Protest police state tactics in Toronto TONIGHT (Mon. June 28)

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Michelle
Protest police state tactics in Toronto TONIGHT (Mon. June 28)

EMERGENCY RALLY: PROTEST POLICE ABUSE OF POWER

 

DATE: Monday, June 28th

TIME: 5:30 - 7:30 p.m.

PLACE: Toronto Police Headquarters, 40 College Street

FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/?ref=logo#!/event.php?eid=122237507819100&ref=mf

 

Protest police abuse of power and show your solidarity with those who have been arrested.  Be there to defend our rights to freedom of assembly, freedom of speech, and freedom to dissent!

Please invite your friends on Facebook, social media, by e-mail and any other means!

 

Michelle

Another announcement with updated info about tonight's protest at police headquarters, 40 College Street, 5:30 p.m., Toronto.

Quote:

Speakers:
Naomi Klein
Ben Powless
David McNally
Abeer Majeed
Testimonies from people who've been brutalized by police

Over the past two days, police have rounded and arrested up hundreds of people. They have been denied access to lawyers, telephones, food and water, and held in deplorable conditions in makeshift steel cages. Many have been beaten in the streets and in their homes; shot at with rubber bullets and tear gas; some have been sent to hospital with severe injuries. Hundreds are still in custody as of Sunday night.

We need to get our people out. We need to take our city back from the armed fortress that it has been turned into.

Catchfire Catchfire's picture

There should be nationwide protests about this.

Star Spangled C...

Saw a note from a friend of mine from Toronto on facebook that he was actually detained in handcuffs at Queen and Spadina for 3 hours. He wasn't a protester. He was at a bar watching a soccer game and went to catch a streetcar, started taking a few pics on his cell phone cam and basically was cordoned off from all sides by police, unable to escape. The cops made an announcement that people who "surrendered" would be processed faster so he and his girlfriend basically volunteered to be arrested thinking it would get them out of there. Instead, it just meant they were separated from the main crowd, put in plastic cuffs and forced to sit on the ground in the freezing rain for two hours before finally being put onto a bus and then released with no charges. He wasn't even asked for ID or anything.

cassidy694

Thanks, will spread the word.

oldgoat

Me and the young goats will be in attendance.

 

 

Lard Tunderin Jeezus Lard Tunderin Jeezus's picture

See you there.

Krystalline Kraus Krystalline Kraus's picture

here's my wonderful experience with the police yesterday and how they fucked with my camera.

G8/G20 Communiqué: The police's interview with me.

 

http://www.rabble.ca/blogs/bloggers/statica/2010/06/g8g20-communiqu%C3%A9-police%E2%80%99s-interview-me 

 

Papal Bull

I think I will be attending!

Michelle

Apparently there have been riot cops gearing up in the area since 7:30 a.m.  radiorahim and I will still be going.  After watching police thugs attacking peaceful protesters and bystanders yesterday, nervousness is understandable, but please don't let fear stop you from coming if you were thinking about coming out. Rights have to be defended - they're never given.

The updated announcement is below - you'll see a lot of well-known names on it. That gives me some hope that the cops won't deploy their goon squad tactics on peaceful protesters today. 

Also, I really, really hope that everyone attending will be absolutely peaceful (well, except for the undercover cops -- I guess no one can predict what they'll do or what trouble they'll try to cause).  Let's not give the cops any excuses to pull any crap, and lets shut down any of their provocateurs who try to pull shit tonight.

Quote:

JAIL SOLIDARITY RALLY!  TORONTO CONDEMNS POLICE VIOLENCE

Monday, June 28th, 5:30 p.m.

Police Headquarters, 40 College Street (at Yonge Street)

SPEAKERS:  Naomi Klein, Judy Rebick, Sid Ryan, Ben Powless, David McNally, Abeer Majeed, Dave Vasey, Deborah Cowen, Nate Prior, MDC, and testimonies from people who have been brutalized by police.

Over the past two days, police have rounded up and arrested hundreds of people.  They have been denied access to lawyers, telephones, food and water, and held in deplorable conditions in makeshift steel cages.  Many have been beaten in the streets and in their homes; shot at with rubber bullets and tear gas; some have been sent to hospital with severe injuries.  Hundreds are still in custody as of Sunday night.

