The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by Flagg »

SVPD wrote:
Flagg wrote:I truly love this idea that laypeople (meaning not the police) aren't allowed to form their own opinions and accuse the police of being brutal thugs when they are being brutal thugs as shown by mountains of direct video evidence. And you wonder why people don't trust police anymore.
I'm glad you're so in love with this idea. Congratulations for thinking it up. Now that you're done thinking that up, perhaps you can come up with an excuse for ignoring massive problems with the "mountains" of video evidence created and posted by people who have good reason to show you what they want you to see.

Well I guess I'm just making an irrational snap judgement! Maybe if I had all of your police training I'd be able to see the invisible rocks the cameraman threw at the riot police before they shot him.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by SCRawl »

Flagg wrote:Well I guess I'm just making an irrational snap judgement! Maybe if I had all of your police training I'd be able to see the invisible rocks the cameraman threw at the riot police before they shot him.
I think that that's enough.

From the evidence available -- which so far amounts to that one video -- if a reasonable person were forced to decide which side was in the wrong, then I believe that the officer would be so deemed. But do you know what's great? We don't have to choose right now. We don't have to rely on just this one piece of (rather suggestive, but still only one-sided) video. Other witnesses can be interviewed, and there may be more video yet to surface.

In other words, the position of a person honestly looking at this so far ought to be "Gee, that looks pretty bad. Is there anything else to this story?"
Last edited by SCRawl on 2011-11-07 04:15pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by Flagg »

SCRawl wrote:
Flagg wrote:Well I guess I'm just making an irrational snap judgement! Maybe if I had all of your police training I'd be able to see the invisible rocks the cameraman threw at the riot police before they shot him.
I think that that's enough.

From the evidence available -- which so far amounts to that one video -- if a reasonable person were forced to decide which side was in the wrong, then I believe that the officer would be so deemed. But do you know what's great? We don't have to choose right now. We don't have to rely on just this one piece of (rather suggestive, but still only one-sided) video. Other witnesses can be interviewed, and there may be more video yet to surface.

In other words, the position of a person honestly looking at this so far ought to be "Gee, that looks pretty bad. Is there anything else to this story?"
Oh I agree, but that's not what's happening. Instead we have people looking for excuses as to why the police shot the guy/ beat the tar out of the guy and left him to bleed internally for 18 hours until his bail was posted/ threw a flashbang at a crowd of people trying to help someone with a fractured skull, That's what's pissing me off.

And as far as the "honest position" goes, no, the honest position is to look at the evidence available and come to a conclusion based on that with the knowledge that you may need to change that position assuming more evidence comes forth.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by SVPD »

Flagg wrote: Oh I agree, but that's not what's happening. Instead we have people looking for excuses as to why the police shot the guy/ beat the tar out of the guy and left him to bleed internally for 18 hours until his bail was posted/ threw a flashbang at a crowd of people trying to help someone with a fractured skull, That's what's pissing me off.
So what if it's pissing you off?

Here's a hint: stop being pissed off

The reason you're pissed off is that you leaped to these conclusions (except in the grenade case, that one appears pretty conclusive) and now that questions are being raised about the "evidence", you're making up this bullshit about "looking for excuses". Pointing out that there are other plausible explanations is not "looking for excuses".

All you're doing above is simply assuming your own conclusions are true, and then claiming "that's not what's happening!" when in fact what SCrawl described is exactly what KS and I are doing - asking "is there more to this story" and pointing out reasons why there must be more to the story, even if that is simply additional details.

You've got a remarakable ability to selectively read and distort other people's position and come up with faux outrage and sarcasm that people aren't letting you beg the question. Very good. You can stop trying now, we're all impressed with your ability to froth at the mouth. It's ok though, the entire world will not collapse if you admit that the whole story might not necessarily conform with your ideas.

You see, that's the nice thing about being a reasonable person. I don't need to get all upset if it turns out any of these cases were brutality because, for people paying attention (in other words, not Flagg) I'm not saying one way or the other if they are. I'm saying a real, impartial investigation (i.e., not some inquisition to give the outraged Flaggs of the world sacrificial lambs) is needed in these cases. If it turns out the cops were beating or shooting people for no reason, then fuck them.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by Simon_Jester »

Losonti Tokash wrote:So here's the issue. We keep getting stories and/or videos of peaceful protesters being severely injured either by police action or in their custody. There's plenty of media showing protesters being restrained without consideration for their safety.

We get instances like Scott Olsen where not only do the police 5 feet away fail to render aid, they grenade the people who actually do try to help him. I don't know what your opinion was, but KS agreed that the cop who threw that grenade ought to be prosecuted.

There was a video earlier of a group of non-violent, cooperative protesters sitting on the ground were assaulted and pepper sprayed in the face before being restrained in a prone position.

We had a second veteran [also in Oakland, like Scott Brown -SJ] get confronted by at least a half dozen officers and came out of it with a lacerated spleen whose cries for help were ignored for 18 hours. It's likely the injury came from repeated blows to the torso, which has been stated to not be a valid target for batons. It's suggested they missed and accidentally hit his abdomen, presumably while he was lying on the ground.

We now have a cameraman being shot with no apparent provocation, after years of police threatening and harrassing bystanders recording their actions nationwide. You have suggested that the cameraman was apparently being threatening or just happened to walk in front of someone who was.

And yeah, I'm at these protests as a street medic. It's been made fairly clear that protesters' welfare is not a top priority, or else the police wouldn't interfere with their prompt treatment. I've also been doing a lot more internal policing of idiots trying to sir shit up than it seems the police have done. It doesn't even matter if you guys are or not, no one sees it and the wall of secrecy or whatever just adds to the feeling of corruption.

Or you get shit like in Occupy DC where was a car runs into multiple groups of protesters and the police decline to press charges. We're not the ones undermining the relationship between the police and their communities. You guys have been working on that for literally my entire life.
I have what may seem like a weird position here. Let me take a step back.

