Bud Meyers rants about the economy, corporate out-sourcing, labor statistics, the REAL unemployment rate, government and corporate corruption, and the plight of the long-term unemployed.
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Friday, October 7, 2011
Occupy Las Vegas (photos, news, and video)
"To the one percent who wish to flee the occupation of Wall Street. You can not escape the occupations. We are at your vacation
destinations. Expect us".
The local Fox News affiliate reported
on the protest.
The local
newspaper reported over 1,000 at the very first Occupy
Las Vegas march - The media estimated the crowd between 500 and a 1,000 - - - but to me, there were many more. For one thing, the march started 30 minutes earlier than originally planned, so there were a lot of stragglers and a few smaller groups following far behind the main group. I estimated closer to 2,000. But no one was actually "occupying", and it was only Las Vegas' first event, so it hasn't had time to really grow as of yet.
The march lasted from 3:30 PM to 7:30 PM - I didn't participate in the 4-hour march from the
New York-New York casino to the Bellagio and MGM Grand casinos (all owned by
MGM). I just spent about 30 minutes taking pictures by the New York-New York casino's "Brooklyn Bridge".
- - Updates - -
One man who was in Las Vegas on business wrote, "Sadly no stick time or pepper spray was seen. All in all it was well organized and under control."
(See
his pictures and video here)
Video - On October 6, 2011, the Nevada Policy Research Institute went to the
Occupy Las Vegas rally held in front of New York New York. (For Reason TV) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D2shIiAn-zk
A few smaller pictures here, and larger pictures further
below. Click on any one to enlarge.
Larger photos below
Yours truly
Occupy Las Vegas
WHO are we?
We are the 99% of Americans who have not benefited from the
various financial bailouts, tax breaks, and other subsidies that the
dominant 1% of the population have gained over the past several
years.
We are students, workers, veterans, the unemployed, those on Social
Security benefits, and those whose savings and investments were
either wiped out or greatly diminished by the economic fluctuations
starting in 2007.
We are those who have had our homes foreclosed upon or are about to
have it done to us, those whose homes are now worth a fraction of
what we paid for them, and those who have never owned a home and now
don’t expect to ever be able to.
We are the newly poor who wonder how everything for which we worked
hard vanished so quickly and how we and our families are going to
survive.
We are the long-time poor, who have never had much of a chance, let
alone a voice, to make our own way in our current social and
economic system.
We come from all backgrounds, races, and religions.
We are concerned about, and more than a little scared by, the
directions in which we see our lives, and the lives of our families,
friends and neighbors going - and the directions in which we see our
nation and the whole planet going. And we are angry with those who
have taken us in those directions.
We are part of a much larger global and national movement that wants
real changes in how the world is run. In short, we’re you, and you
are one of us.
WHAT do we want?
We want an end to corporate money’s influence in politics, whether
through campaign donations, PACs, or other groups. Money is not
speech. We want truly effective campaign finance reform, so that
corporations and other interests have no overwhelming advantage over
the rest of us in any part of American politics.
We want far greater legal accountability for public officials and
corporate executives, and we demand that, if found guilty of
committing crimes while in office, they are made to pay for those
crimes in full, like anyone else. We want equal treatment from our
justice system at all levels, and at every stage from
investigations, through trials and sentencing for everyone,
regardless of origins or social class.
We want a moratorium on foreclosures, an end to the continual
attacks on our social safety net and on the rights for workers to
organize themselves and, if need be, to strike to get better pay,
benefits, and working conditions.
We want secure and sustainable investments and improvements in our
social infrastructure, like schools and libraries, and to create an
America where everyone may actually live in a decent and dignified
manner, an America where everyone's rights count and are respected
by all. This is who we are and what we want. We ask for no more and
shall take no less.
If you only watch Fox News, you would think that all these people are against business and capitalism. Not true.
On Fox News Eric Bolling was berating the Occupy Wall Street crowd for marching on the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, saying "96% of its members are small businesses."
But what he failed to mention was that only 11% of all small American businesses actually belongs to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
If you only watch Fox News, you would think that all these people are against business and capitalism. Not true.
ReplyDeleteOn Fox News Eric Bolling was berating the Occupy Wall Street crowd for marching on the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, saying "96% of its members are small businesses."
But what he failed to mention was that only 11% of all small American businesses actually belongs to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
http://bud-meyers.blogspot.com/2011/10/eric-bolling-fox-news-bash-occupy-wall.html