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Occupy Wall Street: 6 Months Later, What Has Occupy Protest Movement Achieved?

By MEGHAN BARR 03/16/12 01:17 PM ET AP

NEW YORK — As spring approaches, Occupy Wall Street protesters who mostly hibernated all winter are beginning to stir with plans for renewed demonstrations six months after the movement was born.

The global protests against corporate excess and economic inequality are generally thought to have begun Sept. 17 when tents sprang up in a small granite plaza in lower Manhattan. The movement has lost steam in recent months, with media attention and donations dropping off as Occupy encampments across the country were dismantled, some by force.

On March 7, the finance accounting group in New York City reported that just about $119,000 remained in Occupy's bank account – the equivalent of about two weeks' worth of expenses.

The Occupy movement has influenced the national dialogue about economic equality, with the word "occupy" itself becoming part of the public lexicon. In his third State of the Union address, President Barack Obama issued a populist call for income equality that echoed the movement's message. But has anything really changed in the past six months?

Some achievements that can be connected to the efforts of the Occupy movement, and some plans for the near future:

WHAT GOT DONE

In Albany, N.Y., Occupy protesters dubbed Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo "Gov. 1 Percent" for his refusal since the 2010 campaign to agree to a millionaire tax, and because his major campaign financial support comes from corporate executives.

Cuomo tried to evict Occupy Albany from the park co-owned by the city and the state. But the Democratic mayor, Gerald Jennings, agreed to allow Occupy Albany to stay on the city-owned side. Local Democratic District Attorney David Soares also announced he wouldn't prosecute anyone for disorderly conduct at Occupy Albany who might be arrested by state police – who answer to Cuomo.

In a surprise, Cuomo reversed his position on the millionaire tax in December to avoid further cuts to schools and health care. Part of the $2 billion in revenue went to a modest but rare income tax cut of $200 to $400 for most middle class families. Cuomo refers to the millionaire tax as the biggest tax cut for the middle class in decades.

Democratic lawmakers attributed Cuomo's move in part to the Occupy protesters who had targeted him across the street from the Capitol for months and had begun demonstrating just outside his office.

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An Atlanta pastor, whose church struggled to pay its bills after its building was struck by a 2008 tornado, credits Occupy Atlanta with helping it to avoid foreclosure. The Rev. Dexter Johnson's church, the Higher Ground Empowerment Center, took out a loan to rebuild and has struggled to pay its mortgage in recent months.

Johnson said the bank had agreed to work with the church to help pay its mortgage after demonstrations by Occupy members. Demonstrators had set up a camp at the church in Atlanta's Vine City neighborhood, just west of downtown.

In January, Johnson learned his congregation would be allowed to stay in the building.

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In Rhode Island, Occupy Providence pushed for – and won – a temporary day center to serve the homeless during the winter. Protesters made the center's opening a condition of their departure from a public park downtown, where they had camped against the city's wishes for more than three months.

While the city didn't fund the center, officials pledged to help its operator, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence, find money for it.

"It shows that with pressure from people, a government can be made to move," protester Robert Malin said at the time of the center's opening.

The city had threatened legal action to remove the protesters and their tents from the park, but the two sides instead went into mediation before a judge.

___

Also in Rhode Island, the state's junior U.S. senator, Sheldon Whitehouse, introduced a bill in November to crack down on high credit card interest rates – the same week he visited the Providence encampment. While there was no direct relationship between Occupy and the bill, Whitehouse spokesman Seth Larson said Thursday, the legislation no doubt resonated with the protesters.

"It was timely, and I'm sure the Occupy folks appreciated this bill," Larson said.

Whitehouse had introduced similar legislation a year earlier.

___

Occupy protesters helped save an Iraq war veteran's home from foreclosure in Atlanta, the Huffington Post reported. "I strongly believe Occupy Atlanta accelerated the process and helped save my home," Brigitte Walker, whose home activists began occupying Dec. 6, told the website. "If it had not been for them standing up, I probably wouldn't be having this happy ending." Walker had left Iraq in May 2004 when she was injured by the shock from mortar rounds, the Post reported.

Occupy Minneapolis also worked with community organizers to help a former Marine who faced eviction from his home strike a deal with his bank, the Post reported.

WHAT'S NEXT

Occupiers in New York City will commemorate the six-month mark with a rally Saturday in Zuccotti Park, where protesters camped out for months until the city ousted them in November.

Organizers are hoping donations will start to flow in as protests begin anew this spring, including a global day of "economic disruption" on May 1.

And in some states, Occupy supporters are making forays into politics. Asher Platts is running for the state senate in Maine as a "Clean Elections" candidate. Platts, an activist who attended the protests last fall, is running on an Occupy platform.

