Occupy Wall Street's 'raucous' Day of Action

Hundreds of mad-as-hell Occupiers clash with police in Manhattan — storming the financial district to prove the movement still has life in it

Occupy Wall Street demonstrators
(Image credit: REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton)

Early Thursday morning, hundreds of protesters marched from lower Manhattan's Zuccotti Park toward the New York Stock Exchange, marking the anti-bank movement's two-month anniversary and expressing anger over the police's controversial decision to evict the movement from the park earlier this week. Clogging sidewalks and blocking traffic as finance professionals tried to get to work, "raucous" protesters clashed with baton-wielding police officers. At least 75 people were arrested in New York, along with 25 at a sister protest in Los Angeles. (Demonstrations also unfolded in San Francisco, Denver, Dallas, Portland, and several other cities.) Thursday's turnout in New York was so impressive, and received so much publicity, that even the Occupy movement's leaders were surprised. Are the 99 percent stronger (and angrier) than ever?

Welcome back, Occupy: The eviction from Zuccotti and the "clumsy, brutal actions by security forces" have had a "galvanizing effect" on the movement, says Ishaan Tharoor at TIME. Just steal a glance at Twitter's #N17 stream, which "reveals the depth and diversity of protests taking place" across the country. "It's safe to say that, wherever this movement goes now, it's not going into retreat."

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