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diabolical globalist
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2006
- Messages
- 10,017
Please provide evidence that businesses in the area are hurting, that the city is spending millions on police overtime and that "this is nothing but mob rule by a bunch of people that have no respect for private property or anyone living or working in that neighborhood".
Here you go:
The cost of policing the ongoing demonstrations by Occupy Wall Street is mounting, according to Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly.
Nearly a month after protesters took up residence at a park near Wall Street, Mr. Kelly said that overtime costs to police their activities and marches had hit nearly $2 million.
On Wednesday, word came that those costs had increased to $3.2 million. Where the final figure will land is anybody’s guess.
This manager also cited damages, including graffiti on his restroom walls. "For eight and a half years, there was nothing on those walls," he said. "Now it says 'Viva la Revolucion' everywhere. Yes, 'Viva la Revolucion,' but don't write it on my toilet. I let you use my facilities without being a customer and this is what I get?"
Nicole Carty, a member of the facilitation work group, said the city and the park owner were conducting a "tactical effort to evict us."
"The role [of maintaining the park] no longer belongs to them — it belongs to us," Carty said. "And we keep this park clean, and they no longer need to. We have liberated this space from them."
Bolding mine.
The mayor's comments came in response to a caller to his WOR Radio show who asked what the city intended to do about the protest headquarters in Zuccotti Park, which is near her apartment and where hundreds of people are camped out.
"What about my rights to use the park?" asked the caller, named Marsha.
"This is a little bit of greenery that we reclaimed after Sept. 11. It's not usable. There is a general sense of incivility down there. But worst of all are the drums and the shouting. I know they've agreed to stop the drumming. Last night they were drumming until 10:45. Someone did a little practice drumming this morning at 7:50."
Is why the police need to violently attack non-violent protestors?
The Occupy Wall Street demonstrations have generated a “small number” of cases for the city’s Civilian Complaint Review Board, according the board’s executive director, Joan M. Thompson.
Mass movements frequently alter the course of history. Whether the participants sleep on dry or damp concrete, march along slightly moist streets, or occupy very humid factories is totally irrelevant.
Can you name even one thing this "mass movement" has accomplished?
The protests have engaged tens of thousands of active participants, who are building a broad-based movement.
To do what exactly?
Linkys:
http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/13/overtime-solidarity-and-complaints-in-wall-st-protests/
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/...-poses-challenge-to-main-street_n_993306.html
http://www.wnyc.org/blogs/wnyc-news...owners-back-down-while-protesters-plan-party/
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/bloomberg_accuses_wall_economy_protesters_RVVkvakoiVqG68eSGrynrO