In suburban Philadelphia, Occupy protester Nathan I. Kleinman is running a write-in campaign for Congress against four-term Rep. Allyson Schwartz in the Democratic primary on April 24. The 29-year-old said he never would have mounted a run without his Occupy experience. Kleinman withdrew from the ballot after a court hearing in which Schwartz's supporters questioned some of the 1,500 required signatures he had gathered to appear on the ballot.

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Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Jeff Martin in Atlanta, Kathy Matheson in Philadelphia, Michael Gormley in Albany, N.Y., Erika Niedowski and David Klepper in Providence, R.I., and News Researcher Julie Reed in New York.

FOLLOW BUSINESS

NEW YORK — As spring approaches, Occupy Wall Street protesters who mostly hibernated all winter are beginning to stir with plans for renewed demonstrations six months after the movement was born...
NEW YORK — As spring approaches, Occupy Wall Street protesters who mostly hibernated all winter are beginning to stir with plans for renewed demonstrations six months after the movement was born...
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05:10 PM on 03/23/2012
"Protesters made the center's opening a condition of their departure from a public park downtown, where they had camped against the city's wishes for more than three months.

While the city didn't fund the center, officials pledged to help its operator, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence, find money for it."

OK, well. That seems like an OK thing to do and all, but there are TONS of homeless shelters in this country. Each one of them, up until now, was opened without the need to spend months camping in a park and pooping in fountains.
11:43 PM on 04/08/2012
really? i work with the homeless. shelters suck and costs more than it helps and please do tell me about your wonderful shelters that the city and state has. from my view they are shutting them down with no options. stay ignorant all you want but don't spew lies about something you have no idea about. idiot.
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Geral Sosbee
10:07 AM on 03/22/2012
One achievement is the insight regarding police minds:
Look into the criminal minds of your local police, and then run for your lives unless you are in a vehicle, whereupon the thugs in blue have the authority to just kill you:

http://forums.leoaffairs.com/viewtopic.php?f=57&t=114579&start=15
04:01 AM on 04/26/2012
Perfectly said.
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bgofca
05:12 PM on 03/20/2012
for one thing in our area they have stopped a lot of foreclosures. they were also behind getting the new law that prevents the national arm of a bank from foreclosing while the local arm is negotiating. they also have a task force helping those acing foreclosure. occupy has also set up a sunday free medical clinic for the homeless here and are working towards a better shelter for the homeless during bad weather.
04:54 PM on 03/20/2012
Going off course for a tick... What the hell is this? " junior U.S. senator "..??? I thought when we went to the polls we vote for 'senators' NOT "Junior" Senators.. There shouldn't be levels in the Senate.. Either your a Senator or your not, simple as that. Probies belong in the work force NOT politics for chrissakes! These people spend X amount of years in college, read up on history and the political process and for what? So that tenure can bully them around enough to make THEM as useless as the old vet? Get rid of these re-re-re-elected sharks and make them ALL junior senators, maybe then this country can get back on track.
02:21 PM on 03/20/2012
What did I learn from the Occupiers? That protestors have to be paid before they will stand up for their beliefs; to get things done for the 1% (occupiers) you have to resort to threats; that New York will now lose more of it's businesses due to more tax increase on those who create jobs so now the opportunities for more jobs will be lost. Majority of Occupiers are people who think they are entitled.
09:40 PM on 03/20/2012
The answer to what you learned is: nothing. You were determined NOT to learn anything from the occupiers. You're the 1% support. You allow the theft and hoarding to continue. You believe that profit comes before people and planet. I wonder how far it would go though? Let's say, supporting an industrial polluter in your backyard?
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Jerry Bourbon
03:12 PM on 03/19/2012
Aside from 6,000 arrests, OWS has achieved quite a bit:

They have brought a new word, "rape tent" into the lexicon of the English Language.

They have smoked a LOT of pot.

They are still unemployed (and unemployable).

They have provided gainful employment for lots of men-in-moon-suits who clean up after them.

Did I miss anything?
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bgofca
05:15 PM on 03/20/2012
they've got people to move their money from banks, stopped some banks from increasing fees, they have gotten some states to pass laws that help people facing foreclosure with refinancing (stopping the national arm of the bank from foreclosing while the local branch is renegotiating)., they have set up programs to help the homeless and have put the economic equality issue at the forefront of the election. since the 1% have 90% of the us wealth, how muc more do you think they need before they'll start creating jobs?
09:41 PM on 03/20/2012
Did you miss anything? You missed everything.
11:37 AM on 03/22/2012
Drumming???
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irrenmann
won't read your angry replies :D
10:18 AM on 03/19/2012
OWS has achieved laughing stock status, and will forever serve as shorthand for ineffective, directionless, sleazy pseudo-protests. I feel sorry for anyone in the next fifty years trying to organize a serious protest about a worthy issue with clear goals and responsibility, lest they find themselves compared to OWS in the media. HuffPost's attempts to make this seem like it had some impact smell even more of desperation than is usual for them, and even many other far-left publications were merciless in their treatment of OWS and its many failures.
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truthBtold99
Millions without jobs, still no economic agenda
09:06 AM on 03/19/2012
0WS: 6 months later, What has Occupy movement achieved?

