Occupy Wall Street

Six days after crowds gathered in downtown New York City to see the opening of the new 9/11 Memorial at Ground Zero, another crowd gathered on Wall Street and began the “Occupy Wall Street” demonstration.

Since that day two months ago, more than 200 movements like this one have spread across the United States, including Michigan. Cities like Ann Arbor, Brighton, Flint, Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo, Lansing, Marquette, Muskegon, Saginaw, Saline and Traverse City all have occupy demonstrations.

Occupy Wall Street was started by an activist group named Adbusters. Adbusters is a not-for-profit, reader-supported magazine based in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

The Adbusters’ mission statement on their website says, “We are a global network of artists, activists, writers, pranksters, students, educators and entrepreneurs who want to advance the new social activist movement of the information age. Our aim is to topple existing power structures and forge a major shift in the way we live in the twenty-first century.”

According the Occupy Wall Street website, the purpose is to fight back against the “corrosive power of major banks and multinational corporations over the democratic process and the role of Wall Street in creating an economic collapse that has caused the greatest recession in generations.”

This movement was inspired by uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia. The Occupy Wall Street website described the protest as aiming to expose how the richest one percent of people are writing the rules of an unfair global economy.

There is no leader, but the protest includes people of all races and political affiliations. The only common factor is that the protesters will no longer tolerate the greed and corruption of the one percent of people with the wealth. The creators of the Occupy Wall Street website wrote, “We want to see a general assembly in every backyard, on every street corner because we don’t need Wall Street and we don’t need politicians to build a better society.”

On Tuesday, Nov. 15, the police raided Liberty Square, also known as Zuccotti Park, the place Occupy Wall Street protesters have called home for the past two months. The raid included tear gas, pepper spray, bulldozers and police in riot gear. The Occupy Wall Street website had live updates so anyone not in the area could know what was going on.

The protesters were evicted from the park because a city judge ruled the park needed to be cleared and cleaned. The ruling allowed the protesters to return, but banned them from bringing tents, tarps and sleeping bags to stay overnight.

Nov. 17 is the movement’s International Day of Action. In New York City, protesters will be shutting down Wall Street at breakfast, occupying the subways at lunch and taking the square at dinner.

For more information about the Occupy Wall Street movement or to view a live steam of the activities and speeches going on in New York City, visit www.occupywallst.org. Anyone interested can also visit the locations of the occupy movements in the area to find out more from some of the participants.

Megan Filipowski
Megan is a junior professional writing major with a minor in APR. She is the current managing editor for the Pulse and major sports fanatic/junkie. She dreams about working in Major League Baseball as a writer. She's passionate about everything she does and puts 100% of herself into her work. She has two Twitter accounts - one dedicated completely to the athletes she follows.

3 Responses to “Occupy Wall Street” Subscribe

  1. Rodney Haines November 20, 2011 at 5:05 PM #

    Ms. Filipowski needs to do more research on this fascist movement. “Occupy” is a far cry from a little group of Canadian artists who fictionally formed this movement.

    These protests were already being organized last spring here in the United States. Media infiltrators found their way into the movement’s meetings, exposing their destructive agenda. The TIDES Foundation along with ACORN (complete with money from George Soros….) have been the driving force behind these disgusting occupations.

    Interestingly enough, one of the charges brought against Osama bin La-din was his attempt to bring down the financial infrastructure of our country. but isn’t that what these “Occupiers” are doing? If so, we need Homeland Security at each of these sites to arrest these protestors for their acts of terrorism.

    Vandalizing property is NOT a peaceful protest, unlike the kind and very clean….Tea Party Movement….

    Ms. Alexandra Harper has a MUCH better perspective as to what this movement is really all about. However, I am much more pessimistic. I believe these protestors are looking for violence and civil unrest, which I believe they are going to bestow on us all. This will make 1968 look like a church picnic….

  2. Lacey November 29, 2011 at 8:51 PM #

    Rodney,
    Despite your pretentious and indignant commentary, I hardly believe your distorted comparison of OWS to Osama is coherent. In fact, your ignorance is so ostentatious it overwhelms your intentions.
    People have a right to protest, that is what makes American so seemingly amazing. You really need to quit watching the NEWS, living in a conservative cave, or perhaps to an even greater misfortune, both.

    If you truly believe the media is not influencing permeable minds such as yourself, to believe what you are told, then it’s to no apparent wonder you walk a pessimistic path.
    The media’s focal point will rest upon negativity. Cases of vandalism do not represent an entire movement, just as I hope, all of humanity is not represented by you (judgmental).

  3. Erma December 19, 2011 at 11:32 PM #

    “Lacey” – Genesis 6:5 “The LORD saw how great man’s wickedness on the earth had become, and that every inclination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil all the time.” Did you catch that? “ONLY EVIL ALL THE TIME.” This is the world without Christ. This is the state of every person’s heart without Christ as the LORD of that heart. We live in an evil world filled with evil people. We should be pessimistic…anything else is a sin as it is ignoring God.

    Rodney, you rock.

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