'Occupy Wall Street, All Day, All Night,' Protesters Shout On The One-Year Anniversary Of The OWS Movement

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By Amethyst Tate | September 17, 2012 11:50 PM EST

Monday marks the one-year anniversary of the Occupy Wall Street movement, and citizens have come together once again, to be heard and to protest against the so-called one percent.

Police were in full force on Wall Street, as demonstrators in the Financial District carried signs reading, "Imagine Fairness" and shouted in unison, "Occupy Wall street all day all night." 

Reuters
The Occupy Wall Street protest movement has resumed today on the one-year anniversary

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"This weekend we will mark the occasion of our anniversary by once again showing the powers that be that we see what they are doing, and that soon enough the whole world will again as well," said an earlier message on the Occupy website.

"Why are we going back to Wall Street? Because the one percent wants it all and they're not giving anything up without a struggle," Bill Dobbs, of the Occupy Wall Street public relations team, told NBC.

After the demonstrations first started last year, thousands of people around the world attacked the government for not fairly representing them and not providing enough well-paying jobs for the "99 percent."

On Jan. 17, protesters in Washington, D.C. even went as far as to protest in front of the Capitol for the House of Representatives'  first day back in session after winter recess. Many protesters traveled all day to be a part of the demonstration.

Mike, from Sarasota, Fla., who gave only his first name, took a train for 21 hours to be there.

"I am freezing but I would not miss this for the world," he told the Christian Science Monitor, as he slept in a rain-soaked tent Monday night in McPherson Square, one of two Occupy encampments near the White House.

Many of the protesters said they just wanted to be heard. Christopher Horner traveled from Knoxville, Tenn., on an overnight bus with his wife and young daughter. "We're American citizens," he said, "and we're trying to stand up and voice our opinion that things are not going the way they're supposed to be going."

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(Photo: Reuters / )
The Occupy Wall Street protest movement has resumed today on the one-year anniversary
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