Tom :
Here it has been the same. The  demonstrators have been remarkably peaceful.
They were encamped across the street from  city hall for a week on the spot 
usually
taken , on weekends, by what is called  Saturday Market. Vendors of all 
kinds,
all local folks selling locally made  crafts, including clothes. Plus 
locally grown produce.
On Friday the protestors packed up and  relocated to a nearby park, the 
arrangements
had been negotiated a few  days  before.
 
Can't say that this orderly system will  continue, but so far, so good.
 
Of course, Eugene isn't Chicago. And even  so, 1000 people out of 150,000
is still less than 1 % of the population  even if the symbolism matters.
 
What is important is taking a stand. And,  for sure, a heck of a lot more
than 1000  are in sympathy with the  protestors.
 
Hope to do more reading about Wall Street  in the weeks ahead
but some other priorities must be taken  care of first.
 
What is your sense of how various  populations in Chicago
are reacting to the demonstrations  ?
 
Billy
 
-------------------------------------------------------------------
 
10/23/2011   [email protected]   writes:
 

Billy:
 
I agree with what you have  written below completely. Corporatism or as you 
say Corporate capital is  not only good and necessary at this time in 
history, it is also the only  system that really works. But as you point out 
when 
it is carried to an  extreme it becomes destructive to society. But this is 
true of any  extreme, is it not. Simply, milk is good for you but in 
drastic  quantities it becomes a poison. This is the phrase that struck me most 
 
in your post:
 
"Not to eliminate corporate capital, but to  elevate it to where it once was
and to eliminate the dominance of high  finance. "
 
Let me clear up something that was a bit muddy  in my post. Of course there 
is abuse and corruption in the private  sector and that is part of the 
system. However I was referring to  political corruption by the Washington 
handmaidens of these large  corporations. In today's politics the corruption of 
ethics and morals  know no bounds. People who are hiding kickback cash in 
their freezers or  those propositioning others in public rest rooms and on and 
on. This  sets a bad example to the people and has been the cause of the 
decline  of the greatest empires in history.
 
These grassroots movements are often reactions  to this lack of morals and 
self respect among politicians and in  government. They are often defeated 
by those very same politicians who  attempt to take over movements of these 
types and bring them in line  with the party ideology. Sometimes it works and 
sometimes it  doesn't.  We will just have to wait and see how resilient 
these  movements today are. So far the Chicago movements have been free of  
violence and let's hope it continues that way.
 
Tom
 
 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------



Quis custodiet ipsos  custodes?



--- On Sat, 10/22/11, [email protected]  <[email protected]> wrote:


From: [email protected]  <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [RC] Occupy Wall Street  --Democrats fumble the ball
To:  [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Date:  Saturday, October 22, 2011, 8:08 PM


 
 
Tom  :
I don't know what you have been  reading, but I just finished Kevin 
Phillips'
2008 book, published a few months  before the election, Bad Money.
 
You won't believe all the  c#&p that the financial sector has been doing.
It is a pure horror story.  Obviously we cannot speak of all of the people
in megabanks  and hedge  funds, etc, but a helluva lot of them. Avarice
with just about no limits. No  morality whatsoever.
 
Phillips also discusses Fannie  and Freddie, both of which he criticizes 
strongly, 
but to the extent he is right,  and I suspect far more right than wrong, 
"Wall Street"
abandoned all pretext of  responsibility in the Clinton years and ever 
since has
simply run hog wild, no thought  to consequences. In 2007 - 2008, when
Phillips wrote his book, he  blamed most of the excess ( admitting how much
Clinton had done , which was a  lot ) on GW Bush. Think it is safe to say
that we are still in the same  situation, with only cosmetic changes and
some modest reforms that don't  begin to address the most serious problems, 
all we have to show for it, and  even more trillions down the drain.
 
ANY thought of Capitalism as  Savior of Mankind is a sick joke like nothing 
else.
Actually corporate  Capitalism is pretty good. But Capitalism writ large  
includes
finance capital , and that is  where the vast majority of the problems 
exist.
And the problems are not  going away, especially with the need for campaigns
to spend hundreds of millions.  Wall Street has the two parties over a 
barrel.
Laissez-faire ideology must  be attacked for what it is, a con job.
 
Not to eliminate corporate  capital, but to elevate it to where it once was
and to eliminate the dominance of  high finance. 
 
My humble opinion.
 
Billy
 
 
===========================================================
 
 
10/22/2011 4:21:48 P.M. Pacific  Daylight Time, [email protected] 
writes:

This is a movement  that does not bode well for either party if Chicago's 
OWS is  any measure. There seem to be almost as many people who  consider 
themselves conservative and other who take a more  liberal tac. Either way both 
parties will be in trouble if  they continue with the status quo approach, 
as they  have for the past some decades. It appears that this, along  with 
the tea party is a sign that we have passed the "you can  fool some of the 
people all of the time and all of the people  some of the time" to stage three 
or that is to say "but you  can't fool all of the people all of the time."
 
I hope with these  two movements that we can finally end the massive 
corruption  we have been living under for so long.



Quis  custodiet ipsos custodes?



