Monday 21 November 2011

The Occupy Movement–I'm in the middle %

This car belongs to the middle %!
There are many resources for the homeless.
For example, Ontario Resources, or The Ottawa Mission.
"The Ottawa Mission has 223 beds for the homeless and provides more than 1,100 nutritious meals each day to those who stay here and to individuals in the community who are facing hunger."
For those who choose the streets, and cannot live in a shelter, or a building, we must respect their choices and keep them warm and feed them.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Excellent article on the Occupy Movement. I don't really understand Occupy, though. They tried free love communes, they tried communism (can you spell USSR?), and they didn't work very well. Capitalism is how it works in a democracy.

We know what started this recently: The reality is Fannie MaeFreddie Mac are the real disgrace
 -- the two US government-sponsored mortgage underwriting agencies -- walked away with paying minor fines. Its impact on the world has been tremendous, but the fault is not capitalism, Obama, or the wealthy.

Ian Millar's farm - 1%?
A national treasure - hard-working owner of 600 acres.
This is a democratic country. There are many things that can be improved in this society. But this is Canada.

We believe that all should have access to healthcare, all should be able to live and work in safety, freedom, without fear. We have supports and infrastructure, and access to soup kitchens, home care, long-term care.
Yes, there are people who live without the necessities.
Many photos have been taken of Occupy Ottawa. From TopHat, Aritapiero (both of these are professional photographers–interesting!), and some photos from folks just popping by on the way to work.

It would seem that those still occupying are those who are victims, homeless, out of work, and able to sit in a park 24/7. The rest of us have jobs, work, debts, and commitments. We are far from the so-called 1%, although the 1% at the other end of the spectrum are the ones still in the park.
I resent those who are shoving their protest in my face.
Most of us get up every day, find work, and contribute to society.
Most of us put one foot forward every day. Some go to jobs they don't like. Many (60%) don't have pensions, or healthcare plans that pay for drugs, or dental work.


A poster at Occupy Ottawa says:

IF YOU HAVE DEBT–
IF YOU ARE HOMELESS–(300,000 in Haiti)
IF YOU ARE CONCERNED ABOUT THE FUTURE OF OUR PLANET
IF YOU CAN'T SPEND ENOUGH TIME WITH YOUR KIDS–
IF YOU ARE UNEMPLOYED–(7.3 % in Canada)
IF YOU ARE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR CHILDCARE–
IF YOU THINK YOU CAN'T AFFORD RETIREMENT–
IF YOU HAVE LOST YOUR JOB–(Whistleblowers)
IF YOU CAN'T AFFORD HEALTHY FOOD–
IF YOU DON'T TRUST MAINSTREAM MEDIA–
IF YOU ARE STRUGGLING TO PAY YOUR BILLS–
IF THIS ISN'T THE CANADA YOU CAME HERE FOR
IF YOU OPPOSE WAR–
IF YOU KNOW YOU CAN'T VOTE FOR REAL CHANGE–
IF YOU WANT TO BE PART OF A GLOBAL MOVEMENT
YOU SHOULD
JOIN THE MOVEMENT


This pup looks a bit fearful
–we all have to take risks! 
Now, really. I joined the movement a long time ago. I dug myself out of debt as a single parent, a girlfriend brought me groceries one Christmas. I found a home, held tight to family, and took charge of my life. Then my parents became ill, but that is another story!

I refuse to be a victim, and it is my attitude that will change me. It is all about how you frame it. Your ATTITUDE. You cannot let others take your power from you, whether you've been hit with illness, hard times, or simple fate. Take your power back from the bullies. Honour the rights of those to make a fortune, respect yourself for earning a living. Now some are victims of police brutality, this is a different kettle of fish, and not something one can blame on the 1% who are rich. This is power and control, not wealth.

