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An Occupier returns to Dewey Square

Matt Cloyd reports from Dewey Square this morning (may take a moment or two to come up):

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We did SO MUCH MORE with this land than these landscapers. They're packing dirt. We changed the world.

Matt Cloyd21 hours agoReplyRetweet“Gleeful ignoramuses taking pictures. They're not bad people, they just don't understand what this place was. They will in a year though.

Like so many of your generation you have a far too inflated opinion of yourself. You didn't change anything - most people thought you disorganized and in the end self-centered. A friend who moved to NY (who's 30) said her facebook page lit up with joyous messages from all of her similarly aged Boston friends when your sorry butts got tossed. You came in, made a lot of noise, a big mess and ran up a big tab when that money could have been spent on so many other more worthwhile things. Some day you'll grow up and realize your side show did little more than waste your time. You can't regulate morality, common sense or lack of ability to see the future - all of which were the root problems with the financial crisis. This stuff has been going on for millennia. Banging drums for two months on a median strip isn't going to change human behavior, but if your delusion keeps you happy - enjoy it while it lasts. I'm not a fan of the Tea Party - but they have already changed the world far more than you ever will - sorry that's gotta hurt - but it's the truth. It's over and the world hasn't budged.

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The problem of the financial crisis isn't that there are bad people out there. We know that. It's that fraud was committed and the law was either powerless or unwilling to punish it. We're not doomed to be at the mercy of the business cycle as certain Wall St executives would have you believe. We deregulated the industry too far -- and weakened the remaining regulators too much. Those regulations were put in place following the Great Depression, but they were removed to help improve the bottom line of Big Finance by a few percentage. At least until everything came crashing down.

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The more regulations you put in, the more the industry will seek to influence both their writing and the way they are enforced.

Don't regulations inevitably lead to a responsibility on the part of the government to keep the regulated industry going?

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We should use the angered peasants function?
if(corporate malfeasance)
then(pitchforks and fire);

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This guy knows bank fraud. He cut his teeth on the S&L scandal in the 80's VIDEO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N_AuvLTJNh0

If you think he's speaking the truth, then you have to believe that fraud including the fraudulent taking of people's homes has been going on in America for over 3 years, without consequence. If you believe that, then you must ask if why gov't is not enforcing the law.

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Hedge funds, CDS, Derivatives, Options, futures, ect.

You want me to go down the full list of relatively new finical instruments that lack proper regulations and were used to leverage client money improperly?

The problem wasn't regulatory capture, but lack of regulatory oversight from the beginning. Much of the junk being traded are new financial vehicles that government did not have oversight on due to lack of law.

Plus, your solution appears to be let them do whatever they want, and let them fail when they inevitably screw up. That moral hazard will keep them in line.

I agree, but what does that mean for the US Economy? Are you suggesting we should just let free market Capitalism bomb us to the stone age?

Ultimately, moral hazard didn't. Because nations can not (and should not) let their economy go into a death spiral. That means there is no moral hazard for corporations if they can get to big to fail.

Ultimately the government is the counter wight, and the government should nationalize, stabilize, and break up these behemoths. especially when they need a government bailout.

But, but , but socialism!

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If you reduced government levers on the economy, specifically returned to an automatic currency supplier such as the gold standard, you direct investors to make their bets on the economy, rather than the government action.

Right now more investors are betting on what the government will do to the value of the dollar/yen/euro etc than what actually happens to the businesses in these countries.

For instance, I bet that the Chinese will increase the value of the yuan vs. the dollar. Then the corruption comes in, I pay off Charles Schumer and other congressmen to make good on my bet, no matter what it means for the US economy.

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I'll make note you're a gold (digger) too.

Probably also worried about inflation?

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Since it's my major source of protein right now, did you notice how the price has gone up over $4/jar at Shaws?

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Just of a really bad peanut harvest this year. Google am you friend.

So come on out of your bunker EM, the inflata-pocalypse is not yet at hand.

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$40K "family" minivan
$60K college
$400K single family house in Boston with shitty schools

Do you want me to go on?

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try pasta $1/lbs, gas $3.17, coffee (organic, fair trade, local roasted) $7.25/lbs. In fact, I've noticed that produce prices have been pretty flat the last couple years.

Prices go up over time? Sure. But are any of the above 'evidence' of recent inflation, as you imply? No, not at all. And housing and auto prices have deflated in the last half decade here (as in most of the US), so that directly counters your apparent supposition.

Worrying about inflation right now is like worrying about heat stroke in December.

***

And re: those 'shitty schools' - there's plenty of things I'd like to see changed at the BPS (mostly at the Court street level), but overall my 11 year old has gotten an excellent public education here. It's true that there are some poorly run schools, but at least at the K-8 level and in the West Zone, the typical BPS school is actually pretty darn good, especially for a large urban area. Multiple national studies bear this out.

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The inflated price of housing has been slightly reduced IF you have the money to buy and IF you can actually get a mortgage without excessive add-ons because the bank only hires people to lowball the estimates (hmmm ... puts you in a different category ... yeah). We got that when we refinanced - even though similar houses in the neighborhood sold for $50-70K more in the last month than ours was "estimated" at.

Meanwhile, there has been little relief in rents.

Real people don't just buy houses with cash. They have to finance them, qualify for financing, etc. That's why a lot of people rent, and not being able or willing to buy a house - if only because the banks don't do a good job of turning over REOs because it would drop prices - pushes the rental market up.

Meanwhile, those of us who buy massive quantities of food know goddamn well the prices have been going up pretty steeply. That's because our food prices are heavily dependent on oil and gas prices, and these have gone up quite a bit. To say otherwise is to ignore a google news page full of reality.

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Gas prices have gone up because of a huge influx of money into the futures markets through a set of banks that got secret memos that let them ignore the rules on speculators...and then everyone else pushing their money into the system via those banks. This artificially inflates the actual cost of the commodities, like gas. Of course, once that effects the cost to grow/harvest/bring to market the food crops, those prices go up and the futures on those get bought up like crazy too...which further pushes the price up artificially just like it did to gas originally. It's a vicious cycle.

You can read about the math/logic of it in "Griftopia" by Taibbi.

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Short term maybe, but over the last few years, not so much. I buy lots of food too SG - typically producing (vs. purchasing ready-made) 55-60 person-meals per week. I'm old enough to remember what real inflation looks and feels like - and what we have now ain't it. Our current economic ills are not inflation-based.

IMAGE(http://bls.gov/ro5/cpichichart1.gif)

(I'm sure there are graphs at BLS that explicitly call out all the CPI categories (eg food). But you can see that the food&energy CPI (blue curve minus red curve) is relatively narrow - and the lion's share of that is energy, not food. Ref the data at the linked text.)

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Look around you, junior. Inflation is the measure of all prices. What you're seeing is the uneven ratcheting up of prices even during a terrible recession because workers and suppliers are under pressure to give their goods and labor away at fire sale prices.

The dollar becomes weaker through loose money, and then different sectors and industries respond at different rates. This was the same during the 1970s when oil and food and other commodities went up first. It takes the rest of us a lot longer to negotiate our wages up, especially if a recession has caused high unemployment and plentiful labor. In the meantime our standard of living is crashing out because even if your salary remains stable, it buys a lot less stuff.

I think you should really get out and look around. Prices are higher and they are hurting everybody. I don't know how you can be so callous about it unless you're attached to some weird economic theory that is threatened by these facts.

