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  1. This award winning documentary, narrated by Lou Reed, explores the breadth and depth of Occupy Wall Street and how it quickly grew from a small park in lower Manhattan to an international movement. The film highlights why people from diverse age, ethnic and financial backgrounds support the movement and its focus of removing money from politics in order to reclaim democracy from entrenched ...

  2. 17 de sept. de 2016 · Measuring Occupy Wall Street’s impact, 5 years later. By DEEPTI HAJELA and MICHAEL BALSAMO. Published 1:09 PM PDT, September 17, 2016. NEW YORK (AP) — For a time, Occupy Wall Street was everywhere with its grass-roots encampments — first in New York City, then globally — and the refrain, “We are the 99 percent!”. And then it was gone.

  3. 20 de nov. de 2011 · Pre-Occupied. By Mattathias Schwartz. November 20, 2011. A demonstrator from Occupy Wall Street is arrested in lower Manhattan on November 17th. Photograph by Ashley Gilbertson / VII. Kalle Lasn ...

  4. 12 de oct. de 2011 · From Occupy Wall Street to Occupy Everywhere. In three months, an idea and a hashtag became a worldwide movement. Here’s how they did it. Nathan Schneider. October 12, 2011. This article appears ...

  5. This article explores the links between social media and public space within the #Occupy Everywhere movements. Whereas listservs and websites helped give rise to a widespread logic of networking within the movements for global justice of the 1990s–2000s, I argue that social media have contributed to an emerging logic of aggregation in the ...

  6. 18 de nov. de 2021 · In “The 9.9 Percent,” Stewart notes that in 1963, the median household would have needed 10 times as much wealth to reach the middle of the 9.9 percent.

  7. 15 de ene. de 2012 · While the 1 percent has become a catch-all to describe the very wealthy, the members of this group are diverse, especially in where they live, what they believe politically and just how rich they are.