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YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Protesters want world to know they're just like us

    NEW YORK (AP) — As other protesters chanted vigorously around her, Nancy Pi-Sunyer stood off to the side at the Occupy Wall Street rally, clutching her sign, looking a little like a new teacher on the first day of school.

    In a way, she was: At 66, this retired teacher was joining a protest for the first time in her life.

    "I was too young for the civil rights movement," Pi-Sunyer said earlier this week as she joined thousands of protesters marching in lower Manhattan. "And during the Vietnam War, I was too serious a student. Now, I just want to stand up and have my voice be heard."

    As the protests have expanded and gained support from new sources, what began three weeks ago as a group of mostly young people camping out on the streets has morphed into something different: an umbrella movement for people of varying ages, life situations and grievances, some of them first-time protesters.

    There are a few common denominators among the protesters: their position on the left of the political spectrum, and the view that the majority in America — the "99 percent," in their words — isn't getting a fair shake.

    Beyond that, though, there's a diversity of age, gender and race — in part due to the recent injection of labor union support, and fueled by social networks — that is striking to some who study social protests.

    "Most people think this is a bunch of idealistic young kids," said Heather Gautney, a sociology professor at Fordham University and an analyst of social protests. "But the wider movement is remarkably more diverse than it's been portrayed. I've seen a lot of first-time protesters, nurses, librarians. At one protest, the younger element seemed actually to be in the minority."

    Pi-Sunyer, who lives in Montclair, N.J., was drawn into the fray on Wednesday the same way many were — via social networks. She saw a post from a friend on Facebook and realized it was time to join.

    "I just decided to get off the couch and be in control," she said, holding a hand-lettered sign that read: "Wise OWLS Seek Economic Justice 4 All." (OWLS was a play on the initials for Occupy Wall Street — with an "l'' for little people.) "I was oblivious before. I can't be oblivious now."

    Nearby, a speaker in lower Manhattan's Foley Square yelled into a microphone: "I'm tired of sticking my hand in my pocket, and only getting my leg!" The so-called "Granny Brigade" pulled out guitars and played a song. The crowd milled, bearing an endless variety of signs:

    "Make Banks Pay!" ''Corporate Greed is Not Patriotic!" ''Give My Professor Health Insurance, Please!" ''Food is A Basic Human Right!" ''Bernanke Burnout!" An optimistic one: "This Is The First Time I've Felt Hopeful In a Long Time!" And a pessimistic one: "Even My Union is Corrupt!"

    Cherie Walters wasn't carrying a sign — she WAS a sign. Both the front and back of her shirt were covered in scrawled slogans.

    "I came here from MICHIGAN because the top 20 percent are waging class warfare against the rest of the U.S.," it read in part. Walters, 58, also a former teacher, had driven all the way from Michigan with her husband, Rich.

    Her biggest gripe: credit card swipe fees, which she said were killing smaller businesses. She also was concerned about unemployment in her home state. "I'm very angry at how poverty is degrading our people," she said. As she spoke, a much younger protester interrupted her to hand her a leaflet on health care reform.

    The couple, who'd been following the protests all week, getting updates via Facebook and Twitter (and posting their own video on YouTube), complained that protesters had been described by others as unruly mobs or young troublemakers. Did she look like a young troublemaker, Walters asked? (At least there was a silver lining, she quipped: It was flattering to be described as young.)

    Both Cherie and Rich Walters had protested during the Vietnam War, as students at Central Michigan University. Compared with those anti-war protests, she said, this one was way more diverse — "different ages, colors, even languages," she said. Legal Aid lawyer Steve Wasserman, 63, who joined Wednesday's march with his union and remembered his Vietnam protesting days, agreed. "The old left was very male-dominated," he said.

    Such diversity is what organizers were hoping for, said Patrick Bruner, spokesman for Occupy Wall Street. Since launching the protests in mid-September with a group of mostly young activists, "we've made a concerted effort to diversify our group," he said, with an outreach committee and caucus groups for people of color, for example, or for women. "We've gradually seen our message resonate with different groups of people."

    Organizers also have been encouraging people to tell their stories in a virtual protest on tumblr, the social network, spotlighting people of different backgrounds, each tale of economic hardship ending with: "I am the 99 percent."

    Experts say the role of social networks in building and organizing these protests, like in the recent revolt in Egypt, can't be overstated. "I've been studying and attending protests for a decade, and Facebook is the most effective organizing tool I have ever encountered," said Michael Heaney, a professor at the University of Michigan.

    What the movement doesn't have right now, these experts note, are the same concrete goals of some past social movements — a lack that many demonstrators seem to be embracing, at least for the moment.

