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Protesters Take Their Outrage to Wall Street

by: Steven Wishnia  |  AlterNet

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Protesters took to the streets Thursday to express their outrage over the possibility of giving hundreds of billions of tax dollars to Wall Street firms. (Photo: AFP / Getty Images)

    Enraged by the prospect of $700 billion of their taxes going to speculators, hundreds of protesters hit Wall Street on Thursday.

    Enraged by the prospect of $700 billion of their taxes going to reimburse Wall Street speculators for their dubious investments, about 500 protesters paraded through Lower Manhattan's financial district Thursday afternoon, their chants of "You broke it, you bought it" reverberating through the narrow office building canyons and off the flag-draped wall of the New York Stock Exchange.

    "I'm outraged," said Linda Greco, a 40-ish Brooklyn woman. "People are losing their homes. There's homeless people all over the city. The schools are falling apart. And they want to bail these pigs out? It's about time the people of this country woke up and took this country back."

    Like many others, Greco learned about the protest from an e-mail tree that sprouted like kudzu on methamphetamine. "I must have gotten 10 to 20," she said.

    The demonstration originated with an e-mail sent out Monday afternoon by Arun Gupta, an editor at the leftist Indypendent. "They said providing health care for 9 million children, perhaps costing $6 billion a year, was too expensive, but there's evidently no sum of money large enough that will sate the Wall Street pigs," it read. "We need to act now while we can influence the debate. With Bear Stearns, Fannie and Freddie, AIG, the money markets and now this omnibus bailout, well in excess of $1 trillion will be distributed from the poor, workers and middle class to the scum floating on top? Let the bondholders pay, let the banks pay, let those who brought the 'toxic' mortgage-backed securities pay!"

    "It tapped into an enormous reservoir of anger," Gupta told the crowd that gathered at the bull statue on Bowling Green. The e-mail inspired similar protests in almost 200 cities and towns, from Greensboro, N.C., to Henderson, Nev. Though phone calls and e-mails to Congress have been running nearly 1,000 to 1 against the bailout, he added, "it's clear that the fix is in."

    "It's out-fuckin-rageous. They expect the public to bail them out?" said Rich Haber, 61, a retired Brooklyn bus driver. "I worked for the Transit Authority for 27 years, and I can't afford a house. I knew these mortgages were bogus."

    Others offered similar vitriol. "Appalling," said Kate Powers, 39, an Obama supporter from Brooklyn. "Ridiculous," said Laura Skove, an 18-year-old student in an Obama T-shirt. "The government can't spend money on health care, but it can on Wall Street." "Highway robbery," said Annie V., part of a group holding up signs reading "N.Y. to Wall St. and the Bush Adm.: Drop Dead" -- echoing the legendary "FORD TO CITY: DROP DEAD" headline the Daily News ran in 1975 when then-President Gerald Ford refused to bail out debt-ridden New York City.

    That fiscal crisis ended when the banks imposed harsh budget austerity on New York, forcing it to raise the subway fare by 43 percent while virtually eliminating maintenance, lay off police and close firehouses during an epidemic of crime and arson, and slash funding for schools and hospitals.

    "They've been allowed to totally screw up and then get bailed out. I want to strangle every single politician," said Kevin Condon, a 30-year-old farm-stand worker from Brooklyn carrying a "Jump Without Your Golden Parachute" sign. Though he doesn't want to see the economy collapse, he said the crisis is an opportunity to dream of a different system, of smaller, more locally based commerce.

    "Why isn't everyone in the street?" wondered Megan Fulton, 26, a Brooklyn graduate student. She held a sign asking the government to bail her out for the $93,000 she owes in student loans.

    Older protesters had a feeling of deja vu. Davida Joyner, 51, of Harlem worked helping tenants administer abandoned buildings during the 1970s, then suffered a brain tumor and was out of commission for 20 years. "I woke up like Rumpelstiltskin," she said. "I saw all of this housing situation become unbelievable again." Sol McCants, 54, recalled the stock-market and savings-and-loan scams of the 1980s.

    "These people are thieves and belong in jail," he said. "McCain's trying to make it look like he's doing a great thing, but he's not. That scumbag doesn't want to face the questions because he was behind the savings and loans."

    The best thing that might come out of this crisis, he added, is that white voters might learn to "see their pockets" instead of blaming black and brown people for their problems. But if Obama is elected, people will have to nag him "like my wife tells me every other night to put the toilet seat down."

    "I don't think the Democrats are much better," said Eva-Lee Baird, 68, of the Granny Peace Brigade -- noting that many of the Depression-era controls on imprudent investments were taken away under Bill Clinton.

    "We need something like the New Deal," said James Trimarco, 30, of Brooklyn. "Put people to work doing actual stuff -- transportation and the environment -- instead of trading fictitious capital around the world."

