By Sally Kohn FoxNews.com. Oct. 14, 2011 http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2011/10/14/understanding-occupy-wall-street/ Critics of the growing Occupy Wall Street movement complain that the  protesters don’t have a policy agenda and, therefore, don’t stand for  anything. They’re wrong. The key isn’t what protesters are for but  rather what they’re against — the gaping inequality that has poisoned  our economy, our politics and our nation. In America today, 400 people have more wealth than the bottom 150  million combined. That’s not because 150 million Americans are  pathetically lazy or even unlucky. In fact, Americans have been working  harder than ever — productivity has risen in the last several decades.  Big business profits and CEO bonuses have also gone up. Worker salaries,  however, have declined. Most of the Occupy Wall Street protesters aren’t opposed to free  market capitalism. In fact, what they want is an end to the crony  capitalist system now in place, that makes it easier for the rich and  powerful to get even more rich and powerful while making it increasingly  hard for the rest of us to get by. The protesters are not anti-American  radicals. They are the defenders of the American Dream, the decision  from the birth of our nation that success should be determined by hard  work not royal bloodlines. Sure, bank executives may work a lot harder than you and me or a  mother of three doing checkout at a grocery store. Maybe the bankers  work ten times harder. Maybe even a hundred times harder. But they’re  compensated a thousand times more. The question is not how Occupy Wall Street protesters can find that  gross discrepancy immoral. The question is why every one of us isn’t  protesting with them. According to polls, most Americans support the 99% movement, even if  they’re not taking to the streets. In fact, support for the Occupy Wall  Street protests is not only higher than for either political party in  Washington but greater than support for the Tea Party. And unlike the  Tea Party which was fueled by national conservative donors and  institutions, the Occupy Wall Street Movement is spreading organically  from Idaho to Indiana. Institutions on the left, including unions, have  been relatively late to the game. Ironically, the original Boston Tea Party activists would likely  support Occupy Wall Street more as well. Note that the original Tea  Party didn’t protest taxes, merely the idea of taxation without  representation — and they were actually protesting the crown-backed  monopoly of the East India Company, the main big business of the day. Americans today also support taxes. In fact, two-thirds of voters —  including a majority of Republicans — support increasing taxes on the  rich, something the Occupy Wall Street protests implicitly support.  That’s not just anarchist lefty kids. Soccer moms and construction  workers and, yes, even some bankers want to see our economy work for the  99%, not just the 1%, and are flocking to Occupy protests in droves. I’ve even met a number of Libertarians and Tea Party conservatives at  these protests. So the critics are right, the Occupy Wall Street  movement isn’t the Tea Party. Occupy Wall Street is much, much broader. Maybe it’s hard to see your best interests reflected in a sometimes  rag-tag, inarticulate, imperfect group of protesters. But make no  mistake about it: While horrendous inequality is not an American  tradition, protest is.And if you’re part of the 99% of underpaid or  unemployed Americans crushed in the current economy, the Occupy Wall  Street protests are your best chance at fixing the broken economy that  is breaking your back. Sally Kohn is the founder and Chief Education Officer of the Movement  Vision Lab, a grassroots think tank. Follow her on Twitter@sallykohn. Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2011/10/14/understanding-occupy-wall-street/#ixzz1aph1j1cT  Opinion: ‘Occupy Wall Street’ — It’s Not What They’re for, But What They’re Against
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1. How did Sally Kohn get such a pro-OWS article published through FOX news?
2. If she's a FOX employee, does she still have a job?!
In an economy that could go easily into hyperinflation soon, we could all be very poor millionaires and paying these higher tax rates while the real rich continue to use high priced lawyers to avoid taxes altogether. I fear that the promotion of this idea by Obama and MSM is a scam.
Yes Wendy. I forget where I saw it, but it said that higher taxes would be paid by a single person making (I think it was) $250,000 or more per year and couples making $400,000. If this is the case, the tax becomes another way of fleecing the middle class.
Although, this income group may be considered the upper middle class, the ultimate goal of such a scheme is to wipe out the entire middle class, leaving only the ruling elite and their supporting peasant population.