9 thoughts on “They Want A Class War?”

  1. Wow. At least the TPers dressed like Minutemen know what country they’re standing in. The wanna-be East German is trying to appeal to whom, exactly?

  2. He had better not hope a class war ever happens in the USA. Our side is armed and can shoot straight.

  3. I just having a hard time figuring how these protests are hurting the GOP. Perhaps some corporations are having issues, but these protests are happening in large urban cities, which typically have liberal municipal leadership. And the protests are hurting tourism and trade without a doubt, which hurts the inner cities a bit more than surburbia. As the protests become annoying, rather than impactful; people will just head to their quiet homes and remember the politicians backing these protests.

  4. To the media:
    Please please please give these guys more coverage. Interview every single on and create a slideshow of their posters.

    ***

    These protesters complain that they don’t get the coverage they deserve, give it to them lol. The media is doing them a favor, just like the anti-war anti-Bush protesters, by not doing any in-depth coverage of their signs and speeches.

  5. How many lefties does that guy think there is in the Military- or police forces.
    Or how lefties don’t have felony record and have guns?

  6. They’ve defined the Rules of Engagement for their precious “class war“: take out the middle class.

    “How hard is it for us to stake out one of the obvious access roads to some tech company, tail an employee home and toss a liquor bottle full of flaming gasoline through their nice picture window into their cute house,” wrote the author of the email.

    If you’re packin’, keep packin’. If not, maybe time to think about it…

  7. The WSJ reports:

    “At a protest off Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C., it was unclear what the protesters stood for, much less if they’d accept political support from the Democratic Party. A man on stage beat on a drum while reciting free-verse poetry lines such as “Revolution is the solution,” and “then we can all sit down and have a lollipop.” The group at one point participated in Yoga stretches.”

    That, and “drum circles” and “street theater.”

    As soon as it gets a bit colder in the clown parade will move on.

  8. Couple good links.

    Corporations do influence the government, of course. But then so do labor unions, the legal profession, the medical profession, special interest groups based on one form of racial or ethnic grievance or another, and lobbying interests ranging from Iowa corn to Texas oil. The problem isn’t corporations, the problem is that we have a government that has its fingers in nearly every aspect of the economy. That means that policy makers have the ability to pick economic winners and losers every day, and it’s only natural that those policies would be of concern to the people that they’re going to impact most directly, the businesses affected by them.

    http://www.professorbainbridge.com/professorbainbridgecom/2011/10/the-absurdity-of-the-anti-corporation-movement.html

    And did you know there is a movement to #occupysesamestreet?

    http://twitter.com/#!/search?q=%23occupysesamestreet

  9. On my blog I urged Wall Street bashers to boycott Wall Street:

    “What do people do when they identify a commercial enterprise they find morally reprehensible? They refrain from trading with that company. All you Wall Street bashers should show some moral consistency and refuse to buy any products or services sold by any company publicly traded on the NYSE, American Stock Exchange, or NASDAQ. Buy from foreign corporations not listed on those exchanges (like Nestle), or from private firms. Starve the Wall Street beast!”

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