Monday 4 April 2011

stalwart police, standing with the people

throwing petrol bombs and starting riots.
If you want to start a riot, call the police. If you want 'rioters' to kill people effectively... what do you think?

In Greece, 2 people were killed in the Crisis riots, making Greeks look bloodthirsty.
Most believe that the police or spies did it.
Now, in London:

You would think that the budget cuts which are rumoured to be the excuse for cutting 1000 police in London alone, would cause the Force to be on the side of the protesters, not the government.
Naturally, the police would not want to destroy their own righteous union movement, or their own city?
wrong!
MY MESSAGE TO THE POLICE:


In fact, the police here, a group that seems rather sleepy, full of do-nothing paper-pushers, is actually big
on SPYING!
You wanna see government funding, check the millions that go into 'spooking'.
They've had spies in many green groups, for years. Not only have they been taking notes, but they've been pushing those groups to break the law, so that the REAL police could arrest them.

-Costick67 ~(8^P
checkitout:
in this video, at 5:48 an undercover police officer, after starting the riot, crosses police lines,
because he showed his police ID.

[the BBC may be sell-outs to the government, but they did follow this spy very well. Bravo!]
2
http://www.versobooks.com/blogs/444-police-stand-by-as-colleagues-in-plain-clothes-break-windows
Police Stand By As Colleagues in Plain Clothes Break Windows
By Dan Hind / 28 March 2011
At 5.54 of this BBC footage, an 'anarchist' shows his pass to police and moves through the lines.
We are already seeing the first indications that plain clothes officers were moving between the violent protesters and the police at Saturday's demonstration. The police have infiltrated anarchist and revolutionary communist groups for decades.
One undercover officer, Mark Kennedy, has spoken at length about his work. Those he targeted have complained that he was inciting them to be more violent:
They allege that he also made visits to Dublin to help train protesters and encouraged other activists to attack the police. This raises further questions about his role as an undercover officer and backs up suggestions he acted as an agent provocateur. [from the Guardian, emphasis added]
The police don't simply infiltrate these groups to gather information about them, they seek to shape their dynamics. They encourage splits and they promote those whose agenda suits their own. They endeavour always to have the extra-parliamentary left they want, the kind of left that can be relied on to distract attention from issues of substance and matters of general concern....
3
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/mar/26/sixth-police-spy-unmasked
Sixth police spy in protest movement unmasked
Mark Kennedy, the first infiltrator to be exposed, says he may sue Scotland Yard for causing post-traumatic stress disorder
* Simon Hattenstone Rob Evans and Paul Lewis
* guardian.co.uk, Saturday 26 March 2011
A sixth police officer has been unmasked as an undercover spy in the protest movement as it emerged that Mark Kennedy, who spent seven years posing as an environmental activist, is considering suing Scotland Yard.

In an interview with the Guardian Weekend magazine, Kennedy, who went "rogue" and offered to help environmental campaigners accused of planning to break into a power station, says he has suffered severe post-traumatic stress disorder and has been suicidal. His lawyers have been instructed to consider legal action against the police.

The latest officer was reported to have been embedded in an anti-capitalist group for four years under the fake name of Simon Wellings. Newsnight on BBC2 reported that his true identity was discovered through a police blunder.....