Well, I am in Alabama so not sure if there are any active Occupy movements going on nearby. I thought that there was one in Atlanta but that may have either been false information or peetered out. Pressure is good, and for that reason the protests are a good thing. Corporate dystopia isn't what I want since in my opinion the larger a corporation gets the less it focuses on the details like customer service and decency (previous experience as an employee in a very major retail chain in the USA). I do not agree on the distribution of wealth... sure the elderly that can't pay for stuff that they need should be addressed and the physically handicapped should get some love too since they are most likely not going to be able to get into entry-level positions above more capable and physically stronger people. The issue I have against the distribution of wealth is that it raises in me the stigma of Communism. Not the Communism that exists on paper, the one that exists in real life where the gov't owns the property and most things are rationed out. If you are willing to work your ass off for something, you should get paid a decent price for the work. If you want a hand-out, go jump in a ditch and lie there until a good hard rain takes you out of the equation. This is, on paper, a free market. You work for what you get here. I have no skills that are normally employable but I try my hardest to get whatever I need by working for it as hard as possible, and am thus paid well despite little work experience to put on my resume for the things that I do. I work several jobs a week since most will not give me more than 16-20 hours a week at minimum wage. I have a job as a "gopher" for some friends in construction and they pay me 8 an hour to procure materials and deliver them on time. The point of this part of the post is that there is no such thing as a free lunch. Work to the best of your abilities and you can survive. The body can be trained to effectively work off of 6 hours or less of sleep a day. And as a bonus, if you really need the money I will gladly pay you to dig up stuff in my yard...will not pay you top dollar but will give you minimum wage, a break or two, and a meal for the hours that you work. The Capitalist society is not a bad thing, it is that people do not know how to take advantage of the opportunities presented to them. If you are poor you have no reason to not to any job in your power to do. If it is legal to do then no job should be below your dignity level. Hard work pays off.
Rereading that I feel like I just wrote an ad, but whatever... on to the next part of your post!
Pressure against police brutality, though that one was unintended
I think that this was addressed earlier in the discussion, but it could do with some extra posts. The Police need to be properly trained to be able to handle situations presented to them on a day to day basis. Most of these situations are easy to be taught, like traffic violations and small scale altercations (yes, altercations... I hate the word but it is the most broad term I could think of that still works). Things like the Occupy Movement do not end up as small altercations, nor are they traffic violations. They are generally treated as Mob v Police, in which the Police will often take the smallest of small aggressive movements toward their persons as a serious offense and thus react overly harsh, in some if not most instances. The regression in funding and training budgeting has just made this worse. South of me there are areas without municipal police funding and rely entirely on the overstretched and threadbare forces of their neighboring municipalities, or the state police, for protection and response. This leads to even more disturbing issues, but these are not discussable in this topic since it is about the OWS Movement and not general municipal law enforcement.
The pressure may have done some good, but possibly not in the way that is most beneficial to everyone. If/when the government becomes involved most good ideas and solutions fly out the window. This is not because the government is filled with idiots, though partially true, but because the government is filled with super partisans. They will wittle away any good that is in any solution until it becomes distorted from the original purpose.
Example: Say someone in the gov't goes "Hey, I have an Idea! Let's raise taxes for the 1% only!"
Another will follow saying, "Aye, good idea thar!"
And so will follow until the "other party" becomes involved who says "but that's not 'fair'! We need to raise the taxes for all or we would be singling out the 1%!"
This would continue, compromises would be made, and eventually the outcome could come to this:
"We are going to raise everyone's taxes, just the top 20% will have to pay and extra X% in taxes above what the rest pay."
While this would seem like an okay thing, and everyone in gov't agrees on it, it is not because then the little guy would still have less money coming in each month and the top 20% can probably afford to pay that extra X% anyway. This would then begin the cycle over again of "The 1% must pay MORE!" and that's something I just don't agree with.
Again I say, the future will let me know what's the truth and what is false
GalenEvil
Addendum because of Bauglir whom posted while I typed this up:
Your post actually gives me a little pause to think about things. It is right to think that the Status Quo isn't good enough anymore and that action should be taken against it. But why attack Wallstreet of all places? There are much better places to attack... Silicon Valley, Wal-Mart headquarters, Google, Microsoft, the gods of Apple? Sure, every large company that worked for their marketshare wants to keep it. Simple as that. They want to keep what they have, and maybe grow it by a few percent a year in an ideal world. Think about what would actually happen if all of the entrenched high-marketshare business suddenly went under. Microsoft, Apple, Hewlett-Packard, T-Mobile, AT&T, Ma'Bell, HughsNet, DirectTV, DishNet, the people who make half the damn candy in the US, P&G, Wal-Mart, "Big Tobacco" in general, all gone, poof overnight (in this example)... there would be an economic vacuum so great that no number of new ideas would be able to penetrate and fill it even if several years were allowed before any country-wide economic repercussions. Several of these companies are what keeps prices at a certain level even if that level is not where we think it should be. All of the large businesses and conglomerates each provide a large amount of tax revenues at the municipal, state, and federal levels. While at the corporate level they may not pay all that much in taxes (despite the US being currently #1 in highest corporate tax rates), the products all have a taxable amount attached to them that pays into the budgets of the economy as a whole. If all of these companies were to disappear overnight, within a year there might be some extreme economic turmoil...
I think I might be spewing a little bit too much... need to cut back on my drinking tonight >.> hope that this stays a civil conversation ^_^