Author Topic: OWS = Rape, Pimps, Masturbation, TB, Defecation, Rats, Robbery, and Murder  (Read 177099 times)

Fury

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #650 on: October 17, 2011, 07:47:00 PM »

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #651 on: October 17, 2011, 07:49:22 PM »


LMFAO!!!!   

I am going to go down there again soon and keep track of this mess.  batchelor had a good segment tonight w a NYT reporter who slept the night and she confirmed everything I said. 

come end of November - we are looking at Andersonville down there. 

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #652 on: October 17, 2011, 07:53:23 PM »
I can't believe you have never been to NYC.    It's literally the center of the planet city wise.    24 7 everything! 

bloomberg hates gun.
bloomberg invites illegals to go there for free healthcare. 

i don't like shit like that.

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #653 on: October 17, 2011, 07:55:10 PM »
bloomberg hates gun.
bloomberg invites illegals to go there for free healthcare. 

i don't like shit like that.

Dear God.   

NYC is literally like nothing you can imagine.   sometimes I take it for granted for those who live in podunk. 


It's 24 7 here. 

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #654 on: October 17, 2011, 07:59:19 PM »
Freed hikers cheer 'Occupy' movement, plead for prisoners' rights
cnn ^ | 10/17/2011 | staff
Posted on October 17, 2011 10:49:16 PM EDT by tobyhill

Three Americans freed after being held in Iran lent their support Monday to the now-global Occupy movement, applauding its participants' idealism and activism while making a specific point to protest what they call the harsh treatment of state prisoners in California.

The pleas in California from Josh Fattal, Shane Bauer and Sarah Shourd to their hometown Occupy Oakland crowd supporting scores of prisoners on hunger strikes signify the wide breadth of issues -- and, critics may say, lack of focus -- being addressed by the movement. The trio, who said they experienced long-term solitary confinement in Iran -- called California's approach to such confinement especially egregious.

The state Department of Corrections said last week that a three-week hunger strike by inmates had ended. But Fattal -- who announced he'd gone on a symbolic 24-hour fast to show solidarity with the California inmates -- said Monday that 150 prisoners remained on a hunger strike.

"The only way to be heard is to threaten that you're going to die. This is crazy," said Bauer, who like Fattal spent 26 months mostly alone in cramped cells before being released last month. "If people here are supporting (the California prisoners), they are going to feel it."

The three Americans also cheered the Occupy movement, which began 31 days ago in Lower Manhattan not long before the two men were released by Iranian authorities. It has since grown into an international movement, despite its lack of obvious leadership or a single, unifying message.

(Excerpt) Read more at cnn.com ...




LOL.   I fucking live here in this jungle.   The media is sling this out to be something it is not.   

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #655 on: October 17, 2011, 08:09:48 PM »
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Wall Street's Gullible Occupiers (Good One)
Wall Street Occupied Journal ^ | 10/12/11 | PETER J. WALLISON
Posted on October 12, 2011 6:25:30 AM EDT by woofie

The protesters have been sold a bill of goods. Reckless government policies, not private greed, brought about the housing bubble and resulting financial crisis.

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

There is no mystery where the Occupy Wall Street movement came from: It is an offspring of the same false narrative about the causes of the financial crisis that exculpated the government and brought us the Dodd-Frank Act. According to this story, the financial crisis and ensuing deep recession was caused by a reckless private sector driven by greed and insufficiently regulated. It is no wonder that people who hear this tale repeated endlessly in the media turn on Wall Street to express their frustration with the current conditions in the economy.

Their anger should be directed at those who developed and supported the federal government's housing policies that were responsible for the financial crisis.

Beginning in 1992, the government required Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to direct a substantial portion of their mortgage financing to borrowers who were at or below the median income in their communities. The original legislative quota was 30%. But the Department of Housing and Urban Development was given authority to adjust it, and through the Bill Clinton and George W. Bush administrations HUD raised the quota to 50% by 2000 and 55% by 2007.