We need to get our people out. We need to take our city back from the armed fortress that it has been turned into.

We will let the police know that we will not tolerate the arrests, beatings and attempt to intimidate the people of Toronto. Our community stands with the people whose lives have been disrupted by the G20 and by police violence.  We will demand that all those arrested be released, and released now!

 

Joey Ramone

 

I did not witness the mass arrests downtown last night, but what I saw in quiet residential neighbourhoods was just as disturbing in its own way.

I live in the east end of Toronto, near Greenwood and Danforth.  Around 2:00 p.m. Mrs. Ramone, my 3 kids (ages 9, 11 and 3 ½) and I hopped on our bikes and rode downtown with the intention of joining a non-violent protest.  My 3 ½ year old son, Jack, was in a co-pilot seat on the back of my bike. 

We arrived at King and Bay shortly after 3:00.  A wall of nervous looking riot police with shields, batons and tons of weapons prevented anyone from getting any closer to where the G20 were meeting.  A small group of Christian pacifists were staging a sit-in in the intersection, singing Christian peace songs, surrounded by around 300 anti-G20 protesters, supporters, witnesses, tourists etc.... A solitary asshole in black, with a mask and megaphone, urged the crowd to attack the cops.  I am pleased to report that he was ignored by most and heckled by a few of us until he left.  However, by the time he left the wall of cops had grown to massive proportions, and they continued to surround the peaceful crowd after their buddy in the mask had moved on.

At around 4:00 we were joined at King and Bay by about 20 activists on bikes chanting "peaceful protest!" and "whose streets? our streets!".  I recognized a few activists in this group, which appeared to be spontaneous and essentially leaderless, and we joined them, travelling slowly north on Bay.  This group soon swelled to several hundred as most of crowd from King and Bay joined those of us on bikes.  At Queen we turned west, passing in front of Nathan Phillips Square.  Police stopped us on Queen St., for no particular reason, then relented and let the protest proceed west towards University and Spadina.

Up to this point we had seen nothing but peaceful protest and we had seen no abuses by police.  By this time (around 5:15) my kids were hungry, so we decided to turn around and head home, biking east on Queen. 

At around 5:45 we were passing a police staging area in a mainly residential east end area near Queen and Logan.  My kids asked to stop and look at some police horses parked in a row with their riders on a small side street.  While we were looking at the horses a small group (6-7 people) of animal rights activists began to quietly approach carrying home made signs and handing out pamphlets.  When they got within about 10 meters the mounted police, and other police on foot, began moving towards them.  Within seconds two of these quiet, peaceful activists were on the ground with their hands in cuffs behind their backs. 

A small crowd began to gather and few people quietly asked the police "why are these people being arrested?".  When they refused to answer I yelled (I can be very loud) "hey, why are these people being arrested?" At this point several of the mounted police swung around to face us and one approached me (still on my bike with my youngest child in the co-pilot seat behind me) very aggressively, coming close enough that I could have touched the horse.  He barked at me: "move it, or you'll be arrested too".  I'm a big guy and a seasoned activist who's not easily intimidated, but I really felt that my kids were in danger at that point, so we did move a few feet back, onto the sidewalk, but I continued to yell, demanding to know why people were being arrested for peacefully protesting and why they had threatened to arrest me.  Meanwhile the crowd had grown and many, clearly stunned by what they were witnessing, began chanting "this is what a police state looks like!"  Amazing, because these appeared to be simply local folks, not activists.

By this time my kids were quite frightened and I was really angry.  I knew we had to leave or risk having the kids see their father arrested, or worse.  We biked on and a few blocks later passed two frightened looking young women sitting cross-legged on the sidewalk with hands cuffed behind their backs, with several cops standing over them.  I stopped a few feet from them and asked "why are these people being arrested?".  A cop yelled at me "what you're doing is really stupid.  Do you want your kids to see you get arrested?"  I asked "Is that why these women have been arrested, because they asked you why people are being arrested for nothing?"  One of the young women in cuffs looked at me and softly said "thank you".