Most of what police do is fairly routine stuff that involves handling petty criminals over things like public drunkenness, maintaining basic order at routine public gatherings (and by 'routine' I don't mean 'protests,' protests aren't the most common kind of gathering), enforcing traffic regulations, and investigating crimes that everyone agrees are crimes (like arson or robbery). Do I trust the police to take care of those jobs?

Yes. By and large, I do. I trust the police to do the basic job of patrolling society to limit crime, which I consider to be socially necessary. I know roughly what we'd do without them doing that job, and I don't like to contemplate it. So do I think "EVIL PIG" when I get pulled over in traffic? No, no I do not. I know what a truly corrupt 'police force' looks like- just another gang, too busy collecting bribes to enforce the law, and routinely used as a private goon squad by the local oligarchs in ways that not even groups like the Oakland PD are being used right now.


Now, separately and independently from that, we have the behavior of police at protests, or in certain specific contexts like the War on Drugs. In some cities you get police who engage in repeated acts of brutality towards the protestors, for reasons that aren't clear. I honestly doubt there was any kind of provocation that would explain or justify the Oakland PD's conduct towards Scott Olsen (the guy who got a tear gas grenade to the head, then a flashbang to the group of people who tried to see to him), or towards Kayvan Sabeghi (the guy with the ruptured spleen). If I had to guess, I'd say that the Oakland PD has some very serious problems that need to be reformed, and that those problems probably extend to the local government. There are quite a few cities and towns in the US where the local government has disturbingly fascist tendencies when it comes to issues of their own power and control over events in the city limits. If Oakland is one of them, I'm not going to be all that startled.

By the way, looking at Sabeghi's story, I get the feeling that the guy was in a lot of pain and that his story may be confused- although there is and can be no confusion on the important fact that he was badly injured by a police beating, I'm not sure exactly what the situation regarding medical care was, and I don't know enough to judge whether that adds an extra layer of guilt onto the Oakland PD.

But besides these two beatings (which, I repeat, happened in the same city), we have plenty of other incidents across the country. The general police response to the protests has been... unfriendly.

On one level that's understandable, since in their professional capacity police aren't expected to get Miss Congeniality awards very often. The "crowd control" part of their job is one of the least congenial parts, especially when dealing with crowds where there are a few dangerous hotheads mixed in with the bulk of normal people making up the crowd. If you put ten thousand cops in contact with fifty thousand protestors, some of the resulting interactions are going to be messy, because there's always the worst 1% of the cops (and the protestors) to factor in.

On another level, that's still pretty bad. The average nationwide police response to Occupy Wall Street seems to me to be more hostile than that found in other recent major gatherings, demonstrations, and protests. Think about Tea Party demonstrations, the recent protests in Wisconsin, and so on. Some mayors and police departments are being needlessly confrontational, others appear to be turning blind eyes to harm caused to the protestors, still others are trying rather hard to come up with legal means to evict the protestors from public spaces.

And for a long time in America, we've had cases that go to the courts of things like Fourth Amendment violations, scandals about beatings and racism and so on. It does happen, there's plenty of precedent.

In light of this, do I trust the police to be guardians and careful, highly reliable observers of our civil liberties?

No. Not really. Police have a job to do- enforce laws. Left to themselves, even if they're free from corruption, they'll probably enforce the laws too harshly; that's the point of checks and balances. Someone has to keep an eye on them. They are not superheroes, who can be trusted implicitly and whom we should always bend over backwards to exonerate.

But neither are they supervillains, because the vast majority of the cops the vast majority of the time aren't involved in any of this, and show no inclination to do so.


When I add all this up, I have to say:

Do I think that there have been cases of police misconduct against OWS protestors? Absolutely.

Do I think every case of police misconduct presented by the OWS protestors happened as described? Probably not- "some police are bastards" does not imply "all police accused of being bastards are bastards."

Do I think the level of righteous indignation I'm seeing from some on this thread is justified? It depends. Some people are advocating things I think are foolish- treating police as the 'army of the 1%' or some such, trusting Anonymous to be a better watchdog than the police themselves when it's no more accountable for its actions, and so on. If you're indignant enough that you're saying things like that, it's probably time to step back and take a breath.

Do I think the level of dogged determination I'm seeing from... well, mostly KS and SVPD... to raise the issues of "we don't know all the facts" is justified? In some cases yes, in some cases no. We don't know, necessarily, that the guy who filmed himself being shot with a rubber bullet hadn't done anything to deserve to get shot. But then, this also happened in Oakland, the same place that's already put at least two protestors in the hospital.

Either we're looking at a really competent conspiracy to fake police brutality in Oakland, or the Oakland PD is just turning out to be really brutal. At this point, I'm more inclined to believe the latter. And I don't think that the Oakland PD deserves SVPD or KS's attempts to defend them, as long as we don't see ridiculous and evil bullshit like "why aren't those policemen's families on fire yet!" coming out of the people opposed to them.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by Civil War Man »

Simon_Jester wrote:Do I think the level of dogged determination I'm seeing from... well, mostly KS and SVPD... to raise the issues of "we don't know all the facts" is justified? In some cases yes, in some cases no. We don't know, necessarily, that the guy who filmed himself being shot with a rubber bullet hadn't done anything to deserve to get shot. But then, this also happened in Oakland, the same place that's already put at least two protestors in the hospital.

Either we're looking at a really competent conspiracy to fake police brutality in Oakland, or the Oakland PD is just turning out to be really brutal. At this point, I'm more inclined to believe the latter. And I don't think that the Oakland PD deserves SVPD or KS's attempts to defend them, as long as we don't see ridiculous and evil bullshit like "why aren't those policemen's families on fire yet!" coming out of the people opposed to them.
We don't necessarily know if the protester did anything to deserve getting shot, but the area seemed pretty quiet judging from the audio and the policeman who shot the cameraman seemed to be the only person who even cared enough to notice him. So, from what we know, it seems more a case of a lone asshole being an asshole.