It is certainly possible to find prime borrowers among people with incomes below the median. But when more than half of the mortgages Fannie and Freddie were required to buy were required to have that characteristic, these two government-sponsored enterprises had to significantly reduce their underwriting standards.

Fannie and Freddie were not the only government-backed or government-controlled organizations that were enlisted in this process. The Federal Housing Administration was competing with Fannie and Freddie for the same mortgages.

(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...

Fury

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #656 on: October 17, 2011, 08:24:42 PM »
These protests would be old news if the MSNBCs of the world weren't so invested in them. They're the sole driving force keeping them going.

Let's see how long the protesters hang around when the media moves onto the next big thing. I give it two to three weeks, tops.

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #657 on: October 17, 2011, 08:26:32 PM »
These protests would be old news if the MSNBCs of the world weren't so invested in them. They're the sole driving force keeping them going.

Let's see how long the protesters hang around when the media moves onto the next big thing. I give it two to three weeks, tops.

I was down in the middle of that rag tag mess a few days ago.   They are not qualified to un a pet store let alone a movement.

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #658 on: October 17, 2011, 08:27:27 PM »
I was down in the middle of that rag tag mess a few days ago.   They are not qualified to un a pet store let alone a movement.

If Bloomberg wasn't such a pussy he would have bounced them last week when they intended to.


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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #659 on: October 17, 2011, 08:30:28 PM »
If Bloomberg wasn't such a pussy he would have bounced them last week when they intended to.



I m not kidding , if you are two blocks away from these people , you would not even know they are there. 

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #660 on: October 17, 2011, 08:32:09 PM »
I m not kidding , if you are two blocks away from these people , you would not even know they are there. 

I don't doubt it. The leftist MSM desperately wants a group to rise up and challenge the Tea Party. They know how bad Obama's reelection hopes are right now and they're doing everything they can to co-opt and nurture this into something they can use next year.

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #661 on: October 17, 2011, 08:34:35 PM »
I don't doubt it. The leftist MSM desperately wants a group to rise up and challenge the Tea Party. They know how bad Obama's reelection hopes are right now and they're doing everything they can to co-opt and nurture this into something they can use next year.

I was at 60 centre which is about 5 blocks north.   The only sign f these people is maybe a half block north pf this. 

Unless you see it in person, as i did and reported last week, you don't realize what a bs scam the media is pulling on this.

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #662 on: October 18, 2011, 03:19:08 AM »
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Thieves preying on fellow protesters (Occupy Wall Street)
NY Post ^ | October 18, 2011 | LARRY CELONA, LAURA ITALIANO REBECCA HARSHBARGER, FRANK ROSARIO and JAMIE SCHRAM
Posted on October 18, 2011 6:14:36 AM EDT by lowbridge

Occupy Wall Street protesters said yesterday that packs of brazen crooks within their ranks have been robbing their fellow demonstrators blind, making off with pricey cameras, phones and laptops -- and even a hefty bundle of donated cash and food.

“Stealing is our biggest problem at the moment,” said Nan Terrie, 18, a kitchen and legal-team volunteer from Fort Lauderdale.

“I had my Mac stolen -- that was like $5,500. Every night, something else is gone. Last night, our entire [kitchen] budget for the day was stolen, so the first thing I had to do was . . . get the message out to our supporters that we needed food!”

Crafty cat burglars sneaked into the makeshift kitchen at Zuccotti Park overnight and swiped as much as $2,500 in donated greenbacks from right under the noses of volunteers who’d fallen asleep after a long day whipping up meals for the hundreds of hungry protesters, the volunteers said.

(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #663 on: October 18, 2011, 05:48:24 AM »
Occupy Arrest Scam Unmasked
Townhall.com ^ | October 18, 2011 | Kyle Olson




Leftists love to get arrested at protests. It must make them feel like adults and compensates for their otherwise very childish behavior.


