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Woman dies at Occupy Vancouver site

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Woman dies at Occupy Vancouver site


Law & Order | 206720 hits | Nov 05 6:40 pm | Posted by: Scape
67 Comment

A female, who is believed in her 20s, died late Saturday afternoon at Occupy Vancouver in what Vancouver Fire and Rescue Services are calling a "medical emergency." VFRS spokesman Capt. Gabe Roder confirmed the woman who died was in a tent, but it is u

Comments

  1. by avatar 1Peg
    Sun Nov 06, 2011 12:37 pm
    So this "occupy" movement is nothing more than a drug fueled party....

  2. by avatar Public_Domain
    Sun Nov 06, 2011 1:02 pm
    :|

  3. by avatar ShepherdsDog
    Sun Nov 06, 2011 1:15 pm
    It's given the city all the reson it needs to shut it down.

  4. by Bruce_the_vii
    Sun Nov 06, 2011 1:25 pm
    When I went down to Occupy Toronto and spoke to the protestors one of them made the point that the event would be remembered long after it was over. It's a valid point. Occupy Vancouver and etc will be long remembered. The event was a reminder we have problems. They can close the camps down now, they're unsanitary, fading and uncomfortable for the participants.

  5. by avatar commanderkai
    Sun Nov 06, 2011 1:44 pm
    "Bruce_the_vii" said
    When I went down to Occupy Toronto and spoke to the protestors one of them made the point that the event would be remembered long after it was over. It's a valid point. Occupy Vancouver and etc will be long remembered. The event was a reminder we have problems. They can close the camps down now, they're unsanitary, fading and uncomfortable for the participants.


    Um, not really. The overall movement might be remembered, like leftist anti-war protests or right wing Tea Party protests, but individual protests, and their goals, won't really be remembered. To be honest, if all they were there for is bringing attention to "we have problems"...then what's the point? Everybody knows there are problems.

  6. by avatar Public_Domain
    Sun Nov 06, 2011 1:47 pm
    :|

  7. by Bruce_the_vii
    Sun Nov 06, 2011 2:57 pm
    "Mr_Canada" said
    Not everyone knows that other people know we have problems. Assembling together for once provides an interesting experience.


    A protest is a pretty small step. The leftist agenda is sobering because the facts have a Liberal (or leftist) bias. Myself I was rather encouraged by the young people I meet at Occupy Toronto because they had specific, legitimate ideas. I think they did well as protests go.

  8. by avatar Public_Domain
    Sun Nov 06, 2011 3:01 pm
    :|

  9. by avatar andyt
    Sun Nov 06, 2011 3:02 pm
    "1Peg" said
    So this "occupy" movement is nothing more than a drug fueled party....


    In which case, why not sit back and just let them all overdose? Problem solved.

  10. by avatar andyt
    Sun Nov 06, 2011 3:06 pm
    "commanderkai" said
    When I went down to Occupy Toronto and spoke to the protestors one of them made the point that the event would be remembered long after it was over. It's a valid point. Occupy Vancouver and etc will be long remembered. The event was a reminder we have problems. They can close the camps down now, they're unsanitary, fading and uncomfortable for the participants.


    Um, not really. The overall movement might be remembered, like leftist anti-war protests or right wing Tea Party protests, but individual protests, and their goals, won't really be remembered. To be honest, if all they were there for is bringing attention to "we have problems"...then what's the point? Everybody knows there are problems.

    Occupy has already been successful. The 1 percenters are very nervous that this is the beginning of people saying they've had enough, which it is. Keep going down the road of socializing losses while concentrating profits in the 1 percent and there'll be more of this shit. When you have Mark Carney saying they have a point, you know that they, well, have a point.

  11. by avatar Gunnair  Gold Member
    Sun Nov 06, 2011 3:14 pm
    "andyt" said
    When I went down to Occupy Toronto and spoke to the protestors one of them made the point that the event would be remembered long after it was over. It's a valid point. Occupy Vancouver and etc will be long remembered. The event was a reminder we have problems. They can close the camps down now, they're unsanitary, fading and uncomfortable for the participants.


    Um, not really. The overall movement might be remembered, like leftist anti-war protests or right wing Tea Party protests, but individual protests, and their goals, won't really be remembered. To be honest, if all they were there for is bringing attention to "we have problems"...then what's the point? Everybody knows there are problems.

    Occupy has already been successful. The 1 percenters are very nervous that this is the beginning of people saying they've had enough, which it is. Keep going down the road of socializing losses while concentrating profits in the 1 percent and there'll be more of this shit. When you have Mark Carney saying they have a point, you know that they, well, have a point.

    Terrified I'm sure. Sit back and watch the Occupy movements go from a melange of personal pet peeves to a hot spot for drug use, violence, and illegal activity; then shut down.

    Yep. The 1% must be shaking in their boots. :roll:

  12. by avatar sandorski
    Sun Nov 06, 2011 4:26 pm
    Probably hours since the last Overdose in the City. Yup, the Camp is to blame!!!

  13. by OnTheIce
    Sun Nov 06, 2011 5:14 pm
    "andyt" said


    Occupy has already been successful. The 1 percenters are very nervous that this is the beginning of people saying they've had enough, which it is. Keep going down the road of socializing losses while concentrating profits in the 1 percent and there'll be more of this shit. When you have Mark Carney saying they have a point, you know that they, well, have a point.


    Do you have a window in the cardboard box you live in?

    Nobody gives a shit....hell, the majority of the 99% don't care.

  14. by avatar Proculation
    Sun Nov 06, 2011 5:29 pm
    They want to change the world in their own way but they can't even survive themselves. Great society they are advocating....



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