I wrote last week about how Wall Street–area residents were beginning to stir against their occupiers. Last week, over the objections of these residents, the members of Community Board 1 passed a resolution recommending that the Wall Street Occupiers be allowed to remain in Zuccotti Park indefinitely.
Here is a statement that Linda Gerstman, one of those residents, made to the Community Board:
We live in a community that was finally rebounding from September 11th. My fellow neighbors and I chose to live here despite many inconveniences (like limited car access) due to national security.
The protesters have driven our neighborhood into the proverbial toilet (pun intended). Not only does the occupation impact the park and the adjacent streets – where it smells like rotting food and raw sewage – but also impacts us blocks away.
Barricades have been erected in order to block their access to landmarks and terrorist targets. These barricades also prohibit residents from walking freely in their own neighborhood.
Children are frightened, the elderly are forced to walk blocks out of their way to fill a prescription, and our sidewalks are soiled because dogs don’t have access to the curbs.
Local retailers and restaurants are reporting drops in foot traffic and sales. Real Estate Brokers are seeing decreased activity in terms of responses to listings – which has a direct impact on our property values. Several of my neighbors have fled the neighborhood and are selling their apartments.
Our building has been burgled three times by protesters – once to wedge all access doors open (likely for future break-ins), once to hang a protest banner from a window and once to vandalize our building in the name of “art”. So now, not only are we significantly inconvenienced, we are now in fear of our safety and security.
Quite frankly, we are not interested in a “good neighbor policy”. These occupiers are not our neighbors. Our neighbors don’t beat on drums while children are napping, our neighbors do not verbally attack people on their way to work, our neighbors do not break in and vandalize buildings, our neighbors do not urinate and defecate in the street. The occupiers need to vacate our neighborhood.
This is our home. We are not the enemy. Many of the protesters go home at night to their homes in outside neighborhoods and live peacefully while our home life has become unbearable.
I support free speech, free expression, and equal justice for all, but it shouldn’t be at the expense of innocent bystanders. An unfortunate consequence of this is that these individuals are clearly stating that their rights should be taken more seriously than our rights. And that isn’t a fair tradeoff. Why should our basic rights of living peacefully in our homes be trampled on by those who don’t reside in the neighborhood, create unsanitary conditions, cause undue safety issues, and commit crimes. Where is the justice in that?
The question the elected officials must ask themselves is whether they stand for the individuals who have knowingly decided that the law does not pertain to them and side with out of towners or enforce the law and adequately protect those that put them in office. The answer to this question will be apparent in their actions and the members of the community will judge you in this light on election day.
Margaret Chin, who represents the Financial District in the New York City Council, and Daniel Squadron, who serves the same role in the New York State Senate, have been among the leading advocates of their district’s continued occupation. It’s not clear what will change (other than the weather), until and unless someone decides to run against them.
Eh - as disgusting as the OWS idiots are, I have little sympathy for any NYC resident who continues to elect Democrats year-in and year-out. They're reaping what they've sown.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseSpeaking as a New Yorker, I can tell you that most residents are very happy with the way our city runs and operates. No where else I would rather live, but thanks for your heartfelt concern.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseSpoken to most of them, have you?
Speaking as a New Yorker, move.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseSo when you say that the New York residents are happy with the way their city runs and operates, did you do a scientific poll of the residents? Or did you just cherry pick those residents that told you what you wanted to hear just like you cherry pick NRO contributors in order to poke fun or ridicule them?
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseJust a few minutes ago you were complaining about people who pick out a few OWS clowns to highlight.
Now here you go, declaring that since everybody you know likes these clowns, that therefore all New Yorkers do.
Most liberals are so dumb, they can no longer recognize when they are contradicting themselves.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseNo, I don't depend on anecdotal evidence. There have been polls that show how much NYC residents support OWS:
New York City residents support Occupy Wall Street. According to a Quinnipac poll released today, New Yorkers believe that it is "okay that they are protesting" by a ratio of 87% to 10%, and 67% agree with the views expressed by the demonstrators, while 23% disagree. While Republicans disagree with the message 58 to 35%, 73% of them agree that they have a right to occupy Zuccotti Park. When reached for comment, Mayor Bloomberg wiped his brow in an exaggerated fashion and exclaimed, "Phew!"
"Critics complain that no one can figure out what the protesters are protesting," Quinnipac director Maurice Carroll says in a release. "But seven out of 10 New Yorkers say they understand and most agree with the anti-Wall Street views of the protesters." Indeed, a recent poll conducted by ABC/Washington Post shows that 70 percent of Americans see Wall Street unfavorably," which is even more than the 68% approval rating of the governing going on in Washington.
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Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseMillions of "residents" of NYC are no where near these clowns so their opinion is a nice statistic but meaningless to the debate about the local residents opinion ... I'm sure you don't live or work anywhere near these morons ...
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseI thought he was one of those morons.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseLemme guess: Manhattan?
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseTake a ferry ride, Champ.
Speaking as a former resident of NYC (1985-2008) I can tell you that many of my neighbors were not happy with the way it was run ...
Without Wall Street money NYC would quickly turn into Detroit ...
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseThe NYC city council is beyond democrat, it's a collection of pymps, thieves, and ACORN-style radicals.
The president of the council would be at the forefront of that pack of idiots.
Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuseand that is based on .... what exactly? Oh, your racist views? Got it.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseInteresting that you assumed racism in the prior comment. You are the one who is focused on race.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseYou are the one making the assumption that all p^mps are people of color. That makes you the racist.
I have never met a liberal who wasn't a racist.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseSlide's admitted in the past, he has issues with people of colour, by his standards.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseAh yes, that old leftist standard - when you've got no argument, call them a racist.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseI think it is now racist to call someone on calling people racist.
Reply to this commentLinkReport Abusemany of them are white p*mps and thieves ...
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseIf Shelly Silver says, "Enough!" this all stops on the proverbial dime. It's his Assembly District; he's really running the show in Albany, and "Sh*theel" could care less--but it would be a stretch--what Bloomberg has to say about anything.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseShould everyone put their speakers in their windows and blare WQXR out of their windows?
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