“They Don’t Know What They Want.”

This is the number one most frustrating and pervasive falsehood out there. I hear it from the Fox News people – those conservatives who love to make original quips like, “They should get a job, but first they should take a bath, har har.” Sad thing is, I hear it from moderate OWS supporters, too. So here. Please. Take this post and spread it around. Print it out, and bring it along. Tattoo it to the inside of your eyelids. (Sorry for that imagery). We know what we want. We do, we do, we do.

I’m taking these first four line items (with a few updates and edits) from my recent post, How to Defend the Occupy Movement Over the Holidays.

If you’d like to see any of these topics covered in more depth here on my blog, vote in this poll before 11/28/11.

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1. Occupy wants money out of politics. We want corporate personhood revisited by the Supreme Court.

Corporate personhood is a big issue, and one that extends beyond money in politics. For the sake of the OWS argument, we can discuss it in the context of the 2010 Supreme Court ruling (“Citizens United“) that states that corporations may donate freely to political campaigns. This, essentially, means corporations can buy whichever candidate they believe will most favor their own interests. It means that few if any politicians are truly by the people or for the people, because average citizens don’t have the financial power to catapult any one candidate into office.

In One Sentence: Occupy Wall Street wants Citizens United / Corporate Personhood revisited and changed.

2. We want more regulations on big banks.

After the great depression, regulations were placed on banks that prevented them from engaging in certain risky behaviors that could jeopardize the economy…again. The most famous regulation was called the Glass-Steagal Act (GSA), named for the two congressmen who were its legislative sponsors. The GSA, in short, prevented three big industries from co-mingling: insurance, banking and investing. The financial sector wasn’t a fan of this act, because it kept them from making exponentially more money. Things were going well till the late 90′s, when after decades of lobbying, a new bill was passed (Graham, Leach, Bliley) that basically kicked GSA out of the game. The 3 industries merged, and it wasn’t long before the whole system collapsed under the weight of its own greed.

In One Sentence: Occupy wants GSA reinstated, and many conservatives agree.

3. Occupy Wall Street is concerned with the growing income disparity between the ultra-wealthy and the lower classes.

The movement believes the middle class is rapidly disappearing. Average people are becoming poorer, while the richest are becoming richer, and before OWS, no one seemed to care. We believe our children and grandchildren will have to work harder than we’ve worked, to have less privilege and fewer comforts. The movement has gotten the country and the world talking about this problem. So that’s already a major success. Besides talking about it, what can we do about this enormous all-encompassing issue? Occupy Wall Street thinks a great place to begin is to stop cutting taxes on the rich.

One pretty obvious reason congress may not want to cut taxes on the richest Americans is that they themselves are in that group. I mean c’mon who would elect to pay more taxes, given the choice? (Um, lots of rich Americans, but I digress.) Another reason: the people who donate to their campaigns – see #1 – tend to be quite well off.

Conservatives argue that raising taxes on the wealthy would not make that much of a dent in the economy. Occupiers and most liberals tend to disagree. Conservatives argue that raising taxes on the rich will discourage the “job makers” from creating more jobs. Right now, the wealthiest have the most lenient tax scenario ever and there still aren’t jobs, so that theory is dead in the water. Some say that the “problems” our country is facing are no worse than they ever were. Again, occupiers tend to take a look at graphs like the one above, and worry about what that chart might look like if the lines continue on the same trajectory. We fear it could be a lot like this diagram.

In One Sentence: Occupy would like taxes raised on the wealthiest Americans, and lowered for the middle class and the poor.

4. Occupy wants professional lobbyists out of Washington.

Big corporations spend fortunes lobbying congress. Lobbyists write their own bills favoring their own special interests, and congress often passes them. This means that businesses have disproportionate impact on governing law. Bills should be passed and laws should be made to favor the majority. Occupy Wall Street believes the majority (the so called 99%) should have equal influence on legislation.

In One Sentence: Occupy would like the impact of professional lobbying to be limited, beginning with a law that prevents lobbyists from writing their own bills.

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