Haven't you heard? LG is independent. Just ask him.
I know I haven't commented much on the OWS people. Part of this is because I have seriously mixed feelings. I understand why they have a lot of unfocused rage and I think they're probably directing it in the right direction (toward the financial sector generally, since Wall Street here is an idea rather than a physical place which is why you have copycat movements in various places).
That being said part of the reason things are unfocused on is that I think a great many of the individual complaints can be boiled down to the simple "Life didn't turn out the way I thought it would." While I sympathize, mine didn't either, that's not a problem that encompasses a myriad of issues not all of which are financial. Some of it is sociological and a lot of it has to do with the myths we tell each other as a society about the outcomes of our actions and the extent to which we are the masters of our own destinies.
In my mind a major reason the sides keep speaking past each other on this issue can be viewed through the lens of the "myth of hard work." I suspect a large number of OWS people would agree with the idea that part of the reason they're mad enough to occupy something is that they're economically screwed and they feel that they jumped through the hoops and paid the dues that society said they had to in order to at least have a job and a sustainable living without ever getting the "promised" benefit or having that benefit prematurely taken from them. That might be going to college or working 70 hours a week in someone's mailroom hoping to climb the ladder or whatever, but they're demanding that they be paid out on what they perceive as some sort of grand social bargain. We see the other side of this myth from the generally right-wing reaction of "they'd have a job if they spent all that energy trying to get one" or the Herman Cainism about how it's their own fault. On each side the idea that hard work will be rewarded is a guiding principle but the parties are led to different conclusions based upon their perceptions of how hard the OWS protesters have worked for their rewards on the other end. The reality, in my opinion, is that hard work isn't rewarded with good results. Sometimes good results happen to the lazy because of other factors. Other times people work hard all their lives and get screwed for a variety of reasons. But the myth persists, and OWS and it's criticizers aren't challenging those sorts of fundamental assumptions that are driving the conflict.
That's one example and obviously not universal, but I believe similar conditions persist relating to a number of other "ideas" that are really at play in subtle ways.
Anyways, kind of a ramble but that's where my thoughts are on OWS at this point and I haven't seen something similar already posted in this thread. Also, I saw some OWS copycat protesters in Phoenix over the weekend and the most offensive part of them was their lack of quality material. That doesn't exactly win me over. Come up with better chants, tell better jokes, etc.