We carried on home, my blood boiling.  We got home around 7:00, just as the heavy rain started, and I turned on the tv and watched CP24, the local all news channel.  They showed mass arrests happening at Queen and Spadina and I realized that the large group we had been with earlier on Queen West was being arrested, along with lots of by-standers who were not even part of the peaceful protest.  I realized that what we had witnessed on our way home was going all over the city.  CP24 (hardly a left news source) reporters were expressing amazement at the scale and apparent randomness of the arrests, noting that hundreds of people, who had done nothing illegal, were left to stand in the rain in handcuffs for hours.

I see no connection whatsoever between what the Black Bloc and their fellow idiots did on Saturday and the massive police state crackdown of Sunday night.  I've never seen anything like this in my city, and I hope I never see it again. 

 

 

Papal Bull

Joey, amazing. Thanks for sharing that

humanity4all

I feel that what took place in Toronto this weekend is a sign of things to come! When the police can enter into someone's house and put a gun to their head without asking questions, then you know that we are experiencing what we have read in history books!

As I have commented elsewhere, I do not understand why people are perplexed at all this violence. Their country was founded on violence, with that violence being exported on a daily basis.People do not realise the violence in toronto is same violence that their system dishes out elsewhere on the planet.

I am sure that  these actions by the authorities will become common place once people begin to protest. If you never protest and you continue your lifestyle of consumption,going on vacations and  mowing your lawn, then you do not have to fear. 

What i find astonishing with all this, is that we are all paying taxes so we can get policed! The more I ponder our system and way of life, I continually realise that the peoples before the europeans were much more advanced and democratic. Oh well, the original peoples were here for over ten thousand years, it will be interesting to see how long the european way of doing things will last?

Bacchus

Im gonna try to be there

Krystalline Kraus Krystalline Kraus's picture

I'm covering it for rabble.ca on Twitter

@rabbleca

@krystalline_k

mahmud

Catchfire wrote:

There should be nationwide protests about this.

Indeed! Canada Day would be the ideal forum to "take back our Canada" with clear and precise demands for action (whether public inquiry, a royal commission or whatever). STained Canadian flags should be waved on July 1st with demands that the state do its laundry. 

writer writer's picture

Joey, thanks for that.

Sineed

I think most of you have heard what happened in my neighbourhood, when a young couple woke up at 4am on Saturday with cops pointing guns in their faces.  The cops arrested the man and held him in custody for an hour or so, handcuffed, before they released him.  It was a house divided into units, and the cops were looking for people in another apartment in the house.  

I biked past police HQ on my way home from work - the cops are out in force, and they don't look happy.  My advice would be to NOT bring young children to this (if I could make it, I'd bring my girls - they're twelve and fifteen, and adult sized).  But maybe leave the little ones at home.

Joey Ramone

I posted my experiences mainly because what I saw was far away from the mass arrests witnessed and reported on by many in the downtown core.  Given the timing, it appears to me that an order was issued by police brass sometime after 5:30 p.m. yesterday to begin mass arrests of peaceful protesters all over the city.  It does not appear to have been an isolated case of rogue cops in one location suddenly rounding people up.

Bacchus

Hmm Im bringing my 12yr old stepdaughter but the little Bacchane will not be going, much to OGs dismay Im sure Laughing

Cytizen H

BE CAREFUL!!! JUST HEARD THAT RIOT COPS ARE ALREADY THERE AND PICKING PEOPLE OFF!!!!!!! FORWARD WIDELY!!!!!

Cytizen H

people should absolutely still go! Just don't go alone, bring a camera if you can, be safe, look out for eachother. DOn't let them frighten us out of fighting for what's right!!!!!!

ss atrahasis

To everyone going, good luck, this is important. And stay safe.

remind remind's picture

why are you still here, one would think you would be there cytizenh

Cueball Cueball's picture

Good luck guys.

remind remind's picture

i second that, with you in spirit....be safe

skdadl

According to the [URL=http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/article/829854--hundreds-rally-outside-p... at least a thousand people are rallying at police HQ on College right now. College closed between Yonge and Bay.