But new video released exclusively by EAGtv shows the protestors pre-arrange who is to be arrested. That’s right – the arrests are as scripted as a professional wrestling match, at least on the occupiers’ end.


Cameras were rolling in Chicago recently and captured Chicago Teachers Union organizers finalizing plans for who in the crowd would be arrested. That’s right – it was staged.


Comparing lists on clipboards, the footage shows two union organizers in CTU shirts questioning whether a man standing with them would be arrested or not.


Organizer 1: “He said he’s not being arrested. He’s not on the list.”


The intent is clear: Overwhelm the system. Occupy the police. Provoke confrontation. Produce beautiful footage for naïve local TV rubes reporters. Clog the courts. Gain sympathy from citizens.


But it’s all just a game. And the media is continuing to fall for the ruse.


As more fringe elements continue to emerge in the #OccupyWallStreet movement (the Nazis and Communists recently declared their support), these types of staged activities will continue. But as their actions continue and there is inaction on the part of President Obama and the Congress, look for things to take a turn for the worse.


Sadly, I’m afraid, the teachers unions’ brothers and sisters in law enforcement will be the target.



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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #664 on: October 18, 2011, 10:35:40 AM »
http://occupywallst.org/forum


LMFAO! ! ! !


They started a forum! 



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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #665 on: October 18, 2011, 10:54:22 AM »
Los Angeles Faces $28 Million Costs Under Occupy Protest's Plan
SF Gate ^ | 10-18-11 | Chris Palmeri

Posted on Tuesday, October 18, 2011 1:40:49 PM by joinedafterattack

Los Angeles faces tens of million of dollars in additional borrowing costs after the City Council told anti-Wall Street protesters the city intends to cut ties with banks involved in financial wrongdoing, City Administrative Officer Miguel Santana said.

The city may have to pay $27.8 million in termination fees and replacement costs in just one program if it's prohibited from doing business with banks providing letters of credit for an infrastructure program, Santana said today in a memo to Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and city leaders. Additional debt service would cost $14.9 million a year if it has to refinance commercial paper into long-term debt at higher interest rates, Santana said in a telephone interview.

Council members in the nation's second-largest city by population passed a resolution Oct. 12 in support of the demonstrations and promising to accelerate the issuance of "report cards" rating banks on such things as foreclosures and charitable giving. The vote came after three hours of public comment, much of it by participants in Occupy Los Angeles who've camped in front of City Hall since Oct. 1.

"The financial repercussions will be immense" if the city's governing body instructs his office to stop doing business with many of it current lenders, Santana said in the report.

Council member Richard Alarcon, who sponsored the resolution, said Santana's reaction showed Occupy Los Angeles is having an effect.

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2011/10/18/bloomberg_articlesLT8LD86K50YX.DTL#ixzz1b9jLCFfq


(Excerpt) Read more at sfgate.com ...


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




LOL.   

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #666 on: October 18, 2011, 11:00:42 AM »
Hell, No, We Won’t Toe: Neither the Wall Street banks nor the Zuccotti Park protesters believe...
City Journal ^ | 17 October 2011 | Nicole Gelinas



Neither the Wall Street banks nor the Zuccotti Park protesters believe that the rule of law applies to them.

Too big to fail is too big to allow, reads one hand-lettered sign on the east side of Zuccotti Park overlooking lower Broadway. Good point. As a few protesters (not all) understand, the problem with “the banks” isn’t that they exist, but that they’re isolated from the consistent rule of law. The bizarre irony, then, is that five weeks in, Zuccotti Park’s live-in campers are behaving more and more like the banks against which they are railing. A few dozen banks and other financial institutions—at minimum—are “too big to fail.” Back in October 2008, then–Treasury secretary Hank Paulson and Fed chief Ben Bernanke were afraid that letting big firms, such as AIG and Bank of America, go bankrupt would cause too much chaos and pain for the economic and financial systems. The government stepped in and rescued them.