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Inflation hasn't really been a problem, outside of a few core groups.

Wage stagnation and purchasing power has. It's dropped like a rock from it's historical trend line.

Wages over the past 15 years have totally been removed from their correlation with productivity. It part of the reason for the debt bubble, as people filled the void with debt and loans against equity.

So if you want to worry about something, worry that people are no longer getting their fair share for doing more work.

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coffee (organic, fair trade, local roasted) $7.25/lb

Never seen coffee prices this low in the city unless it's Folgers in the big plastic jug. Where is this magical grocery store? (snark not intended)

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2 lbs bags. Columbian, French Vanilla, Breakfast Blend, et al. Local roaster. Great value.

When I'm not being lame, I roast my own for approx the same cost - and even better quality if I order online (green coffee beans also available at various South End/North End shops, but are either a more expensive/not highest quality).

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I'm always so tempted to buy one of their giant bags o' beans, but then I remember that a) I have no grinder and b) I don't drink that much coffee (in a household where I'm the only one who ever touches the stuff).

They also sell lots of grain-type things in bulk.

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But look, if Peets coffee goes from $9/lb at Shaws to $16/lb at Shaws, if Teddie goes from $2.30 at Shaws to $4.60 at Shaws, the answer is not "well I buy cheaper coffee" or "I ground my own peanuts for $2" or "I drive to Roxie's to buy coffee".

Or "you shouldn't drink so much coffee" or "you should substitute tofu butter for peanut butter."

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$40K "family" minivan
$60K college
$400K single family house in Boston with shitty schools

Do you want me to go on?

Yup. But it wasn't inflation. Those are all funded by the debt markets which was the huge demand bubble that just popped. It wasn't inflation, but speculation.

Student loans are next: http://thinkprogress.org/special/2011/12/12/387823...

And as said, check out wages adjusted for inflation vs productivity. There's a reason people first turned toward debt, then went wild with it when banks opened the flood gates.

They were making up the gap as their employers short changed them to post higher profits.

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I agree that college costs are ridiculous. These people are building empires, not institutions of higher learning. That's a battle occupy could win - if one by one students at schools like BU said - hey we are not paying $45,000 a year in tuition (or whatever ridiculous number it now is). We'll pay say $30,000 and then they band together and agree not to pay - or at least a large number of them agree. The schools could threaten to not give them their diplomas - but they would be broke in VERY short order - or they'd have to decimate their endowments to pay the bills. They could bring in the "B" team of students - but that wouldn't make it a very desirable academic institution. I think students - i.e. customers from a VERY limited pool (they can pay and have met some level of standards) have a lot of leverage in a unique situation like this. I think you pay by the semester so they could start as soon as January. National Tuition Boycotts. Now THAT would be fun to watch.

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Teddie Super Chunky peanut butter is 2 for $5 at Market Basket. Shaws, as we all know, is a ripoff though the only local choice for many.

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If Shaws is selling it for $3.60-$4.60, you can bet it will go up everywhere else. S&S already hiked the price to $3.30.

Everybody always has some little explanation for discreet prices going up. Global warming hit the coffee crop or whatever. It's different when they all go up.

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You've been drinking the Kool Aid - deregulation -with one exception did not cause this problem. The primary rule they needed to change or implement was the amount of leverage the firms were allowed to employ. If the ratio had been closer to 10-1 instead of 30-1 we wouldn't have been in this mess to begin with (along with properly accounting for the leverage/reserves which is a whole different ball of wax - see current problems in Europe for a perfect example).

Everyone wants to blame it on Glass-Steagall - when in fact the real culprit was reserve ratios against risky assets. Granted - you need to define risky assets - MBS were nowhere near as safe as they claimed which means they needed more reserves against them (I'm not even sure they needed any reserves on these). It's not more or less regulation - it's right regulation - Dodd-Frank and reinstating Glass-Steagall are not the answers - they do nothing to solve for example what just happened with MF Global - but if you had greater regulation and controls on the amount of leverage they used (which Corzine successfully lobbied against), MF Global doesn't blow up - go out of biz maybe - but they don't blow up along with over $1 billion of client money.

Like speed, its cousin leverage kills.

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I'm not pro- or anti- regulation for regulation's sake alone. It is there to prevent bank failures from dragging down the rest of us. Glass-Steagall may have been a blunt instrument, but it had worked for a long time. Whether you choose to reinstate that law, regulate leverage ratios, institute a financial insurance mechanism, or something else, the important part is to protect the rest of the economy from the inevitable failures of these firms.

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You can see what happens when the regulation says you can only invest in triple A grade debt -- all of a sudden lots of new stuff gets rated triple A.

And on Corzine, the question for me is not the billion dollars that disappeared. It's that he bet on government action when he was intimately connected to the government. It couldn't be clearer that big money will influence the government to take certain actions in order to make private investments pay off.

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She accomplished something. Not by sitting around singing,banging drums, living in a tent, invading bank lobbies and taunting authorities. She did it by collecting signatures, closing her account with BoA and gaining attention in a positive way.

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Give up.
Behold, the great wisdom of the aged one. Gee whiz! Why didn't I think of that?

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IMAGE(http://twitchfilm.com/news/TheyLiveRemake_650.jpg)

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Nice reference, such a great movie!

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how much we've digressed.

Today it would be:

Work:14
Sleep:6
Play:4

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There was a yahoo poll that showed Income Inequality as the third most important issue to Americans, only behind jobs and the roll of the government in the economy. If OWS never happened, no one would be talking about Income inequality at all. The Tea Party didn't change anything, they were just a more right wing version of the already existing right wing nutcases we have. OWS actually changed the national dialogue. Sorry if that's hard for you to accept.

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There was a yahoo poll that showed Income Inequality as the third most important issue to Americans, only behind jobs and the roll of the government in the economy. If OWS never happened, no one would be talking about

Generally true, it did detract from the Kardashian wedding/non-wedding.

Are you really that dense?

Part of the problem that young activists have (I'm assuming that the author is young) is cultural imperialism where their way is the only way, and if other parties in the conversation have another perspective, they must be dense.

I would humbly suggest that this is not the best way to persuade others to your point. Drumming, blocking traffic or closing down ports won't win you many supporters either. In fact, you will push some sympathetic folks away from your point.

The Tea Party didn't change anything...

It may just be an indirect correlation, but I believe that they were a major voice in the last congressional election and significantly changed the political conversation away from economic stimulus and job creation to national deficit and debt reduction.

Naturally being more in the Elizabeth Warren camp, I've talked with fair number of Tea Party members, some of whom are not naturally right wing, but feel disenfranchised by Democratic Party as it's moved away from it's blue collar roots. They think that the Tea Party and to some extent, the GOP have been much more effective in reaching out to the members of the former blue collar workers.

As a progressive, I would encourage other progressives to learn to listen to folks who are not rooted in the suburbs and the academy.

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About these "disenfranchised Democrats" that moved to the Tea Party.

There have been quite a few polls to determine the composition of the support of Tea Party related groups around the country. Most of them find that the majority of "Tea Partiers" are in fact, people who vote and support Republicans, and the conservative agenda.

CBS News poll
Article in The Guardian
Analysis by Pew Forum on Religion

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...especially (though not exclusively) in the South -- they never forgave LBJ (and the party) for abandoning support of racial discrimination. Some remained nominal Dems -- yet have voted mostly for the GOP in national elections for decades now.