As for the Oakland PD being brutal, I may be wrong, but I believe Oakland was also where there was the case of the one officer who (according to the official story) accidentally shot and killed someone with his sidearm when he meant to use his taser. If I am thinking correctly, then it could be a case of the PD being brutal, lax in certain areas, or both.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by Agent Fisher »

To be fair, that was the Oscar Grant shooting, and that was a BART PD officer, not Oakland. And intitially, a number of protesters in Oakland were there about Oscar Grant, not OWS.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by SVPD »

I think you're basically on the right trck, except for 2 things:

1) KS and I are not "defending Oakland PD." We are pointing out that the facts in each case call for an investigation, and that they are not conclusive.

2) It is not legitimate to make assumptions about incidents based on broad and vague perceptions about a police agency any more than it is to make such assumptions about police in general.

Take the video incident. Even granting that Oakland has been one of the worse cities for OWS protestors, you can't look at the video in light of "well, it was Oakland, and two protestors went to the hospital, so therefore we can pretty much assume the cop was in the wrong to shoot."

That line of reasoning is, essentially saying, any time we happen to get an incident in Oakland, we can just assume the cop is guilty because it's Oakland. In other words, there is essentially no burden of proof; any suspicion based on any evidence (and that 40 second snippet stinks worse and worse the more I think about it, while the Scott Olsen and the spleen rupturing case look worse and worse for the cops) is simply given the benefit of the doubt and any counterpoint can be dismissed with "well, it's Oakland."

Aside from the fact that you cannot use the general nature of what an agency has done to convict individual cops in court, the fact of the matter is that this is just shifting the justification to ignore uncomfortable questions like "what's going on behind the camera?" and "what happened before and after the video?" from "well, it's a bunch of pigs" to "well, Oakland PD is a bunch of pigs."

It's compounded with comments like "they put two protestors in the hospital" which is not the issue; the issue is that Scott Olsen was unjustifiably hit with a grenade, and that the other guy was likely, at least, ignored when in pain (the question of whether he was unjustifiably struck is far harder to answer and is separate from if he received reasonable medical treatment.)

In other words, I don't strongly disagree with much of what you said, but I am still seeing hints of the tendency to assume guilt rather than look at the evidence and recognize holes in it.

If the situation were reversed, and we had videos of misbehavior by the protestors, I don't think you would be ok with "Well, it's Oakland protestors and they were the ones that did X."
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by White Haven »

There's a major problem with the constant refrain from SVPD and KS of 'it needs to be investigated.' When you're dealing with the issue of systemic loss of trust in the police (in a given role, as a nod to Simon's post), having police say 'We're investigating this,' when the issue is a loss of trust in the police would be somewhat akin to an Enron rep saying 'We're going to investigate this,' instead of, say, the SEC. Right now, I trust independently-shot video footage more than the word of the same police organizations responsible for the alleged offenses in the first place, for two reasons. Firstly, because they've investigating themselves. Secondly, because even if they ARE investigating honestly, we never hear it. Every time this sort of thing comes up, the perpetrator gets put on a paid vacation no matter how damning the initial evidence...and then the whole matter falls into a black hole.

By this point, the police have a hell of a lot of repair work to do on their image, and an important first step in that is not only investigation (preferably NOT by themselves) but disclosure. Quietly determining many weeks or months or years later that there was an offense committed by police does nothing whatsoever to help their growing image problems. Even if their investigations are honest and the punishments laid out are more than slaps on wrists, if they're not prompt and transparent, they only have meaning in that they punish the guilty. That's only a small part of what needs to happen for there to be any sort of a push-back to counter what they apparently want to claim are faked or orchestrated videos.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by SVPD »

White Haven wrote:There's a major problem with the constant refrain from SVPD and KS of 'it needs to be investigated.' When you're dealing with the issue of systemic loss of trust in the police (in a given role, as a nod to Simon's post), having police say 'We're investigating this,' when the issue is a loss of trust in the police would be somewhat akin to an Enron rep saying 'We're going to investigate this,' instead of, say, the SEC.
Ok, first of all, there is no systemic loss of trust in the police. There may be on this board, there may be among OWS protestors, there may be specifically in a few cities, but there is no systemic loss of trust in the police as a whole, regardless of who you trust. This claim comes up any time it's convenient and there is never any evidence presented of it, much less anything conclusive.

Second, neither KS or I said the police had to investigate themselves; I specifically mentioned the FBI at least once. You're reading that into our argument.

Third, even if an agency does investigate its own officers, you cannot assume they will simply ignore any wrongdoing. It is actually not at all like "Enron investigating itself". You are again, trying to assume internal affairs officers would simply clear another officer based on nothing more than your own cynicism. Your beliefs about the attitudes of police and the fact that it may, occasionally have happened in the past is not evidence that departments customarily simply handwave allegations away on a regular basis. Anecdotal evidence is utterly worthless for establishing trends or widespread patterns.
Right now, I trust independently-shot video footage more than the word of the same police organizations responsible for the alleged offenses in the first place, for two reasons.
This is part of the problem. You seem to think it matters who you trust. For forming your own personal opinions, trust whoever you want. If, however, your personal lack of trust is not reflected in whatever is done, that is not problematic. You don't have to be personally satisfied. Your personal level of trust does not even represent anything like the average; you have a very VERY unusually low level of trust in the police.
Firstly, because they've investigating themselves. Secondly, because even if they ARE investigating honestly, we never hear it. Every time this sort of thing comes up, the perpetrator gets put on a paid vacation no matter how damning the initial evidence...and then the whole matter falls into a black hole.
Except that this is not what happens every time, or even frequently. This happens very very rarely.

