#281
[account deactivated]
#282
[account deactivated]
#283
seems like shits really going down outside of the US... http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia-pacific/2011/10/2011101515123592784.html
#284
well if we attack iran at least that might radicalize ows and begin to fill in the missing third world component
#285
US brass will never green light an invasion of Iran
#286
i doubt that they will invade iran but they will prob bomb it real good and then everybody will qq most heartily
#287
nah
#288
i wont qq if they bomb iran i will cheer it on
#289
i personally am so dumb, narcissistic, and self absorbed that i take utterly for granted the most incredibly brilliant, insightful, hard-won criticisms of Our Modern Times, made with the most deliberate and nuanced care and precision, and use what superficial "understanding" i have of them as license to just be the most worthless, boring, boring human being i can possibly muster being, and then pretend that acknowledging myself as the idiot i clearly am makes me some kind of trail blazing anti-genius martyr of my own tragic self awareness
#290

sosie posted:
i personally am so dumb, narcissistic, and self absorbed that i take utterly for granted the most incredibly brilliant, insightful, hard-won criticisms of Our Modern Times, made with the most deliberate and nuanced care and precision, and use what superficial "understanding" i have of them as license to just be the most worthless, boring, boring human being i can possibly muster being, and then pretend that acknowledging myself as the idiot i clearly am makes me some kind of trail blazing anti-genius martyr of my own tragic self awareness



Sick, whats your Gamertag.

#291
late evening occupy montreal: 200 people maybe? tents, piles of weed, drums, singing, yelling, stuff. cool signs on some big statues. not terrible considering it was windy as fuck & raining... idk how it was during the day, must have been quite a few if the hardcores were ~200... anyway i think they'll definitely be there tomorrow too, i'll check in during the day & try to get better pics (tried to take some today but i failed due to night+rain+wind)

gov of the bank of canada, probably later-this-month chairman of the new international Financial Stability Board & subject of getfiscal post, Mark Carney, commented that OWS is great and constructive and maybe the US will (paraphrasing) get its shit together now... it's not quite Smash The State™ but i like that guy
#292

Goethestein posted:
143 people were arrested in boston on monday. 700 people in new york a week before. 20 in seattle last night. meanwhile on those nights, internet revolutionary cosplayer, in his room like a jail cell only in that he urinates within its confines, haughtily complains that they're having too much fun and not doing anything



a) i show up at things
b) i didn't mean that OWS is shit, i just mean that the NO VIOLENCE! PEACEFUL PROTEST! people should shut up & chant something else already it's been like at least a decade of the same thing. messages are ok.

#293

AmericanNazbro posted:
♫♫♫ this is what democracy looks like, now listen to my song ♫♫♫

#294

sosie posted:
i personally am so dumb, narcissistic, and self absorbed that i take utterly for granted the most incredibly brilliant, insightful, hard-won criticisms of Our Modern Times, made with the most deliberate and nuanced care and precision, and use what superficial "understanding" i have of them as license to just be the most worthless, boring, boring human being i can possibly muster being, and then pretend that acknowledging myself as the idiot i clearly am makes me some kind of trail blazing anti-genius martyr of my own tragic self awareness



hi impper

#295
#296

Several anti-Semitic incidents have been reported during "Occupy Wall Street" demonstrations in New York as Jews were blamed for the turmoil in America's financial markets. In addition, anti-Israel signs were raised against "Israel's occupation of Gaza".





http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4135361,00.html

#297

babyfinland posted:


couldve done w/o the soaring music

#298
lmao the dude towards the end in the black jacket is a jewish guy who goes by the name lotion man
#299
allegedly Occupy DC got an unheard-of 4 month permit

Democrats are gonna try to hijack this against Romney I guess

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/obama-plans-to-turn-anti-wall-street-anger-on-mitt-romney-republicans/2011/10/14/gIQAZfiwkL_story.html
#300
I like ows
#301
lolll

http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/052226f8-f80c-11e0-a419-00144feab49a.html#axzz1b2bcnXCi

Barack Obama, US president, offered more support for protesters against the global financial system after a weekend of demonstrations in cities around the world, but called on them not to “demonise” those who worked on Wall Street.

On Sunday, Mr Obama honoured Martin Luther King at a dedication to a new memorial on National Mall in Washington. Referring to protests that have spread from Wall Street to London, Rome and elsewhere, Mr Obama said: “Dr King would want us to challenge the excesses of Wall Street without demonising those who work there.” Mr Obama had previously said the protests “express the frustration” of ordinary Americans with the financial sector.

A top Republican in Washington dramatically altered his stance on protesters involved in Occupy Wall Street just one week after comparing the movement to “angry mobs”. Eric Cantor, the Republican majority leader in the House of Representatives, told Fox News on Sunday that Republicans agreed there was “too much” income disparity in the country. “More important than my use of the word is that there is a growing frustration out there across the country and it is warranted. Too many people are out of work,” he said.

Thousands took part in demonstrations this weekend around the world, many voicing their anger at the bail-out of banks and government austerity packages. “It is ridiculous the government is willing to pay out over a trillion pounds to bail out banks while at the same time cutting our pensions and benefits in the name of austerity,” offered Tai Wardallg, a protest organiser in London.

