'encouraged' to do by the 1%.
If I employ someone to do a job for me over a 5 year period and find that after 6 months they are not doing that job I would like to be in a position to force them to do the job as agreed or sack them, not grit my teeth and wait for a further 4 years and 6 months before I can kick them out of the job! Okay, no political system can be changed overnight so we will have to live with the political party system for a while to come!
But what if, an elected Government, having a majority, would also be required to have a majority of citizen continuing support votes on an ongoing basis in order to pass bills / laws as stated in their election manifesto. Surely something like this would keep them on the 'straight and narrow' AND more importantly NOT give the 1% the inclination or ability to 'buy them off'!
Okay, it will be argued that this would be unworkable. But something along these lines would make sure that politicians and political parties would have to be straight on policy matters when seeking election. Once they diverge from their stated policies they would need further approval from the citizens. Its not enough to rely on the 'back benchers' as most of them will sit on their hands dreaming of future promotion etc.
Such a system would also encourage citizens to take more of an interest in politics ..... more that than the candidates hair
Does anyone have any more 'What Ifs'?
Mike
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Regarding the What If's: "The best laid plans of mice and men gang aft agley" to paraphrase someone memorable.
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I'm not sure what will be achieved as there are so many causes being represented and I fear the main message will be lost within it.
I would like many things to change but I am a realist, you cannot change something so big so easlily.
My main wish is to get the money out of politics (both campaign finance and lobbyists) and prosecute the banksters that created the crisis.
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Why prosecute bankers? Prosecute the real culprits, Governments!!
In fact forget prosecutions- far too expensive! Form new parties with new, progressive politics and throw these dinosaurs out!
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@tfdesign said:
Why prosecute bankers? Prosecute the real culprits, Governments!!
Let's be on the safe side, and prosecute both. Not that much difference between politics and the world of high finance anyway.
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It would be interesting to see what people here think of international corporations such as Greenpeace and the WWF?
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@tfdesign said:
It would be interesting to see what people here think of international corporations such as Greenpeace and the WWF?
From my readings, it appears the OWS protests are pretty much focused on companies within sovereign borders. If you wanted to discuss "international corporations" then perhaps Union Carbide and BP would be more suitable examples ... It seems to me that you picked 2 corporations that would probably spark more visceral responses ...
Cheers.
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..... I think the whole thing will have to hit rock bottom AND only at that point will some fairer more equatable system of governance be adopted and run for a time before the greed factor turns it upside down again.
The 1% are worried! They are now dealing with a well informed and educated populous for the most part. Knowledge is power! They are finding it difficult to locate the right 'scraps' to throw to the masses and time is running out quickly.
When I recently heard some hot shot arrogant Wall Street stockbroker declaring on TV that he loves to see recessions coming along because it creates more money making opportunities for him, it stuck in my craw!
These leeches have to be far more controlled. Eradication, no! Nature has a place for all parasites but She controls their propagation and maintains a balance. We have lost the balance in the Western World's finances and we must emulate what Nature would do to regain it, enforce a balance by what ever means necessary
It will happen one way or the other, sooner or later. The 1% will always need food, clothing, shelter. 'protection' etc etc as they are skilled at is manipulation finance. They can't survive without their 'hosts', the populous!
A byegone parasite IMO, Mayer Amschel Rothschild quote states, Give me control of a nation's money and I care not who makes her laws. We still have these parasites in our midst!
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@idahoj said:
From my readings, it appears the OWS protests are pretty much focused on companies within sovereign borders.
Further proof that no one really knows what they are marching for!
On the radio this morning the 5 major energy companies in Great Britain announced even more price rises. Some bills have increased over 100%!!! Yet the government are doing bugger all (why am I not surprised?). Labour interjected, with the same old "we would have done that" when everyone knows quite well, that in power, they wouldn't.
With energy, it's down to investment, and it's something we won't see with "renewables"- well we will, in the way of wind turbines, because they cost millions to put up and service. But that all comes out of our pockets as energy corporations don't want to invest- and with a population frightened off by a nuclear only future, is that hardly surprising?
....and this is why I raised the point about Greenpeace and the WWF. Yes it probably will "spark more visceral responses", but they, and privatisation (as well as public share holders) are very much part of 'the problem' too.
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@unknownuser said:
In this day and age, it just does not make sense to me that I elect a politician based on what they stand for and says they will do and then they go back on their word and do as they please or are 'encouraged' to do by the 1%.
...
But what if, an elected Government, having a majority, would also be required to have a majority of citizen continuing support votes on an ongoing basis in order to pass bills / laws as stated in their election manifesto. Surely something like this would keep them on the 'straight and narrow' AND more importantly NOT give the 1% the inclination or ability to 'buy them off'!
I agree that this is a crucial problem in every country in the world, and a good suggestion...I would only add that there should also be more influence of people on media (TV, newspapers), which forms public opinion in a way those 1% wants, for money. It specially affects younger population and kids.
