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Backlash Swells Against New "Gilded Age"
NEW YORK - The encampment of disenchanted young protesters in New York City's financial district has exposed growing anger around the United States over rising inequality and a stubborn jobs crisis.
Day 20 of Occupy Wall Street and Liberty Park prepares for the big union march at Foley Square. October 5, 2011. At 14 million, the number of unemployed people is about the same as during the Great Depression. (Flickr | Creative Commons | David Shankbone) The Occupy Wall Street protest, based at Liberty Plaza in downtown Manhattan, has drawn comparisons to the U.S. auto workers sit-down strikes of the 1930s, the counter-culture rebellion of the 1960s, and the Arab Spring revolt against authoritarian governments.
Protests have since spread to more than two dozen major cities, from Los Angeles, California to Atlanta, Georgia.
Clearly, it is too early to judge whether Occupy Wall Street will be remembered as the spark that created a social movement to roll back decades of neo-liberal policies of deregulation, tax cuts and reductions in public services. But what's undeniable is that the protest has struck a deep chord of alienation in millions who have been left behind during the country's latest gilded age.
"This reflects a widespread anger that the economy only works for the very few," said Robert Borosage, co-director the Campaign for America's Future, a Washington, D.C.-based strategy center for the progressive community.
That anger is reflected in two of the protesters' slogans: "The banks got bailed out, we got sold out" and "We are the 99 percent."
The protesters express outrage that the government gave the country's top banks 787 billion dollars in aid after the 2008 financial crisis while it has only extended at best a limp helping hand to the country's struggling poor and middle class. College graduates find themselves stuck with tens of thousands of dollars in student loan debts and forced to move back in with their parents, as they cannot find jobs.
In recent years, inequality in the United States has deepened so much that it compares with the polarization that existed before the Great Depression about a century ago.
The top one percent takes home 21.9 percent of the country's pre-tax income and controls 33.8 percent of the country's wealth and 50.9 percent of the nation's stocks, bonds and mutual funds, according to the Washington, D.C.-based Institute for Policy Studies.
While Wall Street titans have prospered, the middle class has experienced what Harvard economist Richard Freeman describes as a "lost decade" during the first 10 years of the 21st century.
The earnings of middle-class families began to stagnate in the 1970s. But their income actually dropped to an average of 49,445 dollars last year from 53,164 dollars in 2000, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. During the century's first decade, net job creation was zero, the worst on record. Young workers no longer count on finding a long- term job with a traditional pension, employer-provided pension and decent salary.
At 14 million, the number of unemployed people is about the same as during the Great Depression.
The official unemployment rate is 9.1 percent, but the number of unemployed roughly doubles once it includes people not actively looking for work and part-time workers who want full-time jobs. The unemployment rate of young adults with only a high school degree has averaged 21.6 percent over the past year. For college graduates under 25 years old, the rate is 9.6 percent.
At Liberty Plaza, Gillian Cipriano, 23, complained about being unable to find a job after earning her nursing degree less than a year ago. Austere government policies are causing public and private hospitals to cut services and reduce hiring, said Cipriano, who lives with her parents in Staten Island, one of the city's five boroughs.
Cipriano said friends are working in non-professional jobs in public schools because they can't find teaching positions.
"If the government had used the bail-out money for the people instead of the banks, they would be able to hire teachers, fund public hospitals and pay for police and firefighters," Cipriano said.
Borosage said Occupy Wall Street reflects a nationwide backlash that started with the fight against conservative Gov. Scott Walker's attack on unions in Wisconsin, where public employees were stripped of their collective bargaining rights. A groundswell of opposition developed there and in other states where Republican governors are rolling back union protections and benefits as they deal with deficits.
Occupy Wall Street received a major boost when several powerful unions decided to back the budding uprising. Tens of thousands union members and other sympathizers demonstrated Oct. 5 in Foley Square near a federal courthouse in downtown Manhattan and marched about a mile to Liberty Plaza.
The Occupy Wall Street protesters, including the 100 to 200 who sleep there and hundreds more present during the day, have been at Liberty Plaza since Sept. 17. A smaller group, inspired by a call for a revolt by the Canadian magazine Adbuster, moved there after police evicted them when they pitched tents on Wall Street.
At first, the protesters received little attention and even ridicule from the mainstream media. But the protesters captured national attention - and the heart of the country's left - after the police pepper-sprayed some young women. The arrest of 700 demonstrators on the Brooklyn Bridge on Oct. 1 led to more interest and further energized the group.
