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#1724055 - 12/02/11 12:12 PM Re: Ridiculous Norms & Labels [Re: RaceNeked420]
topcat1666 Offline
Ganja God
***

Registered: 09/08/04
Posts: 10618
Loc: la la land
Isn't it strange how women are killed all the time because cops say they can't arrest somebody until they break a law. But in this they throw that right out the window and say they might do so and so. Don't we have laws against that, he ask sarcasticly?

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#1726626 - 12/22/11 04:36 AM Re: NYC Wall street protest [Re: WeedWitch420.1]
19.5 Offline
Old hand
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Registered: 04/06/07
Posts: 840
Boy that was fun... Anybody accomplish anything besides making the teapartiers look good? I give the whole occupy movement a double down twinkle.... lmao...

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#1726744 - 12/22/11 02:17 PM Re: NYC Wall street protest [Re: 19.5]
topcat1666 Offline
Ganja God
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Registered: 09/08/04
Posts: 10618
Loc: la la land
Well if you've got half a brain or more we made the OWS look better so start buying twinkies.

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#1736984 - 03/19/12 03:18 PM Re: NYC Wall street protest [Re: canadica]
onegreenday Offline
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Registered: 01/12/06
Posts: 1531
Loc: Pawtucket, RI
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/mar2012/occu-m19.shtml

World Socialist Web Site
wsws.org
New York City police brutalize, arrest Occupy Wall Street protesters
By Sandy English
19 March 2012

Early Sunday morning, the New York Police Department (NYPD) arrested over 70 demonstrators who were commemorating the six-month anniversary of the start of Occupy Wall Street in Zuccotti Plaza in Lower Manhattan. On September 17 a few hundred young people began camping in the plaza to protest the domination of American politics and the economy by the banks and corporations.

In the most recent protest, demonstrators marched through Manhattan’s financial district and past the New York Stock Exchange chanting the now-familiar, “We are the 99 percent.” Hundreds assembled in the plaza nearby during the afternoon and evening in a peaceful and largely festive gathering. The NYPD removed one structure—protesters say it was a banner—that had been erected and lined the streets adjacent the plaza in a show of force. At 11:30 p.m. a police commander ordered the protesters to disperse and most began leaving.

Shortly after midnight, uniformed and plainclothes police moved into the plaza en masse and began to handcuff people. Other officers swung their batons. Some protesters linked arms and police tackled others to the ground as they pushed into the crowd. Video footage shot of the assault shows police tackling more than one peaceful protester. Many were taken into custody in police vans while a city bus was called into service to remove others.

One woman. Cecily McMillan, suffered a seizure after police threw her to the pavement and had to be taken to a hospital.

NYPD spokesmen have asserted that the protesters had broken park rules by bringing in tents and sleeping bags. According to the Washington Post, Sandra Nurse, a member of Occupy Wall Street’s direct action working group, denied that protesters had been prepared to occupy the plaza and pointed out that they had neither sleeping bags nor tents.

Demonstrators have alleged that the NYPD used excessive force and called for an official investigation into the department’s actions.

The occupation that began on September 17, 2011 opposed the oligarchic rule of the richest one percent of the American population. The encampment, and the many protests associated with it, struck a chord with millions around the world who have experienced a relentless assault by the ruling elite on jobs, living standards and democratic rights.

In subsequent days and weeks, the protest began to receive international attention and broad popular support. Support grew especially after the NYPD started making mass arrests of protesters, first in Union Square on September 24—where Deputy Inspector Anthony Bologna was videotaped gratuitously pepper-spraying young women—and then on the Brooklyn Bridge on October 1, where over 700 were arrested in what many have alleged to be an act of police entrapment.

As hundreds of Occupy encampments sprung up around the world, the authorities, particularly in the United States, and often at the behest of Democratic Party mayors, responded with violence to close them down. This included the use of tear gas and rubber bullets in Oakland, California, Denver and elsewhere. One protester in Oakland suffered a near-fatal injury in the police violence. The New York police violently evicted the original encampment form Zuccotti Park on November 15.

The emblematic act of brutality came on November 19 at the campus of the University of California, Davis, when a university police officer systematically pepper-sprayed seated, peaceful students at a protest.

In recent weeks Occupy activists have complained of surveillance by the NYPD that goes well beyond the now habitual videotaping of protests themselves. According to the New York Times, one Occupy organizer said that on December 16, “officers parked outside her home in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, where people were discussing a demonstration planned for the next day. … Another found uniformed officers outside her apartment who told her they were there to conduct a ‘security check’ for a condition they would not identify.”

These allegations come on top of revelations that the NYPD conducted massive surveillance of Muslim groups well beyond the borders of New York City, particularly on college campuses and at social activities.

