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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Wealthy 1 percent use site to support the 99 percent

Jim Puzzanghera Los Angeles Times
WASHINGTON — While members of the so-called 99 percent take part in Occupy Wall Street protests, a new website lets some of the wealthy 1 percent declare their support for the movement. The site, called “We are the 1 percent. We stand with the 99 percent,” lets people post photos pronouncing their solidarity with the Occupy protesters in New York, Los Angeles and elsewhere. “When I was 18 my father won $9 million in the California lottery,” one man posted on the site, along with a photo of him holding his message written on two pieces of paper. “With that money I now have no college debt,” he wrote. “When my father dies I will inherit a third of his money. I am committed to using it to help those less fortunate. Due to sheer luck, I am the 1 percent. I stand with the 99 percent.” The posts contain no names, but similarly show people holding up handwritten notes on paper, index cards or cardboard explaining why they back the movement. There is a link to a YouTube video of singer Willie Nelson backing the protests. Organizers of the site identified two of the people with posts on the site. One was Carl Schweser, who created a study program that now is part of Kaplan Schweser, a company that helps people prepare for financial exams. “I made millions studying the math of mortgages and bonds and helping bankers pass the Chartered Financial Analyst Exam,” Schweser wrote. “It isn’t fair that I have retired in comfort after a career working with financial instruments while people who worked as nurses, teachers, soldiers, etc. are worried about paying for their future, their healthcare and their children’s educations.” “They are the backbone of this country that allowed me to succeed,” he continued. “I am willing to pay more taxes so that everyone can look forward to a secure future like I do. I am the 1 percent. I stand with the 99 percent. (Which equals 100 percent of America.) Tax me.” Many of the posts are from children of wealthy parents or people who have inherited money. “Being born to the right family at the right time made me a millionaire,” one man wrote. “Giving most of the money away made me happy.” The site was created by two organizations: Resource Generation, which organizes wealthy young people to work for social change, and Wealth for the Common Good, a group of wealthy people and business executives who advocate for what they call fair taxation, such as higher tax rates on millionaires. The groups said they were inspired by the “We are the 99 percent” blog, which posts similar declarations from people participating in the Occupy protests. “Those of us with more than we need and who believe in a more just distribution of resources can stand up and tell the truth about how the deck has been stacked in our favor,” said Elspeth Gilmore, co-director of Resource Generation. “We need to say that we think it’s wrong, too.”