The occupy wall street movement, which began in 2011, was inspired by anger at the ______.

The occupy wall street movement, which began in 2011, was inspired by anger at the ______.

Karla Adam

London correspondent covering the United Kingdom

October 15, 2011

LONDON — Linking up with the Occupy Wall Street protests that began in New York, tens of thousands of people around the world took to the streets Saturday to reiterate their anger at the global financial system, corporate greed and government cutbacks.

Rallies were held in more than 900 cities in Europe, Africa and Asia, as well as in the United States, with some of the largest occurring in Europe. The demonstration in Rome turned violent, and more than 70 people were arrested in Manhattan on Saturday night, but crowds elsewhere were largely peaceful.

“What’s exciting about what’s happening is a sense of international solidarity,” said Ben Walker, 33, a university teacher from Norwich, England, who was carrying a tent and planning on camping overnight near the London Stock Exchange.

Organizers of the global demonstration said on their Web site that they were demanding a “true democracy.”

“United in one voice, we will let politicians, and the financial elites they serve, know it is up to us, the people, to decide our future,” they said.

The global demonstrations came on the same day that finance ministers and central bankers from the Group of 20 nations met in Paris to discuss solutions to the debt crisis engulfing Europe.

Television images from Rome showed police launching tear-gas grenades and firing water cannons as a breakaway group clad in black set cars on fire and smashed bank machines and shop windows.

The clashes in the Italian capital left dozens injured, including several police officers, the Associated Press reported. Police were out in force for the rally, which came a day after Premier Silvio Berlusconi barely survived a no-confidence vote in Parliament over his failure to address Italy’s mounting debt crisis.

In New York, thousands of protesters with Occupy Wall Street marched through the city’s financial district to Times Square, banging drums and chanting, “We got sold out, banks got bailed out!” Police, some in riot gear and mounted on horses, tried to push them out of the square and onto the sidewalks, AP reported. Police said more than 70 protesters were arrested through the course of the day. Two police officers were injured during the protest and had to be hospitalized, AP reported.

In London, thousands converged outside St. Paul’s Cathedral, including WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, after plans to occupy the London Stock Exchange were thwarted when police blocked the area, saying it was private property.

The atmosphere was lively, with activists chanting “Whose streets? Our streets!” and “We are the 99 percent!” in different languages. Mounted police officers responded with smiles to chants of “Get those animals off those horses!”

“I’m here to stand in solidarity with the protesters on Wall Street,” said Pekka Piirainen, a 19-year-old history student from Finland. He said that the “occupation” movement that kicked off in Spain in May with sit-ins and spread to Wall Street was now “a global thing happening.”

Rallies also drew sizable crowds in other North American cities, including Washington, Toronto, Denver, Orlando, Milwaukee and Raleigh, N.C., where 19 people were arrested for demonstrating in a park after the rally’s permit expired.

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The occupy wall street movement, which began in 2011, was inspired by anger at the ______.

Karla Adam Karla Adam is a London correspondent for The Washington Post. Before joining The Post in 2006, she worked as a freelancer in London, writing for several U.S. publications including the New York Times, Newsweek and People magazine. She is a former president of the Association of American Correspondents in London. Follow

Oct. 8, 2011 — -- As the Occupy Wall Street movement enters its fourth week of protests in lower Manhattan and spreads within New York and to several other major U.S. cities, its message is becoming a bouillabaisse of views representing the many groups that have signed on, and their demands are unclear.

Their causes include such diverse issues as global warming, gas prices and corporate greed -- though most seem to be fueled by the common thread of anger at the wealthy and powerful at the expense of the middle class and less fortunate.

The Occupy Wall Street website says organizers took their inspiration in part from the so-called Arab Spring demonstrations that have tried to bring democracy across the Arab world.

"We will be in a thousand cities in this country by the end of the month - hundreds of cities in other countries. We will see General Assemblies on six continents," read a post on the movement's website today.

