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Intro: "Thousands of demonstrators protesting corporate greed filled New York City's Times Square, mixing with gawkers, Broadway showgoers, tourists and police to create a chaotic scene in the midst of Manhattan. 'Banks got bailed out, we got sold out!' protesters chanted Saturday from within police barricades."

Huge crowds of Wall Street protesters marched north to a boisterous rally in New York's Times Square, 10/15/11. (photo: Getty Images)
Huge crowds of Wall Street protesters marched north to a boisterous rally in New York's Times Square, 10/15/11. (photo: Getty Images)



Arrests, Huge Crowds in NY, Protests World-Wide

By Chris Hawley, Associated Press

16 October 11

 

Occupy Wall Street: Take the Bull by the Horns


housands of demonstrators protesting corporate greed filled New York City's Times Square, mixing with gawkers, Broadway showgoers, tourists and police to create a chaotic scene in the midst of Manhattan.

"Banks got bailed out, we got sold out!" protesters chanted Saturday from within police barricades. Police, some in riot gear and mounted on horses, tried to push them out of the square and onto the sidewalks in an attempt to funnel the crowds away.

Sandy Peterson, of Utah, who was in Times Square after seeing "The Book of Mormon" musical on Broadway, got caught up in the disorder.

"We're getting out of here before this gets ugly," she said.

The Occupy Wall Street demonstrators had marched north through Manhattan from Washington Square Park earlier in the afternoon. Once in Times Square, they held a rally for several hours before dispersing. Over the course of the day, more than 80 people were arrested.

After midnight, about 10 people were loaded into a police van after refusing to leave Washington Square Park, where protesters had returned to convene a meeting following the Times Square rally. The police had warned protesters that the park had closed, and began massing in riot gear and on horses a few minutes before then; most people had left by then.

Police spokesman Paul Browne said 42 people were arrested in Times Square on Saturday night after being warned repeatedly to disperse; three others were arrested while trying to take down police barriers.

Two police officers were injured during the protest and had to be hospitalized. One suffered a head injury, the other a foot injury, Browne said.

Earlier in the day, demonstrators from the Occupy Wall Street encampment in New York City paraded to a Chase bank branch, banging drums, blowing horns and carrying signs decrying corporate greed. Marchers throughout the country emulated them in protests that ranged from about 50 people in Jackson, Mississippi, to about 2,000 in the larger city of Pittsburgh.

"Banks got bailed out. We got sold out," the crowd of as many as 1,000 in Manhattan chanted. A few protesters went inside the bank to close their accounts, but the group didn't stop other customers from getting inside or seek to blockade the business.

Police told the marchers to stay on the sidewalk, and the demonstration appeared to be fairly orderly as it wound through downtown streets.

Later, police arrested 24 people at a Citibank branch near Manhattan's Washington Square Park. Most were detained for trespassing after they ignored a request by the bank to leave, police said.

Overseas, violence broke out in Rome, where police fired tear gas and water cannons at some protesters who broke away from the main demonstration, smashing shop and bank windows, torching cars and hurling bottles. Dozens were injured.

A dozen demonstrators were arrested, the Italian news agency reported. Those arrested came from several Italian cities, especially in the south. Police said they seized clubs and incendiary devices from the protesters.

Tens of thousands nicknamed "the indignant" marched in cities across Europe, as the protests that began in New York linked up with long-running demonstrations against government cost-cutting and failed financial policies in Europe. Protesters also turned out in Australia and Asia.

In Canada, hundreds protested in the heart of Toronto's financial district. Some of the protesters announced plans to camp out indefinitely in St. James Park and protests were also held in other cities across Canada from Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Vancouver, British Columbia.

In Mexico City, a few hundred protesters gathered under the towering, stone Revolution Monument to protest "exploitation" by wealthy elites. In the border city of Tijuana, about 100 protesters gathered in the banking district, including many university students protesting against the lack of jobs for graduates.

In the U.S., among the demonstrators in New York withdrawing their money from Chase was Lily Paulina, 29, an organizer with the United Auto Workers union who lives in Brooklyn. She said she was taking her money out because she was upset that JPMorgan Chase was making billions, while its customers struggled with bank fees and home foreclosures.

