HMQ
5-Year Member
- Joined
- Jan 21, 2010
- Messages
- 107
(I copied this over from the other "Occupy Wall Street" thread, which had morphed into a discussion about colleges/student loans.)
Much as some would like to boil this down to protests by a group of people they don't like, it's just not that simple. This is not just about "kids" strapped by student loans, or those who feel a sense of entitlement. Here's an interesting article which looks at it from another perspective, from the Associated Press today: (link to full article: http://www.poughkeepsiejournal.com/a...sieJournal.com)
Much as some would like to boil this down to protests by a group of people they don't like, it's just not that simple. This is not just about "kids" strapped by student loans, or those who feel a sense of entitlement. Here's an interesting article which looks at it from another perspective, from the Associated Press today: (link to full article: http://www.poughkeepsiejournal.com/a...sieJournal.com)
"NEW YORK — Thousands of U.S. military veterans are heeding the rallying cry of Occupy Wall Street, saying corporate contractors in Iraq made big money while the troops defending them came home — and can't make a living now.
"For too long, our voices have been silenced, suppressed and ignored in favor of the voices of Wall Street and the banks and the corporations," said Joseph Carter, a 27-year-old Iraq war veteran who marched Wednesday to Zuccotti Park, the epicenter of the movement that has spread worldwide.
The former Army sergeant from Seattle spoke to fellow Occupy protesters and passersby on Broadway after joining about 100 veterans marching in uniform from the Vietnam Veterans Plaza through Manhattan's financial district nearby.
Their unemployment rate outstrips the national average and is expected to worsen. They worry about preservation of First Amendment rights. And they're angry.
A week before Veterans Day, generations of former U.S. military men and women threw their considerable weight behind the Occupy movement born in mid-September when about 100 protesters also marched in the Wall Street area."