Wednesday, 30 November 2011

#Occupy Democracy: The Wealthy Have Money, We Now Have Physiques. And also the first Amendment.


YouTube/Screen capture

To anybody available who still thinks that Occupy Wall Street is nothing more than a public nuisance that deserved to become intentionally taken away in militarized police raids, watch this here real quick:

Robert Reich was the U.S. Secretary at work throughout the Clinton administration, and he's been among the staunchest defenders from the 99% lengthy before #Occupy setup camping. And If only it had not been a MoveOn plug, since which will certainly cause lots of folks to dismiss the content beyond control. But it is really only a simple, nonpartisan paean to democracy.

The central reason for the recording, the main one that's essential, is: Under its current mode of operation, American society encourages very wealthy people and companies to make use of their assets when needed to influence democracy. But our laws and regulations will obviously not tolerate the peaceable set up of concerned middle-class people.

I frankly can't observe how someone could not be annoyed with this dichotomy. In the end, whether it were, say, libertarian activists putting on hats constructed of teabags camped out while watching Whitened House to protest government overreach, Fox News and also the conservative political establishment could be appalled by any utilization of police to get rid of them. However when its hippie, collegiate, and radical-searching folk protesting the outsized influence of corporate avarice, sure, bust out the pepper spray and billy clubs.

Money has clearly and unambiguously get to be the predominant element in modern politics -- we have seen it within the effective efforts to scuttle climate and clean energy legislation, we have seen it driving the weakening of important environment protection laws and regulations, we have seen it trying to keep massive oil subsidies in position which are more lucrative companies on the planet. And protesting, organizing demos, and taking towards the roads may be the only viable option we have got. It's why the very first amendment continues to be most significant pillar of yankee democracy.

Whatever your political persuasion might be, notice that whenever we begin condoning using brutal pressure to quell peaceful protest, a grave threat is registered to the standard of democracy itself.



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