"Chase bank is making tons of money off of everyone ... while people in the working class are fighting just to keep a living wage in their neighborhood," she said.

"We aren't going to be a part of this system that doesn't work for us," said another demonstrator withdrawing her money, 20-year-old Brooklyn College student Biola Jeje.

Other demonstrations in the city Saturday included an anti-war march to mark the 10th anniversary of the Afghanistan War.

Among the people participating in that march was Sergio Jimenez, 25, who said he quit his job in Texas to come to New York to protest.

"These wars in Afghanistan and Iraq were all based on lies," Jimenez said. "And if we're such an intelligent country, we should figure out other ways to respond to terror, instead of with terror."

Elsewhere in the country, nearly 1,500 gathered Saturday for a march past banks in downtown Orlando. In Arizona, reporters and protesters saw an estimated 40 people detained around midnight Saturday at a park just north of downtown Phoenix.

In Colorado, about 1,000 people rallied in downtown Denver to support Occupy Wall Street and at least two dozen were arrested. Nearly 200 people spent a cold night in tents in Grand Circus Park in Detroit, donning gloves, scarves and heavy coats to keep warm. Helen Stockton, a 34-year-old certified midwife from Ypsilanti, said they planned to remain there "as long as it takes to effect change."

"It's easy to ignore us," Stockton said. Then she referred to the financial institutions, saying, "But we are not going to ignore them. Every shiver in our bones reminds us of why we are here."

Hundreds more converged near the Michigan's Capitol in Lansing with the same message, the Lansing State Journal reported.

Rallies drew young and old, laborers and retirees. In Pittsburgh, marchers also included parents with children in strollers and even a doctor. The peaceful crowd of 1,500 to 2,000 stretched for two or three blocks.

"I see our members losing jobs. People are angry," said Janet Hill, 49, who works for the United Steelworkers, which she said hosted a sign-making event before the march.

Retired teacher Albert Siemsen of Milwaukee said at a demonstration there that he'd grown angry watching school funding get cut at the same time that banks and corporations gained more influence in government. The 81-year-old wants to see tighter Wall Street regulation.

Around him, protesters held signs reading, "Keep your corporate hands off my government," and "Mr. Obama, Tear Down That Wall Street."

Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick visited protesters in Boston's Dewey Square for the first time. He said that after walking through the camp, he better understands the range of views and was sympathetic to concerns about unemployment, health care and the influence of money in politics.

And in Denver, about 1,000 people came to a rally in downtown Denver to support the movement.

 

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+84 # pernsey 2011-10-16 08:28
My husband and I are going to try to refinance our home through our credit union no more citibank in our future!
 
 
+30 # rubysnan 2011-10-16 10:52
You are smart to do that. I keep my money in my local credit union and my mortgage is with a local bank that won't farm it out. It's a comfortable feeling knowing that I am safe unless there's a catastrophic breakdown in the economy. Hopefully OWS will contribute to saving us from that.
 
 
+7 # jamminon 2011-10-16 20:10
Glad to see so many people doing this! I've used a credit union for 20 years. It's great. You can find one here: http://cuonline.ncua.gov/CreditUnionOnline/CU/FindCreditUnions.aspx
 
 
+61 # Barkingcarpet 2011-10-16 09:22
YES, WE CAN!

Lets change and fix our world folks, and leave the future something livable and healthy.
 
 
+36 # NanFan 2011-10-16 10:01
WAHOO!! I am in Spain and much, much is happening!!

Rock on for justice and free speech and unjust laws.

N.
 
 
+41 # AlaskanRebel 2011-10-16 10:01
The occupiers are heroes! We must succeed to ensure a healthy future for our children and grandchildren. I love the idea of the Occupy National Assembly with representatives from every state to demand change from our politicians.
 
 
+33 # reiverpacific 2011-10-16 10:10
Love it! Power to them!
They are representing "We the people" more directly than most of the elected shills put in power and under the plutocratic thumb ever have!
Warms the cockles of my ol' 60's and 70's direct activist and oft jailed leader's heart!
 
 
+26 # David Starr 2011-10-16 10:25
A spark has started a wildfire. These increasing protests worldwide are symbolic of inevitable ideological change. While they probably won't be THE cause for it, they help pave the way-as actions in the 1960s have done-for inevitably further future actions that neccessarily culminate in ideological change.
 
