Saturday, October 8, 2011

The Silent Majority has found it's voice

I know how little you care about the ongoing street protests across the country as evidenced by your lack of comments on the subject.  That's OK, move on to something else now if you wish, but I'm still going to blog about it because this movement, growing in respectability, is saying what I've been saying for several years now.  This issue really has my attention.  
From one of the online newspaper's editorial pages I read daily:
[The protesters]...."are exactly right when they say that the financial sector, with regulators and elected officials in collusion, inflated and profited from a credit bubble that burst, costing millions of Americans their jobs, incomes, savings and home equity. As the bad times have endured, Americans have also lost their belief in redress and recovery."
"The initial outrage has been compounded by bailouts and by elected officials’ hunger for campaign cash from Wall Street, a toxic combination that has reaffirmed the economic and political power of banks and bankers, while ordinary Americans suffer."
"It is not the job of the protesters to draft legislation. That’s the job of the nation’s leaders, and if they had been doing it all along there might not be a need for these marches and rallies. Because they have not, the public airing of grievances is a legitimate and important end in itself. It is also the first line of defense against a return to the Wall Street ways that plunged the nation into an economic crisis from which it has yet to emerge."
The "silent majority" isn't so silent any more, is it?  The next 12 months (leading up to the 2012 election) are going to be interesting, to say the least.  
S



3 comments:

  1. I haven't commented because we are having similar stuff going on over here. The next months (weeks!) may be quite interesting....

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  2. I, for one, keep hoping that these protests will start gaining in numbers and power, and become more organized and focused.

    It's about time that we become vocal about how fed up we are with corporate greed. I'm not talking about a business wanting to make money - it needs to, that's it's job - but the greed that has raised CEO's salaries by hundreds of percent while the middle class stays stagnant and watches the middle class jobs being moved overseas.

    A good business takes care of its employees - not like Walmart, which "helps" its employees by showing them how to apply for Medicaid because their part-time jobs don't have healthcare benefits.

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