--- On Sat, 10/22/11,  [email protected] <[email protected]>  wrote:


From: [email protected]  <[email protected]>
Subject: [RC] Occupy Wall Street  --Democrats fumble the ball
To:  [email protected]
Cc:  [email protected]
Date: Saturday, October 22, 2011, 4:11  PM


 

New  Republic
 
  
____________________________________
  
 
 
Democrats Beware! Occupy  Wall Street Could Sink Obama’s Re-Election

    *   Franklin Foer  
    *   October 21, 2011 | 12:00  am


 
 
This article  is a contribution to _‘Liberalism and Occupy Wall  Street,’ 
A TNR Symposium._ 
(http://www.tnr.com/article/politics/96296/liberalism-and-occupy-wall-street) 
Occupy Wall Street is a  carnival. Both detractors and supporters say so. 
The most  amusing part of the show is watching the rush to join it.  When 
Deepak Chopra and Suze Orman endorse the cause, you  have to wonder about its 
revolutionary bona fides. Democrats  have also flung themselves in the 
direction of Zuccotti  Park—but in their pursuit of the movement they may 
damage  
themselves and hinder the protests’ potential to do tangible  good.
The catastrophic  misdeeds of bankers should have been political gold for  
Democrats—the strongest case for a robust regulatory state  one could make; 
an opportunity to corner Republicans into  defending banks that have 
inflicted so much misery. But the  Democrats’—or rather Obama’s—strategy 
strangely didn’t point  in that direction. At best, we can describe Dodd-Frank 
as a  
marginal step in the direction of reform. And in the course  of the ongoing 
battle over implementing the law, the  legislation will likely be reduced 
to a marginal half step.  When the Obama administration whispered that it had 
some  qualms with Wall Street’s behavior, the bankers acted as if  they 
were being led to the gallows—a response that spooked  the administration into 
refraining from any further forays  into populist rhetoric and provoked it 
to send envoy Valerie  Jarrett on peace-making missions to Wall Street. It 
is,  indeed, maddening enough to make you rush to the  barricades. 
 
(http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/the-new-republic-for-ipad/id454525980?mt=8) 
With just over a year  until the election, Democrats have finally realized 
that  they have a major problem on their hands. Where the  Republican base 
is fired up and ready to go, liberals are  despondent about the dissipation 
of their messianic hopes.  By failing to speak to the public’s anger, the 
president has  given ample space for Republicans to grab that fury and,  
amazingly, turn it against Washington. 
Or to pan wide on the  scene: Obama has annoyed both his political base and 
his  donor base, while doing not enough of substantive value on  the 
underlying issue. The Democrats have aimlessly meandered  into dire political 
circumstances—so they are desperate for  any cause for hope, no matter how 
implausible.
Protests movements,  with their outpourings of camaraderie and idealism, 
often  lead to lyrical writing and wishful thinking. Some  Democratic 
politicians and think tanks apparently now see a  scenario for salvation in 
Zuccotti 
Park—a possibility that  the protests could morph into the Democratic 
answer to the  Tea Party. Perhaps Washington operatives could descend on  the 
movement and drive it in that direction. But that seems  like an awfully 
daunting task, given the scene on the ground  and the ideological tendencies of 
Occupy Wall Street—and it  misreads the symbiotic relationship between 
liberals and the  left. Let’s say Occupy Wall Street can overcome its  
self-limiting strategic philosophy, develop some concrete  goals, and blossom 
into a 
full-fledged social movement. Over  the long-term, then, liberals will want to 
position their  reforms as the most reasonable mechanism for staving off the 
 radicals. That’s how FDR played it—“Liberalism becomes the  protection 
for the far-sighted conservative.” But you can’t  triangulate against a 
social movement if you fully embrace  it.  
On one level, the  protests have already wildly succeeded. They have helped 
 remind the public of how blame for the crisis should be  properly 
apportioned. And when Eric Cantor mouths the words  “income disparities,” you 
know 
the conversation has shifted.  But as the protests drag on, will they 
continue to be  beneficial? To answer that, the protestors need to answer,  at 
least for themselves, the question: Will they work to  actively undermine 
Barack Obama’s reelection?
Under the best  scenario, this moment emboldens Obama to rhetorically 
cudgel  Wall Street, lock arms with Elizabeth Warren, and make  symbolically 
potent appointments to his economic team. His  turn towards populism reassures 
his political base and helps  him paint Mitt Romney as the tribune of the 
economic  royalists. While the movement continues to harp on Wall  Street, and 
maintains useful pressure on him to overcome his  cautious instincts, it 
does nothing to actively campaign  against his reelection. This shift would set 
the stage for a  second term that would further financial reform and take  
other measures against income inequality.
There is, however,  another, plausible possibility: that Occupy Wall Street 
is  poorly timed. After all, there’s no legislative debate to  usefully 
prod at the present juncture, but there’s a chance  to scupper the president’s 
re-election. As _John Nichols_ 
(http://www.thenation.com/article/163942/99-percent-rise)  cheers in The 
Nation, the  “movement might well develop into 
a virtual primary  challenge to Obama.” Even if Obama attempts to co-opt the 
 message of Occupy Wall Street, the movement will likely  continue to harp 
on his inadequacy. (Many of the complaints  with Obama unfairly view him as 
a central villain in the  crisis, rather than a disappointingly ineffectual 
foe of  it.) Protests might erupt at the convention in Charlotte  that 
overshadow his case for reelection; all this further  diminishes enthusiasm for 
his candidacy. Or worse, a  third-party candidate emerges and we know how 
that story  goes. Indeed, much of the gripe with Obama reflects the  canard 
that a Republican president wouldn’t be worse. I hope  the protesters are 
surrounded by allies who remind them it  actually can get much worse.
Franklin Foer  is an editor-at-large for The New  Republic and a Schwartz 
fellow at the New America  Foundation. 


 
____________________________________



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