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I was asking more about people who actually voted non-Republican until the Tea Party came around, but were convinced to vote GOP as a result. The data shows that most of the people in the Tea Party are hardcore conservative, economically and socially, regardless of their nominal affiliation.

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... regular Dem voter (in national races) who has joined the Tea Party has ever been identified. ;~}

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Right after his family farm was broken up by the estate tax.

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Once the firefighters stood there and did nothing because he didn't pay the libertarian firefighting fee, he changed his mind.

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Has anyone ever documented an actual case in which a working farm (on which a family depended for its living -- and not just as a hobby or tax write-off) having to be sold off due to federal estate tax?

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It happened to a friend of a friend of mine. It was the icing on the cake after being spit on when he got back from Nam.

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"You didn't change anything - most people thought you disorganized and in the end self-centered."

If you are a person that thinks this, that means you didn't pay any attention to what was going on at all. There's quite a lot of "organization" (perhaps even too much from what I saw at a couple of GAs), and considering that all of the major goals I heard from the occupiers have the end result of improving the quality of life for a large number of people, your comments are misguided at best and willfully ignorant at worst.

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You didn't change anything - most people thought you disorganized and in the end self-centered.

(emphasis mine)

"In the end"? Who said they were done?

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The one difference between the Occupy crowd and the Tea Party crowd. After the Tea party and single day meetings around the country they took their views to the ballot box. After the Occupations ended the happy campers and drummers will do zero follow up. I doubt more than a 10th of the group at Dewey Square are even registered to vote.

As an aside, is any one else freaked out that it's December 12th and the ground is not frozen?

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This is reason number one why OB was the subject of so much ridicule from so many people who would otherwise have embraced it: OB was more concerned with setting up tents and defending the encampment than plotting a political course of action and promoting responsible financial policy.

The Tea Party analogy is absolutely correct. Sure they have wacky positions on taxes and our Martian president, but they're promoting candidates and voting consistently to bring about the change they want. Occupy just never got past the wacky position stage (denouncing Thanksgiving and freeing Tarek Mehanna, great, that's your plan to unite the 99%?).

So here's a chance for OB to actually accomplish something. Develop a strong, active, dependable voting bloc and present "the 99%" with reasons to support your candidates. There's a quote on the Globe site that "It was never about the tents." Here's their chance to prove it.

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The Tea Partiers were being fed an agenda by their owners. The occupiers were trying to build one from the ground up. That's the difference between the two movements, and why the nuttier, racist, fascist one seems to have been so much more "effective" in politics - because they were basically hand puppets, with the Kochs' mitts up their butts. They got tons of press, they had access, there was a corporate megaphone (Fox) behind them. Seriously, try to see things as they are.

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We haven't even had state or federal elections in the two months since this movement started. Give it time.

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the Tea Party lost everywhere except districts where the population was already insane right wingers. Even in Mississippi they couldn't get their abortion amendment passed, and none of their guys are going be the Republican nominee, or even close to it. Considering the enormous amount of corporate money the Tea Party had to work with, I'd say they were a spectacular failure, overhyped by people like you who don't actually pay attention to what goes on except what Fox News tells ya.

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... for a patch of turf nobody used until OccupyBoston took over it.

It would be funny if it weren't sad.

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Many around here were calling it a grassy median long before OB moved in.

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Dear Matt, as far as changing the world goes, you did indeed change things: our city budget is short $1m, workers in our central financial district were slightly inconvenienced for two months, and the Greenway laid down new turf. Past that, don't go around slapping yourselves on the back under the impression that you were doing much else besides playing bongo drums and arguing with drunks in between the occasional demonstrations; which are of questionable effectiveness anyway -- more a stand-in for committed and sustained political action, which requires applied energy and focus. The Occupation provided little of tangible benefit to the city or its surroundings. "Initiating a conversation" isn't enough; "American Idol" does more to initiate conversation that you ever will. And, by the way, once you initiate you can't necessarily control that conversation, which among the majority has turned against you.

And as far as "a new movement" goes, how can your herd of stray cats do anything when you can't even corral the drugs and violence that were so very central a part of the occupation? You only see what you want to see, which is fine I suppose in so far as it goes, but don't expect everyone else to surrender to your selective analysis.

I for one am glad to see you go. Good riddance, and back to the burbs with ye.

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These are all options.

Too bad you are too brainwashed to even know they are options.

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There's that cultural imperialism. You in your smugness think you're smarter, better, more human than other people. Say I do listen to Rush (which I do not), what of it? Anyone who does not think like you is "brainwashed" -- highly ironic.

The only difference between you and a Fascist is that a Fascist would have a snappier uniform.

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is really a left wing movement, right?

I would defend you, but then you told us all you're taking "enlighten" marching orders from a dope fiend. Between you and the guy above, this is why we can't have nice things.

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i prefer roxy music to the small faces

and in spirit, certainly, i see a lot of the authoritarian tendency on the parts of many occupiers, the difference being that they don't have any power to act on it, and thank the Lord for it.

also, you might want to brush up on your reading comprehension. i specifically stated that i do NOT listen to rush, but as with most of your ilk you read selectively and see only what you like.

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I don't listen to Rush either. That Neil Peart is just too rabid an Ayn Rand fan.

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Sorry, Matt, but you just brought yourself down to wall street's level. Your tweets make you sound like a pompous, head-inflated douche. Changed the world? No, you didn't. The world may change, but Boston's little misguided, confused occupation didn't change anything, except for people's opinions of the movement.

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Oh dear! The city had to pay to clean up after the Occupiers! Lord knows the money that went to Police overtime and cleanup would have gone directly to housing the homeless, getting them mental health and addiction services, saving the whales and polishing unicorn horns.

Thank vishnu we can go back to complaining about how the glorified median strip isn't used by anyone. All these people actually making use of the damned thing was really screwing up that whiny UHub meme.

And certainly these stinky, drum-banging trustfund hippy, millenial, Apple-product dependent, suburban-sourced, clueless, lazy-ass, shouldn't have gotten an overpriced liberal arts degree in the first place, nitwits haven't changed a damned thing. No doubt Martha Coakley would have launched a counterpunch on the banks even if absolutely no one was talking about this outside of platitudes of bad apples and "boys will be boys (who are actually sociopathic criminals)."

And for the whole two or so months that this thing has been going on there has been no electoral effect of these people (assuming those elections in Ohio and Maine where GOP/Tea overreach was slapped down and a GOP recall in AZ had more to do with people being happy with the way things are), so we can assume that none of them will vote or try to influence matters going forward, because.... well that sounds good to me. They may be willing to sleep in a tent on a median strip, but I doubt they'll vote.

This all seems like a very reasonable analysis of the situation.

If you're a dick.

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Matt,

First of all, thank you for your commitment to the protest. I can easily imagine what a profound experience it must have been in your you and the other participants.

However, I'm afraid that I have to agree with much of Stevil's remarks. After the first few weeks of the occupation movement, it became obvious that the sheer audacity of "occupying public space" as a protest had captured the public's attention. It also became obvious that the movement was far more interested in appealing to every small constituent group than it was in creating a legacy that would have a positive affect on American political life.