Lard Tunderin Jeezus Lard Tunderin Jeezus's picture

Just back myself. I'd echo No Yards estimate of the turnout .... and add 400+ police to the count.

You had to walk a gauntlet of them on each end of the street, and even though the subway and pedestrian mall under College Park.

Oldgoat was there, with two kids in tow.

No Yards No Yards's picture

Just got back, was there at just before 5:30, and there was at several hundred protesters by then (when I left for the protest, about 20 minutes earlier, 1010 was reporting that there was "one protester"?) ... I left around 6:30 (my legs can't take standing on pavement anymore) and the whole block between Yonge and Bay was pretty well packed.

The cops were three deep in front of the police station and had the east end of the street (College and Yonge) blocked off with a line or two of riot police (they were letting people in and out though.

I got off at College subway stop and came up through the Mall area just south of College ... the underground area was crawling with riot police as well (groups of twenty or so sitting at tables in the food courts, in front of the coffee shops, standing in the connecting hallways.

Hard to tell standing in the crowd at street level, but I'd guess at least 1000, but wouldn't be surprised if there was much more that that.

 

skdadl

Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall

Humpty Dumpty had a great fall.

All the king's horses and all the king's men

Couldn't put Humpty Dumpty back together again.

No Yards No Yards's picture

Until somethng better comes along, here's my shaky, poor sound quality video of Judy's speech at the protest.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eiURTmNkMS0

Catchfire Catchfire's picture

I just sent this letter to the CBC ombudsman:

Quote:

RE: Labelling left-wing journalists "activists"

Vince Carlin
Ombudsman
CBC
P.O. Box 500, Station A
Toronto, Ontario M5W 1E6

28 June 2010

Dear Mr. Carlin,

This morning Pamela Wallin interviewed Jesse Rosenfeld (http://www.cbc.ca/video/#/News/ID=1532039797) and introduced him as a "blogger and activist," despite the fact that Mr. Rosenfeld has worked as a journalist both in Canada and internationally for several years. Mr. Rosenfeld objected to Ms. Wallin's characterization and responded "if you call left-wing critical journalism as activism then yes, I am an activist."

Additionally, in a photo blog of today's demonstration against police brutality during the G-20 protests (http://www.cbc.ca/canada/g20streetlevel/2010/06/g20-protests-continue.html), internationally acclaimed and bestselling author and journalist Naomi Klein was identified in a photo as an "activist." Is it currently CBC's policy to label leading left-wing journalists as "activists" and other diminutives? I wonder if CBC would stoop to call Senator Mike Duffy or your colleagues at Fox News "activists." I find this habit of the CBC's disrespectful and dishonest, and it represents an attempt to discredit these journalists and pre-emptively undermine their established and well-informed points of view. I demand that the CBC stop this incredibly unprofessional policy immediately.

Sincerely,

ss atrahasis

What the CBC has become is crying shame. It's a husk, with dimwits occupying the vast hollow. Even CBC radio has been on a downward arc.

oldgoat

Just got home.  Yeah, it was pretty packed between Yonge and Bay.  To be honest I couldn't hear much of the speeches. I was near some drummers who were actually pretty good, and was eavsdropping on the media types talking to eachother.  Some of them got pretty badly treated over the weekend.

I saw LTJ and Papal Bull, but missed all the others somehow.  Totally randomly and small-worldish, I ran into three people I had met in Philadelphia two weeks ago.  Also a couple of people from my work.

Went in to Fran's to use the bathroom, thus feeling obligated to buy a beer, and in that short time everyone buggered off down University.  A bit embarrasing, I left the place and absolutely everyone but the cops was gone.  "excuse me officer, I seem to have lost my mob"

Nice march up and down to city hall after we ran down Bay St. to catch up.  The cops seemed to be trying to behave themselves, but I was really keeping my antanae up.  Mainly because I had my kids with me, and even though they're both in university, they're still my kids, and we weren't there to be any kind of martyr for the cause.  Got to Queen's Park.  Totally pooped.  Went home. On the N side of the building were a lot of cops on horses, and more with full riot gear.  As we got up to Avenue Rd., a TTC bus filled with cops was turning toward the demonstration.