The simple fact is that in a lot of the cases what you think is damning evidence simply isn't, because the courts, or the agencies involved do not look at it the way you do. Moreover, before you claim this is an admission that the police simply look at it in whatever light they please, I will point out that a department that does not conduct a fair, impartial investigation is liable to lawsuit - from the victims, if they favor the officer, and from the officer if they try to screw him. Officers have rights in these investigations, dictated by the courts, and part of the reason for those rights is to protect them from emotional, inflamed public opinion that cannot, and will not consider all sides of the issue.
By this point, the police have a hell of a lot of repair work to do on their image, and an important first step in that is not only investigation (preferably NOT by themselves) but disclosure.
In your eyes, perhaps, and perhaps in the eys of OWS protestors and the citizens of Oakland, but you aren't limiting it that way. You are not in a position to speak for the American public at large as to their attitude towards law enforcement at large.
Quietly determining many weeks or months or years later that there was an offense committed by police does nothing whatsoever to help their growing image problems.
I have seen no evidence of a growing image problem. More importantly, if it is growing after these protests, no amount of repair work will help in the face of the ability of those who have a preconceived idea of the police to put carefully selected videos on YouTube, generate outrage in trials of public opinion, and play to the desire of the press to sell news with shock and outrage. What is the problem with weeks or months? Should investigations be rushed simply to feed your desire to see it on the news? Or are you now going to arbitrarily proclaim a few hours or a few days based on nothing more than your gut intuition and the fact that you want it to be that way?

If you seriously think the image of the police needs work, the first thing to do is demand honesty and accountability from people attempting to tarnish that image. Some complaints are certainly valid, but when the police see that people want to use the internet as a way to carefully present versions of events in an anti-police way with no accountability to anyone whatsoever, you will get little traction among law enforcement for your demands.
Even if their investigations are honest and the punishments laid out are more than slaps on wrists, if they're not prompt and transparent, they only have meaning in that they punish the guilty. That's only a small part of what needs to happen for there to be any sort of a push-back to counter what they apparently want to claim are faked or orchestrated videos.
Again, you are simply assuming investigations must end in punishments, or that "slaps on the wrist are problematic". You simply cannot be taken seriously until you cure yourself of this attitude. Until there is an investigation, we cannot know what, if any, punishment is deserved in any given instance.

If you simply dismiss any investigation that does not fit your personal ideas of what should have happened without an investigation, just an initial video or report of an incident, or whatever, there is no reason to take you seriously. If you can point to a specific problem with an investigation, that's one thing, but a problem is not "ZOMG did you see the video? How could ANYONE allow that!" is not a problem; your personal standards are not those of the court, and the point of an investigation is to reveal facts that aren't there upon a cursory examination of the facts - and looking at YouTube videos is a cursory examination.

I think you're going to find, however, that you're going to go through life without your concerns being addressed if you cannot dispense with this tendency to wave aside standards of civil rights, fairness, and conduct of citizens when police conduct is at issue. You already basically admitted it is ok with you if police private information is posted on the internet by unaccountable vigilante hackers, and if protestors throw rocks at police officers over the actions of other police officers. Your own words indicate that a great deal of this is simply your inability to see police officers as human beings and citizens with the same rights you are entitled to.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by White Haven »

SVPD wrote:
White Haven wrote:There's a major problem with the constant refrain from SVPD and KS of 'it needs to be investigated.' When you're dealing with the issue of systemic loss of trust in the police (in a given role, as a nod to Simon's post), having police say 'We're investigating this,' when the issue is a loss of trust in the police would be somewhat akin to an Enron rep saying 'We're going to investigate this,' instead of, say, the SEC.
Ok, first of all, there is no systemic loss of trust in the police. There may be on this board, there may be among OWS protestors, there may be specifically in a few cities, but there is no systemic loss of trust in the police as a whole, regardless of who you trust. This claim comes up any time it's convenient and there is never any evidence presented of it, much less anything conclusive.

Second, neither KS or I said the police had to investigate themselves; I specifically mentioned the FBI at least once. You're reading that into our argument.

Third, even if an agency does investigate its own officers, you cannot assume they will simply ignore any wrongdoing. It is actually not at all like "Enron investigating itself". You are again, trying to assume internal affairs officers would simply clear another officer based on nothing more than your own cynicism. Your beliefs about the attitudes of police and the fact that it may, occasionally have happened in the past is not evidence that departments customarily simply handwave allegations away on a regular basis. Anecdotal evidence is utterly worthless for establishing trends or widespread patterns.
Hoo boy, do I hate omnislashing. Ah well, here goes. First-off, your claim that there is 'no systemic loss of trust' is just as baseless, yet we're supposed to treat it as holy writ. Alright, I'll bite. How's Gallup treat you? No 2011 numbers yet, which I expect will be substantially influenced by the news coverage of OWS itself if the survey is conducted during or after the current events. Still, even without that that's still a 6% drop in the number of polled individuals who rate their trust in police officers as a whole as 'high' or 'very high' between 2009 and 2010. That is, in fact, the definition of a loss of trust in the police.

Secondly, while the FBI might look into the occasional matter, that's generally what Internal Affairs departments are for. Particularly, one of the videos previously linked has a police official mentioning that he has two officers assigned to investigate the matter.

Thirdly, it's precisely like Enron investigating itself. An Enron accountant could have investigated the company and outed everything to the SEC and brought the whole thing tumbling down. An internal police investigation could reach an honest conclusion. I never claimed it was impossible, only that it was impossible to trust the conclusion in the absence of any independent investigation. That same problem applies to every self-policing organization anywhere, not just the police themselves. Why do you think the SEC even exists?
Right now, I trust independently-shot video footage more than the word of the same police organizations responsible for the alleged offenses in the first place, for two reasons.
This is part of the problem. You seem to think it matters who you trust. For forming your own personal opinions, trust whoever you want. If, however, your personal lack of trust is not reflected in whatever is done, that is not problematic. You don't have to be personally satisfied. Your personal level of trust does not even represent anything like the average; you have a very VERY unusually low level of trust in the police.
It does indeed matter who I trust, because I'm a member of the public and public trust in the police is, as has been previously demonstrated, decreasing. I don't have to personally be satisfied, no, but a populace is just a lot of individuals, and if they collectively trust independent video over police statements, that means something else entirely. As of the previously-referenced poll, something like 10% of Americans agree with me, and while that's not enough to elect a candidate it's certainly not a drop in the bucket. And another 33% only consider themselves to have 'average' trust in the police. Simon's earlier point regarding there being two different classes of police behavior with differing levels of trust attached to them is well-made as well. I'm very curious what that poll would show if it were split into 'Police undertaking normal police work' and 'Police undertaking crowd control work.' Are you?
Firstly, because they've investigating themselves. Secondly, because even if they ARE investigating honestly, we never hear it. Every time this sort of thing comes up, the perpetrator gets put on a paid vacation no matter how damning the initial evidence...and then the whole matter falls into a black hole.
Except that this is not what happens every time, or even frequently. This happens very very rarely.

