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Latest update: 18/11/2011
- demonstrations - Economic crisis - New York - Occupy Movement - US economy - USA
Occupy Wall Street protesters clash with police
New York police clashed with Occupy protesters Thursday, arresting at least 100 people after hundreds turned out for a Wall Street march to mark the two-month anniversary of the movement.
REUTERS - New York police prevented protesters from shutting down Wall Street on Thursday, arresting more than 200 people in repeated clashes with an unexpectedly small but spirited Occupy Wall Street rally.
Protesters took to the streets in rainy New York and cities across the United States for a day of action seen as a test of the momentum of the two-month-old grass-roots movement against economic inequality.
Organizers and city officials had expected tens of thousands to turn out for a demonstration following the New York police raid that broke up the protesters’ encampment in a park near Wall Street on Tuesday.
A crowd that disappointed organizers throughout the day grew to several thousand after the standard workday ended and labor union activists joined a march across the Brooklyn Bridge, where last month more than 700 people were arrested during a similar march.
“We certainly want to see more people mobilize and show up,” said Occupy Wall Street spokesman Jeff Smith, who nevertheless said there was “a fantastic turnout.”
After tempers among police and protesters flared throughout the day, crowds grew larger and more festive after dark.
“This is a great night for a revolution. I’ve never seen anything like this in my entire life,” said Daniel Reynolds, 34, a financial analyst at a venture capital firm, who joined the protests for the first time on Thursday.
Many protesters complained of police brutality, pointing to one media image of man whose face was bloodied during his arrest and another of a woman who was dragged across the sidewalk by an officer.
Police reported seven officers were injured, including one whose hand was cut by a flying piece of glass and five who were hit in the face by a liquid believed to be vinegar.
Police barricaded the narrow streets around Wall Street, home to the New York Stock Exchange, and used batons to push protesters onto the sidewalk as they marched through the area to try to prevent financial workers getting to their desks.
Workers were allowed past barricades with identification and the New York Stock Exchange opened on time and operated normally.
Protesters banged drums and yelled, “We are the 99 percent,” referring to their contention that the U.S. political system benefits only the richest 1 percent.
At the Union Square subway stop, one of the busiest in the city, protesters tried to crowd the entrance but police repeatedly moved them against the walls to make way for subway riders.
Protests across U.S.
Demonstrators targeted bridges they considered in disrepair in cities such as Miami, Detroit and Boston to highlight what they said was the need for government spending on infrastructure projects to create jobs.
In St. Louis, more than 1,000 protesters marched through downtown in support of the Occupy St. Louis movement that was evicted last week from its campsite near the Gateway Arch. The Thursday march was by far the largest since Occupy St. Louis began in support of the New York demonstrators.
In Los Angeles, hundreds of anti-Wall Street demonstrators marched through the financial district, blocking a downtown street to snarl morning rush-hour traffic, and briefly pitched tents outside a Bank of America office tower. Nearly 80 protesters were arrested in the city.
At least 300 people gathered at Chicago’s Thompson Center, giving speeches in English and Spanish. The protest was focused on jobs with signs reading: “We need jobs, not cuts” and “Jobs, schools, equality: end the wars.”
The Washington, D.C., gathering was smaller than hoped for by organizers. One protester in McPherson Square said he expected about 1,000 people, while perhaps 200 showed up, with many leaving within the hour.
About 100 marched through downtown Denver, chanting slogans and calling for the recall of Mayor Michael Hancock for his decision to have police remove illegally pitched tents and other items from the Occupy Denver campsite last weekend.
In Dallas, more than a dozen people were arrested when police shut down their six-week-old camp near City Hall.
Hundreds of Occupy demonstrators in Portland, Oregon, gathered on a major bridge and later massed in front of a Chase bank branch downtown. Police arrested at least 30 people.
About 600 protesters in Seattle converged in an early evening “Jobs Not Cuts” rally on a bridge spanning near the University of Washington, causing a 2-mile (3-km) traffic backup during the city’s raining rush hour.
Police in Las Vegas arrested 21 protesters who sat down in the street outside a federal courthouse after they ignored warnings to leave.
Before dawn on Thursday, police cleared away a protest camp from a plaza at the University of California, Berkeley, where 5,000 people had gathered on Tuesday night.
Protesters say they are upset that billions of dollars in bailouts given to banks during the recession allowed a return to huge profits while average Americans have had no relief from high unemployment and a struggling economy.
They also say the richest 1 percent of Americans do not pay their fair share of taxes.



























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(4) Reactions
i join it
i love this police
wall street greed
In 1992 I was stopped at a red traffic light behins several cars when a Westinghouse company car plowed into my rear. Bertty Ponder Wilson was talking on her cel instead of looking out the windshield. In the hospital, police handed me her info, giving CONTINENTAL INSURANCE (with a policy number) as her insurer. Years later, after losing my healthy, marriage, and everything I own, I came to Costa Rica to live on Social Security Disability. I would have been happy with half the money Westinghouse spent on lawyers to be certain I received nothing. They never admitted fault or even fixed my bike, and I left the US with $350,000 in medical bills. I would just like to share this story with the protest movement as an example of what is wrong with corporate America.
In democratic form of
In democratic form of government a strike is a strike to the people, it is the people on the lose, No one become rich if there is no poor, when someone is rich it is the people that created him.
Wall street protest rally
America should strongly observe Human Right and refrain from detaining any protestor in the Wall Street rally as well as in other rallies throughout America which have existed for more than two months till now (18.11.11) otherwise the whole world will be asking “what kind of standard US is practicing?” Human Right is the standard initiated by the US and they propagate it to all Western countries. Therefore they have the irresistible responsibility to honor it not only by words of mouth but also by action. However, whether other countries particularly those in Asia accept such standard or not is another question. Their recent and current arrest of over hundred protestors is a serious violation of such standard they themselves strongly propagate. We strongly condemn such action being taken. If they are really serious about what they strongly propagate for the good of mankind, this is the good moment for them to show good example to the world that they themselves firmly uphold their own Human Rights standards and not to practice double standard.