What could have become the founding of a great American progressive resurgence instead mixed a protest about corporate malfeasance into a jambalaya of competing special interests. Protests about concentrated corporate power became diluted with LGBT rights, Animal rights, anti-capitalist screeds and protests and student loan relief. Ultimately the message was became further diluted when the discussion became almost soley about the Occupation itself being an act of free speech.

Occupy had a rare opportunity to punch through our present muddy politics and provide real information and provide real alternatives. Instead Occupy tried to completely reeducate the American public about a utopian community experiment that was spoken of as if were a permanent option. Because most of us spend a great deal of time making a living, raising our families and dealing with all of life’s minutiae, the public, we don’t have time for hour of GA’s each day interrupted by working group meeting. In other words, occupy should have worked more to provide a few retail options.

As sympathetic figures such as Bill Clinton and Tom Menino have suggested, the movement would have done better to use that great energy and excitement that arose to choose one or two issues such as a return to progressive taxation, re instituting the effective government regulation of the banking system that the U.S. enjoyed for decades after the FDR administration or even supporting Elizabeth Warren's campaign.

Sadly it appears that the legacy of the movement may be as temporary as the already fading chalk etchings on the sidewalk. Instead of making lamentable comparisons between your actions at the camp to landscapers unrolling sod, I challenge you and the other participants to take some time learn your lessons from your unique rich experiences and do better.
America needs you.

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You know, you could always ditch the plantation-slave mentality, stop blaming (oh, sorry, "challenging") other people for not being a better citizen than you are, and start making a difference yourself. America needs YOU.

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Love all the entitled douchery in this comment section from people sockpuppeting that the money could have been better spent.... coming from the same concern trolls that often cry taxes are evil and liberals drool.

ultimately, Occupy did do one concrete thing, it changed the focus of the MSM. Lots of recent talk about income inequality, unemployment, foreclosure, the damn economy and lack of JOBS.

Something that barely got a whimper from the MSM and our elected officials just two months back.

It was all austerity, all the time; so main street time to buckle those bootstraps because hey, Wallstreet is too important to ask to tighten theirs. That not fair of us, even with a trillion dollar bailout.

Good on them. They changed the dialogue, directed by the beltway and 1%. Thats is no easy feat, and they did so more successfully than the Teaparty.

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Love how you HATE hard on the people who are not behind the OB...that only they are douchie or trolling...

Let me ask did you support OB other than ranting here ?????????
Doubt it....So dont act like you are GOD

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But I also have my issues with the movement and some of the more utopian, stary minded individuals in it. I'm more of a realist, than a radical. They've done good work, but unless they stay together and GOTV; it was only winning a battle. I think thir plan to try to shut down ports on the East/West Coast coming up is very short sighted. Harassing workers normal lives and mom & pop shops, just to scratch the mega corps isn't good for the movement. Shutting down shipping for a day isn't going to harm the people they think it will.

Anyways, I just call it as I see it.

It's disingenuous to me that the same people deriding government as useless are the ones applauding Menino for his heavy handed, liberty squashing tactics. Especially under the nanny state guise of "sanitary conditions and upholding ordinances". These same people will hoot and holler bout their right for LTC and castle laws.

That people complaining about government spending and waste are actually using arguments that the money would have been better spent, or that using police force to babysit a small group of nonviolent protestors is smart, prudent use of police resources in a city where people are getting shot at daily.

Yeah, I'll cal out their ideological hypocrisy any day. It's apparent, shameful, and small minded. Especially when they're the ones on the attack, then claiming victimization.

I don't agree one bit with the Teaparty anymore, since they fell back into their safe spot of working against their enemies and focusing their message of taxes, government, and libruls are Evil. They had me when they were pointing out that the Government shouldn't be baling out private banks who screwed everyone but their CEO's and BOD. But then they got confused, and they started squawking that any attempt to break the banks up was socialism. Sorry if I don't sign on to nihilist, self destructive politcs that only wish to see the "bad guy" (insert boogyman of the week here) burn for their sins.

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Spending money babysitting occupistas (many if not most of whom are not even city residents - we just happen to be a densely populated focal point and thus a target of these suburban assault teams) is a bad way to spend money. Spending it on extra services like teaching, fire and police is good, paying down debt is better and not taxing me and leaving it in my pocket so I can choose to spend or save it as I see fit is best.

It's not hypocrisy, it's prioritizing. Given as I don't see them paying down debt or giving it back to me, I'm happy to advocate for extra services on things we really need, but given my druthers - we'd all be better off if the city stopped tipping us upside down and shaking the coins out of our pockets.

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you won't hear me arguing against efficiency in government. I think that's where the focus should be, as starving the beast is a red herring and a good way to raise deficits and while appearing fiscally conservative.

But here's the thing, corporations are terribly inefficient too. It's not a problem exclusive to government. Especially large ones.

I'd also argue that the "best" thing for the individual (keeping all your money, no government to deal with), is not the best thing for the economy or the community. Those are arguments that were won long before much of written history. Even though we have fundamental liberties and rights, we choose to delegate some for security, safety, and prosperity as a community. Unfortunately, A LOT of the arguments coming from the GOP now a days seems like they literally want to send state and federal governments out to the pasture. They believe in no government, unless it can completely be controlled by their ideology.

If libertarian paradises worked in the real world, there'd be quite a few of them around. As it is, they're about as common and lasting as hippie communes.

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not all government, in this case just the cost of the occupation (we should have shot cannons at them from the hills of Dorchester-worked for the British!).

Even I think Boston can only reasonably drop another 5-10% of "fluff" before we really start missing services (We've gone from 17,000 employees to 16,000 since FY 2009 and I bet most people would be extremely hard pressed to figure out where they cut). You'd have been hard pressed to find 1000 heads of fat in the private sector in a force this size even in 2007.

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I realize that you think that you have a million dollar booty, but every number you pull out of it isn't automagically God's Own Truth.

Lets see some honest statistics - not bloviations spread as rumor here. Also, consider that the police presence was totally excessive.

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But one example is state wise is the state police.

They stopped hiring and let their number drop through attrition because of budget cuts, and then underfunding in this bad economy. I've heard "conservatives" complain about the tax money we have to pay to keep police in the same breath of them complaining that Eval Deval has been hamstringing the Troopers in this state.

As for occupy, let's not pretend this was an appropriate show of force.

You want to talk about where the real money pit is, let's talk about how they're all dressed as stormtroopers now a days. Even small regional cities like Worcester have that sort of riot gear. It's not cheap, and it's stuff that was deemed unnecessary by our representatives and the public at large 15-20 years ago and before. In that time crime has gone down, not up. Our police routinely show up looking like something out of a dystopian 80's flick.

But, if you want to ok this reckless spending in the name of beating up some nonviolent hippies and projecting questionable authority, while screaming about high taxes.. well that's on you.

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When did the Boston Police beat any of the OB ? Please share?
You are so drama filled and a conspiracy theory follower...

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Victoria Snelgrove
David Woodman

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have to do with OB ??? Dont use a reference that HAS ZERO to do with your arguemnet...

That was a TERRIBLE tradgedy...But I was there that night and the Police did a good job....the IDIOT kids rioting , climbing the bleachers, and not OBYING the law caused that to happen...

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You want to talk about where the real money pit is, let's talk about how they're all dressed as stormtroopers now a days.

Do you even read posts here, or is trolling your only purpose?

Police running around with expensive riot gear and anti-riot toys tend to use those toys first chance they get.

