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Occupy Wall Street thread
10-10-2011, 07:52 PM
"God damn it, an entire generation pumping gas, waiting tables – slaves with white collars. Advertising has us chasing cars and clothes, working jobs we hate so we can buy shit we don't need. We're the middle children of history, man. No purpose or place. We have no Great War. No Great Depression. Our great war is a spiritual war. Our great depression is our lives. We've all been raised on television to believe that one day we'd all be millionaires, and movie gods, and rock stars, but we won't. We're slowly learning that fact. And we're very, very pissed off."
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Occupy Wall Street thread
10-11-2011, 09:12 AM
Our financial system is in need of deep reform, and these protests can highlight that. The reforms in the wake of the financial crisis were paper thin, and people are angry. More to the point, living standards are declining for most Americans while a small minority continues to accrue wealth. Like Roosh, I also enjoy when people challenge the status quo because I have a dissident mindset.
Unfortunately, these protests suffer from the same problem as most other protests: they are made up of ill-informed, badly dressed youth with nonsensical demands. I don't blame them for not being organized, the Tea Party originally lacked organization (and might be better off going back to that), but I do blame them for being the same old sacks you see at every dumb protest. I especially loathe them for shutting down the Brooklyn Bridge, a very important transport artery for both commercial and personal traffic.
I am not happy with the Citizens v. United Supreme Court ruling, but that's a far cry from ending corporate personhood, which takes the prize for worst political fad of the 21st century. The whole point of corporate personhood is that it allows limited liability corporations to exist and be subjected to government regulation and our legal system--just like a real person. It should be obvious to everyone that the very fact that we have corporation law means that corporations are not treated just like persons.
People who want to abolish corporations are fools. Efficient industrial organization requires the enormous concentration of capital and managerial talent, and a great way to facilitate that is to create legal vehicles for many different investors to pool their capital into a single entity where they are only liable for the sum of capital they have invested. It's not just business (or the consumers that purchase products from businesses) that benefits, but also NGOs, labor unions, charitable organizations, universities, and churches.
Lastly, I am very annoyed with the reigning ideologies of this country. The left has basically swallowed nonsense fairy tales about political correctness, abhors data and facts (especially about failed/failing groups), and seems to want every fucking human on the planet to be a special little snowflake protected at all costs. The right on the other hand has degenerated into a pointless anti-government ideology where all taxes are bad, all billionaires are good, labor unions are nefarious, and government regulation is the root of all evil. Do either of these groups ever step outside, adjust their eyes to actual sunlight, and see the reality out there?
Memo to the left: not everyone is good, and I don't have to like everyone. In fact some people (and peoples) are bad, and this truth should not be concealed. Shame is a very powerful motivator. If you don't uphold personal responsibility, people will not act responsibly and eventually everything falls apart. Your "non-conformist" act is a crock of shit, you're conforming to a very fashionable subculture which is present in every major urban center in the Western world and is catered to by massive, profit-seeking corporations like Apple Computer. When you dress like a slack jawed pot smoking hippie, this is exactly what older, middle class people who have some skin in the game (you know, mortgage, kids, obligations, responsibility will perceive you as.
Memo to the right: capitalism is a creature of the state, its laws, its leaders, and its institutions. It was not created by heroic John Galts. Alexander Hamilton and Abraham Lincoln are more important to the history of capitalism than John Jacob Astor or John D. Rockefeller. It requires regulation to curtail its abuses, to make sure the fruits of industry are widely distributed, and even to make it more efficient. Taxes, particularly those levied on consumption and personal income rather than on investment and corporate income, have little long-run relationship to economic growth and are necessary to fund the operations of government, up to and including a robust welfare state.
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Occupy Wall Street thread
10-11-2011, 09:57 AM
Thorfinnsson thats the best post on Politics I have seen in a while.
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Occupy Wall Street thread
10-11-2011, 01:07 PM
Lot of my thoughts have been said by other posters. The only question I have is, WHY IS THERE NO OCCUPY K-STREET?
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Occupy Wall Street thread
10-11-2011, 07:53 PM
I honestly don't know. I've paid very little attention to the TEA party.
I only know details about the Occupy movement since they're right in my neighborhood, and I'm somewhat sympathetic. But, if they had "secret" funding, they'd have better signs, clearer messages, etc. However, it's very much a DIY movement, which is both good and bad.