Sallow
The Big Bad Wolf.
When was the last time a monopoly was broken up? It has been so long I can't remember. Is it even possible anymore?
It was tried with Microsoft. That didn't work so well.
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When was the last time a monopoly was broken up? It has been so long I can't remember. Is it even possible anymore?
When was the last time a monopoly was broken up? It has been so long I can't remember. Is it even possible anymore?
Then again, the day is young. When everyone comes out for lunch I'm sure tens of thousands of people will be out and about. They're part of the 99%, right? Counts, doesn't it?
Then again, the day is young. When everyone comes out for lunch I'm sure tens of thousands of people will be out and about. They're part of the 99%, right? Counts, doesn't it?
That's just silly.
The left leaning A.P. couldn't even spin it. The "tens of thousands" turned out to be around 50 protestors sitting in a circle.
When was the last time a monopoly was broken up? It has been so long I can't remember. Is it even possible anymore?
It was tried with Microsoft. That didn't work so well.
The left leaning A.P. couldn't even spin it. The "tens of thousands" turned out to be around 50 protestors sitting in a circle.
Good!
The people are speaking.
It would be interesting to see a poll about how Americans view the OWS movement.
While I hear talk radio hosts lambasting the movement (so much so, that it makes me wonder if they're afraid of it), I haven't seen any poll result of how average Americans feel about the movement.
However, considering the fact that so many average Americans ended up getting the economic and financial metaphorical 'shaft' even as Wall Street Bankers got a bailout followed by record profits, I find it hard to believe that those average Americans aren't secretly (and maybe not so secretly) rooting for this movement and the protesters who are enduring everything from cold weather to late night and early morning police raids.
Good!
The people are speaking.
It would be interesting to see a poll about how Americans view the OWS movement.
While I hear talk radio hosts lambasting the movement (so much so, that it makes me wonder if they're afraid of it), I haven't seen any poll result of how average Americans feel about the movement.
However, considering the fact that so many average Americans ended up getting the economic and financial metaphorical 'shaft' even as Wall Street Bankers got a bailout followed by record profits, I find it hard to believe that those average Americans aren't secretly (and maybe not so secretly) rooting for this movement and the protesters who are enduring everything from cold weather to late night and early morning police raids.
A new Public Policy Polling poll shows that Occupy Wall Street may not speak for the 99 percent it claims to represent.
After an 11-point shift in one month, 45 percent of Americans now oppose the movement, the poll indicates, indicating that public opinion has turned against the self-styled occupiers. Just 33 percent favor the movement, down from 35 a month ago.
Significantly, the movements support among independent voters has waned. The report notes independents have gone from supporting Occupy Wall Streets goals 3934, to opposing them 3442.
Last month, 35 percent supported the movement and 36 percent opposed it, a statistical tie. But after a rash of violent incidents, including several and clashes with police, more Americans have wearied of the anti-corporate protests that have entrenched themselves in public squares in dozens of cities and towns.
Read more: Occupy Wall Street | Poll | Tea Party | 99 Percent | The Daily Caller
PPP is a left-wing polling group.