Showing posts with label Occupy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Occupy. Show all posts

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Seriously, This 'Occupy' Movement Is Now Global And Needs Defining

When you see spontaneous social protests erupting from Tunisia to Tel Aviv to Wall Street, it’s clear that something is happening globally that needs defining. There are two unified theories out there that intrigue me. One says this is the start of “The Great Disruption.” The other says that this is all part of “The Big Shift.” You decide.        

Paul Gilding, the Australian environmentalist and author of the book “The Great Disruption,” argues that these demonstrations are a sign that the current growth-obsessed capitalist system is reaching its financial and ecological limits. “I look at the world as an integrated system, so I don’t see these protests, or the debt crisis, or inequality, or the economy, or the climate going weird, in isolation — I see our system in the painful process of breaking down,” which is what he means by the Great Disruption, said Gilding. “Our system of economic growth, of ineffective democracy, of overloading planet earth — our system — is eating itself alive. Occupy Wall Street is like the kid in the fairy story saying what everyone knows but is afraid to say: the emperor has no clothes. The system is broken. Think about the promise of global market capitalism. If we let the system work, if we let the rich get richer, if we let corporations focus on profit, if we let pollution go unpriced and unchecked, then we will all be better off. It may not be equally distributed, but the poor will get less poor, those who work hard will get jobs, those who study hard will get better jobs and we’ll have enough wealth to fix the environment.        

Read the rest of this post at The New York Times.

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Saturday Night Live Mocks Bloomberg Over Occupy Wall Street Response

Saturday Night Live laid into New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg over his administration's response to the Occupy Wall Street protests.

Fred Armisen opened the show as the billionaire mayor welcoming the protestors to the city:

"With all due respect to Chicago, Los Angeles, and London, if you're looking to vent your rage at a system where the richest 1 percent controls 40 percent of the planet's wealth, there is no better time or place than autumn in New York. And why not cap off a day of protest with dinner at one of New York's many world class restaurants. Or take in a Broadway show like Mary Poppins — currently playing at the New Amsterdam theater."

'Bloomberg' defended his decision to power wash Zuccotti park:

"As all New Yorkers know, various parts of the city are routinely power washed. Power washing is a New York institution, and without it, the Big Apple would lose its reputation as the cleanest and most thoroughly sanitized city. With streets — as the saying goes — you can eat off."

Watch the video below:

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Shockingly Violent Pictures Of Today's Occupy Rome Protests

Occupy Wall Street protests went global today. At least 500 activists in Rome attacked police, two banks and a supermarket. Authorities responded with tear gas and water cannons.

Italian media reports that as many as 100,000 people rallied in the city Saturday, making one of the biggest OWS movements so far.

The following shots are from the violent Roman clashes between protesters, the Carabinieri and the tax police.

Occupy RomeA man standing next to a burning Carabinieri vehicle shows a placard depicting Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi and reading in Italian "Throw the shoe at Silvio" during clashes in Rome, Saturday

Image: AP

Occupy RomeProtesters hurl objects at police as a burning car is seen in foreground

Image: AP

Occupy RomeA masked protester hurls a stone during clashes in Rome

Image: AP

Occupy RomeItalian police fired tear gas and water cannons as protesters in Rome turned a demonstration against corporate greed into a riot Saturday, smashing shop and bank windows, torching cars and hurling bottles

Image: AP

Occupy RomeProtesters stand by a burning car

Image: AP

Occupy RomeProtesters prepare to stave off a police baton

Image: AP

Occupy RomeA tax police officer is helped by colleagues as he lies on the ground during clashes in Rome

Image: AP

Occupy RomeA Carabinieri (Italian paramilitary police), his face covered with blood, adjusts his helmet during clashes in Rome, Saturday, Oct. 15, 2011

Image: AP


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Wednesday, February 15, 2012

It's Getting Massive, As Hundreds Of Occupy Wall Street Protests Are Happening All Around The World Today

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Marc Faber: Go Long The Dollar, But Occupy The Federal Reserve

Marc Faber, asset manager at the Gloom, Doom & Boom Report, popped in at CNBC (Clip Below) on Oct. 11 while visiting in Montreal, Canada (He is usually based in Thailand.)

Faber expects volatility to continue (not necessarily means a downside to the markets), but dollar should be a long trade as whenever there's a bubble, e.g. tech bubble, housing bubble, stocks bubble, and commodities bubble, usually after the bubble bursts, there typically will be a 10-15 years of volatility before markets settle down to reignite an uptrend.

"Despite the fact that the [European Central Bank] and the European government will flood the market with liquidity to bail themselves out, global liquidity is tightening.....Whenever global liquidity is tightening it is bad for asset prices but good for the U.S. dollar, as was the case in 2008."

He thinks there had been far too many "interventions" by the Western governments, where the total share of the economy that's government owned or sponsored have grown tremendously,.  Add to that, the high levels of debt, it is almost impossible for the developed countries including Japan, the U.S. and Western Europe to grow.  

When the economy stagnates over a long period of time, people ("the 99%) seeking answers start to go after the "top 1%" minority like Wall Street, which took advantage of the system for profits.  However, it was Washington and the lobbyists who created the system to begin with.  So from that perspective, Occupy Wall Street should move to DC and Occupy the Federal Reserve on the way, Faber laments.

