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So far at least 80 protestors have been arrested during marches near Wall Street.
Describing itself as a "leaderless resistance movement with people of many colours, genders and political persuasions" the Occupy Wall Street protest began on September 17 when hundreds of people began a sit-in at Zuccotti Park, a private park near the financial district.
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"We are the 99 per cent that will no longer tolerate the greed and corruption of the one per cent" is the protest's slogan.
Its symbol is the image of an elegant ballerina in a free flowing dance movement perched atop the iconic statue of Wall Street's raging bull.
A rallying call issued by the activist journal, Adbusters, in July has snow-balled into both a ground level protest as well as a spreading on-line mobilization - with people across the US reportedly contributing food, money and equipment.
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"We also encourage the use of non-violence to achieve our ends and maximize the safety of all participants."
New York police has deployed heavy security, including nets, to block off major roads, to protect the New York Stock Exchange.
BBC reported one 21-year-old protestor, Ryan Reed, as saying that he is upset about an economy and a system that's collapsing.
"The enemy is the big business leaders of Wall Street, the big oil company leaders, the coal company leaders, the big military industrial leaders," he said.
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According to various reports, many of the protestors come from the working-class or middle class backgrounds.
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"Is it really surprising they would like to have a word with the financial magnates who stole their future?"
In an apparently unrelated event across the Atlantic, last weekend, the Christian Council for Monetary Justice held another of its regular open meetings to protest the stranglehold of money power.
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The discontent being loudly expressed by Occupy Wall Street is clearly a global phenomenon.
However, in terms of numbers of protesters, the turn-out tends to be disappointing.
The Occupy Wall Street campaign had initially issued a rallying call for at least 20,000 people but no more than 2,000 have shown up at any given time over the last 10 days.
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Symbolic protest can sometimes be complete in itself.
For instance, at 9.30 every morning, the protestors have been ringing an opening bell for a 'people's exchange' - as a counter to the opening bell rung at the New York Stock Exchange.
Whether or not people physically turn up to join such a protest many might share this observation made by Amy Goodman, one of the movement's supportive commentators.
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Similar questions have been raised by some who attended the Clinton Global Initiative's glitzy annual event in uptown Manhattan - which took place at precisely the same time that the protestors dug their heals in at Zuccotti Park.
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The conference rings hollow to many observers because it is seen as yet another platform of the rich and powerful where good intentions are aplenty but hard questions are consistently ignored.
Much money is committed at such an event for good causes, but there is little room to ask whether all the money that's being handed out is actually solving problems at their root.
A sit-in like Occupy Wall Street will not by itself give us detailed answers on how to address the crisis of both inequity and instability.
But it does create both a physical location and an Internet platform for venting the angst and drumming up energy for doggedly demanding systemic solutions.
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