 

Best sign/placard of the event, witnessed at Queens Park...." Anyone up for scrabble after?"

 

Oh yeah, a bunch of the protesters on bicycles were getting together to ride down to the detention facilities on Eastern Ave.  I don't think the cops will be amused.  Good luck to them.

Unionist

Excellent, Catchfire. Marginalization takes many forms.

Sineed

Love the letter, Catchfire!

 

writer writer's picture

At Queen and University, someone was pulled out of the group. We stopped. Those of us closest to the back started to say, "Let him go!" Other demonstrators further along heard us, and came back.

We remained there, repeating the demand.

And they let him go.

We then continued along to City Hall. I had to leave soon after that.

Michelle

Great letter, Catchfire.  And Joey, thanks so much for sharing that.  Thugs thugs thugs!

Oh, and I don't know, maybe I'm bad at estimating crowds, but the entire street AND the entire sidewalk were packed like sardines, full of people, between Yonge and Bay. And the sidewalk dips into a very large open space in the middle of that block.  There's no way there were only a thousand people there.  I'd say thousands.

remind remind's picture

thank you all......great action writer...

Bacchus

Im back too, and it was interesting. Didnt see any of you at all but it was packed. I was on the west section of the demo so I got some pictures of Judy speaking and crowds. Saw a Tshirt I liked "with no power comes no responsibility" which made me chuckle.

 

My stepdaughter enjoyed her first protest and took a ton of pictures and sent them from her phone to her friends in Pittsburgh (home of a previous G20 summit)

Ripple

Thank you for sharing your story, Joey.  What must go through a cop's mind, I wonder, as he threatens to arrest a father in front of his kids - orders or no.  I hope your kids are doing ok.

Papal Bull

writer wrote:

At Queen and University, someone was pulled out of the group. We stopped. Those of us closest to the back started to say, "Let him go!" Other demonstrators further along heard us, and came back.

We remained there, repeating the demand.

And they let him go.

 

Yeah, I was right in the middle of the group. It must have been something for the police to see several thousand people turn their gaze on them.

 

Either way, it was spectacular. It was energizing. I of course bumped into OG and the goatlings. I watched Michelle's FB updates fairly closely! I also spoke with quite a few people were there on the weekend and dealt with some serious police shit.

 

But I have to say, the entire time...It was weird. I've never looked at a cop and only seen a cop. I always used to see a working person. I'd look around and see cops everywhere. Cordoning it off. When we were at City Hall, I was in another world. I'd look around and see glass and big blue fences holding us in. Cops on all sides. When we got to Queen's Park, it was worse. I saw a line of cops on the foot of the legislature. I looked back and saw them surrounding us to the west and the south. I couldn't see east. I just suddenly felt tense. I eventually relaxed when I thought 'well, if they've not started shit yet...they won't.' But still. I didn't see a working person wearing a uniform. I just saw a uniform. Someone. Something. Something that was being paid to be out there to, at the crackle of a radio, turn a baton on me. Something out there to hurt my friends. To hurt my family. It felt like all the cordial encounters with police in the past had melted away. It was just cops. This sound stupid and potentially put-down-ish, but as a white straight (and ostensibly to my grandma - good catholic) male...I'd never felt so vulnerable and threatened before. I'd never looked at a cop and thought 'that person is out to hurt me'. See the faces all blend together.

What really struck home for me was seeing some of the same cops that were on videos this weekend committing crimes and still walking free. What really struck me was a cop and her buddies sitting at Union joking about what they did this weekend. No remorse. Nothing.

God help us.

remind remind's picture

welcome to the world of the non-white male, papal bull...that is how  many 'others' feel all the time and everytime they see a cop.

 

That is why solidarity is so important, "as first they came for.......and then there was no one left to save me"

 

 

Frustrated Mess Frustrated Mess's picture

Papal Bull wrote:

Yeah, I was right in the middle of the group. It must have been something for the police to see several thousand people turn their gaze on them.