NOTHING....

Unless we call mass arrests for rape, robbery and other seedy activities such as illegal illicit drug glorification something to be proud of.
0WS fell out of favor with most unions after the debacle in Oakland where they blocked the port.
The Oakland chapter also defiled and the city building resulting in thousands of dollars of damage the tax payers must pay for.

I think most "movements" that essentially exclude certain people either by choice or with hateful rhetoric essentially spells the end of said movement.

Defecation in and on police vehicles is savage behavior only a mother could be proud of...
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03:18 AM on 03/19/2012
if politiicians, elections, politics, political parties solved problems, we wouldn't need to resort to occupy movement.

it's BECAUSE all these things have failed that occupy was born.
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03:12 AM on 03/19/2012
ONLY in our ADHD now now society would 6 months seem like an eternity.

ONLY in our "next quarterly growth" society would 6 months seem like an eternity


americans of short attention span and short term memory!.................




http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African-American_Civil_Rights_Movement_(1955%E2%80%931968)


"Between 1955 and 1968, acts of nonviolent protest and civil disobedience produced crisis situations between activists and government authorities."



IT TOOK ALMOST 10 YEARS FOR CIVIL RIGHTS CHANGE!!!!

6 MONTHS IS NOTHING!
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schotts
Strength and Honor
10:28 AM on 03/19/2012
Yeah, except this isn't about civil rights.
09:42 PM on 03/20/2012
It's about rights. Adjectives are irrelevant.
10:00 PM on 03/18/2012
The problem with this article is that the authors still insist on the idea that Occupy should be proposing solutions. That's not their job. Their job is to take over the conversation from the CONservative echo chamber and articulate the problems. Solutions are the job of the officials We the People elect to do that job.
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03:14 AM on 03/19/2012
" Solutions are the job of the officials We the People elect to do that job."

i disagree.

IF politicians and election solved problems, WE WOULDN'T NEED TO RESORT TO OCUCPY MOVEMENT IN THE FIRST PLACE!
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03:15 AM on 03/19/2012
BOTH parties suck

both parties work for 1% and corporations................not you!

so why would you trust that policitians would solve problems for you?

are you really that gullible?

you do realize that politicians are professional liars?
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Jerry Bourbon
04:28 PM on 03/18/2012
Never before have so many rich white kids with so little work experience gathered in one place to smoke so much pot...
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schotts
Strength and Honor
07:04 PM on 03/18/2012
I am not sure they were rich but I agree with everything else.
04:23 AM on 04/26/2012
You say that like it's a bad thing.
Lighten up, Jerry, have some jerryslastname.
Or a couple of tokes.
Not too late for you to see the light.
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corte33
04:09 PM on 03/18/2012
The Occupy movement gave me faith in our young people's ability to effect change. The middle class got involved a bit too, but most of them are too tired. The high point was Occupy's visiting the halls of Congress and meeting with those crooks. I see much good coming out of this movement, especially at election time.
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schotts
Strength and Honor
07:08 PM on 03/18/2012
Effect change? Like how to blow dope, poop in the park, spit on the police and whine they want things handed to them and how wealthy people don't deserve it even though many got there from hard work and using capitalism to their favor?
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thebearclaw007
Is your conscience functioning properly?
12:00 PM on 03/18/2012
Much more work to be done obviously.
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allproinstall
03:47 AM on 03/18/2012
OWS claims to be for small business. Now, I own a small business in Hartford CT. The Occupiers blocked the highway ramp in an effort to prevent people from coming into work. This also caused our clientele to not have a way to stop in at my establishment. Meanwhile, they would come in and use ask to use our bathroom non-stop and leaving it a mess day in and day out. Eventually we had to resort to locking the door and no longer accepting walk-ins.
Nice going OWS.
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12:37 PM on 03/18/2012
Get over it. Either their argument is valid or it isn't. You seem to have a problem with the right to assemble.
01:55 PM on 03/18/2012
No they have a problem with infringing on private property rights. They hurt the very entity they "claim" to defend!
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schotts
Strength and Honor
07:14 PM on 03/18/2012
The Right to assemble should not cause a person harm with their ability to make a living.

Get over it? I am over OWS....they were a joke.
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corte33
04:11 PM on 03/18/2012
Occupy depends on businesses helping out a bit. It's only temporary but the benefits far exceed the cost.