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Chattanooga Police Officer Eric Milchak stands with his son, Eric Jr., during a rally by Mark Gilliland performs a monologue as "Chucky" Fleischmann criticizing his platform during a rally by a coalition of community activists, labor unions, student associations and immigration advocates Saturday at Miller Plaza. Protesters spent hours addressing issues to the crowd that they wished to see addressed by local and federal government.Photo by Jenna Walker /Chattanooga Times Free Press.
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Dominique Pennington, right, signs a petition regarding the Normal Park school zoning as Rhiannon Maynard, left, watches during the rally by a coalition of community activists, labor unions, student associations and immigration advocates Saturday at Miller Plaza. Protesters spent hours addressing issues to the crowd that they wished to see addressed by local and federal government.Photo by Jenna Walker /Chattanooga Times Free Press.
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Sam Mills holds up a flag that reads "People before Profit" during a rally saturday by a coalition of community activists, labor unions, student associations and immigration advocates Saturday at Miller Plaza. Protesters spent hours addressing issues to the crowd that they wished to see addressed by local and federal government.Photo by Jenna Walker /Chattanooga Times Free Press.
Wearing a "Chucky" mask and standing behind an American flag, a man on stage at Miller Park on Saturday pretended he was U.S. Rep. Chuck Fleischmann, accepting fake dollar bills while saying America must forgive corporations. ("Corporations are people, too," the man reasoned.)
In front of the stage, a 50-year-old union electrician wearing a Marine Corps cap and overalls shouted back at the fake Fleischmann.
"Double boo!" Dana Barnett yelled.
Barnett brought the flag to Chattanooga Organized for Action's Rally for Good Jobs, Living Wages and Public Education.
Barnett said he received the flag when it draped his brother's coffin. He didn't want to keep the flag locked away in a box, so he brought it with him to the rally.
He said he came because he is sick of Wall Street and politicians "gambling with America's money."
"You see that person lying on the side of this hill?" he said, gesturing toward a sleeping homeless man. "There's no excuse for that in this country."
So Barnett came to Miller Plaza to join the hundred or so other men and women who waved signs and listened to speakers at the rally. Speakers included representatives from the Chattanooga Area Labor Council, the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition, the Dogwood Manor Resident Council and the National Association of Letter Carriers.
Barnett said his family has lived in Chattanooga since the early 1800s, and he said he grew up poor. After his Air Force veteran dad died, his stepfather began gambling the family's money away on barroom poker machines.
He and his brother, both teenagers, stood up to their stepfather and persuaded their mom to take him off the family bank account.
This is what needs to happen to Wall Street and the government, Barnett said.
"We've given, and we've given and we've given some more. And then they said, 'We're going out of business,' so we've given even more.
"I'm tired of corporate America running us over."
At the start of the rally, the Rev. Leroy Griffith of the Renaissance Presbyterian Church prayed.
"Unite us in the bonds of love and fellowship," Griffith said. "Through our struggle and confusion, guide us so that together we may build a loving community in this place that will be a benefit for all."
Teletha McJunkin, a woman in Occupy Chattanooga's media working group, urged rally participants to join Occupy Chattanooga supporters when they attend Tuesday night's Chattanooga City Council meeting.
After the council meeting, McJunkin said, Occupy Chattanooga members will start actually occupying the city by camping out and protesting.
Occupy Chattanooga representatives tried to obtain a permit from the city's parks and recreation department, she said. They were told that because the city has a curfew, permits weren't possible.
But Occupy Chattanooga members intend to camp anyway, McJunkin said.
Barnett said he would join Occupy Chattanooga if he weren't busy at work.
Andrew Pantazi is an intern at the Chattanooga Times Free Press who says that when he was 7 he knew what he wanted to do for the rest of his life: play hockey for the Colorado Avalanche. Unfortunately, he says he wasn't any good at hockey, so he became a journalist instead. He writes about the lives we hide, like the man who suffered a stroke but smiled, or the football walk-on who endured 5 ...







If this movement can spread to Chattanooga it will soon spread to all parts of the country. Of course with 20% of the adults unemployed, plus their supporters, there are plenty available to join the movement.
You're not paying attention. The Occupy movement has no attachment to the Democratic party. The whole system is effed up and it matters not which of the hardly distinguishable "parties" is in power. They are both guilty of enriching the already rich, cowtowing to corporations, waging unnecessary wars, and ignoring the rapid decline of our country.
If "payingattention" had paid attention/attended the rally, s/he would know that one of the speakers stated that both parties are colluding with Wall Street, and the crowd heartily supported that statement. Small minds are having trouble understanding that this is not about partisan politics. It is about getting corporate/big money influence out of politics and returning us to a government of the people, by the people, and for the people. It's really pretty simple. Whereas the Tea Party movement let itself get co-opted by corporate interests and the Republican Party, the Occupy movement is determined to remain an independent people's movement that cannot be highjacked by any political candidate, party, or philosophy. Yes, the unions have historically supported Democratic candidates, because those candidates supported labor. However, we are facing a new reality in which both parties are handmaidens of the plutocracy, and labor is adjusting (if slowly) to this new paradigm. As they join the Occupy movement, they will learn that the movement will not be used to promote one candidate over another.
This information is widely available at any internet source that is covering the Occupy movement. People such as "payingattention" would do better to become informed before entering the discussion.
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