Share Subscribe

Ping InTransit

My Ping in TotalPing.com

InTransit Headline Animator

PhoenixMoney Headline Animator

Teaars in Raadiated Raain Headline Animator

amzn best deals

YOU HAVE TRAVELED FAR YOUNG JEDI

******************************************************

YOU HAVE TRAVELED FAR YOUNG LION

.. .. ..
Normalcy bias
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The normalcy bias, or normality bias, refers to a mental
state people enter when facing a disaster. It causes people to
underestimate both the possibility of a disaster occurring and
its possible effects. This often results in situations where
people fail to adequately prepare for a disaster, and on a
larger scale, the failure of the government to include the
populace in its disaster preparations. The assumption that is
made in the case of the normalcy bias is that since a disaster
never has occurred then it never will occur. It also results in
the inability of people to cope with a disaster once it occurs.
People with a normalcy bias have difficulties reacting to
something they have not experienced before. People also tend
to interpret warnings in the most optimistic way possible,
seizing on any ambiguities to infer a less serious situation.
. . . .
leave now, if you are enjoying the nice little dream... it will end soon anyway, turn on the TV, Plug in the remote control, Vote ... For... The Best Candidate in...american idol... ... ...and exit this page....
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

To be Promethean is a life long process
Define truth Create yourself
and never die..
and you'll always be in my heart little one.


Awaken...
This Life; This Is Your Life,
.... And The Hour is Late

Awaken

Awaken
(Advanced Graphical Representation of 99.9 of The Masses Level of Interest When I Tell Them That if They Buy Silver, Food, and Other Supplies VERY SOON, They Just Maybe Will Survive The Inevitable Collapse of The Dollar, Riots, Massive Food Shortages, and Countless Unforeseeable Mass Tragedies That They Have Been Too Busy Watching American Idol With a Gas Pump Lodged Up Their Ass To Save This Country's Freedom; Freedom People Once Fought and Died To Protect. PS Don't Tell Me I Didn't Warn You. If You Ask For Food I'll Give You a Bullet in Your Head... SPEAK OUT SPREAD THE WORD and if this page has benefited you, Please Donate. Lastly remember... prepare now ---> stand a fighting chance to survive ---> 2-4 years things will get better...i promise

FireLion LoneWolf

My photo
albany/queens, NEW YORK, United States
{Picture taken on bus, of a crow rescued and released 6 days after} ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ bare skinless paws they traveled far dreaming of a pleasant closure willing ready to die rocks liquifying blowing away dry ash shattered claw and fang marks eroding on his own Sisyphus boulder would be the only remainder of a life spent dying to live the universe is wise its students will only see flaming hot paw prints as Phoenix rose forever thankful his soul penetrating glance his wisdom cross referencing foresight this ones life death not guaranteed and a Herculean purpose as Phoenix traveled up passing Hells' exit entering Hells' entrance This Hell Too Belongs To Him He Brings With Him Influence and Metamorphosis

Total Pageviews

We All Are One

The People United, Will Never Be Defeated


Thank You For The Trading 'Level Up' TSI Trader,

ForexProsForex Charts Powered by Forexpros.com - The Forex Trading Portal.

Silver For The People - The Blog

Friday, September 30, 2011

"Occupy Wall Street protesters driven by varying goals" -TINA SUSMAN, LOS ANGELES TIMES




TINA SUSMAN, LOS ANGELES TIMES
LOS ANGELES TIMES
SEPTEMBER 29, 2011
Michael Moore and Su­san Sarandon have dropped in. A seasoned diplomat dispens­es free advice. Support­ers send ev­ery­thing from boxes of food and clothes to Whole Foods gift cards. They even have their own app, for the legions of fans fol­lowing them on iPhones and Androids.

Nearly two weeks into a sit-in at a park in Manhattan's financial dis­trict, the "leader­less resistance move­ment" call­ing it­self Occu­py Wall Street is at a crossroads. The number of protesters on scene so far tops out at a few hun­dred, tiny by Athens or Cairo standards. But the traction they have gained from run-ins with po­lice, a live feed from their encamp­ment and celebrity vis­its is upping expectations. How about some spe­cif­ic de­mands, a long-term strategy, maybe even … office space?

So far the group, which generally de­fines it­self as anti-greed, has none of those.

"At a certain point, there's a valid crit­icism in people ask­ing, 'What are you do­ing here?'" protester Chris Biemer, 23, said on Wednesday, Day 11 of the demonstration. In an exchange that il­luminated one of the dilemmas that any move­ment for change faces in trying to sustain mo­mentum, Biemer and protester Victo­ria Sobel made it clear they had differ­ent vi­sions for Occu­py Wall Street.
             Biemer, who re­cently moved to New York from Florida with a degree in busi­ness admin­istration, says that ide­ally the group should team up with a nonprof­it orga­ni­zation and get office space.

"It's pos­sible to stay here for months or longer, but at some point we're go­ing to become a fix­ture," he said of their home in Zuccotti Park, a privately owned, publicly ac­cessible plaza dotted with trees and flower beds about midway be­tween the Stock Exchange and the for­mer World Trade Center site.

Sobel, who like Biemer serves on Occu­py Wall Street's finance committee, dis­agrees and said the group's strength lies in its ability to re­main high­ly vis­ible and in a place where anyone can vis­it and partic­ipate. The 21-year-old New York Uni­versity student happily reported Wednesday that bookshelves had been de­liv­ered to the UPS store where the group receives mail. They'll sit be­neath a tarp in the park, all part of Sobel's vi­sion to so­lidify the group's foothold.

