CBS News/ October 8, 2011, 11:34 AM

"Occupy" protesters garner increased support

In New York, the protest is called "Occupy Wall Street" - but around the nation, where the movement is picking up steam, it's being called "Occupy Together."

This week, CBS News correspondent Michelle Miller reported on "The Early Show on Saturday Morning," demonstrations were held in more than a dozen cities, from Los Angeles to Richmond, Va., to downtown Minneapolis, Minn.

In Minneapolis, one demonstrator told CBS News, "We're here because we want the big dudes to start paying."

More demonstrations are scheduled this weekend in cities like Indianapolis, Ind.

The website OccupyTogether.org, the unofficial hub for all of the events springing up across the country in solidarity with Occupy Wall St., claims there are online supporters in more than 900 cities.

This week, unions joined the protest, marching through New York's Financial District during rush hour Wednesday.

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, told CBS News, "They are basically sending us a message that says, 'Don't create a society where one percent basically has all the wealth.'"

Approximately 5,000 people marched on Foley Square in New York Wednesday. By late evening, police and protesters clashed, and 23 people were arrested.

The downtown Manhattan encampment that started it all is attracting a steady stream of onlookers - and reinforcements, including Michelle Snyder, who stops by every day on her lunch hour.

When asked about what she sees as the purpose of the protests - which were not formed by a centralized leadership - Snyder told CBS News, "In the end, it's to stop the economy from going into such a downward spiral. Really we all just want our middle-class back."

Frustration over the gap between the wealthiest and the middle-class is one theme, Miller said. But there are as many messages as there are cardboard signs spread along the sidewalk. ,/P>

Those who came by Zuccotti Park in New York's Financial District, curious to figure out the point of the protest, seemed a bit confused.

Aaron Green, an investment manager, said, "Most of them are kind of hanging out, doesn't look like they're doing too much."

But, Miller reported, there's no sign the protesters in New York (or elsewhere) are packing up their signs any time soon.

One New York protester said, "There's no ending date, there's no designated date that it's ending, it's growing every day."

On "The Early Show on Saturday Morning," Michael Daly, special correspondent for Newsweek and The Daily Beast, said people protesting are not necessarily accomplish something - but rather, express something.

He said, "The one thing that runs through all of them is that a feeling that there is just a fundamental unfairness. From their point of view, the very people who almost wrecked the U.S. economy on Wall Street continue to get wealthy while working people are struggling to pay their bills. I mean, it comes down to that."

Though the protests are going strong now, Daly says the weather might be the determining factor as to when the "occupation" ends.

"It's not the the Arab Spring, it's the New York Fall," he said. "It's going to get cold. I think the friend for the policemen, in this case, may be the weather."

There is no curfew at New York's Zuccotti Park, which has enabled the protesters to camp out there. But the protesters are expected to march to Washington Square Park, which does have a curfew. Daly said that could put an end to today's protests.

"Early Show" co-anchor Russ Mitchell noted President Obama said he understood them and House Republican Majority Leader Eric Cantor called them a "growing mob" on Friday. "What do these types of comments do to the protesters in terms of their resolve?" he aske dDaly.

"You know, the people are talking about them," he replied. "If nobody was talking about them, I think that would probably send them home. But if you have the President of the United States acknowledging you and if you had the Republicans calling you a mob, then you're really starting a conversation ... they ARE accomplishing something."

Mitchell said to Daly, "You're sympathetic to the protesters. You wrote this week they are being arrested and being handcuffed, but the people they are protesting have not been handcuffed."

Daly responded, "Sympathetic in the sense there is an unfairness. You can wreck the U.S. economy and you don't end up in handcuffs, but if you make a left-hand turn on the Brooklyn Bridge, you get collared. It's not a question of law enforcement, it's a question of the law.

"The law is very clear - if you go and block traffic, you're going to get arrested. The law is not so clear if you're a rating agency and you inflate ratings in order to get more business."

Daly says he's not surprised the movement has gotten this expansive.

"The least American thing is unfairness," he said. "I mean, the whole country got started with fairness. The original 'tea party' was all about fairness. The Constitution is a document about fairness, and if there is a wide feeling there is unfairness, then, you know, it shouldn't surprise anybody."

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
276 Comments Add a Comment
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GlobalFamily says:
Correction to this story: if it was Arab Spring then, what Europe had was Europe Summer, and now it's American Autumn, not just simply New York Fall. It's spreading faster than you realize.
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jschmidt27 says:
The biggest demand I keep hearing is arrest the bankers. We are a country of laws. If the Obama adminstration hasn't prosecuted than either no laws were broken or Obama doesn't want to prosecute his campaign contributors. Any of these protesters up in arms against the waste Solyandra loans that Obama gave his big campaign contributor.
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dzaffina replies:
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repeating the rightwing talking points, fresh from the faux sunday mourning republican platform show. good boy.
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jschmidt27 says:
You need to fix the tax code. Get rid of the loopholes and subsidies including ethanol and green energy. Reduce the corp tax rate to somethng less than the 2nd highest in the world, and something competitive such as Switzerlands 6%. Reduce cap gains taxes. The gains are only realized when the stock is cashed in. Repatriate overseas profts at a low tax rate if profits are used for expansion and hiring in the US and not stock buybacks. And GE can get breaks because it is huge and give plenty to campaigns, while the small town oil company or town grocery store or small manufacturer, all corporations, can get no breaks and pay the higher taxes. But the left paints all of them with the same brush and accuses all the companies of being rich and wants them to pay more in taxes.
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dzaffina replies:
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Reduce the corp tax rate to somethng less than the 2nd highest in the world,

you have been posting this same comment for days now. the same rightwing rhetoric, its BS, and people aren't buying it. everybody knows that corporate wealthy pay no where near what you claim to be "the 2nd highest in the world". forget facts, keep telling the lies and maybe people will believe them.
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passengerpidgeon says:
Evening of 07/04/1776: OK now we need an economy for our country...OK how about this: tomorrow 07/05/1776 each person will go out and grab as much money as they can for themselves!