Either way, it was spectacular. It was energizing. I of course bumped into OG and the goatlings. I watched Michelle's FB updates fairly closely! I also spoke with quite a few people were there on the weekend and dealt with some serious police shit.

But I have to say, the entire time...It was weird. I've never looked at a cop and only seen a cop. I always used to see a working person. I'd look around and see cops everywhere. Cordoning it off. When we were at City Hall, I was in another world. I'd look around and see glass and big blue fences holding us in. Cops on all sides. When we got to Queen's Park, it was worse. I saw a line of cops on the foot of the legislature. I looked back and saw them surrounding us to the west and the south. I couldn't see east. I just suddenly felt tense. I eventually relaxed when I thought 'well, if they've not started shit yet...they won't.' But still. I didn't see a working person wearing a uniform. I just saw a uniform. Someone. Something. Something that was being paid to be out there to, at the crackle of a radio, turn a baton on me. Something out there to hurt my friends. To hurt my family. It felt like all the cordial encounters with police in the past had melted away. It was just cops. This sound stupid and potentially put-down-ish, but as a white straight (and ostensibly to my grandma - good catholic) male...I'd never felt so vulnerable and threatened before. I'd never looked at a cop and thought 'that person is out to hurt me'. See the faces all blend together.

What really struck home for me was seeing some of the same cops that were on videos this weekend committing crimes and still walking free. What really struck me was a cop and her buddies sitting at Union joking about what they did this weekend. No remorse. Nothing.

God help us.

Indeed.

Cytizen H

Just got home from this. Absolutely beautiful. Just stunning. I'd say at least 2500 people. SO peaceful. Amazing energy. Almost everyone who was in my cage at the prison was there. We are not afraid. THe support was amazing. Afterwards I got spooked by the mounted police gearing up at the North of the Legislature building. Took off with a friend. Someone during the march came up to me and told me that a police officer had pointed at me and said "that guy in the blue checkered shirt....". Felt pretty scared. I had been on the news a lot this weekend, and hanging out with some of the higher profile organizers. A lot of my friends were getting picked off on the streets by plainclothes all week... me and my friend ducked into a bar, got some food and beer. Apparently my revolution also includes drinking?

takeitslowly

Please allow me to say what I have to say, I used to believe in the white male privilege concept and I still think the theory has merits, but I want to talk about how that kind of talk might be counterproductive to our causes.(please note, i am Chinese and a trans female and i have absofuckingultely witnessed white male privilege)

Are you sure it is a straight white male experience to not be intimidated by the police, my boyfriend is a straight white male who grew up in a small town and he was treated like crap by the police all the time. The kind of white male privilege, which I can sympathize with, is the exact type of discourse that alienates the very people you want to be in solidarity with. Alot of the poor white people resent being represented by certain white people who speak with academic terms like white privilage , call it bitterness, resentment, or what not, but i think there would be a better chance of winning the support of working class if we tried to use or at least understand their languages, just my opinons. I am not telling anybody to do anything, i dont wish to nor have the power to.

And i totally supprot all the peaceful protestors and stand against the pigs who grossly violated your rights. It is disgusting. I wish i could be there to show support but i had to work at a call centre in the evening.

remind remind's picture

i am working class and so is my partner.....

 

...if your partner is from a small town, I will bet dollars to doughnuts he was from the 'wrong side of the tracks', and it had nothing to do with "working class" roots per se...

 

for example, there is  several white guys is this small town who sorta have no white male  privilege, but that is not because they are NOT "working class" they  are the sons of single mothers.

 

White male privilege is an issue, and I am fucking tired of perople saying "we can't alienate them",  we sure as hell can if they are not allies,  and if the majority were, women's equity would have long ago been reached.

 

Having said that, empathy is what I was meaning, for those who do not know what it is like to live in fear of the copps all the time.

takeitslowly

remind wrote:

i am working class and so is my partner.....

 

...if your partner is from a small town I will bet dollars to doughnuts he was from the 'wrong side of the tracks', and it had nothing to do with "working class" roots per se...