His solution for the U.S. economy - Flat tax on everybody "would be a good measure", and reducing the restrictive regulatory environment to encourage business to start investing again.  Moreover, the lack of savings is the biggest problem of the U.S.  Essentially, the U.S. will have to work more, and get paid less to get out of this mess.

EconMatters Commentary 

Dollar, despite the Federal Reserve's continuous QEs and twist, is still holing up well attesting to the dangerous state of the world's finance and economy.  So in the near term, dollar could be still king, but with a high degree of uncertainty longer term, depending on how the Euro, the closest competing currency, will come out from this seemingly ever expanding EU sovereign debt crisis.

As to the economic and fiscal state of the U.S., we are not as pessimistic as Faber, but have written many times that the U.S. has many structural issues in the labor market, and the vital decisions of the country are  and will be made based on politics, and by politicians who can't walk the talk.  If the U.S. does not start to make some fundamental changes, it could eventually prove Faber right.  

Towards the end of the interview, Faber made reference to Lee Kuan Yew, the first Prime Minister of the Republic of Singapore for three decades.  Lee Kuan Yew retired in May 2011, but has remained one of the most influential political figures in South-East Asia.

In the three decades during Lee's tenure as PM, the country has been transformed from a developing economy to one that's the most developed in Asia.  However, the "Singapore Model" is based partly on a socialistic structure (e.g., single political party, state planning, and state-owned enterprises).

As to the current economic and fiscal state of the U.S., we are not as pessimistic as Faber, but have written many times that America has many structural issues within the labor market and too many of the country's vital decisions are and will be made based on politics and by politicians who can't walk the talk.  If the country does not start to make some fundamental changes, it could prove Faber right.  

Dr. Doom Roubini, in an interview with Business Day less than a month ago, also noted Singapore could be one country that he was not averse to state involvement in the economy and held up Singapore as an economy that might be shielded from global shocks.

So we find it quite interesting that as a result of the global financial crisis, more and more Western economists are now moving towards socialism, while the more socialist countries such as China are becoming more capitalistic.  Could this be the New World Order underway? .


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Sunday, February 12, 2012

BILL GROSS: The Occupy Wall Street Protesters Are Just Fighting Back After "30 Years Of Being Shot At'

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One of the richest, biggest investors around seems to be 100% on the side of the Occupy Wall Street Protesters.

Just tweeted by PIMCO:

Gross: Class warfare by the 99%? Of course, they’re fighting back after 30 years of being shot at.

30 years of being shot at?

It sounds like he's basically saying it started with Reagan, though actually labor's share of the national income has been declining for about 40 years.

chart

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Matt Taibbi Lists The 5 Things The Occupy Wall Street Protesters Should Demand

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matt taibbiImage: wiki commons

The man who called Goldman Sachs a "great vampire squid" has some advice for Occupy Wall Street.

Not that he doesn't think they're doing things well. In fact, he thinks the logic behind the protester's lack of demands is ingenious.

But if they were to figure out their specific demands. Here's where he, per his article in Rolling Stone today, thinks they should start:

1. Break up the monopolies. He's talking about the 20 or so "too big to fail" companies in our country that could single-handedly take down our economy.

2. Pay for your own bailouts. "A tax of 0.1 percent on all trades of stocks and bonds and a 0.01 percent tax on all trades of derivatives would generate enough revenue to pay us back for the bailouts, and still have plenty left over to fight the deficits the banks claim to be so worried about..."

3. No public money for private lobbying. Pretty self-explanatory.

4. Tax hedge-fund gamblers. Right now, because of the carried-interest tax break, they're only paying about 15%.

5. Change the way bankers get paid. Bonuses shouldn't be paid up-front. They should be contingent upon performance. 

Actually, the groups coalescing around the Occupy Wall Street movement have started to mention demands, though they aren't official. Here's a video of the pep talk they had before yesterdays Millionaires March. They specifically mention keeping the New York State Millionaires tax alive and well:

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Friday, February 10, 2012

Occupy Wall Street Has Some Bad News For The Rich Residents Of The Upper East Side

  x You have successfully emailed the post. Tomorrow, Occupy Wall Street protesters will leave Zuccotti Park at 11 AM and head to the Upper East Side to see how "the 1%" live.

They're calling it, "NYC billionaires Walking Tour" and they'll start marching at 59th and 5th Avenue around 12:30 PM. You can check out the here's the link to their Facebook invitation, and a snippet:

Wanna "see how the 1% lives"? Then join us on a walking tour of the homes of some of the bank and corporate executives that don't pay taxes, cut jobs, engaged in mortgage fraud, tanked our economy.....all while giving themselves record setting bonuses!
Occupy wall street will join community groups fighting for economic justice.

You can meet at Liberty Square/Zuccotti Park at 11:00 am and we will take the subway together or you can meet at 59th and 5th ave at 12:30pm. (please indicate if you will travel with us from the square)

We'll be meeting at 59th Street and 5th Avenue at 12:30 pm, and then march from house to house, demanding accountability for Wall Street crimes, and an extension of the Millionaire's tax.

Who will we be visiting exactly? Well....you're just gonna have to come to find out.

That's a really good question. But don't worry, we'll have the answer for you on Business Insider tomorrow.

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