The simple fact is that in a lot of the cases what you think is damning evidence simply isn't, because the courts, or the agencies involved do not look at it the way you do. Moreover, before you claim this is an admission that the police simply look at it in whatever light they please, I will point out that a department that does not conduct a fair, impartial investigation is liable to lawsuit - from the victims, if they favor the officer, and from the officer if they try to screw him. Officers have rights in these investigations, dictated by the courts, and part of the reason for those rights is to protect them from emotional, inflamed public opinion that cannot, and will not consider all sides of the issue.
This happens all the TIME. I'm not referring to cases that never see the light of day ever again, I'm talking about how almost every investigation disappears into a hole until a conclusion is thrown back out, often very quietly compared to the profile of the original case.
By this point, the police have a hell of a lot of repair work to do on their image, and an important first step in that is not only investigation (preferably NOT by themselves) but disclosure.
In your eyes, perhaps, and perhaps in the eys of OWS protestors and the citizens of Oakland, but you aren't limiting it that way. You are not in a position to speak for the American public at large as to their attitude towards law enforcement at large.
Already covered.
Quietly determining many weeks or months or years later that there was an offense committed by police does nothing whatsoever to help their growing image problems.
I have seen no evidence of a growing image problem. More importantly, if it is growing after these protests, no amount of repair work will help in the face of the ability of those who have a preconceived idea of the police to put carefully selected videos on YouTube, generate outrage in trials of public opinion, and play to the desire of the press to sell news with shock and outrage. What is the problem with weeks or months? Should investigations be rushed simply to feed your desire to see it on the news? Or are you now going to arbitrarily proclaim a few hours or a few days based on nothing more than your gut intuition and the fact that you want it to be that way?

If you seriously think the image of the police needs work, the first thing to do is demand honesty and accountability from people attempting to tarnish that image. Some complaints are certainly valid, but when the police see that people want to use the internet as a way to carefully present versions of events in an anti-police way with no accountability to anyone whatsoever, you will get little traction among law enforcement for your demands.
Police don't like the story that's being told? Maybe they should tell their own, with more than empty, unsupported police statement soundbytes. They want to argue that there was a goon with a molotov behind the guy with the camera who got shot? Provide something, video footage, a picture of a big fuckoff rock or a broken bottle and a rag next to the guy. Police at a crime scene document everything, damned near, but a whole shitload of police in a riot line either document nothing, or the documentation vanishes into a blue-colored black hole.
Even if their investigations are honest and the punishments laid out are more than slaps on wrists, if they're not prompt and transparent, they only have meaning in that they punish the guilty. That's only a small part of what needs to happen for there to be any sort of a push-back to counter what they apparently want to claim are faked or orchestrated videos.
Again, you are simply assuming investigations must end in punishments, or that "slaps on the wrist are problematic". You simply cannot be taken seriously until you cure yourself of this attitude. Until there is an investigation, we cannot know what, if any, punishment is deserved in any given instance.

If you simply dismiss any investigation that does not fit your personal ideas of what should have happened without an investigation, just an initial video or report of an incident, or whatever, there is no reason to take you seriously. If you can point to a specific problem with an investigation, that's one thing, but a problem is not "ZOMG did you see the video? How could ANYONE allow that!" is not a problem; your personal standards are not those of the court, and the point of an investigation is to reveal facts that aren't there upon a cursory examination of the facts - and looking at YouTube videos is a cursory examination.

I think you're going to find, however, that you're going to go through life without your concerns being addressed if you cannot dispense with this tendency to wave aside standards of civil rights, fairness, and conduct of citizens when police conduct is at issue. You already basically admitted it is ok with you if police private information is posted on the internet by unaccountable vigilante hackers, and if protestors throw rocks at police officers over the actions of other police officers. Your own words indicate that a great deal of this is simply your inability to see police officers as human beings and citizens with the same rights you are entitled to.
God, are you thick? I never said that punishments should be handed out when someone isn't guilty. I said that punishments handed out when people ARE guilty should suit the severity of the offense, both the actual act and the fact that it was committed in a breach of the trust the public theoretically places in police officers. I don't want Anonymous to release information on police officers, unless that's the only way to get it. I don't want rocks thrown at the police, but if a police officer nails someone with a rubber bullet and they WEREN'T part of the Evil Occupy Wall Street Conspiracy you seem to love implying, I'm not going to shed crocodile tears if a few bricks wing back in his direction.

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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by Einhander Sn0m4n »





Time to admit you don't have a leg to stand on. Bravo, you arrested Grandma's bingo club. Aren't you fuckers proud?
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by SVPD »

White Haven wrote: Hoo boy, do I hate omnislashing. Ah well, here goes. First-off, your claim that there is 'no systemic loss of trust' is just as baseless, yet we're supposed to treat it as holy writ. Alright, I'll bite. How's Gallup treat you? No 2011 numbers yet, which I expect will be substantially influenced by the news coverage of OWS itself if the survey is conducted during or after the current events. Still, even without that that's still a 6% drop in the number of polled individuals who rate their trust in police officers as a whole as 'high' or 'very high' between 2009 and 2010. That is, in fact, the definition of a loss of trust in the police.
While that might indicate a loss of trust (since it says nothing whatsoever about attitudes that were not already high or very high) police officers are still in the top quarter of professions; only 5 other jobs top them. Furthermore, a one-year trend is dubious as a "systemic loss of trust". What's the margin of error on that poll like?