The problem remains. Just last week, three European nations bailed out Dexia Bank, a global municipal lender. In the New York Times’s Dealbook, Jesse Eisinger wrote that, while Western governments “probably won’t hesitate to wipe out equity holders in failed financial institutions, . . . they will do everything they can to protect [derivatives] counterparties so that the system doesn’t collapse.” If he’s right, that means speculators and derivatives are benefiting from free government insurance, courtesy of the people who will pay for future financial crises—whether that’s taxpayers or people thrown out of work or both.


Nobody knows what will happen in any individual case because there’s no consistent rule of law to protect free markets, only the unpredictable rule of people. In particular, Republicans, who are supposed to support free markets, should spend more of their waking hours worrying about how this crisis came about and how they’d fix it. But last week, GOP presidential front-runner Mitt Romney, for one, made clear that he doesn’t think much about the too-big-to-fail disaster.


By now, the Zuccotti squatters have become too big to fail, too. New York mayor Michael Bloomberg worries that enforcing the rule of law at Zuccotti Park would cause too much chaos and pain. This time, the pain wouldn’t come in the form of economic injury in the form of years’ worth of double-digit unemployment, but in potential injury to protesters as well as to police, bad publicity for the city, and lawsuits. And just as Paulson and his successor at Treasury, Timothy Geithner, have treated financial institutions randomly, Bloomberg’s approach is similarly unpredictable: one day, he’s going to force the protesters to leave on a firm deadline; a few hours later, he backtracks, citing mysterious, unseen forces.


Coddling banks has had unfortunate unintended consequences. Thanks to its government subsidy, the financial industry is likely still bigger than it needs to be—to the detriment of other industries trying to compete for capital and talent. Coddling squatters will also have negative unintended consequences. New York City is home to dozens of parks, public and private. People live and work just yards away from them. Now, other would-be squatters can observe what’s going on at Zuccotti and draw their own conclusions. What’s to stop homeless people, for example, from pitching heated tents in Central Park? Such a situation would be awkward, at best, for the mayor, because many Zuccotti protesters are white, and many chronically homeless people are not. If the mayor were to evict squatters from some spaces and not others, New York might face lawsuits based on unequal treatment. In addition, some New York City public spaces are indoors. This past Saturday, Bank of America closed its indoor “park” in its headquarters near Bryant Park—no big mystery why. But this closure, another random action, penalizes the public.


In both cases, whom should people blame for government’s failure to enforce the law? The protesters make a common mistake in blaming the banks. But the banks are simply exploiting Washington’s weakness. The protesters should hold elected officials, not bank executives, accountable. Likewise, the protesters aren’t to blame for Bloomberg’s failure to enforce public order and private-property rights. The protesters are taking advantage of the mayor because he’s letting them. It’s understandable that Occupy Wall Street garners public sympathy (and donations). People feel disenfranchised, and they just want somebody, somewhere, to do something. But the nation can’t combat the failure to uphold the rule of law with more of the same.


Here’s a simple prescription: banks shouldn’t be too big to fail, and people shouldn’t live in public spaces.


Nicole Gelinas, a City Journal contributing editor and the Searle Freedom Trust Fellow at the Manhattan Institute, is the author of After the Fall: Saving Capitalism from Wall Street—and Washington.



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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #667 on: October 18, 2011, 12:02:36 PM »
 :)

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #668 on: October 18, 2011, 01:12:07 PM »
Man accused of exposing self to children arrested
By KOMO Staff Published: Oct 18, 2011 at 10:36 AM PDT
 


 
SEATTLE -- A man accused of exposing himself to children at least five times across Seattle was arrested early Tuesday morning.

Seattle police say he was taken into custody at his Kenmore residence around 1 a.m.

Officers had been given a composite sketch of the suspect and detectives learned he had been at Westlake Park taking part in the Occupy Seattle protests.