    Though Lower Manhattan is one of the most heavily locked down areas in the country -- the Stock Exchange is surrounded by an iron fence, the closest subway exit is barricaded off, and surrounding streets have concrete stanchions and raised metal sheets to block traffic, with guards and dogs in booths watching them -- police presence at the demonstration was surprisingly light, especially by the draconian standards of the Giuliani-Bloomberg era.

    Gupta attributed that to the "media feeding frenzy" surrounding the protest. "You think that while those fuckers are debating in D.C., they want pictures of protesters being beaten by cops being beamed around the world?" he asked.

    Many Wall Street types greeted the protesters with contempt. "Just look at these people," sneered one broker as the march neared the Stock Exchange. Another group held a "Get a Job" sign in an office window, and one man dropped a few dollar bills out of his. They fluttered down short of the marchers, landing in a construction site.

    Such contempt from the upper classes is nothing new to the lowly proles of Gotham. On Broadway near Wall Street is a stone slab commemorating billionaire real estate developer Harry B. Helmsley, "whose richness of spirit and love for New York helped build this great city." New Yorkers of a certain age and level of cynicism are more likely to remember Helmsley's late widow, Leona, a hotel magnate nicknamed the "Queen of Mean."

    She achieved notoriety by leaving $12 million to her dogs -- more than she left to any of her grandchildren -- and telling her housekeeper that "We don't pay taxes. Only the little people pay taxes."

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    Steven Wishnia is a New York-based journalist and musician. The author of Exit 25 Utopia and The Cannabis Companion, he has won two New York City Independent Press Association awards for his coverage of housing issues. He is looking for a job.

  

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person world view depends on

person world view depends on their economic class: poor[er]=see in terms of local setting; middle class=in terms of national setting; wealthy=in terms of international view [ruby payne]. problem the usa administration/wall has is not being to convince the , because the necessity is defined differently by the american people and have no interest in supporting more of what has been detrimental to them individually. the protest correctly vocalizes 'why should they care?' there may even be a 'necessity' in international terms, but not in local or national terms. the fundamental/basic problem is we do not produce enough to maintain world leadership status, and other sources of production were accessed or 'created': the 'housing market' value importance became unbalanced, the 'accaparer' [monopolizetion, cornering] of the world's energy sources [iraq, nigeria..] became a must as 'producers' we control [& profit from], the controlling of the world's banking systems in various ways, new[?] securitized[?] banking products[?], the prevention of 'green' sustainable energy development [would shift power back to local and individual], charging for water and other inalienable resources, etc... this is the great danger of the past decades of dumbing-down the education and the political debates to very simple emotional terms[low/no tax, reproductive issues, religions issues as the war on xmas, etc..] and not keeping the citizenship fully aware while the world goes by and we are below the top 20% in education..greenspan, paulson, bernanke,rove, helmsley, etc all function at the international 'view' and their loyalties reside there. of course, in the end, the power really remains with the individual citizen. dumbing-down the citizenry returned immediate election wins. but we are not going to be able to dumb down the rest of the world. they may diplomatically not remark anything, but will quietly use the advantage for themselves.

You bet I'm angry! To go

You bet I'm angry! To go from a great economy with a surplus in revenue to nearly bankrupt has made a whole lot of us extremely angry. To be constantly lied to, to give nothing to average Americans, to start two useless wars, to see a million people killed. Burn them at the stake!

The government SEIZES

The government SEIZES property of drug dealers and others for offenses that contribute to problems in this country -- WHEN are we going to start seizing the ASSETS of these THIEVES? We should be demaning this -- and start talking to the Swiss and Cayman Island banks to SEIZE the money that has been siphoned off and hidden in overseas banks. And THEN we should be putting these bastards into public stocks. And HANGING the CEO's. See what happens when the public listens to these RW LIARS and THIEVES.

beware of the money changers

beware of the money changers ... Isa son of Maryam kicked them out of the temple... sound money, austrian school of economics, no fractional reserve banking (no 'pseudo' islamic banking either!) Be conscious of what you consume.. cancel all debts... all over the world.. free the world..

I think we need to accept

I think we need to accept that we can't borrow our way to prosperity and no amount of government assurance that credit will flow like oil is going to change the collapsing consumer base is really at the heart of the meltdown. Maybe if we parked some guillotines down on Wall Street and Capitol Hill, the plutocrats might take heed that sometimes you need to place a higher value on everyone. A subtle reminder that the over valuation of the few has a very immediate and concrete cost to said few. How about a trade with the ruling class. We give you the bailout financing in return for which we put a moratorium on off-shoring work, health care premium increases and a bonus and raise program. Any takers?

No to the HANDOUT. The

No to the HANDOUT. The people are going to suffer badly no matter what is done, so let's just keep those billions and not borrow any money just to pay off the financial geniuses who created this meltdown. THEY will not suffer: by heaven, let's make sure they get no more taxpayer dollars for their crimes.