See my example above where two innocent people paid for it with their lives. See the many examples of small town swat officers busting down grandmas door and killing her. See the pepper spray incident at UC Berkley.

Militarizing police forces is both horribly expensive, and not a very efficient use of money for the day to day needs of 99% of the community. If it's about protecting officers, better effort and money would be spent in hiring more for the beat. Partner them up again.

So if you want to complain about wasting money (which was the issue way back above), lets start with asking why stormtroopers were first needed, then second, needed to babysit a peaceful protest. Besides some hooligans in Allston (tagging stuff, but they do what they do regardless), I believe there was zero property damage as a result of these protests.

IOW The city doesn't need to be spending this money. The Meninio administration and the police do need to show this response to "justify" the expense to taxpayers. How else would any sane taxpayer be ok with a million dollar mobile command unit and 1.5 million worth of body armor?

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of Framingham was another innocent victim of this over-the-top, shock-and-awe, militaristic policing. Google him if you get a chance.

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You are a joke my friend a joke. You just live life in your mom's basements and hide behind the internet while the rest of us work and provide for our families...we vote and take action the legal way. You and OB just feed off the rest of us...

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Resident of Southie bro, out working on my own. Paying my taxes, and involved in politics when I can be. Vote every Nov and special election too.

Anyways, thanks for trolling. Love the ad hominem attacks when your ass is beat and you don't have a leg to stand on. It's becoming a constant theme of your posting.

Maybe Adam can do something about your sockpuppeting. I'm not the first person you've attacked when you ran out of cookie cuter talking points.

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I am a resident of Southie...and work on my own. Never miss a vote. very involved in local politics..

I love you attacks too or silence when you are beat. Love how who ever disagrees with you or Swirly is a troll ha!

If anything at all you are amusing....and that makes my day.

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They were interviewing people who were bloodied and bruised from zip ties tied extremely tight (to the point of nerve damage and lacerations) and then being thrown face-first into trucks (with their hands tied so they couldn't break their falls).

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Mr. Anon...or as your friends like to call "anon's", Trolls,....

Your saying OB protesters when arrested were bloody and had SUPER tight zip ties, that you can confirm caused nerve damgae?????

Please let me know and please send me the links to this as I have NEVER heard nor seen an Occupy Boston person have this happen....I will await your response...

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It helps you find things like the above-referenced "Weekly Dig", which happens to be a weekly paper in the Boston area that has been beefing up its editorial cred lately and actually has been pretty consistently covering the occupation of Dewey Square. You might know that or you might not.

This may be the (extremely easy to find) interview in question: http://digboston.com/think/2011/12/exit-poll-tori-...

Of course, indignantly demanding that somebody send you the links is much easier than actually typing stuff in that box that gets you the information.

The key words here were "zip tie"; "weekly dig" and "interview". Not so hard now, is that.

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Swirly and Anon-squared you are just ..well just too ironic

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Its amazing to me how much the tweets read like the farcical self-inflation of the Matt Albie/ "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip" Twitter accounts

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Unfortunately I found the anti-Israel / antisemitic position that Occupy Boston adopted early on disturbing and it completely turned me off from the other messages that OB was initially trying to get across. We don't need more hatred in this world.

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I know plenty of Jews who have supported Occupy. They wouldn't have done so if Occupy was 'antisemitic'. Occupy had High Holy Day services and a sukkah.

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When a small bunch of Occupiers occupied the lobby of the building the Israeli consulate is in and then Scott Brown pretended to be all outraged.

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Yeah, that stunt was immature, but hardly antisemitic.

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Fox News and the GOP tried to wave around the "antisemitic" tag to distract people from the protests against financial malfeasance by Wall Street. Certainly not the first time that Republicans have attempted to cynically exploit the Jewish people, in order to further their own ideological ends.

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There was at least one and perhaps a few more Occupistas that were spurting some anti-semitic slurs. I believe one even worked for the LA schools and got fired over it. Probably not a widespread problem - and certainly not a position that even an anti-occupista like me took to be a large part of the movement - just a coupla nuts on the sidelines - unfortunately there were a lot of nuts on the sidelines that took away from the core message of income inequality and the power and interplay of money and politics. Issues I can agree are a problem - but the main complaint is it was like identifying that the sky is blue but everybody likes green better - OK - so what are you going to do about it. Two months of crickets on solutions but a whole lotta tents and chants and drums and endless GA's. Kaz said who said they are done - if this is all they got - we can only hope and pray that they go the hell away. Chant that.

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Supposedly income inequality is one of the cornerstones of Occupy's beef. They may need to start eating at Wendy's per this article that says the share of income of the top 1% dropped from 23% in 2007 to 17% in 2009. Probably came back a little since the recession - but still relatively in line with historical standards and after a good 2010 - 2011 on Wall Street will be pretty mediocre at best. As the article says - the top 1% is making about what they made in the 90's and nobody really cared.

http://www.cnbc.com/id/45650569

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First off - salary accounts for only a minor fraction of the income of the top 1%. Most of their wealth is generated by interest/capital gains (and taxed at a fraction of what most of the rest of us get to pay). So the top 1% took a bit of a salary hit in the last few years? Let's see the stats on how their share of total wealth has dropped. Then I'll cry prodigiously for their plight.

Second, plenty of people cared about income disparity in the 90s. But the economy (seemed) strong enough that the MSM/majority of Americans allowed themselves to believe that the good times would never end. USA triumphalism was the order of the day.

"But it was this bad before!" is not an excuse to ignore how bad something is now. At least not for anyone over 6 years old.

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When 90% of Americans have little to no net worth, i.e. they spend everything they can get their hands on, why is it the fault of the wealthy that they accumulate their wealth and invest it in a tax efficient way? While it would indeed be hard for the true 1% to spend everything - they could - and some do (can you say NBA basketball player?). The problem is that most of America wants what they can't afford. Been to a big box parking lot this holiday season? That's not the 1% in there buying the latest electronic gizmo (the 1% shops on Amazon anyway). It's hard enough regulating income - now you want to hammer the people who do what they tell them and go after their savings.

17% going to the 1% is not that outrageous - and it's not the fault of the 1% and you're not going to fix it by taxing them more (they'll still make the same - they'll just keep less - but you give it to the bottom 50% and they spend it and it ends up back in the pockets of the 1%).

Rather than beating the 1% we need to find a way to

a) put the bottom quarter to work in better paying jobs
b) get the two middle quarters to stop spending everything they make

The problem is the Occupistas focus on the symptom - not the disease.

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"i.e. they spend everything they can get their hands on"

IT IS CALLED POVERTY! Aka "living hand to mouth" ... "living paycheck to paycheck".

Somebody seriously needs to read "Nickled and Dimed" to learn something about how the vast majority of Americans HAVE to live these days.

Accumulating wealth when you can't even feed your kids? Oh hell yeah. Make it a moral failing rather than a societal shame.

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...who really deserves to have a recognizable (even if pseudonymous) identity. Please do set your self apart from the anonymous anonymi.

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...it's the fault of the poor. I mean there has to be fault assigned somewhere, so natch, the poor. They are the disease.
...
riiiight.

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He was blaming the middle classs. And there is some truth in there somewhere.

Then again, isn't spending good for everyone?

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What middle class. They've been downsized.

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Spending on credit isn't.

Part of the reason for the very slow recovery is people paying down their debt. They are very worried about the bad economy hitting home and then having to face bankruptcy.