 

there is  several white guys is this small town who have no white man's  priovilege, but that is because they are NOT "working class" and are the sons of single mothers.

 

he was also raised by his single mother and also dirt poor, and i mean, government housing poor. Anyways, i am not saying he represents any angry white poor male voting bloc i am not privy of that information- its just something i am throwing out there for discussion sake.

remind remind's picture

exactly my point takeitslowly, and I knew it, as class placement plays its role, especially in small towns, moreover the "higher placed  white boys will blame the lower placed ones, they purposefully hang out with, when they get into "trouble".

Hence the "lower class" boys get the 'rap sheet'  and all the police attention.

 

BTW I edited my post you quoted for clarity...and spelling

observer521

A quick follow up to show the contrast, one day later, same location, same protesters, different police tactics. They were obviously ordered NOT to attack citizens today.
So no problems at all. None.

Monday June 28, 2010, rally at police station, College St.

 Here is something amazing.

The march on Mon June 28, went down University with no problems at the US embassy at all. (unlike the days before when it was surrounded literally with hundreds of riot cops with 4 ft long clubs, who did nothing but provoke anxiety and aggression).

But later it basically spontaneously went into the City Hall area from Queen. I was right at the front, and it was pretty spontaneous, people were walking there, standing, and then started to go into this tiny little entrance for the Jazz Fest.

Somehow, several thousand people managed to march into a tiny little entrance of the Jazz Fest, right past tables with trinkets. It appears that literally not one trinket was even bumped over by accident, by hundreds of people with bicycles, and thousands walking!

Later on Monday June 28, at Queens Park there were probably more than twice the numbers of people than before, and nothing happened, because the police were given new "orders" not to attack people. (of course all the riot cops were still there, but were hidden by Ryerson and other areas).

The days before, even less people at Queens Park, and the police called in a literal army of full-power riot police, horses, and then they attacked people constantly, and provoked them.

Today, they left people alone, and nothing happened. Why? Guess what, if the police had sent 400 riot police to Queens Park again today, and attacked with horses, the same thing would have happened, as people don't want to be attacked.

Instead, the police were ordered to be present a heavy, but standard police presence, and no one was provoked. It ain't rocket science.

Some people argued with the police about what happened on the weekend, and the police, humanly, argued back a bit. There was some communication, not a big drama either way. But some local communication.

But when the full-power riot squad attacks a peaceful protest, they provoke people to resist. Give people some space, and let them be calm, and nothing usually happens. (not always of course).

Also, the head of "security" on CBC news, showed that G20 "security" was run out of a room in Barrie Ontario on computer screens!

No wonder the police leaders had no idea of what was really going on on the street, and were given such incompetent and ridiculous "orders" in their ear-pieces.

Some guy watching a TV screen in Barrie, is moving a few riot squads around like a chess game, and ordering them to attack! To him its a video game.

Regardless, these Robocop remote-control police tactics have to end forever. Their job is maintain the peace, not to attack people and create riots! There is no question, the police attacks created  the rioting, except when the bb-vandals ran down Queen St from Spadina. I was there, I saw those few vandals plan something, and then run down Queen, that was unprovoked.

That is when the police should have stopped them. But as proven, they let the vandalism run for miles and miles, for over 2 hours, 3:30-5:30. Too late, but of course that was part of the police plan, let them run amok, then come down with an army of riot police. That justifies the expenses.

http://www.rabble.ca/news/2010/06/g20-police-let-rioters-run-amok-and-then-struck-back-hard-all-activists

Tonight, I even spoke with the head of police security right in front of the police station, as the rally gathered. I asked him why there were no police on Yonge for so many hours, as the few dozens vandals ran around. He said all his officers were "deployed" and that is why Yonge St was left unprotected for hours. Can you believe that, when they had thousands and thousands of them, no where to be seen, behind some fence.

I asked him why it took so long. He said they could not get around. I told him I could walk anywhere in minutes.

He actually said I personally should have arrested the vandals, as a citizen. This is the attitude of the head of police security, right in front of the police station for the protest today. That is his plan and attitude, let the citizens arrest vandals.

