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Blacks Not Embracing #OccupyWallstreet, Make Up Only 1.6% Of Protesters



Nov 27, 2011 9 Comments ›› Pat Dollard

Washington Post:

Occupy Wall Street might seem like a movement that would resonate with black Americans. After all, unemployment among African Americans is at 15 percent, vs. almost 8 percent for whites. And between 2005 and 2009, black households lost just over half of their median net worth compared with white families, who lost 16 percent, according to the Pew Research Center.

However, these numbers have not translated into action. A few prominent African Americans, such as Cornel West, Russell Simmons, Kanye West and Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), have made appearances at Occupy protests. “Occupy the Hood,” a recent offshoot, has tried to get more people of color involved. But the main movement remains overwhelmingly white: A Fast Company survey last month found that African Americans, who are 12.6 percent of the U.S. population, make up only 1.6 percent of Occupy Wall Street.

African Americans share white Americans’ anger about corporate greed and corruption, and blacks have a rich history of protesting injustice in United States. So why aren’t they Occupying?

“Occupy Wall Street was started by whites and is about their concern with their plight,” Nathalie Thandiwe, a radio host and producer for WBAI in New York, said in an interview. “Now that capitalism isn’t working for ‘everybody,’ some are protesting.”


  • Anonymous

    Interesting statistics. It may be that the blacks don’t understand that whites can finally feel trampled on. Perhaps ist’s because we ignored their history in this position so long. It would be best to hear from the posters on this site who are black. Is this part of the negative sentiment?

    • Lou

      Noooo..perhaps they feel like they’ve lived under Democrap Socialist rule on the Guvment dole for so long they don’t know what all the fuss is about…

    • Lou

      Noooo..perhaps they feel like they’ve lived under Democrap Socialist rule on the Guvment dole for so long they don’t know what all the fuss is about…

  • Anonymous

    Interesting statistics. It may be that the blacks don’t understand that whites can finally feel trampled on. Perhaps ist’s because we ignored their history in this position so long. It would be best to hear from the posters on this site who are black. Is this part of the negative sentiment?

  • Anonymous

     Why would anybody in their right mind want to march alongside The American Nazi Party and  Communist Party USA with a movement endorsed by David Duke? 

    I would also suggest that many Black people may  consider the blatant anti-semitism permeating from OWS  unacceptable, and have  chosen the moral highground, even if they might agree with socialist ideals in principal. Back in the 60′s, during the real Civil Rights era, many of the people who travelled to the Deep South to help the the oppressed population of Southern Blacks learn to read and write so they could register to vote were in fact Jewish. In recognition of this  debt, many Blacks may be refusing to march.

    At least, this is what I would like to believe, and it may even be so. 

    • Anonymous

      If you look into “black Liberation Theology” you will find plenty of anti-semitism. Most black people who do not openly support BLT give it a polite nod, mush like “Mainstream Islam” does not “Condone” terrorist’s actions, but hey sure dont cry out against it much either.

  • Charlie from New Jersey

    Is the MSM going to start calling the OWS movement racist because it has fewer blacks than the Tea Party?  Somehow, I doubt it.

  • Charlie from New Jersey

    Is the MSM going to start calling the OWS movement racist because it has fewer blacks than the Tea Party?  Somehow, I doubt it.

  • YERMOM

    protesting is hard work.