effect reaches far beyond questions of inequality as iraq veteran writes: >> he joins us tonight, derrek mcgeeeteran occupier and author of iraq's journey from wall street. i spent time with the occupy movement in washington d.c. and i must say, you are the most unlikely occupier if i can put it that way. i mean, you've been a marine, served in iraq, you've been a banker on wall street with merrill lynch. what attracted you of all people to the occupy movement? >> well, i think what got the first time was simply because of having an understanding of what went wrong in the financial crisis, knowing that there was the steps that had been promised, the regulation that was supposed to come in so it never happened again never took place. the account bite i thought should have been there wasn't there. i went down for the purpose of arguing just that one point. i didn't believe in a lot of the other things that i saw on signs and didn't have a lot in common with a lot of the people down there but when i went down there, i started hearing and seeing other things and researching, finding that there was