Occupy Wall Street

Read Complete Research Material

OCCUPY WALL STREET

The Occupy Wall Street Movement

The Occupy Wall Street Movement

Introduction

The Occupy Wall Street Movement is a movement that has garnered extensive popularity in the last few months. The movement has been covered by all the major news agencies and magazines of our time and is considered to be an iconic representative of the unrest that is steadily accumulating and reaching bursting point in the masses. The movement has been the subject of countless debates that have sought to determine if the movement is justified or if it is an exploitation of the freedom of free speech and the right to protest. The discussion will highlight the moral and economic implications involved in the movement; while analyzing (with support from examples and evidence) each of the implications identified above against the utilitarian, Kantian, and virtue ethics to determine which theory best applies to the movement.

In order to do so adequately, the discussion will explore who is responsible for income inequality and wealth distribution in the U.S. This will be followed by the suggestion of an equitable outcome from the movement that would be appropriate for our capitalistic society. The discussion will come to a conclusion by predicting whether the movement will continue, fad away, or turn into something else.

Discussion

Occupy Wall Street Movement was a movement that began as a result of social unrest amongst the masses. It is perhaps because of the same reason that the Occupy Wall Street Movement was frequently supported with slogans that sought to highlight the fact that the masses were behind the movement. The moral and economic implications behind the movie are diverse (Klein, 2011). Firstly, the moral implications are apparent in the fact that the protestors have been recorded to engage in numerous unethical protest practices during the Occupy Wall Street Movement. In addition, there is a need to understand the fact that the Occupy Wall Street Movement is essentially a protest that is looking to bring about a radical change at an equally radical pace. Change management principles make it clear that change can never be expected to yield a positive outcome when it takes place with such a sudden intensity (Rushkoff, 2011). In fact, if the demands of the Occupy Wall Street Movement are to be met and implemented, it would be only fair to expect a complete collapse of economy since the demands will require radical changes that will leave economic elements incompatible with the functioning of the global economy.

Occupy Wall Street Movement demands that wealth is distributed adequately and justly, but common sense dictates that if wealth has indeed been siphoned off to a select few in the last few decades, then it is unreasonable to expect that the situation will turn around within a few weeks or a few months (Jones, 2011). The rationale behind the Occupy Wall Street Movement may be reasonable and just in its own right, but the demands that the movement is propagating cannot possibly be considered ...
Related Ads
  • Wall Street/1987
    www.researchomatic.com...

    This is an ethical review of film Wall Street ...

  • Abstract
    www.researchomatic.com...

    The movement of protest against the financial and ec ...

  • Street Gang
    www.researchomatic.com...

    Street Gang: a Reflection of the American Capitalist ...

  • The Wall Street Journal A...
    www.researchomatic.com...

    The Wall Street Journal Assignment, The Wall Street ...

  • Cartoon Analysis
    www.researchomatic.com...

    The above cartoon is showing the aftermath of the pr ...