    "We're a broad range — everyone's affected in a different way," said John Crisano, 27, who'd answered a call for college students to attend Wednesday's protest. "But we're all here because we're upset at the way the government is being run."

    Karen Livecchia, 49, agreed. "For now, it's a lot like the Internet — leaderless, spaceless," she said as she collected signatures at the march, spurred to action by an email from the liberal group MoveOn.org. "It's hard to tell what it will lead to. But I'm not concerned that we don't have specific demands — that will come."

    Livecchia, a Harvard grad with a master's from New York University, was laid off 21 months ago from her publishing job, and for her, too, this was the first protest of her life. Her anger was palpable.

    "I did everything I was supposed to do," she said. "I have two fancy degrees. I'm from a union home, raised to believe in the system. But you know what? The system doesn't work! It's too polluted with corporate money."

    "If it's like this for me," she added, "how about the waiters, and the truck drivers?

    What led Abdullah Pollard to the protests, just months after he became a U.S. citizen, was no less than the dashing of his American dream.

    Pollard, 58, came to the United States from Trinidad in 1996, and became a citizen in June. "I didn't feel empowered as an immigrant," he said at Wednesday's march, where he volunteered as a marshal. "Now I am a citizen, and I want to stand up for the downtrodden."

    A father of three adult kids, Pollard was laid off in April from his job in telecommunications. He's looking for work again but said it's hard at his age. He feels let down by a country where, he said, "both political parties march to the same drummer — the powerful corporations."

    "You leave your own country and you expect things to be better in America, a step or two up from what you left back home," he said. "And then there's this rude awakening.

    "America is just not what it used to be."

    ___

    Online:

    http://wearethe99percent.tumblr.com/page/2

     

    5,748 comments

    • Dave  •  7 mths ago
      An easy solution-Ban lobbyist and term limits-would be a nice start!
      • Mike Hunt 7 mths ago
        As a conservative I'd simply prefer to see all liberal traitors nuked. End of problem. They are terrorists and thugs and criminals what the hell do these people think this is some kind of democracy where they have rights or something? All they have the right to do is work and shut the hell up and anyone who doesn't like it is a traitor and a communist and should leave our great nation!
      • Augustus 7 mths ago
        We do not need codified term limits. We need people to act responibly and make an informed vote everytime we get a chance.
      • DarrylB 7 mths ago
        We have term limits. They're called elections. People are too stupid and lazy to vote, they get what they get
    • Brian  •  7 mths ago
      I'm not saying a person has a right to have job, a person has the right to have an opportunity for a job
      • John S 7 mths ago
        Don't say that to the " occupy crowd".. they were taught in school that they are ENTITLED TO A HIGH PAYING JOB, for studying marxism in college and not much else.
      • Skeeter 7 mths ago
        i doubt they study much marxism, they don't know we even run a monopolistic price fixing economy and have the nerve to call it capitalism.
      • A Yahoo! User 7 mths ago
        These guys don't want a JOB! They want our tax dollars going to them and not to the banks. They want a hand-out.
    • Suzanne D  •  7 mths ago
      The difference between the coverage of the occupy Wallstreet protesters and the coverage of the Tea Party movement is quite telling in my opinion.
      • Ken 7 mths ago
        I'm not sure whether the manstream press or Washington needs an enema more. The press is has certainly become the collective Pravda for America. It would take FoxNews multiplied by 20 to balance things out.
      • JAMES 7 mths ago
        Ken will tell us what the Sunday papers say about these events.

        And why they are wrong.

