Skip to main content

Occupy Wall Street - Wear A Peter King Mask Today!


I love this statement by Republican congressman (New York's 3rd district) Peter King about the rapidly growing #OccupyWallStreet movement - because everything he says makes me love it all the more and proves him to be such a Dick...Cheney.

As anyone who has seen my Twitter feed would know, I have been following the Occupy Wall Street and other Occupy events across the country (see map below) and think they are the most exciting thing that has happened in US politics in years (although I still think that President Obama being elected was a pretty monumental step in itself).

I think we should all let the Occupy movement grow: give it space to find its feet, make statements, contradict those statements, find leaders, find different leaders, make mistakes, do whatever it takes to make the "I am the 99%" slogan ring out across America.

And to those who say these demonstrators don't want to work (hey, there are so many jobs out there right now!) or that by using iPhones and technology and electricity and eating food, they are hypocrites, because those of are the products of corporate America - BULL****!

Those are the products of the hard work - or labor (to use a word that scares the Right) - of working Americans (or in the case of so many corporations who farm the work out overseas, hardworking foreigners) and anyway in a struggle against the greed and complacency and failure to act of and against the banks, the Republicans and corporate America in general, any tool is a good tool - a smartphone, a shovel, a pen.

Just in passing, while these lazy, good-for-nothings were protesting about the rip-off that is Wall Street and its cronies in Washington, didn't Bank of America (a bank that may well need a big bailout pretty soon), just pay one of its former executives a severance package of six million dollars (or possibly a total of ten million dollars, according to Bloomberg.com)?

A nice gesture when 9% of Americans (more like at least 12-15% in reality) are out of work.

May Occupy Wall Street be America's Arab Spring...or American Fall.


Follow the excellent Daily Kos blog for great reporting and news aggregation on #OccupyWallStreet.

Comments

  1. So what exactly is the objective of this movement?

    ReplyDelete
  2. See my latest post for Keith Olbermann reading the objectives - although my point is that the objectives can change, evolve, grow, contradict themselves at times. This movement is only a few weeks old - and look at how it is spreading. Ordinary people are dissatisfied and angry with what has happened to their lives over the past three or four years because of the banks and Congress and the major corporations...and President Obama isn't immune, either, for failing to act more aggressively in Washington. Perhaps this will lead to true, radical change.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Please note that for reasons I have not been able to solve yet, I have enormous difficulty posting replies to comments - so I apologize if I don’t reply!

Popular posts from this blog

The High Tower Apartments and The Long Goodbye

Photograph by Dwayne Moser. This beautiful apartment complex in Los Angeles is called the Hightower or High Tower Complex (the High Tower name refers to the central elevator, I believe), and was designed in 1935-1936 by architect  Carl Kay - and made famous in 1973 by my favorite film, Robert Altman's The Long Goodbye (see Why I Love Robert Altman's The Long Goodbye ). Although Altman used the building as Philip Marlowe's apartment in his somewhat post-modern Long Goodbye (the film plays with references to Old Hollywood and opens and closes with the song, Hooray For Hollywood ), the building has another direct connection to Raymond Chandler. It was apparently the inspiration for Chandler in his book, The High Window (the first Chandler novel I ever read), in which Chandler describes the residence of Philip Marlowe as being on the cliffs above High Tower Drive in a building with a fancy elevator tower. (Thanks to the Society of Architectural Historians Southern...

Timeless

I haven't written on this blog since 2021, soon after Joe Biden became President and the horrors of the OG Thug passed. I'm still here, I'm still enjoying life, but I have to say that this November worries me greatly. The better part of me cannot believe that America will return a criminal insurgent to the White House...but a tiny part of me wonders if such insanity is possible. I no longer have the faith in humanity I once had; I have most of it but the Fetid Pumpkin took the rest. We'll see come November. Do whatever you can to make it not so. 

The Story Behind the Immortal Bass Line of Lou Reed's Walk On The Wild Side (VIDEO)

Of all the tributes to, and stories about, Lou Reed over the past week, this is one of the most fascinating - even though it doesn't directly concern Reed himself, but rather Herbie Flowers , the legendary British bass player who created the immortal bass line that opens Reed's massive solo hit, Walk On The Wild Side. When I first heard Walk On The Wild Side, it seemed the ultimate late night New York song: a transgender story (which apparently radio stations in the 1970s and since didn't even pick up on, despite the line, " Shaved his legs and then he was a she ") featuring characters from Andy Warhol's Factory , which sounded as if it had been recorded at about 1 am in some smoky lowdown basement hangout in the East Village. The video above reveals the immense influence of Herbie Flowers - who had worked with David Bowie , who produced Walk On The Wild Side and the Lou Reed album it came from, Transformer , on Bowie's own classic breakout s...