Wednesday, December 14, 2011

SEED: Houston Police Place Large Tent Over Restrained Protesters and Gas Them (Video)

This is clearly a move to HIDE misconduct and prevent any Judicial action to protect the rights of protesters. Any judge worth his oath should immediately issue a restraining order/injunction forcing the Police to work in what is called the "Light Of Day". Anytime a Government can act in secret to arrest and detain ANY individual in secret clearly indicates a Fascist Act to abuse and intimidate the Public At Large with fear to control and retrain them exercising their Constitutional Rights.
After watching this entire video, it's truly difficult to remain objective when it comes to what apparently transpires between some of the protesters (seemingly those who are already restrained) and the police.
America is spiraling more into a Police State every day.

1 comment:

Joe Burd said...

What people really seem to forget is that in the 1960s and early 1970s, it was fairly common for police to turn their weapons on protesters, otherwise known as American citizens, especially those interested in exercising free speech or opposed to one of the illegal or unnecessary wars perpetrated by the domestic political establishment.

This is simply the evolution of a hidden agenda style law enforcement philosophy that's existed in the United States since 1776.

What really boggles my mind is how ready domestic police officers, otherwise known as fellow American citizens, brother and sisters, mothers and fathers, are to brutally turn on the general civilian public, folks in the very same town or city that they themselves live, in such a harsh, savage manner.

These type of tactics, that are more and more being exposed by video evidence over the past few decades, are neo-fascist, fundamentally misguided, an utter breach of public trust, and not in accordance with proper governing or law enforcement whatsoever. This is true whether it's make-shift Nazi-esque gas chambers in the street, indiscriminate use of taser weapons that, more often than what most people would consider tolerable, lead to death or otherwise severe injury, shooting citizens in the streets and on college campuses (as was demonstrated on May 4, 1970 at Kent State in Ohio), or the undue and unjust, savagely brutal aggression that we see time and again these days captured on video and broadcast via the media.

The times, they are certainly changing.