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Wednesday, Oct 12, 2011 4:22 PM UTC2011-10-12T16:22:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

The tragic, hilarious “We Are the 53 percent” movement

Conservatives launch a campaign against the poor and the old -- so we're launching one too

The 53%

 (Credit: Alex Pareene/Salon)

The art with this story is Alex Pareene's parody of Erick Erickson's unintentionally hilarious web site We Are The 53%. It screams out for satire -- so go ahead and give it a try. We'll publish the best ones on Salon. Write a hand-written letter, take a picture and email it to us at 53@salon.com. Or you can publish it yourself on Open Salon -- just tag it "The Real 53 Percent."

The conservative response to the “We are the 99 percent” movement is … hilarious. (And, sure, heartbreaking.) Conservative filmmaker Mike Wilson and vacuous right-blogger Erick Erickson joined forces to start “We Are the 53%,” a blog made up of contributions from the 53 percent of Americans who pay more in federal income taxes than they receive back in deductions or credits.

The project was kicked off by Erick Erickson, who announced that he works “three jobs,” by which he means being a professional television pundit, radio pundit and Internet pundit. There is a stunning amount of cognitive dissonance, misplaced resentment and class revulsion going on, even for a conservative Web project.

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Alex Pareene

Alex Pareene writes about politics for Salon. Email him at apareene@salon.com and follow him on Twitter @pareene  More Alex Pareene

Tuesday, Feb 21, 2012 5:50 PM UTC2012-02-21T17:50:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

The 99ers’ unemployment fix

In the latest episode of our video series, jobless Americans fall in love with Occupy -- and bring their own agenda

VIDEO
The 99ers to Occupy: hear our demands

The 99ers to Occupy: this way to full employment

For our 99ers, an informal group of jobless New Yorkers who have exhausted their 99 weeks of unemployment benefits, the Occupy Wall Street movement came as a dream fulfilled.

As the protests took root in Zuccotti Park, the 99ers found a mass of people who care about the plight of the jobless and want to do something about it. As seen in last week’s episode of our video series, “Occupy Meets MacArthur’s Tanks,” Occupy Wall Street is just the latest in a long line of American protest movements demanding economic justice. The emergence of the Occupy movement, one 99er said, felt “like the early stages of a revolution.”

And then the question arose: What do America’s jobless want? As the video shows, the 99ers have some answers.

Immy Humes, a NYC documentary filmmaker, has produced stories for PBS, NBC News, and Michael Moore. Her short film, "A Little Vicious," was nominated for an Oscar. Her latest feature, "Doc," is a saga of the post-war generation of New York writers and of madness. Her web site is http://www.thedoctank.com/  More Immy Humes

Tuesday, Feb 21, 2012 4:04 PM UTC2012-02-21T16:04:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

The truth about violence at Occupy

In Oakland, the camp coincided with a significant drop in crime. But that wasn't the story we were told

Members of the Oakland Police Department arrest an Occupy Oakland demonstrator in Downtown Oakland, California January 28, 2012

Members of the Oakland Police Department arrest an Occupy Oakland demonstrator in Downtown Oakland, California January 28, 2012  (Credit: Reuters/Stephen Lam)

This originally appeared on TomDispatch.

When you fall in love, it’s all about what you have in common, and you can hardly imagine that there are differences, let alone that you will quarrel over them, or weep about them, or be torn apart by them — or if all goes well, struggle, learn, and bond more strongly because of, rather than despite, them. The Occupy movement had its glorious honeymoon when old and young, liberal and radical, comfortable and desperate, homeless and tenured all found that what they had in common was so compelling the differences hardly seemed to matter.

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  More Rebecca Solnit

Friday, Feb 17, 2012 7:00 PM UTC2012-02-17T19:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Jack Donaghy fears the 99 percent

Occupy Wall Street sneaks into "30 Rock" and "The Office." How does the movement avoid becoming just a punch line?

Alec Baldwin as Jack Donaghy

Alec Baldwin as Jack Donaghy  (Credit: NBC/Ali Goldstein)

It’s official. The class war is waging and there’s no denying it – even “30 Rock” says so.

On Thursday night’s episode of the award-winning comedy, Jack Donaghy — the debonair, Reaganite CEO played by Alec Baldwin — confirmed what some of us have been thinking for a while: “We’re on the verge of a class war.”

Since the show’s first episode, Donaghy has embodied a parodic late-capitalist overlord. In previous episodes, however, the fulcrum of his political commentary fell strictly along party lines: he called Obama a communist from Kenya, described Bill Clinton as president “inter-Bush” and engaged in Reagan-themed role-play sex. The jokes last night broke this mold. His reference to class war was not just wheeling out the Republican canard that higher taxes constitute a war on successful people. Donaghy was talking about unrest on the streets of New York.

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Natasha Lennard is Brooklyn-based writer and a project officer for the International News Safety Institute - North America.   More Natasha Lennard

Wednesday, Feb 15, 2012 5:31 PM UTC2012-02-15T17:31:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Occupy defends the Volcker Rule

Radical protesters are reborn as policy analysts; they tell the SEC to curb Wall Street speculators

Occupy the SEC's radical message

Occupy the SEC's radical message

As the Occupy the SEC march made its way past the Goldman Sachs building in New York City on Monday night I looked up from the near-constant tweeting I do at these events just in time to see a man in a top-shelf suit rush past us holding a bottle of champagne. I imagined him looking at the 100-plus crowd of activists disrupting the walk to his luxury mid-size, pouting indignantly, “You’re gonna do this to a guy in a $4,000 suit? Come on!”

Occupy the SEC held the march to celebrate the release of its 325-page comment letter to the SEC calling for it to strengthen – and then, more important, enforce – the Volcker Rule, which will go into effect on July 21, 2012. According to Aaron Bornstein, who helped organize the march, Occupy the SEC’s comment is about twice the size of the next longest letter, drafted by the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, a financial interest lobbying group.

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John Knefel, a comedian, is co-host of Radio Dispatch. Follow him @johnknefel.  More John Knefel

Tuesday, Feb 14, 2012 1:00 PM UTC2012-02-14T13:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Occupy fights the law: Will the law win?

From Boise to Nashvile, the movement faces an unconstitutional legal siege

Occupy Boise is under legal and meteorological siege.

Occupy Boise is under legal and meteorological siege.  (Credit: AP/John Miller)

The Occupy movement is an exercise in the workings of power whether it is social, financial, policing or political. The occupations that began in September spread with an infectious passion in part because the police violence and mass arrests, the tried-and-true methods of state power employed to suppress radical movements, backfired and the movement grew more. By October hundreds of encampments had popped up nationwide with the tacit cooperation and sometimes explicit approval of local officials. For a few heady weeks Occupy Wall Street had the glow of popular legitimacy – social power – trumping whatever fusty laws prohibited camping or a continuous presence in a public space.

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Arun Gupta, a New York writer and co-founder of Occupy the Wall Street Journal, covers the Occupy movement for Salon.  More Arun Gupta

Michelle Fawcett, Ph.D., is an adjunct professor in the Department of Media, Culture and Communications at NYU and is reporting on the Occupy Movement nationwide.   More Michelle Fawcett

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