I'm glad the conversation like this is taking place . It is really good way for better World, thanks to the internet.
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@mike lucey said:
A byegone parasite IMO, Mayer Amschel Rothschild quote states, Give me control of a nation's money and I care not who makes her laws. We still have these parasites in our midst!
Mike, I know it wasn't your intention, but I'd be really careful how you use the word "parasite"!
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@tfdesign said:
Mike, I know it wasn't your intention, but I'd be really careful how you use the word "parasite"!
Can you think of a better word to describe this type of low life!
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"jammy bast***"?
"lucky bas*****"??!
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@tfdesign said:
Why prosecute bankers? Prosecute the real culprits, Governments!!
maybe.. but.. what happens if the bankers are the govt?
the banks/corporations have infiltrated our government.further, I think it's time to start prosecuting individuals for their crimes instead of piling them into one group "the government" or "the banker" etc.
maybe start off with dick Cheney. this guy owns possibly the largest construction firm in the world.
he blows up entire countries then hires himself to go rebuild the place for billions of dollars.
Or maybe he likes to use his governmental position to force third world countries into 'modernizing' their electrical grid or plumbing system.. placing them in debt to the u.s. banks/corps for the next 60 years or so.
Cheney is the government, a corporation, and a banker... and there are plenty of others just like him. -
@tfdesign said:
Further proof that no one really knows what they are marching for!
to an extent, yes.. no one really knows exactly..
we (at least americans?) generally have no idea how our monetary system actually works.. there's no way in hell the bankers are going to teach us their system or rules of the game in schools.. they won't make that information easily available either..
if we really knew what was going on then their game would be over. immediately.. even someone like my mom wouldn't stand for the b.s. but as is, she's probably a bit scared by these protests.. she's probably thinking the protesters are terrorists or something because she's so uneducated about the u.s. financial institutions.but, she does know that it costs her $5 to take money out of a bank.. her own money!
she does know that she's struggling to keep her house and keep her husband alive (heart issues)
she works 50+ hours per week in a factory.. she's busting her ass.. and she's having a hard/stressful time just to keep a shelter over her head..
this same scenario is happening a few million times over in the u.s. and in many cases, much worse..we are taught to work hard and we'll have a comfy life.. the american dream..
well, the american dream is a hoax and the country is finally waking up to it..
people are getting too greedy.. they are taking too much.. and they are going to fall because of it. -
I don't know. I don't think "greedy" is the right word. More like 'ignorant' perhaps?
In Britain the south has become so affluent, that most people living down there seem to have lost control of their senses. It seems people forget once they become comfortable.
Both our current leaders (hung parliament, because so few came out to vote), are both ex-Etonians. They have practically no grasp on reality at all. You're more likely to get into one of the top 5 universities (Oxbridge etc) if you went to public school (Eton is a well known British public school that only sons of bankers are most likely to afford) and paid the ยฃ5000 per term entry fees, rather than going to a state comprehensive government funded school school.
Did you also know the majority of 11 year olds who went to state schools over the last 20 years don't even know what an architect does, whereas ask someone from a public school, and you will get a different answer? As a matter of fact, if you are a well known RIBA architect, it's more than likely that your children will also go to public school.
Same probably goes for the monetary system, as we no longer live in a meritocracy. But when our leaders are also both ex-public school, this is hardly surprising.
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@unknownuser said:
maybe.. but.. what happens if the bankers are the govt?
the banks/corporations have infiltrated our government.Aye. And vice versa: quite a few of our politicians and former politicians have cushy jobs on the boards of banks, insurance companies, and whatnot.
@unknownuser said:
maybe start off with dick Cheney.
If it were up to me, Cheney would rot in jail. I'm willing to accept George W. felt he was on a moral mission of sorts, but Cheney surely had no other objective than money and power. As far as I'm concerned, the man's just as big an evil tw*t as Bin Laden was.
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@unknownuser said:
If it were up to me, Cheney would rot in jail.
Why bother? What would it achieve? He'd only be replaced by another twit.
@unknownuser said:
Perhaps a revolution can overthrow autocratic despotism and profiteering or power-grabbing oppression, but it can never truly reform a manner of thinking; instead, new prejudices, just like the old ones they replace, will serve as a leash for the great unthinking mass.
Immanuel Kant; An Answer to the Question: What is Enlightenment? 1784 (Excerpt)
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just in case you have not watched it yet
perplexed police
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=N9HvJhilJzo#! -
Under the circumstances what could the police do? I think they behaved very amicably this time considering the circumstances. The police otoh were wrong to arrest all those on the bridge the other day. If they'd arrested this guy, it would have probably sparked a riot! Personally I thought he should have saved his anger and become the next Malcolm X!
America needs new leaders! This guy's got more passion than Obama! That can only be a good thing!
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