What a joke. They should have moved to contain any vandalism right away, not leave the city core. The only rational conclusion is that they police bosses decided to let the vandals trash downtown, to keep them away from their fence, and to justify their expenses.

As N. Klein said tonight, they send media releases out as the police car was burning, saying that justified their billions spent. The fact is they let it burn forever, so everyone could get a photo of it.

The police also attacked the crowds with full knowledge that the attack would provoke the crowd further. Obviously, the police big-wigs wanted riots to justify all the money they got, so they provoked the crowds. (except for the first attack by the bb-vandals on Queen).

The bottom line is it was either a plan to hijack lawful rights to protest, or absolute incompetence by the police bosses, or both.

Thanks goodness the citizens marched tonight, and nothing happened at all. It actually shows that the aggressive Robocop police attacks are the thing which can create a riot. Police power must be controlled, and kept in check.

It was very important to have that spontaneous walk through the city, as a peaceful protest. Its the overkill riot-police, and the police attacks on citizens, that can spark people into self-defense aggression.

Of course the police experts know this, that is their business. Its the police bosses, the guys who ordered the police to stay away from Yonge St for more than 2 hours, they are to blame. They are also to blame for later sending in a riot-army to attack citizens. They provoked all of it.

Again, today was a case-study. Same places, same people, different result. What was different? The police did not attack people with an army of riot police.

If the police would have attacked again today, with the riot police and horses, the same thing would have happened, in terms of a long stand-off, and the rest of it.

But the police were ordered to stand-back, I heard the orders being given, to NOT form lines, to stand back casually, and lay-off.

What is the conclusion? The entire script of attacking the citizens with an army of riot police to provoke riots was planned. On top of that, there were horrible incompetence in the orders given to police, to attack blindly.

The reality is that most of the protests on the weekend could have been like today, angry, loud, but peaceful, if the police would have backed off properly. But no, the police did 2 tactics...

- zero police for miles and hours

- an army of riot police attack people.

They decided against using appropriate middle-power crowd management techniques, like they did today. That is the only rational conclusion. The police planners, with some senior politicos wanted a bunch of riots, so they made it happen.

The amazing thing about the rally/walk/protest tonight, is that there really wasn't a "leader" at the front. Sure, there were a few folks trying to keep things rolling, but it was a geniune peaceful civil rights march, the right to not get arrested for no cause, and/or beaten for walking the streets.

Whoever is behind this attempt to increase police powers, have to be stopped, before they take it to the next level. 

I was only a citizen oberver the last few days, as TO is my home. But after the outrageous police abuses, and the terrible/incompetent police tactics that must have been a deliberate plan to create riots, I made the choice today to stand up for the most basic right of a citizen.

As a side-bar, the regular police were also propagandized for months about the "violent agitators" that were walking the streets. They were also propagandized all weekend through their ear-pieces with false information, and had to follow orders. So the police brass not only dehumanized the public, they also dehumanized their own officers, as each officer had to follow orders from the ear-piece, and not exercise common sense.

I saw the peaceful protestors down by Commerce Court on late Sat night, they were the same type of people as today, basically. I left that group of protestors, and went east, and saw all these riot police getting dressed as they got out of the vans. There were rushed, yelling at eachother, and very tense and even afraid. Their ear-pieces were telling them that a huge band of maniacs were coming to attack them. Meanwhile, the protestors were the peaceful group Steve Paikin was with.

So its the police brass in Barrie watching a video screen, or in a helicopter, telling cops they are being attacked by a mob of killers. Meanwhile, the group is a tame group of unarmed citizens.

The police tactics used were either the worst tactics one could imagine through gross incompetence, or the police brass wanted to provoke the city into a lockdown. Rational thinking concludes the police brass planned out the tactics to do exactly what they did, as that is good busine$$ for them.

(a few more comments here)

http://www.rabble.ca/blogs/bloggers/judes/2010/06/toronto-burning-or-it
http://www.rabble.ca/news/2010/06/g20-police-let-rioters-run-amok-and-then-struck-back-hard-all-activists

Doug

I like this graph from the Globe and Mail which helps put what went on during the G20 into some historical perspective:

 

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