 
+40 # williamofthetrees 2011-10-16 11:03
I'm in Medellín, Colombia and people don't even know they can speak with over 42 union leaders getting killed every year but still I went down to the park with signs and got on top of the Botero statue and when they tried to get me off the people wouldn't allow it cheering for the posters on a more humane world! Thank you all for consciousness!
 
 
+4 # NOMINAE 2011-10-16 23:29
You GO william !

Some *serious* cojones on THAT move ! That image of you on top of the Botero statue *could* become for the people of Columbia what the "Running Girl" image became for the movement to end the war in VietNam !
 
 
+27 # susienoodle 2011-10-16 11:11
I hope one result from these protests is that CEO salaries go back to what they were pre Ronald Reagan, when the huge disparity began. After Governor Reagan turned the mentally ill out of facilities onto the streets of Calif, he went on to become president. But he was mild compared to the selfish, greedy folk who have succeeded him. We must get rid of Eric Cantor for starters, who won't even allow FEMA to fund recovery for hurricane victims.
I also hope something can be done to address expense of a college education. I attended the wonderful U of Wisc in Madison, in the 60's, and paid $150 per semester in state tuition. It is so unfair today's graduates are saddled with debt. I admire and applaud these brave protestors who are shining a light on the injustice that has prevailed for too long.
They have nothing to do with the tea party who were bussed in and financed by the Koch bros. Tea party is just the KKK sans hoods who hate the demographic changes taking place in America. The talking heads in the media show their ignorance by giving the tea party so much coverage, who care only about themselves, while OWS protestors seem more concerned with injustice and fairness.
Let's hope they succeed !!!
 
 
+4 # NOMINAE 2011-10-16 23:38
@ susienoodle - "The talking heads in the media show their ignorance by giving the tea party so much coverage, who care only about themselves, while OWS protestors seem more concerned with injustice and fairness."

The talking heads to which you refer are certainly not the sharpest knives in the drawer, but it is unquestioning fealty to their Lords And Masters that elicits their vacuous verbal onslaughts, not simply the blindness born of their "room temperature" I.Q.s!
The sad state existing here, is that they *do* know what they do, and they happily proceed to do it *anyway* !
 
 
+18 # jay84 2011-10-16 11:41
Had the writer of this article watched the actual video coverage of what happened at the Citibank, they'd know they tried to leave, but the police locked them in and arrested them.
 
 
+5 # NOMINAE 2011-10-16 23:48
Quoting
Had the writer of this article watched the actual video coverage of what happened at the Citibank, they'd know they tried to leave, but the police locked them in and arrested them.


Well said,jay84, and a good reminder that these power people are *very* good at controlling the narrative and filtering the footage. Not such an amazing accomplishment when they now control so much of the media apparatus.

Republicans have been walking all over Dems for the last 30 years because Repubs "frame" the debate, control the narrative, and "own" the discussion from there to the ramming thru of their pet legislation. Dems "fold" before the fight begins ala Obama, bcuz they are also rewarded for "going along with", not "fighting" the corporate agenda.

So, watch these very sophisticated tactics being perpetrated upon the OWS Movement by the Police Force and other instruments of the elite, learn from them, and in a kind of "energetic Aikido", determine ways to "dance around them" without actually giving an inch of ground, or being hustled off to jail, if at all possible !
 
 
+29 # Jill of York 2011-10-16 12:10
I attended the protest in Times Square yesterday and it was amazing. I am so grateful to the people who are living in Liberty Park. This is a global awakening and it is a sight to behold. Our government has been co-opted by corporations. Corporations are in control be it the military industrial complex war machine, the banking system, the insurance companies, corporate media, big pharma, Wall Street and now "we the people" are standing up and saying "Enough is Enough." The only thing they are afraid of is us. This is about economic justice. Stay non violent. That is our power. Occupy Wall Street. Coming to a town near you. God bless them all.
 
 
-11 # Martintfre 2011-10-16 16:53
// Our government has been co-opted by corporations.//

How blind can you get?

The government creates corporations.