I'd also point out that for 2008-2009, the increase was 7%, so your 'systemic loss of trust' is looking more like simply fluctuation from poll to poll.

Still, I am impressed that you at least tried to support this argument. That's better than most libertarians usually do, so I have to say 'A' for effort, even if it's a C- for accuracy.
Secondly, while the FBI might look into the occasional matter, that's generally what Internal Affairs departments are for. Particularly, one of the videos previously linked has a police official mentioning that he has two officers assigned to investigate the matter.
So?
Thirdly, it's precisely like Enron investigating itself. An Enron accountant could have investigated the company and outed everything to the SEC and brought the whole thing tumbling down. An internal police investigation could reach an honest conclusion. I never claimed it was impossible, only that it was impossible to trust the conclusion in the absence of any independent investigation. That same problem applies to every self-policing organization anywhere, not just the police themselves. Why do you think the SEC even exists?
No, it actually is not. It would be like an Enron accountant investigating the actions of one lower-level manager. You are conflating a company investigating itself as an organization with a police department investigating the actions of individual officers, which is not comparable. If the department were conducting an investigation into itself as a whole, that would be comparable, and you would be correct about the lack of trust. In this case, however, the impossibility of trust is based on your stereotypes of police officers, not on any inherent problem with an organization investigating itself; the organization is investigating the actions of members as individuals which is far, far less problematic.
[It does indeed matter who I trust, because I'm a member of the public and public trust in the police is, as has been previously demonstrated, decreasing. I don't have to personally be satisfied, no, but a populace is just a lot of individuals, and if they collectively trust independent video over police statements, that means something else entirely. As of the previously-referenced poll, something like 10% of Americans agree with me, and while that's not enough to elect a candidate it's certainly not a drop in the bucket. And another 33% only consider themselves to have 'average' trust in the police. Simon's earlier point regarding there being two different classes of police behavior with differing levels of trust attached to them is well-made as well. I'm very curious what that poll would show if it were split into 'Police undertaking normal police work' and 'Police undertaking crowd control work.' Are you?
Well, first of all, you did not demonstrate that trust has been decreasing, you demonstrated a fluctuation that remains around 60% between 2008 and 2010. If I were more cynical I'd accuse you of cherry-picking the data, but I honestly think you just didn't read it carefully enough.

Second, no, it does not matter whether you personally trust the police or not, except insofar as you consitute about 1/3x10^8 of the total population of this country (very roughly).

Second, you admit only 10% of Americans disagree with you. 33% having 'average' trust is really not much of an issue, given that this is still only 43%; the vast majority of that 43% cannot be said to truly distrust the police ('average' trust most likely means the person simply does not think that much about the issue).

Third, Simon's post, while well-thought-out, was still speculative when it comes to crowd control work, and incorporates (to a lesser degree) the same problem you exhibit - you don't really grasp that other people honestly do not see these issues the same way you do. Some, evidently about 10% do, but quite frankly, that 10% is unlikely to be pleased by any effort by the police.

Fourth, I know of no way to break the poll down in that fashion and so I'm not terribly concerned with it.
This happens all the TIME. I'm not referring to cases that never see the light of day ever again, I'm talking about how almost every investigation disappears into a hole until a conclusion is thrown back out, often very quietly compared to the profile of the original case.
Except almost no investigations "disappear into a hole" unless what you're referring to is the failure of the press to keep carrying on about it endlessly. Here's a clue: the press has a very short attention span, and so does most of the public. This is what happens with almost every major public issue; it's big news for a short time and then people forget.
In your eyes, perhaps, and perhaps in the eys of OWS protestors and the citizens of Oakland, but you aren't limiting it that way. You are not in a position to speak for the American public at large as to their attitude towards law enforcement at large.
Already covered.
And already demonstrated that your claimed deterioration of public trust represents yearly fluctuations. Let's look at a quote form your own poll:
There has been little meaningful change in the ratings of professions that are measured annually, compared with last year. To the extent there was change -- as in the case of pharmacists (+5), police officers (-6), bankers (+4), and lawyers (+4) -- the ratings have generally returned to the levels of two years ago.
Apparently, the average is around 56-57% consistently, and for some reason trust in the police surged in 2009, before returning to normal levels in 2010. Your argument for deteriorating public opinion is getting weaker and weaker. In the future, when you cite sources, it helps to look at them closely, not just pick out one bit of data you think supports your position.
Police don't like the story that's being told? Maybe they should tell their own, with more than empty, unsupported police statement soundbytes. They want to argue that there was a goon with a molotov behind the guy with the camera who got shot? Provide something, video footage, a picture of a big fuckoff rock or a broken bottle and a rag next to the guy. Police at a crime scene document everything, damned near, but a whole shitload of police in a riot line either document nothing, or the documentation vanishes into a blue-colored black hole.
"Documenting" everything means writing it down afterwards, for the most part. If they did release "documentation" you'd just be claiming it was doctored, and citing your own distrust as evidence.

Moreover, the police cannot just release evidence. The courts have rules about tainting evidence and jury pools that have to be followed. Are you suggesting the police should engage in battles of subjective public opinion at the expense of proper criminal procedure? If so, take it up with the Supreme Court.

I'm also curious how you think police are supposed to do much documentation in the middle of crowd control.
God, are you thick? I never said that punishments should be handed out when someone isn't guilty. I said that punishments handed out when people ARE guilty should suit the severity of the offense, both the actual act and the fact that it was committed in a breach of the trust the public theoretically places in police officers. I don't want Anonymous to release information on police officers, unless that's the only way to get it. I don't want rocks thrown at the police, but if a police officer nails someone with a rubber bullet and they WEREN'T part of the Evil Occupy Wall Street Conspiracy you seem to love implying, I'm not going to shed crocodile tears if a few bricks wing back in his direction.
First of all, I have never in any way implied any Evil Occupy Wall Street Conspiracy; I have repeatedly said that OWS's major reasons for protesting are ones I agree with. So you can, quite frankly, shove that right up your ass. The fact is that OWS does include a nontrivial number of unscrupulous individuals, and is for the most part, completely unvetted as to who is involved, and therefore can certianly not be implicitly trusted as to the specifics of incidents.

