(Associated Press) - have been camping in Manhattan's financial district more than two weeks of demonstrators eating donated food, and keep your notebook computer and a portable gas generator to run. They have a newspaper - the Wall Street Journal in the occupied - and a temporary hospital.
They lack a clear goal, but their corporate greed, social inequality, global climate change and other issues to speak. However, they increase in number, more organized, there is no sign of quitting.
City officials' ideas, we want to leave, we never left, "19-year-old protester Kira Moyer - SIMS said. "We intend to stay as long as we can."
More than 700 arrested on Saturday, thousands of people tried to cross the Brooklyn Bridge seems all the rage on Wall Street, those sleeping in Zuccotti Park, near Broadway Plaza, a private off down the oil overnight.
Jared Schy, a young man sitting squeeze the other three from Manhattan to participate in Saturday's march a bridge between the financial district, said: "The growing, cross-country movement" of the signal changes in consciousness.
"We do not care whether this person covered by the mainstream media see us on TV, what counts more than 30,000 spectators, following our online real-time streaming," he said. "We hear a lot of them, they now join us!"
According to the Wall Street demonstrations began last month, more than a dozen colleges and universities Zuccotti Park students spend fewer days and nights. It has significant growth, both in New York City and people from Boston to Los Angeles to show solidarity with similar protests.
Moyer - SIM card, Portland, Ore., said the group has become more organized. "We have an agreement with most things," she said, including the arrest of the person to get legal help.
Protest has caused different ages and occupations, including Jackie Chan Fellner, marketing manager from Westchester County's activists.
"We are not here to take down Wall Street, this is not the poor, the rich, it's about big politicians elected, and plans to handle the money for funding," she said.
On Sunday, sitting in a New York public school teachers in the square, including Dennis Martinez of Brooklyn. Most of the students in her school life, or below the poverty line, and her classes are packed with about 50 students.
"These are America's future workers, what drop down issues - unemployment, crime," she said. She accused the Wall Street caused by the country's financial problems and says it needs more work to do to solve them.
Police officers are regularly on the square line of sight, but the New York Police Department spokesman Paul Browne said the protests did not lead to sectoral allocation of other people in the region. He said the department will not change its approach to dealing with protest, and will continue to conduct regular patrols and monitoring.
"As always, if it is a legitimate model, we can help promote and if they violate the law, we arrest them," Brown said.
Fire department says it has to live in the past any fire safety check several times a week, people in the square of the harm, but there have been no major problems.
Protesters in the square to spend most of their time sleeping cushion, meetings to discuss their goals and listen to speakers, including filmmaker Michael Moore and Princeton University professor dogwood West.
However, in the past two Saturdays, they march to other areas of the city, which led to tensions with the police stand. September 24, about 100 people were arrested, the group released video shows some of the women were attacked by a police officer with pepper spray. October 1, 700 people were arrested, as the group tried to cross the Brooklyn Bridge.
Some demonstrators said they were lured to the police, roadway, or they did not hear the appeal pedestrian head. Police said no one deceive was arrested and later hear that a group be allowed to leave.
Other News:
Wall Street protesters: We're in for the long haul
Obama's jobs bill falls to pieces in Congress
For Listeria victims, sudden turns for the worse
Typhoon moves to Vietnam after hitting China
ABC News, Yahoo! News Announce Online Alliance
ongress' dysfunction long in the making
Dozens arrested in drug raid at Boeing plant
President Obama: America 'Not Better Off' Today than Four Years Ago