Based on a Police Officers Training (which includes the Continuum of Force.
...In the above scenario, based on their training, the police have likely done exactly what they were taught to do.
I was reporting the facts on the ground, not discussing the proportion or disproportion of the response.
However, where in the Continuum of Force would you place shooting pepper spray at people who hadn't committed any escalatory acts or throwing a man with a video camera on the hood of a car?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zgr3DiqWYCIWhere in the Continuum of Force would you place the this?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TH3kiaJ1-c8&t=1m15sSeems like several steps got skipped. They were locked in, nobody gave them a "disperse or you will be arrested." They were just arrested.
Funny how the property rights of the banks are upheld (can't be in the bank lobby if the manager says so) but the patrons, not so much (my money is in there and they refuse to return it to me).
Much like a landlord may not just switch the locks on your house without going through a prescribed legal procedure, your bank should not be allowed to refuse you access to your money. How can anyone look at the refusal of a bank to give you money YOU OWN when requested as anything but revealing what a sham it is to believe we truly "determine our own financial situation."
I get the feeling that banks could overnight change their policy to say they are instituting an account surcharge equal to 110% (you owe them the extra) of your current account balance as of today, plus interest generating on any deficit of 50% per day...
...and someone would still dance on the semantics of "well, gee you signed the agreement that said they can make changes to the terms at any time." Somehow, utterly devoid of what the implications are. Can't see the forest for the trees.
I can cite specifically from Chicago, that violation of the Municipal Ordinance which states nobody may be in Grant Park between 11pm and 6am is an offense where you are given a citation and a court date and should not result in arrest. Didn't stop them from getting arrested, did it? Let me state here, the uniformed officers are following orders. The Occupy Chicago protestors themselves have made the case that they "did their best to treat us with the dignity and respect we believe every human being deserves." My opinion of the CPD is actually quite high right now. There was humor and joking between both sides throughout processing. They don't want to be there on extra duty time all night arresting and all morning processing any more than the protestors wanted to be arrested for assembling to discuss what they feel is wrong with our government (1st amendment) in the park they, as taxpayers, own and paid for.
In some cases the rules are fair, but the other side isn't playing by them.
I would say it is unlawful detention and that can only be tested by someone pressing charges against the bank. It would be excellent for the case if there was a group of individuals in the bank who were not there to close their accounts and had places to be (like work). The case would test the justice system at this trying time.
Oh, I see. If it's a non-violent, entirely legal form of protest (in this case, a boycott by closing their accounts) then lock them in. But if it inconveniences anyone else, stop the presses, this is a human tragedy, got it.
This would be like arresting large groups of African Americans for crossing the street on foot against a light (in no traffic) when they were boycotting the busses. A clear example of state-supported harassment of a group exercising their freedom of choice and coercing them back into "compliance."
Again, someone would focus inanely on the jay-walking as if between the two, that is the act to be truly mortified at.
"Wall Street" - you mean all those publicly traded companies in which Americans (and the rest of the world) work? Or are you talking about the traders, who bet the market would go down and were rewarded for their foresight? Or the banks who received bailouts and who have largely paid the money back?
From my understanding it is "the system which we have arrived upon in which cold, analytical mathematics have replaced nearly all consideration for what a human being needs to survive and have a fulfilling life."
The situation that currently exists is that corporations are sitting on more money than ever. They earned record-shattering levels of profit this year. Yet somehow we are told over and over there's just not enough to pay more workers with. Meanwhile, executive pay and compensation continues its meteoric rise in ratio compared to average wages.
I'm not doing this just for me. We aren't doing this just for America. This is for the Coffee farmer in Kenya who makes $0.03 a pound for his harvest, but when it shows up at register, it is $5.00 for a 24oz. cup.
I have some real concerns with your bit about traders, too. One should approach the stock market from a perspective of investment for return, not "betting." If you want to gamble, there's venues for that. Also, treating a roll of the dice like it is something admirable akin to hard work. Finally, the very concept of profiting from a situation that will lead to more hardship for the common man.
If the American people want to punish the connection between the corporations they work for and the representatives they elect, then they need to elect new representatives when the opportunity arises.
One does not have to look very long at the process of primaries in this country to understand the problems in it.
In the general elections, money plays a role which makes 1 vote not truly equal to another.
Willful manipulation and blackmail of the justice system? wat?
Acting like exercising your constitutionally protected right to a trial by jury of your peers is something to be ashamed of? wat?
You think lawyers don't try to screw each other over with settled plea agreements even when avoiding trial?
Not to derail, but what happens when the law is broken down to the point where completely screwing someone, or taking what isn't yours becomes legal? Just look what happened during the UK's expenses scandal.
Sure, our MPs were operating within the law, but that didn't make it right.
This.
Legal and Just are not the same thing.