Road Warriors are pussies man, me and my guys from the Cobra Kai would snap them like dry twigs!
I Lol'd.... Gotta love the Cobra Kai, them cats is gangsta!Road Warriors are pussies man, me and my guys from the Cobra Kai would snap them like dry twigs!
Faced with the option of spending years behind bars (and coming out with a felony) and walking away after getting hit with pepper spray, most would choose the latter.
A federal court in 2005 ruled that pepper spraying the nonviolent qualifies as excessive force. So in this case, the latter option may also include walking away with money after suing the university and/or police.
I understand that the government, etc do take advantage of people, but sitting around in circles and protesting won't change much.
Class division at OWS - love it:
Occupy Wall Street Divided - The Daily Show with Jon Stewart - 11/16/11 - Video Clip | Comedy Central
Ive been saying for years I can't wait for that shit to break out. Who's with me? I'll totally do that shit today lol
Imagine if the Army tried to deploy a pepperspray hose/cannon at a legion of people... They'd die instantly in extreme pain because of the high quantities involved... Couldn't escape it.Pepper spray is banned for use in war by Article I.5 of the Chemical Weapons Convention, but fine to use on U.S. citizens in their own country for blocking a sidewalk by sitting? :ugone2far:
No, they've admitted it was pepper spray.That doesn't look like pepper spray, and they are not reacting like it is pepper spray. Most likely criminal ID spray. Even so, no more land of the free for you guys. When you can't exercise your constitutional right to a peaceful demonstration without being assaulted it is an indicator that the party is well and truly over. Or are they "terrorists" as well?
I'm on two sides of this occupy bullshit.
1.) These people are lazy fucks. They sit there and complain, while everyone else just puts up and gets on with it. If you want money...earn it you fuckwits? Most of us are.
I'm officially a fanboy of yours.No, they've admitted it was pepper spray.
- Most of the common positions related to occupy aren't about getting money. It's present of course(they're fine with taxing the very top), but more than that they see an issue with corporations controlling our politicians via election money and lobbyists.
I've talked to a lot of these people and most are of the opinion that as long as the system is poisoned it will produce poison results. Even amongst those that want "more money" that comes in somewhat secondary because many don't believe the government is capable of doing such a thing while it's beholden to outside interests to the extent that they are.- For a lot of people a major complaint is that they can't find jobs. If you're coming out with a college degree you face a pretty unique situation. You're over-qualified for low end jobs so you won't get hired. You're under-qualified for jobs in your field because there's so many people with years of experience who were laid off and want the same job you do. The end result is that many can only find part time employment or can find none at all. This generation(the 20-25 year olds) are fucked in a way we haven't seen in recent history.
- Only 15% of the Occupiers are unemployed. Not only is that unemployment rate lower than that of the tea party, but it's with 6% of the average unemployment rate.
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They get the diagnosis right. But their "treatment" will not deliver the results they want. They are essentially imploring the state to self-police. That is a horrible starting point since the state has never been adept at that. The following sums up my position (from here):
- Most of the common positions related to occupy aren't about getting money. It's present of course(they're fine with taxing the very top), but more than that they see an issue with corporations controlling our politicians via election money and lobbyists.
I've talked to a lot of these people and most are of the opinion that as long as the system is poisoned it will produce poison results. Even amongst those that want "more money" that comes in somewhat secondary because many don't believe the government is capable of doing such a thing while it's beholden to outside interests to the extent that they are.
The demonstrators have dozens, if not hundreds, of different concerns they are complaining about. They accurately identify many injustices and major problems with our society, but they fail to connect the dots.
They imagine they can use the state to take money from the richest 1% and deal it out to the bottom 99%, but they don’t see that the state was the primary instrument used to amass the wealth of the top 1% in the first place. They complain about corporations but do not blame the state for their very existence. They grumble about greed but fail to point out the primary lever of power, the state, which exacerbates it. They rail against the merger of state power with corporations, or corporatism, which for some reason they call “capitalism.”
They moan about the wars, but not the state that creates them. They scream about the millions of unemployed but make no mention of the state’s role in driving businesses out of America. They call to “End the Fed,” but do not fault the state for its creation. They moan about the millions of foreclosures but do not refer to the housing bubble — intentionally created by the state. They criticize the cost of education but fail to cite the state financing that drove up the price.
The protestors have not yet realized that all of the problems they are concerned about are symptoms of a deeper cause — the power of the state. Everybody sees that the state has nothing but contempt for “the will of the people.” It is frustratingly futile to try to change the system using the system.
Not to mention the effect it's going to have on their lifetime earnings.
- For a lot of people a major complaint is that they can't find jobs. If you're coming out with a college degree you face a pretty unique situation. You're over-qualified for low end jobs so you won't get hired. You're under-qualified for jobs in your field because there's so many people with years of experience who were laid off and want the same job you do. The end result is that many can only find part time employment or can find none at all. This generation(the 20-25 year olds) are fucked in a way we haven't seen in recent history.
OWS definitely needs an image makeover. People perceive them as unemployed - and thanks to recent episodes in Seattle and Oakland, violent - brats. They're losing the public. If they lose the public, they lose the war.
- Only 15% of the Occupiers are unemployed. Not only is that unemployment rate lower than that of the tea party, but it's with 6% of the average unemployment rate.
It's the best of the available options. OWS would not be able to bring about an anarchist state. While I appreciate the views put forth in your article, it's not realistic. If you hold out for something like that you're going to be waiting until the end of time.They get the diagnosis right. But their "treatment" will not deliver the results they want. They are essentially imploring the state to self-police. That is a horrible starting point since the state has never been adept at that. The following sums up my position (from here):
I don't think they're losing the public, I think they're driving the people who already hated them into hysteria. Polls have shown they have pretty solid support in most places.OWS definitely needs an image makeover. People perceive them as unemployed - and thanks to recent episodes in Seattle and Oakland, violent - brats. They're losing the public. If they lose the public, they lose the war.
I don't think they're losing the public, I think they're driving the people who already hated them into hysteria. Polls have shown they have pretty solid support in most places.
A full 72%(vs 24%) of New Yorkers think they should be able to stay.. 52% support the movement as a whole(vs 35% not supporting). The approval for the police's handling of the protests is just 45%....5/8ths of the support for OWS.
At a time when Congress's approval rating is just 9%, Those types of numbers are absolutely unheard of in the American political system. If those numbers are at all indicative of how the rest of the country feels, they are more popular than any political institution, politician, or political group that exists in the country today.