But some bankers and others in the protesters’ sights sought to spread the blame. Andreas Schmitz, head of the German banking federation and chief executive of HSBC Trinkaus, told the Financial Times on Sunday that protests against banks were “a diversion from the fundamental problem: that we can no longer finance our welfare states”.

In 2008 a banking crisis caused a budget crisis for governments, he said. Now “a state debt crisis is causing a banking crisis”. Politicians, he warned, should not try to make the banks the “fall guys” for their mistakes.

Protesters complained about banking excesses, but the demonstrations reflect more than simple anger at financial institutions, argued a banker in London. “It’s becoming apparent these are protests that aren’t just about banks, it’s all manner of things . . . They’re talking about the number of millionaires in the cabinet and all kinds of things – it doesn’t necessarily simply involve the banking sector.”

Demonstrators picked the wrong target when they chose to rally at stock exchanges in New York and London, executives of some of the world’s largest exchanges said. “We are the most visible symbols of the financial world so it makes exchanges an obvious destination. But I don’t think it’s the right target. We don’t represent the financial sector,” said Ron Arculli, chairman of the World Federation of Exchanges.

Others voiced sympathy for the demonstrators. Banks “just compete and stampede to make money at the expense of consumers,” said Atsushi Saito, Tokyo Stock Exchange chief executive. “To some extent, I can understand the mindset of those demonstrators against Wall Street.”

The rallies show Americans want a “financial system that works,” said David Axelrod, chief campaign strategist for Mr Obama, on Sunday. They support financial reforms which some Republican presidential candidates have threatened to roll back, he said.

In Italy, Silvio Berlusconi, prime minister, condemned the violence in Rome by a “large group” or rioters, although the initial violence came from just small numbers of “black bloc” anarchist and far-left militants. Paolo, a researcher in molecular biology who marched in Rome, said the police had let rioting get out of hand in order to “criminalise” and discredit protesters.

Protesters’ grievances remained disparate and wide-ranging, with signs in various cities condemning corporate greed, demanding an end to the Iraq and Afghanistan wars and calling for student debt relief. A statement posted on an activist web site that helped organise the protests said: “United in one voice, we will let politicians, and the financial elites they serve, know it is up to us, the people, to decide our future.”

It is unclear what the next step for protesters will be. In New York, where the month-long Occupy Wall Street movement has been a leading inspiration for protesters, dozens remained at their base in Zuccotti Park on Sunday. The group’s agenda listed only a committee meeting and the regular nightly assembly scheduled for the evening.

Supporters of Occupy Wall Street have donated nearly $300,000 in cash, as well as food, blankets, medical supplies and sleeping bags, spokesman Bill Dobbs told the Associated Press.

New York Police Department said at least 88 were arrested in New York on Saturday and overnight, including two dozen for trespassing at a Citibank branch and 45 in Times Square.

In London, hundreds of protesters occupying the steps of St Paul’s cathedral have begun to settle in, erecting tents and setting up a kitchen, a media centre and toilets. “We will occupy this space for as long as it takes for our voices to be heard,” said Adam Young, a student who was also at the Wall Street occupation. “The system is broken and it is up to us to fix it,” he said.

Others stressed they were part of a global movement for justice. “First came the Arab Spring and Spain’s indignados. Then came the Wall Street protests. In London, we are now part of this movement campaigning for a better world,” said Spyro Van Leemnen.

#302
wow obama is scum
#303
[account deactivated]
#304

Impper posted:
wow obama is scum



i really cannot wait for the mincing, vindictive, self-righteous memoir he's gonna put out after he loses in 2012

#305
what makes you say he's going to lose?
#306

AmericanNazbro posted:
what makes you say he's going to lose?



we're on the cusp of another big recession, so things are only going to get worse between now and 2012 and obama is already real goddamn weak. i just cant imagine a president, especially one who made such grandiose promises, winning on a campaign of 'i know im not that great but youve really just got to trust me'

#307
yea but the gop doesn't have a single remotely appealing candidate. their best chance is a guy who worked in freakin' management consulting for 20 years and whose signature legislative legacy is pretty much the same as obama's

it's funny, even strange, how shallow the GOP bench is considering the strength of the american right more generally
#308
herman cain sang a song about "imagine there's no pizza" i'm pretty sure he's gonna win
#309

Impper posted:
herman cain sang a song about "imagine there's no pizza" i'm pretty sure he's gonna win



you mean, like the John Lennon song? lmao

#310
wow
#311
Obama will win again who cares by how much. We're at terminal velocity but still far from the ground comrades.
#312
#313
-------------
Photo recovered from a camera found in the smoking ruins of a NATO airstrike.
#314

Crow posted:

hehhee

#315

thirdplace posted:
wow



lmfao

#316
[account deactivated]
#317

thirdplace posted:

wow



hahaha

#318
http://www.theatlantic.com/infocus/2011/10/occupy-wall-street-spreads-worldwide/100171/
#319
http://www.flickr.com/photos/liza/6255714747/
#320

Goethestein posted:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/liza/6255714747/



lmao that rules