Anyways, I saw it as a "ya'll got your xboxes" argument, which is the go to talking point of why these bad, bad people should just bootstrap up.

Which misses the point that the things that matter most have increased in price way, way beyond inflation. Property, Housing, Rent, Education, Medical Bills, Transportation, and even food to an extent. People aren't hurting from spending $3 a week on their new iPhone... electronics are both cheap and to some extent (computer, phone) a necessary tool to keep competitive in today's workforce.

They're hurting because wages haven't kept up with the prices of the things that matter in life. Low food prices and equity debt piggy banks really allowed for people (and employers paying those salaries) to lie to themselves, overextend themselves and pretend those cost increases never happened.

That works when housing prices never fall. Not so much when that unsustainable bubble pops.

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Rather than beating the 1% we need to find a way to

a) put the bottom quarter to work in better paying jobs
b) get the two middle quarters to stop spending everything they make

I'd argue that returning to sane fiscal and economic policy is the best way to "not beat up" on the 1% and further, to increase their wealth. That path includes new revenues on top of balancing the budget, and cutting what isn't working or working well.

The problem is the ratio, not the limits. Are the wealthy better off in a 15 trillion dollar economy holding 40% of the wealth or a 25 trillion dollar economy holding 30%?

I know which I'd rather take. Plutocracy is an unsustainable form of Capitalism.

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I always seem to come back to that question whenever you post on this topic, Stevil. You are either disingenuous to act as if "17% of the income" is okay for the top 1%...when (as pointed out before to you) it's not "income" that's the problem, it's the money-making-money aspects (or as you call it "investing") which get taxed at extremely lower rates (if at all) as well as the fact that the top 1% includes the top 0.1% when it comes to income...and you've used 90% of the 1% to mute the effect that the 0.1% are making even the lion's share of that 17%. It's the exponential shape to the income curve that is the danger indicator, not whatever muddled math you want to throw at it!

Furthermore, talking about the fluctuations in income (or wealth) between now and 5 years ago is like talking about how the ocean must be receding from the beach because you happened to look at it while the tide was out. Compare 2007 to 1957 and get back to me on how not-so-inequal our income is in this country.

Or you're just stupid and you're just spouting what you read without knowing or caring what's behind the numbers, but still want to use it to blindly crucify the other 99% of us. Like I say, it's either disingenuous or stupid but you're hardly the only one like you either.

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The rich make too much money so they should make less
- well that doesnt' help anybody

Well then we should make them pay more taxes
-why so we can give it to other people so they can spend more money (I'd agree with you if you told me we were going to use it to pay down debt or even REALLY fix our roads and bridges - but let's face it - it would probably just get used to continue our spendthrift ways on SS and medicare and I'll even throw in defense)

Well it's not really that they have too much income - they have too much money - so now we are going to penalize them for saving and we should confiscate their money

Puuuuuulease - what's next - we should make them run around naked on Boston Common?

Yes Kaz - the curve is always going to be skewed - it bottomed at 9% in the 70s and it has been both higher and lower than where it is now. 17% IS ok for the top 1% to make. I don't have a problem with that and it's not going to encourage or discourage me from trying to join that club whether it's 9% or 25%.

Yes - some things are taxed at lower rates - that's true almost everywhere in the world - dividends which are already taxed at corporate rates first, cap gains because we want to encourage investment and muni bonds - usually not at all - because we want cities and towns to have access to cheap financing.

I mean let's face it - this is inevitable - who are the 1%? They are people that used to sell to the country or a small sliver of it - now they sell to the world. Athletes, entertainers even top doctors and lawyers that used to rely on a poorer, smaller US now sell to a larger richer US AND a much larger, much richer world. Meantime the bottom of the income chain has to compete with an enormous pool of unskilled and semi-skilled workers. My former employer made shoes a bit south of Boston. All those jobs are gone because nobody wanted $400 shoes made in the US at $30 an hour for labor when they could get shoes that were as good (in some cases better) for $175 made in China and Indonesia at about $2 an hour - including food, housing and medical. If you don't have an education or skill or "localized" job - that's what you are competing with and that's not going to change.

It's a big world out there Kaz - and you're not going to stop the tide from coming in when a tsunami is hitting the beach.

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why is it the fault of the wealthy that they accumulate their wealth and invest it in a tax efficient way?

It's their fault because in order to accumulate their wealth, they've acted in ways (or hired people to do so) that are unethical. Albeit these were often not illegal because they operate in areas of finance that aren't understood by anyone but them and Congress benefited from that activity so they had no interest in regulating the activity...and were even financially swayed to act oppositely. These are also activities that NOBODY ELSE has access to because they don't have enough money to put any skin in those games (like hedge funds). And if they finally run into a regulation that stops them from behaving even further unethically or possibly illegally, they pay to have the regulation removed (often even having their lobbyists draft the actual legislation that was used because Congress didn't understand well enough to write it themselves). Finally, they get people of the same mindset into the regulatory and federal financing roles (again, buying the representation they want) who make policy decisions that have nothing to do with Congress that give them access to a safety net that none of the rest of us have. So when they make bad bets, they still get paid off in the end. And finally, they do all of this while increasing their profit margins by axing their employees to outsourced labor in other countries while shipping is cheaper than their employment costs here...causing more Americans below them to stop making money just so they can accumulate more wealth.

Now, who faults them for "investing" in tax efficient ways? Well, since that "investing" is to abuse one of the banks with an exemption as a speculator on the futures exchange...thus artificially driving up costs on all of those people who aren't able to "invest" in this way. But, really, what I think Occupy is arguing more for is not that they are at fault for all this "investing" that keeps leveraging the little guys, but that the taxes should make it so it is far MORE efficient to "invest" in new business rather than just money-making-money ventures the way the current tax schemes have been bought-and-paid-for by these very same rich people who hire others to "invest" in these tax efficient ways.

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Right here (direct from probably the most hypocritical 1%er out there!)

http://michaelmoore.com/books-films/

Seriously Kaz - I'm not going to disagree this is an issue - but most of the 1% don't make their money this way - especially the vast majority that got their money outside of wall Street.

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Just because you hate Michael Moore doesn't make him wrong. Actually, your hating him probably means that he is right.

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but most of the 1% don't make their money this way - especially the vast majority that got their money outside of wall Street.

I call bullshit. Show me any reputable source that most wealth accumulation of the 1% comes from non-investment sources (aka 'outside Wall Street').

While you're at it, show me a source that even single-digit amounts of the top 0.1%'s wealth accumulation is from non-investment sources.

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Prove me wrong with your own research - the VAST majority of wealth in this country is created by creating and growing companies - wall street is more for managing money - not making it (with a few well publicized exceptions). Think, Gates, Jobs, Watson, Vanderbilt, Zuckerberg and more)

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YOU made the assertion that the 1% is all hard-working self-made go-getters. YOU have to prove the assertion otherwise it's meaningless to have made it. That's called talking about the facts.

In the meantime, Bill Gates' father was a lawyer and his mother was a large bank's board member (and her father was a bank president before her).

Zuckerberg is the son of a dentist and psychiatrist and went to Harvard.

Vanderbilt? Which one? The ones that lived off of Commodore's money or the Commodore himself? Do you really want to go all the way back to the turn of the 19th century as an example of making your own way in the world as it exists today??

