The term "moral entrepreneur" was originally created by outsiders Howard S. Becker's author. Becker classifies moral entrepreneurs into two categories. It is rule creator and rule executor. Those who make rules are considered to be "moral crusaders" whose main purpose is to persuade others to turn away from departure and turn to what they believe to be norms. Rule preparers usually consist of senior class HNWI who are not focused mainly on means to persuade others to achieve their agenda.
Occupying Wall Street: Protestors occupying Wall Street asserted the position of income inequality against society. By protesting financial institutions that provide financial services to economic companies, "occupiers" believe that market-driven inequitable practices accepted by financial organizers did not lead to a fair and reasonable economic order I will.
Let's look at the case of Occupy Wall Street, mistakes in social movements, and comparison with Brazilian protests. Occupy Wall Street proposes several key ideals that the PAC can use to purchase parliamentary voting, government relief, and tax evasion / vulnerability to financial elite. First of all, these ideals are sufficient to cause protests, but it is much larger than the Brazilian passage protests. However, many people point out that OWS has failed. These ideas drifted, the problem areas and teams diversified too much, and the goal was blurred. In Brazil, federal traffic has wise maintenance goals. The idea of talking equally throughout the organization further promoted OWS, as OWS has just gone too far from movement without a leader. As an equal voice group, they divide movement
The nature of Occupy Wall Street is quite different. The message is a call for equality. Activists are satisfied that they dominate the company, politics, economy by 1%. The rise of sports already completed the plan. The event page was created by social media and was held at Zuccotti Park on September 17, 2011, the campaign and its online show began. Like the tea party exercise, "Occupy Wall Street" is recognized by news stations, newspapers and magazines, and growing due to popularity. Slowly, "Occupy Wall Street" began to gather less and less attention until the event was finally demolished. As opposed to the tea party movements, "Occupy Wall Street" suddenly began and ended organically. The traces and intentions of these two movements are still on today's social media and sports-specific websites but are not active in a way that has returned in 2010 and 2011.