
Kalle Lasn spends most nights shuffling clippings into a binder of  plastic sleeves, each of which represents one page of an issue of 
Adbusters,  a bimonthly magazine that he founded and edits. It is a tactile  process, like making a collage, and occasionally Lasn will run a page  with his own looped cursive scrawl on it. From this absorbing work, Lasn  acquired the habit of avoiding the news after dark. So it was not until  the morning of Tuesday, November 15th, that he learned that hundreds of  police officers had massed in lower Manhattan at 1 
A.M. and cleared the camp at Zuccotti Park. If anyone could claim responsibility for the Zuccotti situation, it was Lasn: 
Adbusters  had come up with the idea of an encampment, the date the initial  occupation would start, and the name of the protest—Occupy Wall Street.  Now the epicenter of the movement had been raided. Lasn began thinking  of reasons that this might be a good thing.
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