Posts Tagged ‘ occupy ’

127-Year-Old Car Fetches $4.6M at Auction

October 11, 2011
127-Year-Old Car Fetches $4.6M at Auction

Car brought in double the expected price. Photo Credit: Darin Schnabel/RM Auctions / Rex Features See more here: 127-Year-Old Car Fetches $4.6M at Auction

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Protesters Gather at Roxbury Park Asking for Change

October 11, 2011

Like the Occupy Wall Street movement that inspired the event, those who came to Beverly Hills’  Roxbury Park  Monday for the “Hear it from the Hills” protest all had different concerns, but one thing in common: They want the United States government to make some changes. Jonathan Brock, a Beverly Hills video editor, wants to stop complaining and actually do something about a government he feels is powered by corporate money. Michael Jones, a Culver City resident who works with the probation department, is concerned that the thousands of inmates about to be released from state prisons due to budget cuts will return to a life of crime when they can’t find jobs. Liz Cohen of West Los Angeles feels like she lives in a country that doesn’t reflect her ideals. “We are here today to help build a movement of progressive people who feel like 99 percent of us are not represented by our current government system,” said Roberta Eidman, who coordinated the event with MoveOn.org. “We all have different levels of concern. The retirees are worried about social security, unions are afraid of being stripped of their rights, recent graduates need jobs, homeowners want to avoid foreclosure, but we all have a vision of how to make a better future.” Holding signs with slogans like “Jobs Not Cuts” and “Greed Is Not Patriotic,” the group of about 60 protesters chanted “We’re the 99” as they made their way down Olympic Boulevard from Roxbury Park to the Century City financial district, despite Monday being a bank holiday. “I wanted to show my solidarity with the other members of the 99 percent of people who are rising up and basically saying they are really tired of being powerless,” Brock said. “We’ve lost our democracy. I’m here to take a stand and show my desire to take our real democracy back.” Like the Occupy Wall Street movement, which started in New York City and has now spread across the nation, most of Monday’s participants were protesting against corporate greed, a lack of jobs, and the influence of big business and the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans on U.S. laws and policies. “The top 1 percent is the only segment of the population that is really holding the assets—just astronomical amounts of the nation’s wealth—and the power that goes with that wealth,” Eidman said. Be sure to follow Beverly Hills Patch on  Twitter  and “Like” us on  Facebook . See more here: Protesters Gather at Roxbury Park Asking for Change

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What You Need to Know About CicLAvia on Sunday

October 9, 2011
What You Need to Know About CicLAvia on Sunday

The third CicLAvia is upon us already, and it’s bigger than ever . You’ll be able to bike, walk, run, jog, skateboard, cartwheel, pogo-stick or do anything but drive through the 10 miles of the route from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. tomorrow. more › Here is the original post: What You Need to Know About CicLAvia on Sunday

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Danny Glover To Occupy LA: ‘We Need 24/7 Warriors’ (VIDEO)

October 9, 2011

In the clip above, actor and activist Danny Glover surprised Occupy LA demonstrators on Saturday in front of Downtown’s City Hall. In the sweltering heat of the afternoon (it is certainly not fall yet in Los Angeles), Glover says participating on the weekends is not enough. “We need 24/7 warriors,” he cries out at the end of his speech. Check back to see the full video soon. Video by Sasha Bronner. To see the best signs from Occupy LA, click here . See the original post: Danny Glover To Occupy LA: ‘We Need 24/7 Warriors’ (VIDEO)

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Occupy Wall Street BORING

October 8, 2011

Occupy Wall Street and its various susidiary ‘Occupy’ gatherings are boring.

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David Freid: A Tree Grows in Wall Street

October 5, 2011

“If reality is a cliff, this argument just fell off it.” That was how I began a response to a political email thread that I got pulled into a day before the Occupy LA protests began. I never intended to respond to that thread. I’ve got good friends on both sides of the political spectrum, and do my best not to get into important conversations with them. But sometimes someone says something so wrong that I pull my head out of the sand just long enough to get my point across. That must be how “The 99%” in tents and sleeping bags on the lawn of city hall are feeling too. Like something needs to be said. A few months ago I went a pillow fight (seriously) in Pershing Square. Attendance was huge, and I got some great photos of the feathery melee. I figured if a pillow fight could draw such a crowd, something ostensibly more important, though admittedly less fun, should have at least comparable numbers. And this could be a good time to have a camera. Los Angeles didn’t disappoint; this was well attended. All of the obvious LA stereotypes were there. Plenty of good-looking hipsters with small dogs. And of course there were the stoners, dreadlocked bongo players, and daisy-laden idealists. What would a left-wing protest be without them? But what really stood out to me was the diversity beyond that predictable group. Since I didn’t sit down and get to know each one of them intimately, please allow a moment of creative license and book-by-its-cover-style analysis. There were teachers, doctors, and soccer moms — people who looked like the last of a dwindling American middle class. There were old people, military types, and men non-ironically wearing business suits. There was an equal and opposite response for every person you would expect to see. For every performance art poet, there was a financial analyst. For every vegan chef, a strict meatatarian (creative license, right?). Hell, I think I even spotted a couple of Republicans with what looked like tea strings swinging from their pockets. This is a good start, but it’s only been a couple of days now. The seed was planted on Wall Street, and the demonstrators in New York have been flexing their constitutional muscles for weeks now. In fact, while I was at Occupy LA, a friend showed me a tweet about the Brooklyn Bridge getting shut down by protesters. Will LA have a Brooklyn Bridge? The people of New York are occupying under more challenging conditions than we of sunny Southern California. And there’s rain on the horizon. I don’t mean that metaphorically; there is literally rain in the forecast. This is rare for LA, and if you’ve ever been in this town during even a minor sprinkling, you know that people lose their minds a little. “Storm of the century pounds Los Angeles!” is the headline during a mild winter shower. People stay home. And those who brave the roads do so with a screw loose, a malfunctioning internal guidance system, and seemingly nowhere else to be. Will a little rain be enough to slow what one activist called “the most important movement in history”? Even if that speaker was aware of his hyperbole (Marie Antoinette’s head must’ve rolled in its grave), there was definitely a feeling of importance at this event. I’m not sure if it was the spirit of the occasion, my own unspoken dissatisfaction with the status quo, or the free pizza one of the activists gave me (never underestimate the power of free pizza), but after a while I felt involved. Will Los Angeles have the endurance to keep this thing going? This town always looks so nice after a good rainstorm. The city gets an HD look to it, like someone just took Windex to a dusty TV. I’m looking forward to seeing a large, if not larger crowd next time I turn on that TV. (OK, that last bit was a metaphor.) A seed that was planted 2,793 miles away is growing into a tree. “This is it” was a common phrase I heard this weekend, as was some universal rhetoric that a generation has come of age. I wonder if this makes the 1% nervous. Even a little. See the original post here: David Freid: A Tree Grows in Wall Street

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Raw Police Video