The man is accused of exposing himself three times on Sept. 29 -- once in Crown Hill, once near Alki Beach, and a third time on Capitol Hill. Three days later, he was spotted at Pinehurst Playfield near Northgate, and then again on Oct. 3 at the Lakeside soccer field in North Seattle.

In one instance, the man allegedly approached two 13-year-old girls on swings, made a comment and was engaged in a lewd act when they turned to look, according to police.

The man was booked into King County Jail for Investigation of Indecent Exposure.

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #669 on: October 18, 2011, 01:27:52 PM »
Teachers join Occupy L.A. movement with march
KABC TV Los Angeles ^ | Oct 18, 2011 | Subha Ravindhran and Robert Holguin

Posted on Tuesday, October 18, 2011 3:50:06 PM by kingu

DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- A strong showing is expected in downtown Los Angeles on Tuesday, as more people join the sweeping movement sparked by Occupy Wall Street protesters.

Demonstrators with the Occupy L.A. group have been living in tents outside of City Hall for about two weeks protesting against what they call corporate greed.

On Tuesday, the teacher's union will join Occupy L.A. in a march to LAUSD headquarters where the school board will be meeting. They are looking to start a second occupation site to protest teacher layoffs.

The union wants the district to re-hire the 1,200 teachers and other school workers that were laid off earlier this year.

"One of the main points of Occupy L.A. is to protect the public's sphere," said teacher Marcy Winograd. "That we share a public arena and it should be protected from corporate influence."

Winograd says one major issue is corporate charters defunding public education in LAUSD.


(Excerpt) Read more at abclocal.go.com ...


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Do these public sector madoffs and crooks understand where the money comes from to pay them? 

tu_holmes

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #670 on: October 18, 2011, 01:31:02 PM »

Do these public sector madoffs and crooks understand where the money comes from to pay them? 

No... which is sad, because they are supposed to be TEACHERS... Teaching kids... But they are idiots.

So I guess it makes sense why they are laid off... because I don't want a bunch of morons teaching my kids.

Skip8282

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #671 on: October 18, 2011, 02:18:14 PM »
I m not kidding , if you are two blocks away from these people , you would not even know they are there. 


I keep seeing the number seemingly go down, but the douchebags on this board are pimping it like it's hundreds of thousands of people.

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #672 on: October 18, 2011, 03:05:18 PM »
WTF! 

These people are like robots and drones.   


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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #673 on: October 18, 2011, 03:10:23 PM »
‘Occupy Cleveland’ Protester Alleges She Was Raped
October 18, 2011 4:06 PM



Protesters camp out during the “Occupy London” rally. In Cleveland, one “Occupy Cleveland” protester claims she was raped in her tent on Saturday. (credit: Getty Images)



Cleveland Police, Occupy Cleveland, Occupy Wall Street, Parma, Public Square CLEVELAND, Ohio (CBS Cleveland) –


An “Occupy Cleveland” protester tells police she was raped in her tent over the weekend.

Cleveland police are investigating an alleged sexual assault incident Saturday at the “Occupy Cleveland” rally involving a 19-year-old female student from Parma.

According to police reports, the 19-year-old student was instructed by “Occupy Cleveland” personnel to “share a tent with the suspect due to a shortage of tents.” The suspect identified himself as “Leland” to the woman. The woman told police that after she had thought the suspect went to sleep in his own bed, she slept in a sleeping bag provided to her by the rally.

The student went to school Monday and told a teacher about her sexual assault incident in Public Square — which is being classified as “kidnapping/rape” — prompting the teacher to immediately contact the authorities.

“Occupy Cleveland” is one of many movements taking place nationwide in the wake of “Occupy Wall Street,” which is protesting against corporate greed.

Emails from CBS Cleveland to the “Occupy Cleveland” movement were not immediately returned.

 

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Re: Occupy Wall Street = Sad, Laughable, and Pathetic Joke
« Reply #674 on: October 18, 2011, 03:12:15 PM »
WTF! 

These people are like robots and drones.   



pot kettle.    ;D