Second, what you said was "even if the investigations are honest AND the punishments are more than slaps on the wrist..." This sentence, as you wrote it, (the word AND is critical here) indicates that the investigations must result in punishments to have been honest, and moreover that those punishments must be more than "slaps on the wrist", which, as a vague colloquialism, can only be read as "sufficiently harsh to please White Haven personally." Had you said "the punishments, if any, are more than slaps on the wrist, when appropriate", or something of that nature, you would have avoided this problem because the sentence would not indicate that guilt is already determined in your mind, and the only thing left to do is determine if any punishments handed out are sufficiently harsh for your tastes.

No, you never said someone shouldn't be punished when they aren't guilty, but that does not change the bottom line that your mind is already made up about guilt. It is of little consequence to allow that those not guilty should not be punished when you dismiss any cause for doubt as to guilt in the first place.
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You have, in no way whatsoever, been strawmanned. Not even a little bit.

I will allow that maybe you didn't think carefully about what you were writing before you wrote it. The fact remains, however, that you did at a minimum strongly imply that there simply is no question of guilt in your mind, and that nothing to the contrary could be legitimate.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by ChaserGrey »

White Haven wrote: Hoo boy, do I hate omnislashing. Ah well, here goes. First-off, your claim that there is 'no systemic loss of trust' is just as baseless, yet we're supposed to treat it as holy writ. Alright, I'll bite. How's Gallup treat you? No 2011 numbers yet, which I expect will be substantially influenced by the news coverage of OWS itself if the survey is conducted during or after the current events. Still, even without that that's still a 6% drop in the number of polled individuals who rate their trust in police officers as a whole as 'high' or 'very high' between 2009 and 2010. That is, in fact, the definition of a loss of trust in the police.
I clicked your link, and it shows 57% had a "high" or "very high" level of trust in police officers, 33% "Average", and 10% "Low". That doesn't say "systematic loss of trust" in the police" to me- it says the majority of people polled still have a high level of trust and only a minority don't trust them. A 6% drop is indeed a worrying trend, but I wouldn't label it a "systematic loss of trust" by any means.
If you want to compare them to Enron, well..."Business Executives" scored 15%/52%/32% in the same brackets. I wouldn't call that even a remotely similar profile. Moreover, the 6% loss drops the level back to about where it was in 2008, so without more data I would hesitate to even call it an erosion of trust. For all we know 2009 could have been a spike.

I was also very amused to see that Congress is on track to drop below car salesmen in the public trust rankings. And they said I had nothing to look forward to in 2012.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by Agent Fisher »

Ein, what was the point of those videos? To show that people of all ages are at these OWS events? That even senior citizens, when they block an intersection, would be arrested?

EDIT: Just to add in, arrested doesn't necessarily mean they'll be charged. For these senior citizens, they'll be detained while they're being removed and then most likely cut loose later in the day.
Last edited by Agent Fisher on 2011-11-07 10:39pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by RogueIce »

Einhander Sn0m4n wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=soecENbgPVc

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZfIb9VlKzeQ

Time to admit you don't have a leg to stand on. Bravo, you arrested Grandma's bingo club. Aren't you fuckers proud?
If you were looking to support what SVPD said earlier about how these YouTube videos don't always give the full context but are a way to let people work up their rage, you couldn't have done a better job of it.

Though in fairness to the first video, it's fairly neutral. The second one isn't.

Anyway, first off, the seniors were not arrested. As less than thirty seconds of Google effort gave me this story by the Chicago Tribune. I will grant some benefit of the doubt to you that the story does acknowledge initial claims of arrests being made, but:
The protests lasted about an hour, and while there were some claims at first that people had been arrested, police said protesters were cited for impeding the flow of traffic and let go without arrest.
Though the next paragraph starts off with, "Those arrested..." which is a rather odd thing to say.

Also, if you actually watch parts 1, 2 and 4 of the above video, you'll note a few things. First, in part 1, they do swing some wide views and you can see a fairly long row of vehicles backed up down one of the streets they were blocking. So this sit-in was clearly causing a nuisance to people who were just trying to get through downtown Chicago. Further, you can see police officers and at least one lady in civilian clothes (no idea if she's a protester or officer) telling the gathered crowd to get back on the sidewalk. So clearly the police issue was the blocking of the intersection, not the protest itself.

Also in parts 1 and 2, the police are using their PA system to say something, though I can't make out their words over the chants. So it's probably they did try telling the JASC crowd to stop blocking the street, or were just telling everyone else to stay on the sidewalk, or maybe something else altogether. Either way, it's impossible to tell from the videos I saw.

Further, parts 2 and 4 show more of the protesters walking away. Some of them have their arms casually at their side, while at least one lady was pumping her arms in the air. If the police were arresting all of them, that's a rather odd way for them to go about it. It wasn't for lack of handcuffs or ties; one of the officers has a bunch wrapped around his arm, so clearly if they wanted to use restraints they could have. It's difficult to tell, but I didn't see any signs of restraints being used on those who did walk away with their hands clasped behind their back (whether this was at police urging or their own decision is also unknown). And finally, in part 4, as the camera swings back to the crowd on the sidewalk, it goes over just enough to catch some of the street, where you see a couple cars driving by; so it would seem they allowed traffic to go through again.

This is all from the first, second and fourth parts of that series of video of which you only bothered to show one part. And yet they all gave some additional context to what we see in the part you posted. Amazing, huh?