Corporations are children of government - it is not the other way around ... ever.

A government that propps up some coroprations at the expense of others and tax payers is a fascist government.

The GOVERNMENT is SOLY responsible for the BAILOUTs
Government is solely responsible for too big to fail and we are too small to save (but not too small to screw)
 
 
+20 # walt 2011-10-16 12:18
Will anyone hold Mayor Bloomberg accountable for all this? He is a billionaire and surely is not happy with folks protesting Wall Street crimes! His police henchmen have continued to shame all New York and he should be taken to task over it.
 
 
+18 # DPM 2011-10-16 12:32
About 100 people in front of Chase criminal bank, in Traverse City, MI., yesterday. Another rally on the 22nd. Join us! Perhaps they will let us in the bank to buy a politician.
 
 
+16 # swissms 2011-10-16 12:55
Yay to those who came to show their support in Denver. I was really worried about the small original turnout. It was too easy for the police to disrupt and arrest them.
 
 
+10 # Charles3000 2011-10-16 12:59
We need to tell our government to stop printing money and giving it to banks. The government should either spend or lend at interest the money they print.
 
 
+19 # John Locke 2011-10-16 13:51
Remember the 1% needs the 99%... who will clerk in their stores and fancy restaurants, who will repair their plumbing or air conditioning, who will work for slave wages in their factories, hit them where it hurts... show them who has control... organize a sick in... no one goes to work that day see how they feel differently when it hits them where it hurts and if they don't get the message have a week of sick ins until they get the message that goes for bank employees also, everyone except fire and ambulances and hospital staff...the 99% is the labot the 1% needs, stop catering to them...
 
 
+3 # susienoodle 2011-10-17 05:42
You reminded me of a story they told in Telluride 20 years ago.
There was a freeze and Donald Trump called a plumber to deal with his frozen pipes. He said :"This is Donald Trump and I need you to drop everything and get out here right away." and the response was:"This is Louie the plumber and I'll get to you when I get to you!!" I loved it then, but even more today, plus it proves your point John Locke.
 
 
+16 # Kayjay 2011-10-16 14:10
Kudos to all the efforts to give the 99 percent a peaceful voice. And I have a general question for the US government. Please let us all know exactly WHERE and WHEN your citizens can exercise their constitutionall y approved rights to free speech and assembly. It seems where ever the OWS goes, the riot squad is ready to knock a few heads together. I always thought this was the "home of the free." I hope that doesn't just mean we are free to shop at Walmart, which is a evil outlet for products made by an outsourced work force.
 
 
+15 # mmc@hiwaay.net 2011-10-16 14:39
Throughout history the corporate bankers have repeatedly proven they cannot be trusted. I can see no reason to continue to protect and subsidize this collective gang of crooks. Let us nationalize OUR banking system and get the corruption out. To those who whine this is socialism I say that this is what democracy looks like!
 
 
-2 # Martintfre 2011-10-16 16:46
I say democracy looks like lunch after two wolves and a sheep voted on the next meal.
 
 
+7 # skydog70 2011-10-16 15:30
Sandy Peterson, of Utah, who was in Times Square after seeing "The Book of Mormon" musical on Broadway, got caught up in the disorder.

"We're getting out of here before this gets ugly," she said.

{They would look and hard to find someone who felt out of place there. I suppose a stray Mormon or two might.}
 
 
+4 # antineocon 2011-10-16 19:15
IF YOU HAVE SAVING PULL IT OUT FROM THE BANKS. JUST GO OUT AND BUY JUNK SILVER PRE 1964 90% SILVER AND BUY GOLD BULLION AND PUT IT AWAY SOMEPLACE IN THE GROUND. TRY NOT TO GIVE OUR IDENTITY WHEN YOU BUY AS THEN IT MIGHT BE CONFISCATED BY THE usg. kEEP YOUR POWDER DRY AND KEEP YOUR MONEY AT HOME. NO MORE BANKS.
 
 
+4 # seeuingoa 2011-10-17 00:18
Is it possible to overload the whole system by getting arrested again and
again and when the arrested are again
in the streets after a couple of hours/days, then repeat the arrests
again and again?
Where will they put them?
Concentrationca mps ? Guantanamo ?
 

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