OK, thanks. As per my update, another way to approach this is on a "separate but equal" sort of basis, i.e., a non-hostile, parallel demonstration. You'd pick a different name than Occupy Wall Street, but you'd set up shop near enough the Occupy Wall Street gatherings that you could float over and have a civil discussion.
Medea Benjamin of Code Pink had gone to her first Tea Party gathering with the idea of mocking the participants, but found out that they mostly seemed normal, she had many fans there, and also about half were anti-war.
Those are the sorts of realizations that I would like to see fostered. You can't - and shouldn't - cooperate in all areas. But it's quite possible to be somebody's political friend in one area, and their political enemy in another. Purists and party bots don't like this, and the plutocrats really don't like this (I'm guessing transpartisan coalition building that threatens the 2 party duopoly scares them more than anything), but free-born citizens of the US should relish the opportunity to exercize their freedom of association to manifest their collective political will, as well as can be done by a heterogeneous population.
Allowing plutocrats and party purists to split the public down the middle is probably the biggest reason that the public is disempowered relative to big money.
You have to understand that this is a serious mainstream republican campaign for the GOP nomination. Image is very important at this point. Ron Paul is trying to effect change from within the existing system. We have a 2 party system and that's not going to change right now. You undermine Ron Paul's chances in the Republican primary if you are seen by the media or the typical GOP voter as associating with the people protesting on wall st. or groups like code pink. Save it for after Ron wins the GOP nomination.