But with the protests spreading to so many cities, there is no clear, single message, leaving many wondering what exactly people are protesting about.

"There is no one, unified message for the protesters, but that doesn't mean these protests are not real," said Jake Horowitz, the co-founder of PolicyMic, a news site focused on millennial politics. "From students protesting against tuition hikes to union leaders speaking out against the death of the middle class, people are angry and disillusioned with the economy and political process. They feel that a small few are racking up huge profits while the vast majority of Americans are suffering.

"More importantly," he added, "they feel that Washington is only representing the select few. These protests do not have a clear end-goal or aim in mind, but they represent a chance for people to vent their frustrations and commiserate, to finally raise their collective voices and get Washington to listen. While there is no one person or policy that is the target of these protests, this is not a fringe movement of hippies and radicals," Horowitz added.

Protests at Freedom Plaza in Washington, D.C. kicked off Thursday. A video on the Occupy D.C. website showed some protesters dressed up as wealthy investment bankers riding the subway, holding champagne glasses and toasting to the "1 percent" -- the wealthiest Americans.

Others chose to mark the 10th anniversary of the start of the U.S. war in Afghanistan at a church near Dupont Circle.

The Stop the Machine movement also joined the protest, although Occupy D.C. made clear on its website that the two groups are not affiliated.

The National Air and Space Museum was closed today after an estimated 100-200 protesters tried to enter with signs. When a security guard tried to stop them, he was held by the demonstrators, the AP reported. A second guard used pepper spray on at least one demonstrator.

In Georgia, several hundred people have joined the Occupy Wall Street movement, setting up their own demonstrations in Georgia with group names like the "99 Percenters" and Occupy Atlanta.

"The 99 percent of Americans who basically fall into the middle class or the lower class who are suffering from unemployment ... are suffering from corporate America basically gouging the middle class," protester Alethia Hyman said.

U.S. Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., showed up at rally in Atlanta, hoping to lend a word of his support, but the crowd voted against hearing him speak.

Lewis shared what he had wanted to say with ABC: "I stand with you. I support you, what you're doing to humanize American corporations, humanize the American government and look out for those who have been left out and left behind."

In Los Angeles, protesters have been camping outside city hall for over a week.

Earlier this week, about 40 protesters from ReFund California, a coalition of advocacy groups and union members, barged past security guards into a California Bankers Association meeting at the Balboa Bay Club in Newport Beach, chanting, "Make banks pay!" the Los Angeles Times reported.

Occupy Wall Street Heads to Union Square in Manhattan

In New York, the Occupy Wall Street protesters, who have been joined by unions, 200 orthodox Jews, the Naked Cowboy and a Sarah Palin impersonator, are marching into Union Square today in attempt to find more space.

"Obviously, we've outgrown our current space; we've met our capacity," organizer Matt Vrvilo, 20, of Portland, Ore., told the New York Daily News. "It's critical to find more space. ... We have to migrate some of our people to another location."But in city parks like Union Square, mandatory curfews are applicable. So if the protesters try to stay overnight, they will be breaking the law."

Added a post on the movement's website today: "We are growing. Block by block -- city by city. We will see change in this country, in this world. It will happen sooner than you can imagine."

The post announced the group will form a second general assembly in Washington Square Park today at 3 p.m. It is unclear how the group plans to be in two places at once.

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg described the protests as "trying to destroy the jobs of working people in this city" on his weekly radio program.

"Their salaries come from the taxes paid by the people they're trying to vilify," he said, referring to the public-sector unions that have joined the protests.

Which statement best describes recent changes in the digital divide?

Which of the following statements best describes recent changes in the "digital divide"? The digital divide has narrowed, leaving cyberspace as one of the most egalitarian sites of social interaction.

Why are weak ties more influential in obtaining employment than close ties such as those immediate family members or very close friends?

Why are weak ties so much more influential in obtaining employment than close ties, like those among immediate family members or very close friends? a) Immediate family members or close friends are more likely to know your weaknesses, making them less likely to recommend you to an employer.