discord and harmony

"...out of clutter find simplicity; from discord find harmony; in the middle of difficulty lies opportunity." - einstein

“
What it is, the demand the 1% can’t comprehend, is us. It is the  individuals and villages, the cities and peoples across the world who  are seeing each other on the far side of appeals and petition. It is the  world we are becoming.
Establishment polls confirm what everyone in the street already  knows: a clear majority of New Yorkers, three of every four, support the  occupation and get the “demand” in their gut. The epicenter of the  October 15 international day of action was Times Square, barricaded by  police insistent to demonstrate their control. But our town is only one  center. The world is round.
In the south, thousands streamed onto the avenues of Buenos Aires and  Santiago. In Brazil, Peru and Colombia, in more than 20 cities of  Mexico and all through our Americas, people came out. There was noise.  More like a song.
In the East, demonstrators supporting the occupation emerged on the  streets of Hong Kong and Seoul, Manila and Jakarta, Auckland and  Melbourne. Days earlier, astonishingly, a solidarity rally in Zhengzhou,  China supported the “Great Wall Street Revolution.” China has rallied  for our human rights. Imagine.
In Africa, protestors gathered in Nairobi and Johannesburg. The  heroes of Tahrir Square in Cairo have returned to battle the military  regime that did not follow Mubarak into infamy.
Germany and Greece, ruled by the same banks, rose up with Spain and a  lost generation of Europeans to claim a future from the dust of faded  empire. Everywhere the lack of demands let us see each other clearly.  Across the world, as if for the first time.
And in our own backyard, in thousands of backyards, from Augusta and  Jackson, Springfield and Sioux Falls, Vegas and Santa Rosa and Green  Bay: Americans celebrated the occupation in its infancy. Jobs with  dignity. Housing fit for families. Education. Health care. Pensions. The  very air we breathe. What can those who want democracy demand from the  king, except his crown? Regime change is in the air. America is looking  at itself, it’s place in the world and who we are to be.
This is not a demonstration. It’s participation. Creation. This is a  movement where we can be ourselves, together. In Liberty Square. In New  York City. In America. A new world.”

What it is, the demand the 1% can’t comprehend, is us. It is the individuals and villages, the cities and peoples across the world who are seeing each other on the far side of appeals and petition. It is the world we are becoming.

Establishment polls confirm what everyone in the street already knows: a clear majority of New Yorkers, three of every four, support the occupation and get the “demand” in their gut. The epicenter of the October 15 international day of action was Times Square, barricaded by police insistent to demonstrate their control. But our town is only one center. The world is round.

In the south, thousands streamed onto the avenues of Buenos Aires and Santiago. In Brazil, Peru and Colombia, in more than 20 cities of Mexico and all through our Americas, people came out. There was noise. More like a song.

In the East, demonstrators supporting the occupation emerged on the streets of Hong Kong and Seoul, Manila and Jakarta, Auckland and Melbourne. Days earlier, astonishingly, a solidarity rally in Zhengzhou, China supported the “Great Wall Street Revolution.” China has rallied for our human rights. Imagine.

In Africa, protestors gathered in Nairobi and Johannesburg. The heroes of Tahrir Square in Cairo have returned to battle the military regime that did not follow Mubarak into infamy.

Germany and Greece, ruled by the same banks, rose up with Spain and a lost generation of Europeans to claim a future from the dust of faded empire. Everywhere the lack of demands let us see each other clearly. Across the world, as if for the first time.

And in our own backyard, in thousands of backyards, from Augusta and Jackson, Springfield and Sioux Falls, Vegas and Santa Rosa and Green Bay: Americans celebrated the occupation in its infancy. Jobs with dignity. Housing fit for families. Education. Health care. Pensions. The very air we breathe. What can those who want democracy demand from the king, except his crown? Regime change is in the air. America is looking at itself, it’s place in the world and who we are to be.

This is not a demonstration. It’s participation. Creation. This is a movement where we can be ourselves, together. In Liberty Square. In New York City. In America. A new world.”

6 months ago

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