Well that's what got us into this mess that disappears the middle class. As usual greed hoodwinked our founding fathers into this decision. It's time for all of us to undo it. Let's dilute our captialist economy with a little Democratic Socialism - I guess we already have some with SSA & Medicare; that's a start
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berlinfoto-2009 says:
Hello Dan Authoritarian 1523:
Government employees are the most Brainwashed of all Americans particular C.I.A. it is done during their training, also likewise for the F.B.I.
With that said, nearly all Americans are brainwashed, however the protesters, would be the least brainwashed of Americans.
The media is not Liberal, it is corporate, it is diametrically opposed to the protesters.
The media is very responsive to request of the government administration.
As I alluded to by giving you the last name Authoritarian, you simply are not very smart, stupid would be a more fit description to your intellectual ability.
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SIDtheDOG says:
The economy has change but the politicians still can't adjust to what is needed to get this country back on track. All you hear is the same old solutions that worked in the 60's. If you want businesses to hire, you must make fundamental changes in the work week to begin with. That would be shortening the work week to 32 hours a week and then 24 down the line. Overtime would be paid for any hours worked over those hours. This could be done in weeks and not years. This would open up new posiions and allow others to seek additional employment. You need to understand that what took 5 men to do several years ago only takes 1 now. That is the biggest difference. And it is only going to get worse. Home purchases would increase with the end of mortgage write offs on all new home loans after the 1st of the year 2013. SSI could be done in a cafeteria style, with workers picking how much they want to contribute into the system and how much they would receive when they retire. The same could be done with Medicare. The first $15000.00 from an individual's savings account would not be taxed per year. This would spur savings and banks to compete for customer's accounts. An end to salaried position,which most businesses have taken advantage of loose regulations. An end to right to work states, if people wan to organize for the betterment of the employees, the state should not stand in the way. And last, suspending Congress for 2 years and a flat tax rate.
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mary-miami replies:
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You actually said "the first $15,000. from an individual's savings...?" There are people that work all day, all week for minimum wages, that are working paycheck to paycheck and barely make that amount in a year. They are called working poor. They don't have any way of saving money because every dollar they earn goes to pay rent, bills, utilties, food. Despite what most people think, these folks don't always ask for food stamps, mainly because they feel embarrassed to ask for the help. So they just have one meal a day, and go hungry. The rich should pay more taxes. That's the solution. The rightwing GOP/Teaparty wants to create a two class system of rich and poor, with no middle class because the rightwing wants to have slave labor in the US. That's why they closed factories here and sent them to China, where they don't have to deal with workers rights and environmental regulations. GOP wants people to believe that American industry is obsolete, well it's not. Industry was exported to China, and China's poverty was imported to the US. The only party that has ever respected and defended the working class is the Democrats. I will vote to re-elect President Obama.
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SGNitz says:
The republicans are making a huge mistake in criticizing the "occupy wallstreet" movement. I'm in the military (I have a job for the moment), a conservative, identify myself with the republican party, and I want to join these protesters. Only a few commentators on the Sunday morning circuit got it right today when they said republicans should embrace the sentiment (Matthew Dowd); and I think offer solutions. Joblessness, the mortgage crisis, bank and corporate bailouts, and the perceived collusion between wallstreet and big government that caused it all in the first place is real and growing. Government is dysfunctional and can't answer American's call to balance the budget and when they call customer service at any corporation they're more than likely going speaking to a voice recording that offers boilerplate responses to stock questions. I get angry just thinking about it all. And at about how "disconnected" even the media elite is from real life in modern America.
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tjsroch replies:
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Make a difference SGNitz. You are a 99. Peace and truth to power.
rocketjl replies:
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Got some good ideas, but most of what I see in the pictures are people carrying union signs, like the UAW. Those union folks start around $35 an hour and go up to $50/$60 an hour. So being out there with unemployed 'whoevers' is confusing. What's that all about?
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credibility2 says:
..there is a lot of misinformation, lies and ignorance going around with these protesters...hearing some advocate not paying back loans, which has been espoused by many of these protesters in other news stories, is despicable...no one told the spoiled brats to go to college in the first place and take on debt...if you made the debt, you pay for it, just like everyone else...in terms of money being given to the bailout recipients, much of it has been repaid, so the assertion that taxpayers got the shaft, that's a lie...I don't feel anyone should have gotten bailed out, including those on Main St...you poorly managed your finances, over stated your financial solvency, and took on more debt than you could handle or were entitled too..for that you deserve to fail...Wall St. or Main St., no difference...
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tjsroch replies:
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Bernie Madoff is proud of you credibility2. I'm sure all those people deserved to be screwed. As for bailouts, the bank bailouts are not repaid, except by shifting their burden.

Do you relly believe that "no one told the spoiled brats to go to college in the first place and take on debt"?

What crap... everyone but you has believed going to college is the right way to make a better living AND make contribution to the society.
rocketjl replies:
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I saw some UAW signs in the pictures and it seems many of them were bailed out. I understand Washington is trying to pull and end-run so they can forgive a lot of college loans. A hint at who has done all of this and trying to do more is, Obama. Yeah, you finally guessed right.
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tjsroch says:
Cains 999 is assuming all poor people are employed and paying 17% (or whatever), thus 9% is lower. He ignors the fact that many poor people are NOT employed and that the only result would be imposing new federal 9% tax on those least prepared to pay it.
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tjsroch says:
I agree with Gingrich about corrupt courts.
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