Videos of both incidents wound up on YouTube, serving as organizing tools for the tech-savvy protesters, who like the activists of the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt, used their smart phones to rally support.
Where will this go?
Occupy Wall Street protesters say they don't intend to let up, though they acknowledge that cold weather or a police eviction may eventually force them to leave the park.
For now, they remain in their makeshift city. They hold two general assembles each day in which decisions are made by consensus, not by voting. They have set up an Internet account that allows supporters from around the world to make donations and pay for pizzas from nearby restaurants. A generator powers the laptops in the media Center. There is a library, sleeping area and health-care zone. Recently, the group published The Occupied Wall Street Journal.
"It's hard to say what this will look like down the road," said Mark Bray, a 29-year-old graduate student who is studying for a doctorate in European history. "We are trying to envision a better way, a better democracy in practice. The most important thing is the model of our movement, which is participatory and inclusive."

13 Comments so far
Show AllAn injustice to one is an injustice to all- stand in solidarity.
War criminals roam free and proudly promote their self-serving "books." Young (and not so young) Americans peaceably assembling to express their dire grievances are pepper-sprayed, rounded up, arrested, handcuffed, humiliated and "kettled" in degrading inhumane jail cells on the flimsiest of technicalities: Our predicament goes beyond the "Gilded Age" issue; we must also struggle against being coerced (and in cases like those of Bradley Manning and Tim De Christopher, disappeared) by an old-style totalitarian police state. I salute the magnificent bravery and determination of all our Occupiers in shining a glaring light on the reality of America.
"People are frustrated and the protesters are giving voice to a more broad-based frustration about how our financial system works." -- Barack Obama
Yeah, that's it. People are protesting because they are "frustrated".
The millions of people who are out of work, losing their homes, their life savings and everything else they have worked for are just "frustrated".
Not "desperate" because they have lost everything and have nowhere else to turn (because the banksters "own" Congress just like they own the White House)
Not "furious" because Obama gave the banksters who devastated the economy trillions and left "ordinary" folks like themselves to fend for themselves.
Not "ready to vote for Sara Palin, Rick Perry or any other yahoo" who happens to run on the Republican ticket -- because they figure they have as good a chance with any of these as with Obama.
No, people are just "frustrated"
And Obama is supposed to be some kind of political genius?
Sounds more like an idiot to me.
Has this guy really lost ALL touch with his "roots"? -- and with reality?
I realize Obama does not want to say anything that will affect corporate campaign donations, but the least he could have done is state the obvious: people are hurting very badly all over the country and are desperate for help.
But "frustrated"?
Must be one of the words that Obama learned for the SAT. You know, the words the elites use without having any clue what they mean.
OWS = RESETTING THE NATIONAL MORAL COMPASS
OWS = RESETTING THE NATIONAL MORAL COMPASS BY CHECKING TO SEE WHICH SIDE OF THEM THE MOSS IS GROWING ON.
"While intelligent people can often simplify the complex, a fool is more likely to complicate the simple." ~ Author: Gerald W. Grumet
"While intelligent people can often simplify the complex, a fool is more likely to complicate the simple." ~ Author: Gerald W. Grumet
I heartily agree with one sign:
"The Barack Obama we voted for would be out here with us"
The Democrats don't want to admit how much they've be corrupted by "campaign donations". The Republicans & Libertarians are completely off their rockers and have buried their head in the sand. Although I am leary of how this movement could be co-opted, I couldn't be more proud of our protestors.
Live by this creed "May I become able to help all beings". This is how we used to live before the murder machine crept into man's mentality. This message is desperately needed in the homes and offices of the rich. Go OWS, I know that is your creed.
The Occupy Wall Street has announced that job creation is the highest priority of the movement and will immediately begin creating jobs.
As of today, any person reporting to OWS headquarters at the park will be given a job paying $800/week and free healthcare for that person and all dependents.
The money will be paid in cash and OWS will also provide an engraved certificate declaring that OWS inc. has declaring all earnings to be non-taxable.
“Wise men speak because they have something to say; fools because they have to say something.” Author: Plato
“And understand this: If American workers are being denied their right to organize and collectively bargain when I’m in the White House, I’ll put on a put on a comfortable pair of shoes myself. I’ll walk on that picket line with you as president of the United States.” – Sen. Barak Obama during a 2007 campaign speech in Spartanburg, South Carolina.
Well, he blew his first chance of fulfilling this simple campaign promise in Wisconsin and he's gonna blow it again in Wall Street.