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Occupy
Wall Street Militancy Just
Getting Started
Posted 11/04/2011
Occupy
Oakland protestors set trash on
fire to make a barricade as police form a line to disperse them on
Thursday.
Politics:
What is the real point of
“Occupy Wall Street”? The violence in Oakland offers the first clue.
Now with
politically connected union bosses and Acorn involved, it might just be
worth
looking at its links to Democrats.
Now
that Oakland’s streets have been
“redecorated” with shattered glass, cement chunks and burning garbage
from the
Occupy Wall Street movement, it’s critical to see that these acts are
no
aberration, but came after calls for force and violence. What makes it
disturbing
is how close the White House is to them as election time approaches.
United
Steelworkers President Leo
Gerard, speaking on radio host Ed Schultz’s show last Monday, declared,
“What
we need is more militancy.” Asked to clarify, Gerard said: “I think
we’ve got
to start a resistance movement. If Wall Street Occupation doesn’t get
the
message, I think we’ve got to start blocking bridges and doing that
kind of
stuff.”
The
Canadian union leader then
denounced Americans’ 2008 election of Tea Party representatives to the
House as
“nut jobs,” and called for more force and illegality: “We ought to be
doing
more than occupying parks. We ought to start occupying bridges. We
ought to
start occupying the banks’ places themselves.”
Despite
his proletarian persona, Gerard
is close to Occupy Wall Street’s criteria for the 1%, pulling in a
$188,000
salary and benefits. He’s won an honorary college degree and attended
galas in
his honor. He’s served on the board of the Apollo Alliance, tied to
one-time
Obama “green jobs” czar Van Jones, and served on the board of the
Economic
Policy Institute, a George Soros front. And he heads the tony-sounding
Blue-Green alliance, which links labor to wealthy environmentalists.
That’s
elite all by itself. But more
to the point, he’s political. He’s got the White House ear as a
frequent
visitor, and has been appointed to the White House Advisory Committee
on Trade
Policy and Negotiations. On that board, he evidently had enough clout
to delay
the U.S.-Colombia free-trade treaty for nearly two years.
Now
Gerard’s calling for taking U.S.
bridges and banks by force, depriving citizens of their property,
access to
money and right of passage. This isn’t democracy — it’s violence, as
the
Oakland protests showed.
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Two
months ago another White House
ally, Teamsters chief Jimmy Hoffa, openly called for his members to
“take these
sons of bitches out” in Congress, as Obama stood silently at his side.
“They
got a war with us and there’s only going to be one winner,” he growled.
Hoffa’s
Teamsters, it should be noted,
have the most violent record of all labor unions, clocking in 454
incidents of
violence since 1991, according to the National Institute for Labor
Relations
Research in Washington.
Then
there’s the SEIU-linked Acorn,
which has made OWS its latest cause. The Obama-tied group had
supposedly
disbanded, but now operates as New York Communities for Change (NYCC),
using
the strong-arm political tactics of community organizer Saul Alinsky.
Since
it was discovered that NYCC was
a prime funder and director of the Occupy movement, Fox News reports
that the
group has been shredding documents, firing staff, offering up alibis
and
surveilling Fox News personnel.
One
starts to wonder: Is Occupy Wall
Street a grass-roots movement, or a corrupt, violent organization whose
real
center is the Obama administration itself? One thing’s for sure: It
isn’t
interested in democracy.
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