Again, I have to wonder if you're COMPLETELY DISINGENUOUS or just stupid when you write shit like: "wall street is more for managing money - not making it". You can't have even a hint of a clue how the housing bubble was burst by Wall Street (and subsequently backfilled by the Feds)...which means you're stupid. OR you know damn well how it all went down....which means you're completely disingenuous.

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Kaz, in trying to figure out if Stevil is disingenuous or stupid, you left out a third option that I think is the case for many people in this country. He's religious.

I don't mean that as a slam on religion either. When I get into arguments with people that seem to just spin around in circles not getting anywhere -- neither me moving off my opinion (which I frequently do if people have good arguments) or the other person, I usually find that one of us is taking a position based on faith. I just know this is the right answer - I can feel it in my scrotum like an errant infield hopper. Facts come out that refute what you believe but you're sure it's just a case that you haven't done enough research to find the facts that fit that belief. You know you've heard someone enunciate it beautifully before and you wish you had bookmarked that thing, because you could sure use it for the argument now, but at any rate you won't give up that position, because it feels right, because it feels good. It puts you at peace with the world.

It's how I feel on a lot of human rights issues -- although there are some pretty strong, logical arguments for those things, it's the feeling in my gut that cements me on those positions, more so than my head agreeing with the logic.

The biggest blow-out arguments that I have with my dad are related to the positions that Stevil takes. Since the 40s and 50s he has put his faith in The System and things like current events really shake his faith in it and it causes him to flip out and say crazy old man things. I can't budge him on it and I'm not going to start believing that we really live in a meritocracy.

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I don't know what Moore advocates since I don't read or watch him.

But there are plenty of people out there who would agree with what Kaz wrote.

For example: Warren Buffet.

Are you saying that Warren Buffet is a Michael Moore type fanatic?

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But how is he hypocritical?

He never called for socialism, and he has never said that hardworking people should not be compensated for their hard work and their fortunate luck. He has said Capitalism has been rigged by both corporations and the government in favor of each other, and he's right on that one.

He has also called for all the rich to pay their fair share, including himself. Many, many a 1% has actually started calling for that realizing the mess the current inequality is making of their investments in the economy.

And here's where you tell us he can always write a check to the FED; even though that's both false (they'll refund you) and two the real world would never work that way. You can't have a nation that relies on optional taxation. It just doesn't work that way. Not to mention the argument reeks of that of a fifth grader, and not someone trying to best run a nation.

But do tell, maybe I'm missing something here, but how is making a boatload of cash, and insisting that he be taxed on it progressively and fairly hypocritical? Or did the word suddenly change meaning?

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Yes you can write a check to the Fed and they won't return it to you - it's even tax deductible - they are a bit of a charity case these days anyway so it makes sense.

First of all the reference to Michael Moore is that similarly he ascribes everything to a vast right wing conspiracy advocating a rigged system that favors the few. Is that true - absolutely - but really only on the margin. For example - Matthew cites Warren Buffet's editorial. Should "carried interest" be taxed at ordinary income rights - agreed 100 million percent. But seriously - this is like trying to say we are going to fix the budget deficit by eliminating waste and fraud in the (fill in the department). It's a good cause -but it's far less than a rounding error in the scheme of things. I even think we need a much more progressive estate tax and a complete reform of trust law (now that's a scam the occupy people should be talking about).

Exactly what is the rich's fair share? They make 17 or 23% of the income and pay about double that share of income tax- probably depends on the year, source of info but that's roughly consistent - and the top 10% pay about 2/3 and the top 50% pay 97%. Should the rich pay 3 times their share of income. And how about the bottom 50% the effectively pay zero - is their fair share of our national burden zero?

And the big question is what the hell are you going to do with that money? If you tell me pay down debt and truly upgrade our infrastructure (rather than fill pot holes because they are shovel ready projects) - I'm all in - but again everyone including the bottom 50% AND the top 1% should be chipping in something. But if you're going to use the money to kick the can down the road on entitlements and government pensions - forget about it.

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Citations Please

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The bottom 50% need to chip in? What? Their kidneys?

The median household income for the bottom half of the country is about $24,000! Who the fuck do you think you are to say that those people need to "chip in something" when the top 1% are making AT LEAST 10 times that amount!?

You don't even realize how much of an asshole it makes you to say something like that, do you, you arrogant prick?

Fortunately for you, there are other people here willing to respond to your nonsense. I'm done with you. You either willfully choose to ignore the reality around you or live within a bubble so hazy that you couldn't see three feet out of it if your life depended on it. Either way, Barney Frank said it best: "Trying to have a conversation with you would be like arguing with a dining room table".

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dining room table = zealot

It's like having an "argument" over abortion. There is no argument. One side views it as the murder of a human being the other as the choice of a woman about her body. Never the twain shall meet.

Some people are convinced that privilege does not exist, that things are the way they are only because of an individual's choices. You're poor - bad choices on your part. You're rich, you know what you're doing. Ironically these same people seem to be the first to blame the govt or welfare leeches for their failures. Maybe it's not zealotry but sociopathic behavior.

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it's 100% sociopathic behavior. It's worse of all when the bootstrappy individuals are also public employees, gladly taking taxpayers money in well paying jobs and pensions, only to get violently angry when called on it.

The cognitive dissonance is amazing. But then you're just some snobby asshole who looks down on them and needs to mind his own business.

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Even if right.

There's also this "Fair" thing going on that makes no sense when viewed critically.

The bottom 50% pay the same on their $24K income as the top 1% pay on their first $24K income. The top 1% pay more, progressively on additional income the more they make. That is fair.

If anyone in the bottom 50% moves up the income ladder, they pay the same rates going up.

That's also completely fair.

What is not fair is saying someone making 20 million a year should "fairly" pay 20% (4 mill) while someone making 10K a year is supposed to also pay 20% (2K).

Because of the price of necessities for life and liberty, that's not fair taxation. It never will be. It's regressive and it puts very hard financial burdens on the people that can least afford it. That in turn causes quite a few problems economically and socially.

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MA income tax is your latter example, a flat tax. Also, FICA is regressive and hits the first $110k of income each year, meaning it represents a much smaller proportion of the 1%'s income than it does anyone in about the bottom 75% or so.

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I never hear anybody talk about it- but to me it certainly explains why the GOP is so unenthusiastic about cutting it. It's a tax mainly on lower- and middle-income taxpayers, so the Republicans kinda like it! What bothers the American GOP (guys like McConnell, Boehner, Cantor, etc) isn't taxes per se, but taxes on the very rich. The "income cap" on the payroll tax is just hilarious in its blatant regressiveness- when did that cap get instituted , anyway? And whose idea was it?

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This is a tax in name only in that it is a mandatory payment to the government. In function it is an insurance payment so that EVERYONE who is in the system has some level of income in retirement (some are exempted - teachers, RR workers, Congress etc. because they have their own system - usually much better than SS). You basically get your payment back based on what you pay in based on actuarial tables - the reason there's a cap is that after the max, congress figures you max out and you have at least something to sustain you in old age and from there you are on your own - note there is no cap on medicare - because that system needs every penny it can get and then some and we are all assumed to have the same average need regardless of income. While I understand the current need to cut the payroll tax, we are playing a dangerous game. Any questions on that see your friendly neighborhood actuarial, you can find them on the internet right next to Zak's scopists.