        That's assuming that Ken gets the Sunday national newspapers of record.
      • GreedOverPeople 7 mths ago
        @james who owns Wallstreet? Who owns the media? funny how they both have the same master? Or is it just easier for you to paint this as a liberal vs. conserviative issue?
    • John  •  7 mths ago
      I emplore all to research the Glass-Seagall Act, which was put into place after the Stock Market Crash of 1929. It will explain a lot when you research the government repealing it durring the Clinton Administration. It was just a matter of time after the act was repealed before we got skrewed by greedy bankers again.
      • Resident PITA 7 mths ago
        How are "we" getting screwed? Should I be checking my account? Are they planning to steal something from me? Help me please!
      • s 7 mths ago
        Bailouts...have you heard of them?
      • Alienhideout 7 mths ago
        Resident PITA, you are getting screwed by your bank. Ever heard of fractional reserve banking? That is the way the U.S. banking system works. This system goes all the way to the federal reserve, which by the way is not actually part of the federal government, it is a privately owned bank that manipulates our currency. Try taking all the money out of your account in cash and see what happens. The banks are only required to have a certain fraction of your deposits on hand as reserves. These people should be protesting the federal reserve and the Keynesian economic ideas that our government is practicing.
    • Dave M  •  7 mths ago
      The protestors are kids who are just starting to think based on limited life experiences...and really have little to offer, a few adults who want the rest of the population to feel sorry for them and give them more money, and retirees that didnt save enough...sad really. What if they joined together to clean up an area instead of having feces everywhere?
    • A Yahoo! User  •  7 mths ago
      Those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it....
      • Hellfire 7 mths ago
        See, that's often used as an expression of fear, but really; I'd love to repeat my childhood, that was some good times right there.
      • A Yahoo! User 7 mths ago
        Lets just hope our future is as bright in America as our childhood was... its not looking that way...
      • A Yahoo! User 7 mths ago
        Like prohibition?
    • WHO'S RIGHT  •  7 mths ago
      Corrupt, career politicians and the laws they pass are the root cause for what is ruining America. If the politicians didn't accept bribes.....then unions, corporations, lawyers, and other special interest groups wouldn't get the favorable legislation everyone is complaining about. Vote out the career politicians and make term limits for all.
    • Eric Hates Scammers  •  7 mths ago
      We should all be upset. We don't get to write the rules to this economic monopoly game.
      I don't know of any average tax payers sending lobbyist to Washington to bend the constitution in their favor. Our candidates are force fed to us by the media. Our vote, our choices and our labor are are having the value sucked out of them and funneled to the rule makers.
    • Allen  •  7 mths ago
      My bank does not charge these fees. It is a smaller community bank that is very responsive to its depositors.
    • bs  •  7 mths ago
      You are interested in changing the image of blue collar workers. How do we do that?

      Well, I term them essential workers. Shaquille O'Neal's job is not essential. Lady Gaga's job is not essential. The essential people are the ones who prepare and maintain the air conditioning in this building, or repair the elevators. Those are the essential people, because without them we go nowhere. So the media for the last 30 or 40 years have depicted people with toolboxes as being stupid, or drunk. So why would a kid growing up and seeing that depiction on a movie screen want to be that? It seems like we've become a society that honors failure and not success. We should be honoring the people who make it all work. You have to get the writers or producers and say, why not have a sitcom or film based on a bricklayer, or a truck driver. And give them dignity and respect.
    • Jerry  •  7 mths ago
      amazing....the last comment in the article was by a new citizen of this country.....America....isn't what it used to be......talk about irony........welcome to the new America, my fellow citizen.......
    • Ryan  •  7 mths ago
      I hear your anguish, but remember a point in all directions is the same as no point at all. Focus on ending Lobbying, (Legalized Bribery). This is the Fuel that fans the flames of Government Corruption.
    • Dave M  •  7 mths ago
      I'm sure they will clean the place up when they are done...after all they are soo environmentally conscious and caring about their fellow man...just ignore the feces.
    • Your.TV.Lies  •  7 mths ago
      It's pretty obvious who gets their news from the tv instead of researching it for themselves. What if... just what if the big corporations that own the media use it to manipulate you. Grow up people! Think for yourselves!
    • SickofLiars  •  7 mths ago
      Glass Stegal Act NOW! Next Indictments on the Washington DC power base for Financial treason against the United States Of America!
    • Glen  •  7 mths ago
      Before Ms. Noveck gets a thrill up her leg and begins rapturously quoting John Steinbeck, let me point out one significant difference between the protesters of today and the displaced workers of the Great Depression. I've seen protesters on camera refusing all types of jobs because 1) they don't pay enough; 2) the jobs aren't in their career field, or 3) they don't want to leave the city for remote localities. Whether it's a $17,000/year restaurant job in the city, or a $95,000/year oil & gas job in Wyoming or North Dakota, the answer is 'no'. This selective approach to climbing out of poverty is a major change from the 1930s, when whole families uprooted themselves and moved to find any paying job, from picking fruit to taking in laundry to working heavy construction building ecologically-suspect dams for electric power across the great rivers of the nation. As Thomas Edison said, "Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work."
    • Solid Citizen  •  7 mths ago
      Was Steve Jobs "greedy"?
    • Salmon swimming upstream  •  7 mths ago
      Back to the 60's????? If you remember the 60's, you really weren't "there"!
    • Reclusive Lady  •  7 mths ago
      A lot of people have time on their hands and an axe to grind.

      This is what happens when there aren't enough jobs to keep them busy.

      Want to stop the protests? Bring back the jobs.
    • curt  •  7 mths ago
      Why does Homeland Security have 300,000 employees, isn't our security the job of the Army, Marine Corp, Navy, Air Force, Coast Guard, FBI, CIA, and Secret Service,
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