Your second video is odd. The title claims "Seniors arrested" yet is apparently part of a Huffington Post story that is linked to it, with the writer's name being the same as the YouTube account name. What's odd about it is that the article also tells us that the protesters were cited and seems to make no mention of any arrest reports at all. And it also ends with these two paragraphs praising the Chicago police officers:
Participants in the demonstration said they were "proud of the police" for their handling of the demonstration. Individuals occupying the intersection were escorted to a cordoned-off street corner without being handcuffed, and were issued citations, despite many expecting to spend "one or two days in jail," protester and Senior Caucus board member Gene Horcher said.

"[The police were] perfect gentlemen," Horcher said, posing happily with his citation after his third demonstration advocating for social programs to retain funding. "They realize we're fighting for the same thing."
Emphasis mine.

In short, these videos show nothing of what you're getting yourself all outraged about, and a little extra effort (Hell, just showing the other three parts of the series you got the first video from) could have demonstrated this.

So much for "you don't have a leg to stand on." And while I don't know if the police officers themselves were proud of what they did, it seems the protesters who were involved were proud of them. Imagine that.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by Einhander Sn0m4n »

My mistake. Good to see the Chicago PD actually setting examples on how this should be handled, then. There's still zero defense for Oakland cops shooting unarmed citizens. Your sig pretty much says it all anyway.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by Mr. Coffee »

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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by Kamakazie Sith »

Mr Bean wrote: Yes because defendants HATE when police leak video that results in mistrials and thus freedom.
I said fair trial. Not a trial that defendants would like,
I believe we were just talking about unwarranted assumptions KS and I believe a second camera (On the grassy knoll of course), falls into that grouping would you not agree?
I'm talking about a fairly standard police practice during protests and how it could impact investigations. I wasn't trying to submit an assumption as proof that these officers were justified.
So as to not make unwarranted assumptions let us review the last posted video which I believe was the Camera-man filming the cops who was shot with rubber bullets.

1. What was the official police statement.
2. What did the video show
3. With this available evidence what conclusion can we come to at this point with this evidence?
That we have a perspective of one side. Maybe it's just my experience being a cop but you don't just look at the information presented from one side and make a premature conclusion. Why you seem to think that is OK is concerning.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by Kamakazie Sith »

Kryten wrote:
SVPD wrote:We can basically conclude (in both the case of the video and the case of the ruptured spleen) that the officers and departments involved need to be investigated by an outside agency.
Is there such an official third party in the U.S.? Do you have an equivalent to, e.g., the Independent Police Complaints Commission?
Yes. Many city governments have civilian review boards.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by Kamakazie Sith »

White Haven wrote:There's a major problem with the constant refrain from SVPD and KS of 'it needs to be investigated.' When you're dealing with the issue of systemic loss of trust in the police (in a given role, as a nod to Simon's post), having police say 'We're investigating this,' when the issue is a loss of trust in the police would be somewhat akin to an Enron rep saying 'We're going to investigate this,' instead of, say, the SEC. Right now, I trust independently-shot video footage more than the word of the same police organizations responsible for the alleged offenses in the first place, for two reasons. Firstly, because they've investigating themselves. Secondly, because even if they ARE investigating honestly, we never hear it. Every time this sort of thing comes up, the perpetrator gets put on a paid vacation no matter how damning the initial evidence...and then the whole matter falls into a black hole.

By this point, the police have a hell of a lot of repair work to do on their image, and an important first step in that is not only investigation (preferably NOT by themselves) but disclosure. Quietly determining many weeks or months or years later that there was an offense committed by police does nothing whatsoever to help their growing image problems. Even if their investigations are honest and the punishments laid out are more than slaps on wrists, if they're not prompt and transparent, they only have meaning in that they punish the guilty. That's only a small part of what needs to happen for there to be any sort of a push-back to counter what they apparently want to claim are faked or orchestrated videos.
I think I've been consistent in saying that I do think incidents of police abuse should be investigated by a third party. The problem is that might not be realistic. Cities, and counties have limited funds so hiring an outside investigating team to investigate every allegation of abuse by police would not be affordable. I hate to say it in this thread because I know it won't be popular but for every legitimate complaint...there are many more bullshit complaints.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by madd0ct0r »

the sad thing is, we're arguing completely about police procedure, when the basic copper has as much interest in OWS succeeding as any average guy.

What do people see as coming out of this?
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by Murazor »

Out of the OWS movement, you mean?

I expect that it will either reach a critical mass of frustration as their demands are ignored and perception of police brutality rises, potentially resulting in riots (like those we saw recently in the UK), or that it will wither away after a few months, as the status quo reasserts itself and protesters lose their energy (as it happened to the 15-M movement in Spain).
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by madd0ct0r »

We won\'t see the UK riots - that went from festering normality to \'yahoo, torch the place\' in a matter of days.

this is a far more restrained, organised and political movement.

And i think, only think, it takes a lot more to drive americans to the streets then the spanish, therefore they\'ll have a crapton more reserves to draw on in terms of their own anger, and non-protesting supporters gifting food, blankets and encouragement.

It might result in a delicate distancing game between wall street and the white house, and could lead to a very intresting congress if it acts as a psudeo-party to get a lot of independents in.
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Re: The Occupation of Wall Street Spreads

Post by Starglider »

In Europe protest movements are an extremely tempting block of votes for smaller parties, so there is almost always some engagement from the mainstream political machinery, even if it is minor parties. In the US third parties are considered jokes; this is why the Tea Party successfully focused their efforts on Republican candidate selection. Unless the Occupiers suddenly get focused on taking control of the Democratic party (not likely IMHO) they really don't have much way to influence US politics. Personally I think both the political and corporate/financial structures are massively corrupt and need significant demolition work - I respect protesters who seriously want to do this and loathe the 'everything will be fine with a bit more tax/regulate/spend' crowd - but as yet OWS has nowhere near the numbers and determination to bypass the existing US political system. An OWS-Tea Party coalition would certainly improve the numbers but with the amount of hate on both sides that doesn't seem likely either.
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