Copyright © 1998-2012 World Socialist Web Site - All rights reserved
_________________________
Moral courage is a rarer commodity than bravery in battle
or great intelligence. Robert F. Kennedy

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#1736998 - 03/19/12 05:27 PM Re: NYC Wall street protest [Re: onegreenday]
TimJ Offline
Pot Head
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Registered: 08/31/08
Posts: 3103
Loc: Pomona, California
Outlaw Occupy: US set to strangle protests with jail threats
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=d4IySuIhU3E

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#1737525 - 03/25/12 09:45 AM Re: NYC Wall street protest [Re: TimJ]
TimJ Offline
Pot Head
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Registered: 08/31/08
Posts: 3103
Loc: Pomona, California
Exclusive: OWS Activist Cecily McMillan Describes Seizure, Bodily Injuries in Arrest by NYPD

http://youtu.be/mgMT3MaVvwg

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#1737526 - 03/25/12 09:52 AM Re: NYC Wall street protest [Re: TimJ]
onegreenday Offline
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Registered: 01/12/06
Posts: 1531
Loc: Pawtucket, RI
I give them a lot of credit for staying non-violent....
I could not....so I don't go.....I don't think their NV training would help. My fight or flight would kick in...



Originally Posted By: TimJ
Exclusive: OWS Activist Cecily McMillan Describes Seizure, Bodily Injuries in Arrest by NYPD

http://youtu.be/mgMT3MaVvwg

_________________________
Moral courage is a rarer commodity than bravery in battle
or great intelligence. Robert F. Kennedy

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#1737672 - 03/26/12 08:34 AM Re: NYC Wall street protest [Re: onegreenday]
topcat1666 Offline
Ganja God
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Registered: 09/08/04
Posts: 10618
Loc: la la land
Spring is almost here this summer OWS will be back stronger than ever.

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#1737821 - 03/27/12 09:43 AM Re: NYC Wall street protest [Re: topcat1666]
TimJ Offline
Pot Head
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Registered: 08/31/08
Posts: 3103
Loc: Pomona, California
(Video) Colorado cop investigated for shoving man on video

Officials in Fort Collins, Colorado are investigating after a Loveland man formally complained that an officer shoved him without provocation — and the incident was caught on video.

A video posted to YouTube on Sunday showed 24-year-old Matt Hefferon being shoved by officer Dan Calahan and then arrested by officer Kyle Bendzsa.

At a press conference, Fort Collins Police Chief John Hutto explained that officers had been called to the Old Town District at around 1:45 a.m. Sunday morning by a pedi-cab taxi operator who accused Hefferon and his friends, Joshua Cullip and Jarvis Gullatt, of damaging his bike.

“What happened is we asked the guy for a ride,” Cullip told 7News. “As we were loading up on his bike, it ended up tipping back because we had too much weight on it. It ended up tipping back and breaking the brackets on his reflector.”

Cullip began recording the incident after one of the officers returned his ID.

In the video, Calahan can be seen talking to Hefferon when the officer shoves the man for no apparent reason and yells, “Step back!”

Bendzsa quickly apprehends Hefferon, telling him he is under arrest.

“For what?” Hefferon asks over and over again.

“Shoved him for no reason,” Cullip says. “You saw that, right? No reason. He shoved him back. I got it on camera. I ain’t even trippin’.”

At that point, Calahan approaches Cullip, asking for his ID again.

“There’s no need for my ID, dude,” Cullip replies.

“You can hold up that camera all you want,” Calahan remarks. “Get your ID out.”

In an interview with the Coloradoan on Monday, Hefferon insisted that he had not provoked Calahan.

“I was just standing there talking, explaining,” Hefferon recalled. “And all of a sudden, he just snaps. … He just unloaded into my chest.”

“I was in no position to be any threat,” the Loveland man added. “I wasn’t in his face to begin with. As I’m sitting there explaining it to him, not even close to him, he tells me to get back. I step back and fold my arms and stare at him. That’s when he punches me in the chest and tells me to get back. They keep telling me I’m resisting arrest.”

Police Chief Hutto on Monday cautioned that the video only showed one minute out of a 17-minute interaction between the officers and the suspects.

“It’s important to put this in the proper context and not to jump to any conclusions,” Hutto said. “But it obviously raises questions.”

Heffron is facing charges of criminal mischief and obstructing a peace officer. Cullip was charged with interference and Gullatt was charged with obstructing a peace officer.

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/03/27/colorado-cop-investigated-for-shoving-man-on-video/

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#1737976 - 03/28/12 11:30 AM Re: NYC Wall street protest [Re: TimJ]
topcat1666 Offline
Ganja God
***

Registered: 09/08/04
Posts: 10618
Loc: la la land
The bad part is even if they beat these charges the officers won't be charged for filing a false report.

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