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In New York City the big story is “Occupy Wall Street;” and so, with camera in hand, I decided to take a look for myself.

I still wonder, other than frustration over the current economic condition, what exactly does this protest movement advocate?

www.Occupywallstreet.org serves as an open forum of sorts in which organizers present their ideas; and critics and supporters can freely respond with their own comments, often in a disarmingly uncensored way.

Here are several of the comments of both supporters and detractors of “The Occupation.”

GMay

I’m a small business owner and employ 4 people, at or slightly above minimum wage. If you raise the minimum wage to $20 an hour then you put my four employees out of a job, and me out of a job as well.

Remember, you also increase unemployment by hundreds of thousands with your whim of banning private insurers.

You do not represent 99% of anything.

Winston

So you can only make a go of it by paying slave wages? You have no problem with the taxpayer paying for their food stamps it would appear. Go out of business you exploitive piece of s#@%.

Small businessmen just dream of being big businessmen and disingenuously try to distinguish themselves. Your capital should be seized and given to your employees. Perhaps they can start a co-op doing the same tasks they were doing realizing the profit for themselves.

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actiasluna

um…I’m pretty sure that 99% of America isn’t socialist.

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TheDailyCannibal

The bankers! Confiscate the wealth they have stolen from student loans!

RustyShakleford

Well, no one forced you to go to college. The reason we are in this mess is because it’s beaten into your head from day 1 that you have to go to college. But what happens when more people get a college degree for a job market that can’t handle that many applicants? You get high unemployment from that generation who cannot pay back the loans they needed for the school they were told they needed in order to get a job.

oh7Eek2

Stolen? Can you prove that a banker, any banker, has violated the law?  In what way did they steal, and from whom?

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skjgnfbkjgn

Where are these trillions of dollars going to come from? How will companies all be able to afford $20/hr wages? It sounds like this movement wants to abolish the idea of currency in general and just make everything free for everyone ever. This cannot possibly work.

Also, I see that you resort to deleting comments that you don’t like. Keep living in a fantasy world where any of this is a good idea and no one disagrees.

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alwayzabull

Are you a drone? Can you not see what is happening in this country? Go back to your corporate zombie box.

 

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And now for one more comment, and this one is my own:  I believe that Occupy Wall Street got it 99% right, except they’re missing 1%. Intentionally trying to foment class warfare is foolish, and goes against the interest of 100% of us.  Also, trying to create a new form of direct democracy is in severe opposition to the wise and sound principles which have led this nation through its entire history.  While I believe most of the protesters are curious to see what is going on, those who are leading the pack know full well where their revolutionary road leads, and it is not utopia.

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It is harvest time in Guilford, CT.  I know because the apples are the sweetest in the world right here, right NOW.  We’ve all got time, some more than others.  But the clock keeps ticking and the question is: “How are you going to spend it?”

Just what is it that can’t wait for tomorrow?  What is it that never happened yesterday?  Maybe now is the time.

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Antonio Lopez: Fashion Illustrator

“The CD is in the computer.”

Pause.

“You mean the images are on the computer, but the CD is where…physically?”

“It is in the computer.  I put it in to help you, but fine I will take it out.”

With annoyance the hallmark of my movements I pushed the start button.

“No!  Just…you’ve helped enough just go!’

With a train to catch, and in stunned disbelief at just witnessing my mom in a Zoolander-style moment, I walked away with a Cali girl-style “What-Ev-er.”  Such was our inaugural day of working together so that she will finally (this time it is for real) publish a book on her friend, the 1980’s fashion illustrator Antonio Lopez.

Beginnings aren’t always chocolate milkshake smooth, but after years of compiling, archiving, and writing my mom is on her way to crafting her book and presenting it to the world; and petty drama aside, I am proud of her.

As for me, my own beginning is directed towards the fairly noble (at least in my mind) if foolhardy aim of sustaining myself as a photographer in New York City.  From today, September 12, 2011 to the 4th of July it is my time to make it happen.

With a D.C. power lawyer cousin making more money in a year than I have made in a lifetime and a close friend who is supporting his parents financially it really is time to show what my investment in money, sweat, and tears was all for.  So while working part-time jobs at BookBook; being the substitute receptionist at the NYU Muslim Center, and just about any free-lance gig that comes my way will probably be my lot, I am ready to show that I can indeed create art.  At twenty-eight years old, I feel that I am out of the “late-bloomer category” and into the “will it bloom barrel!” but here goes nothing.

In the words of Tony Kushner, the commencement speaker for my graduation from SVA:

Working won’t really kill you; completing your work won’t really kill you; you’re afraid it might, but you won’t really die.  Being late with your work, never finishing your work won’t really make you immortal; you only think it will.

And so to begin: This is the first of hopefully many posts to document my attempt at being an artist; and (whether I succeed or fail) to tell of the characters that I will meet along the way.

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