Wall Street Protests Continue To Gather Momentum

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A huge anti-Wall Street protest in New York is growing as activists join forces with students and unions. Demonstrations are multiplying in the US against the corporate greed that’s blamed for leading the country to the brink of economic collapse.

The demonstration in New York is gaining unprecedented momentum as thousands of people, including members of several major unions, have joined the “Occupy Wall Street” movement.

The Transport Workers Union, one of the largest unions in New York City accounting for 36,000 employees, has joined the rally. Teachers are also on the streets together with the nation’s largest nurses’ movement.

Students have walked out of universities in New York and throughout the country to join the demonstrations. About 1,000 students have marched through lower Manhattan to join crowds who had camped out in Zuccotti Park.

“This is Cairo! This is Tunisia! This is a movement taking place not only in the US, but one taking place all over the world! Enough with the Wall Street bailouts! We will win!” are some of the things that the demonstrators have been saying, RT’s Marina Portnaya reported.

Anti-Wall Street protests – now in their third week – are continuing to spread across the country. Some of those marching have issued a statement claiming to represent 99 per cent of the population against the country’s richest one per cent.

There are two grievances that unite all of the protesters, Marina Portnaya says. The first one is that they are frustrated with the wealth disparity in the US. And the second one is that they are very frustrated with corporate influence over US politics.

Frustrated Americans have been waiting for the economy to get better and have been waiting to reap some kind of benefits from the bailouts following 2008’s financial crisis.

The aggravation is increasing as annoyed American come together to demand that their elected officials change the system and make sure that things become a little fairer for ordinary Americans.

RT

RT, previously known as Russia Today, is a global multilingual news network that is funded by the Russian government and has been labelled as a propaganda outlet by the US State Department.

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