"It's a mo­ment of clar­ifying for us," Sobel said, confident that as autumn's chill turns to winter's subfreezing tempera­tures, Occu­py Wall Street will stay put. "We'll layer," she said with a laugh, when asked how they'll man­age the cold.

The protest, which evolved from a network of individuals and groups galva­nized by the demonstrations in Egypt last winter, has moved far be­yond what it was on Sept. 17, when po­lice barricaded the streets out­side the Stock Exchange to pre­vent a march there to protest corporate greed. A map in Zuccotti Park pin­points scores of oth­er cities with Occu­py Wall Street events ei­ther under­way or planned, including sit-ins planned for Los An­ge­les on Sat­urday and Wash­ington on Oct. 6.

But its proximity to the re­al Wall Street and its se­ries of high-pro­file vis­itors have made the New York protest the focal point. So have inflammatory videos posted on­line that show a New York po­lice offi­cer us­ing pep­per spray on some protesters last Sat­urday.

Now, its settle­ment has gelled into an orga­nized community that hums along almost Zen-like, co­exis­t­ing with the city that rages around it and ignored by many ei­ther too busy or too uninter­ested to stop. Harried commuters seem to barely no­tice the mis­hmash of human­ity a few feet away as they rush down the sidewalks skirting the park.

       Tourists stroll in to snap pic­tures and read the protest signs scat­tered across the ground, then wander off to their next sightsee­ing stop. Exec­utives drop in on lunch breaks to talk politics and eco­nomics. Po­lice hang back on the sidewalks, and fol­low along when groups of protesters stage marches.

Protest numbers vary as people drift in and out of the park. Some live in the area and come by for a few hours each day or week. Oth­ers stay there around the clock, their sleeping bags, gui­tars and cloth­ing bun­dles spread on the ground. On Wednesday, they included a sleepy-eyed young man in a rum­pled T-shirt cuddling a pet rat, and a woman who pranced about in her under­wear.

There are committees, including one for finance, food and comfort, which en­sures that anyone who needs blan­kets, dry cloth­ing or perhaps a hug gets it. There are twice-dai­ly meetings called general as­semblies, where anyone can make a brief an­nounce­ment. The as­semblies draw ev­eryone togeth­er in a tight hud­dle. To avoid vio­lating a ban on bullhorns, the crowd obe­di­ently repeats in uni­son ev­ery phrase uttered by the main speaker, to en­sure ev­eryone hears.

Each morning, protesters stage a "morning bell march" through the neighbor­hood, to co­incide with the clang­ing at 9:30 a.m. of the bell that marks the start of trading at the Stock Exchange. Most days, a "clos­ing bell" march also takes place in the af­ter­noon.

On its website, Occu­py Wall Street de­scribes it­self as a "leader­less resistance move­ment" drawn from people of all backgrounds and po­lit­ical persua­sions.

"The one thing we all have in common is that we are the 99 per­cent that will no longer tol­erate the greed and corruption of the 1 per­cent," the website says. The posters in Zuccotti Park speak to the lack of a narrow platform: "End financial aid to Israel"; "End greed, end poverty, end war"; "No death penalty"; "Tired of racism."

Some support­ers of the premise wonder how far Occu­py Wall Street can go in galva­nizing oth­ers if it does not trans­late its anger into spe­cif­ic de­mands.

"I see some­thing beautiful here. I've nev­er had a more inter­est­ing po­lit­ical debate," said Carne Ross, a for­mer British diplomat who resigned in protest over the inva­sion of Iraq, and who now owns a consul­ting busi­ness in New York. But Ross, who stops by reg­ularly to        advise Occu­py Wall Street, said it needs "far broad­er out­reach" and a narrower message.

"They need to get a message to people who can't be here," Ross said.

"I'd pre­fer to see a list of de­mands," one fan wrote on the Occupation Wall Street Facebook page, echo­ing the concerns of a woman who tweet­ed some­thing similar to Moore as he did his MSNBC inter­view. She asked for "some spe­cif­ic, tan­gible goals."

Michael T. Heaney, a Uni­versity of Michigan po­lit­ical sci­ence pro­fessor who has stud­ied social protest move­ments, said such groups of­ten bump up against pressure to become more focused and to ei­ther build or join in­stitutions that can support them.

"What you're talking about is a degree of buying into a po­lit­ical system," Heaney said. "But the more you use tactics that we rec­ognize as getting you influ­ence, the more you buy into the system, and the more you buy into the system, the more you open your­self up to compro­mise."

In Occu­py Wall Street's case, Heaney said de­mands could be as vague as simply call­ing for financial bailout programs to apply to individuals rather than banks.

Most of those in Zuccotti Park, though, don't see the need for a change in tactics. At least not yet.

"There isn't a consol­idated message, and I don't think there needs to be," said Andrew Lynn, 34, who drove the three hours from his home in Troy, N.Y., to help the demonstrators' me­dia team.

On Wednesday, he hunched over a laptop sheltered from the clammy air by an umbrella. A generator rumbled be­side him, en­sur­ing the group's activ­ities con­tinued to stream live to au­di­ences.

Added Kobi Skolnick, a young Israeli American who by Wednesday was in his ninth day of partic­ipating in the protest: "I think the main thing we're do­ing is knocking on the walls of ignorance in this country so people wake up."

tina.susman­@latimes.com
Source: LOS ANGELES TIMES
                                                                                                                                

Carolyn Cole, Los Angeles Times
© Ongo Inc.

No comments:

Post a Comment