Sunset on the trees
I watched a fabulous Oprah show in which she said she stopped feeling guilty about lifting herself up, since someone else pointed out that when she lifts herself up, she is lifting others up to a higher place. She brings up the rest of us, and provides the world view I admire. Many philanthropists are doing the same.

Oprah reviewed an interview she did (1997-ish?) with a young woman whose heart was broken as their family house was in foreclosure, and her husband had left her, and her three children.
Suze Orman made a great point; an AHA moment. The young mother felt she'd failed her kids by not having a 4-bedroom house anymore. A house does not a home make. A FAMILY, that is what is important. You are not your job, your house, your car or your income.

"You get in life what you have the courage to ask for." says Orman. The mom needed to change her attitude. Her family is where her heart should lie, not in the things she has lost. Her grief overwhelmed her. Her perceived curse, losing a house and husband, is her blessing. The young woman turned her life around and realised how little material things matter.

The road rises up to meet me
Oprah spoke of Jeanette Walls, who lived on Park Ave., while working as a gossip columnist for MSNBC.com, despite having been homeless as a child with 3 siblings. The teasing, the bullying of school-peers was merciless. She rose above it. The guilt this woman felt, seeing her still homeless mother on New York city streets, picking through garbage, was an embarrassment to Walls. She had offered to help her parents, but they didn't want her help. There are some who cannot live indoors. There are some whose choices we must respect.

Those of us in the middle class, with mortgages, children to support, send our tax dollars to CBC Radio, and support radio shows, like Q, that feature too many Americans, to my listening ear.
However, I believe in the power of working together. Very few seem to be speaking out against Occupy. I think these misguided people need to get a grip.

And all is not well at Occupy...

 AndrewBreitbart 

: Violent & Sexual Assaults Should Not Be Reported To Police:  Seeing a trend, anyone?!


6 comments:

Yogi♪♪♪ said...

The whole Occupy thing fascinates me for some reason. I think they are unhappy about things but their proposals seem to miss the mark. It reminds me of the Tea Partiers a little bit who also seem unhappy but deal with it through willful ignorance.

I think they way the police have mishandled the situation has made heroes out of the guys here in Tulsa. Now all the surrounding towns have their own occupy movements.

Hilary said...

Very well expressed, Jenn. You raise a number of fine points with much truth.

Yet, everyone feels the need to belong and to make a difference. And I think Occupy fills that need for some.. at least to some degree.

Your photos are lovely.

EG CameraGirl said...

Interesting post, Jenn. I think what the Occupiers want is way too nebulous, that they need to pin it down to one or two specifics. I don't think they are organized well enough to do that so are not much of a threat to anyone.

I do think people have a right to protest but they need to figure out just what it is they are protesting. Otherwise it's just a waste of time and energy.

Red said...

The Occupy protest may have some warts but their basic premise is crucial. There are extreme differences which are caused by the way the economy is structured. The rich guys have the dice stacked in their favor. For example some bullies persuade the U S congress that pizza is a vegetable????

W.C.Camp said...

I don't care if people protest as long as they comply with normal rules. Why must I step around these people in a public park or allow them to camp in places that I would receive a fine for doing the same thing. The same rules are for EVERYONE no matter how noble you you think your message is. Bully for you and the THOUSANDS of others who worked through your tough times and PREVAILED!!! That is what life is really about - trying to SOLVE the puzzle. It is not supposed to be easy and sometimes you FAIL. But in the end, if you keep trying and learning, more often than not - you WILL find a way to the next step up. If everything was just given to you, why would we work at all? Who would make anything or suggest improvements if everything was a 'given'? Society has forgotten the value of the quest these days and only impatiently WANTS the rewards without the toil. Makes me sad! W.C.C.

George said...

Thanks for an interesting, thoughtful post. I'm definitely not in the 1%, but I don't think the Occupiers represent me, either. I just want everyone to play by the same rules. It seems to me that most of the problems here in the U.S. have been caused by our professional politicians. Perhaps we need fewer of them and more of people who are citizens first.