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First it was I think Matthew claiming that the majority of wealth in this country is generated on Wall Street (when in fact it's generated by entrepreneurs creating businesses and to a lesser extent perhaps real estate developers if you want to segment them out), then we have Kaz claiming that half of America is scraping by through no fault of their own on $12 an hour (even though you can't get someone to ring your doorbell in large parts of the country for less than $30 an hour) and now crazy talk about people making $10k paying 20% in taxes, the same percentage as someone making $20 million.

Here are the numbers - roughly - if you gross $10k and are single - you might end up paying a hundred dollars in taxes after taking your exemption and standard deductions. If you are married you pay zero and if you got this from working I think you get to claim the earned income tax credit in some situations which means the government gives you money back for not going on welfare. If that is a net number - you pay 10% on the first $8500 and 15% on the rest - or about $1000.

If you make $20 million - you will pay about 1/3 in federal taxes if this is a net figure (plus state and local which in Mass is about another $1 million and in NYC would be about $2 million I think). If this is gross - it depends on several factors - but to get to a 20% tax rate it means almost half your income has to come from tax free sources like muni bonds (which means you have $300 million which probably came from selling a company which means you paid about 15-20% in taxes on the original amount depending on when the sale took place and other factors), or legal but creative accounting (if you are in some kind of a partnership, real estate etc. MAYBE).

This is the problem - you kaz and I assume Matthew by virtue of participating in this dialogue are some of the more informed of our society and your "facts" are rooted in sensationalist headlines rather than the way the rules really work.

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Where the rest of us get our numbers from...you know, reality. Piss off until you're willing to talk from sourced material like this and not off-the-cuff anecdotal bull crap about "can't even get a plumber for cheap" or "haven't you heard of that one guy who made that one company big?".

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Top down - So the 1% pay 33% - over 30 times their per capita fair share or double their economic fair share. How much should they pay? 50%? Then the next 9% contribute the same 33% and the rest of the country's fair share becomes effectively almost zero so 10-15% of the country pays for everything? How is that "shared sacrifice" and everyone paying their fair share? that's a society on the brink of disaster.

Bottom up - So according to you there's an army of 80 million workers making an average of $12 an hour or actually less if you are referring to household income - not individual. Please tell me where I can find them. Around here, if you want someone that doesn't have a substance abuse issue and won't rob you blind or break everything you own, you need to pay over $30 an hour for someone to clean around your house, feed your cat or walk your dog, and paint your walls. Add a tiny bit of skill for a tradesman -carpenter, electrician, plumber - and you double or triple that. Add a specialty skill like elevator repair and the rate goes to $165 an hour.

Where are all these talented people making $12 an hour?

If I ignore reality it means you are living in an alternate universe. If I'm a dining room table, that makes you the nail holding the table together that's been pounded on the head.

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I only linked Warren Buffet's op-ed to make it clear that there are some pretty smart and wealthy people out there who also think that the current situation is unfair. Warren wrote that he pays a lower tax rate (17%) than his secretary (30%). In other words, the overall rate is regressive.

If you want to understand how tax burden is distributed, then you should start with the CBO. Notice how Federal tax burden increases at a slightly faster rate than income? This is a progressive income tax at work. Note that income tax is just one component of Federal taxes. The payroll taxes are not progressive, and are capped at a certain level (at income ~$100k).

When the GOP wants to mislead people about taxes, they often cite the fact that about half of taxpayers don't pay income tax (as of the recession). This is strictly speaking "true" - particularly for retired people - but cleverly omits the fact that lower earners still pay significant payroll taxes. That is why it is disingenuous for anyone to claim that "half of Americans don't pay taxes". That statement is completely false, and relies on people getting confused on the distinction between income, payroll, state and local taxes.

Speaking of state and local taxes - they are regressive in most states. Massachusetts is slightly regressive: richer taxpayers pay a slightly lower percentage than poor taxpayers. This counters the slight progressiveness of Federal taxes.

Why have progressiveness at all? Because fundamentally there are many fixed costs to living: food, health, shelter, education, transportation, etc. While there are ways to reduce your costs on some of these items, there are also clear lower bounds. Therefore, it makes sense to have a lower tax rate for people who are struggling to pay for the basics. Even Adam Smith wrote about this.

More things to check out:
Congressional Budget Office - TRENDS IN THE DISTRIBUTION OF HOUSEHOLD INCOME BETWEEN 1979 AND 2007

The Economist on income inequality in America

Business and Labor Statistics - Wage Estimates. There are millions of people who make less than $30/hour and you can check out what kind of jobs those are.

Also Kaz did link to a nice article to check out as well.

I probably won't have much time to respond further - sorry.

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Payroll tax is really an insurance payment and only a tax in the sense that it is a payment to the government. SS is effectively an annuity and medicare is health insurance - paid over time. You'd actually probably be a lot better off in most cases buying a private annuity - although you'd be hard pressed to get health insurance commensurate with your medicare bennies.

Looked briefly at the economist article - interesting point - nobody really knows why the rich have done so well - I speculate a lot of this has to do with globalization and consolidation of markets - the 1% are benefiting from selling to billions of people generating enormous economies of scale and the 99% are stable or hurting because labor costs are competing with low wage countries or even better educated emerging market workforces. You can't fight that unless you want greater protectionism.

I don't buy Kaz' core argument that this is all because of some grand 1%er conspiracy. And I don't think that when 1% of the country pays 1/3 of the taxes and either 10% or 20% (depending on whose numbers you look at) pay 2/3 of the taxes that the rich are undertaxed - at least not significantly. Raise their taxes, and assuming you don't have capital flight, it'll probably just raise their income - they are the providers of goods and services and they'll just pass it on.

One stat I would like to see - one of Kaz' graphs shows how more and more wealth is concentrated in the 1% - I would bet if you overlaid the American savings rate upside down on this graph they would be almost perfectly correlated. No surprise there - if the 99% are spending everything they make and the 1% aren't the rich are going to get rich really fast.

It's a classic ant v. grasshopper story.

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although you'd be hard pressed to get health insurance commensurate with your medicare bennies

No kidding. Private health insurance is screwy in our country.

Anyway, this isn't about any kind of conspiracy. At least, nothing more sinister than money corrupting politics - business as usual.

Quoting statistics like "the 1% pays a third of the taxes" is a misleading tactic. We don't tax people by the head, we tax them by income (among other things). The top 1% makes about a quarter of all the income. Even under a perfectly flat income tax, the top 1% would still be paying most of the aggregate tax.

I will leave the rest of this discussion to Timothy Noah.

P.S. Certainly rich people have the opportunity to save more. But be careful what you wish for: if everyone started saving, then everyone would lose. This is called the Paradox of Thrift and yes, it is really happening.

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The fatal flaw in your operation is that even if you could pry more money out of the rich, nobody really expects that money to reach the middle class, except for those who are employed by the government. I will never see that money in my kids' classrooms, will never see it in my employment.

I don't want to have to kiss somebody's government ass to get more money, and I doubt that most college kids go in with the ambition of working for the college they graduated from, or the City of Boston.

I hope you come up with some better solutions than this standard-issue Democratic Party crapola. You can present social issues, but the city is well-versed in turning that sentiment into money machines for the people doing pretty well right now. You can knock down the rich folks but what if that wrecks my economy, am I supposed to feel better?

Maybe cut down on the links and cites, anybody can use the internet to justify anything. Maybe try listening for a little while.

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