Originally
posted by
H4xOr WaNgEr:
The occupy protests haven't really focused on one particular issue, which is why it is hard to listen to them as they are so unfocused.
One day they are talking about banking regulation, the next they are talking about wealth inequity etc. They need to figure out what it is they are trying to accomplish...
I think what they are accomplishing, indirectly, is forcing the conversation and exploration of those problems. The people in the streets are not in a position to solve them. The people in a position to change the roots of those problems have connections, jobs in offices, and likely money/stability. More than likely the people able to change the problems are mostly unaware of the problems because their comfortable circumstances don't require them to notice what is going on, and who wants to care about a problem without being compelled?
They are splattered across papers and newscasts. The conversation turns towards the topics they bring up. That conversation forces journalistic discovery of the problems because people become interested. The prostestors have made the story. The media didn't make this story, the media is responding to what is interesting to the people.
Because the financial system causing all these problems is not transparent it takes time for mass media outlets to piece together a story people can understand in order to explain the banking problem. The more exposure people have, the more familiar the topic. Information takes time to spread itself among a population. The attention on the protests helps information proliferate, whether the protestors have a specific goal or not.
When the story begins to be understood by all whose lives are comfortable, those people will become incensed. Information spreads and affects everyone. It's a virus and with the connectivity of our society there is no stopping it. It will force change as the problem clarifies in the minds of individuals.
So this time, now that the public is caught up to the shinanigans of the bankers, there should be pressure for justice against the crooks at MF Global. No more petty fines. Everyone now knows they are criminals. They didn't hurt anyone or steal from anybody's pockets by lying, but they still broke the law/regulations and essentially stole hundreds of millions from customers.
See, before not so many people would have understood enough to know that Jon Corzine committed a crime enough to go to jail. Now the public knows and understands - not just the comfortable people in finance. A good deal thanks to the exposure the protests have produced.