G-20: Luke Interrupts NBC's Brian Williams and faces criticism

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C-nctIu7Phg

Here's what it looked like from the news broadcast:


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And of course Luke got arrested...

Legal defense funds are now desperately needed for We Are Change reporters:

While reporting from the G20 Summit in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania this 24-25th of September, We Are Change were specifically targeted during their efforts to report accurately while observing the wrong doings of both police and provocateurs whose actions were not only highly illegal but immoral and cancerous to a free society.

Luke Rudkowski and Lee of We Are Change Chicago were specifically targeted and sent to state prison meanwhile the hundreds of protesters were released and not charged. They are facing charges of disordely conduct and failure to disperse, you will see soon the entire video of the arrest.

Please donate what you can and help the fight for the 1st amendment of the United States Constitution... more.

Go Luke!

Thanks Luke for keepin it real and calling out the media!

Can't wait until we are together in Sydney doing the same thing!

www.thehardevidence.com

Just try to stay out of gaol, if possible :)

Kind regards John

9/11 24/7 UNTIL JUSTICE!!
www.truthaction.org.au

I remember this well Thursday 9/24 6pm NBC news! All grins!

Thursday 9/24 at 5:32pm CST - The Dallas bomb incident hit the news on local Dallas Fox 4. I saw it come up on the internet. I went to the TV to see if NBC 6pm national news would report it. Coincidently, NBC was making a big deal about terrorists while covering the G-20, but they had no mention of the Dallas bomb threat. I was all grins as I overheard the background protest, then later saw Luke briefly. http://www.911blogger.com/node/21450#comment-217818

I hate Brian Williams

I wrote him a letter and told him so..........

Best MSM Show

That was the best MSM news show I have seen in a long time. Wish they were all that informative! Good work.

It's no laughing matter but..........

I couldn't stop myself.............Nice work Luke!

Brian Williams:

"That's our broadcast for this evening. On behalf of our protester will the bullhorn, I'm Brian Williams, thank you and good night."

Priceless!

great job Luke!

It is funny how these tv faces with empty heads just smile and keep selling the soap.

It is not funny that Luke and others were arrested and treated like shit in captivity.

Courage

under Fire.

Constitutional Courage.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The CONSTITUTION is NOT going to "collapse" into pulverized dust no matter how much thermate/explosives or planes they throw at it

We're paying $$ for this exhibition of maximum security paranoia

What an incredible quantity of law enforcement resources, time and personnel which could be put to real use in catching real criminals. Here, these law enforcement resources are being used to protect and guard international arch-criminals from the dire threat of exposure to free speech and expression.

...

"Good evening from Pittsburgh, PA, one of the great American cities, but unfortunately for the people who live and work here it has been virtually emptied out so that Pittsburgh can host the G-20 Summit of leaders from around the world. The downtown section of this city is desolate. No people, not a car, or truck, or bus, or a boat, or a plane overhead. Just police, troops with humvees and automatic weapons watching over empty streets. This, is big event security in our

"Post-9/11 Age."


Do these people deserve to know how and why their loved ones were murdered? Do we deserve to know how and why 9/11 happened?

Yes,

it's hearing shit like that that keeps my fire going too.

Notice Matt Taibbi?

He's the Shill that Alternet put up against David Ray Griffin to negate everything DRG brought up.
He was there in that interview to insult and confuse the issues in the ONLY information in eight years that Alternet ever had on 9/11.
I think it was done solely so that Atlernet could say, yes, they have had articles about 9/11.
But it was a setup. Matt was there to confuse each subject, as each subject was not given enough time to be thoroughly discussed by DRG.

Alternet is run, in part, by Joshua Holland, and I guess, Matt Taibbi. Joshua is a senior editor and writer. He has written insulting pieces about 9/11 truth. It is my idea that he brought Matt in to discredit David Ray Griffin, once and for all.

Alternet is supported by some big foundations who, at their head, are part of the elite banking, corporate Kissinger type G-20 types.
It must support an anti 9/11 truther stance.

Mike vs. Matt.

Mike Taibbi is working for NBC. His son Matt has written for Rolling Stone, been on Bill Maher's show etc. Neither of them are trustworthy in my opinion.

Matt Taibbi

is an insult to the youth culture that Rolling Stone represents because the youth understand the 9/11 issue and the new world order more than anyone. My guess is that this has isolated much of their readership or lost them altogether.

http://911truthburn.blogspot.

http://911truthburn.blogspot.com

Puke Guns for Protesters.....They kinda tipped their hand in Pittsburgh wouldn't ya say????

Robocops Come To Pittsburgh

No longer the stuff of disturbing futuristic fantasies, an arsenal of “crowd control munitions,” including one that reportedly made its debut in the U.S., was deployed with a massive, overpowering police presence in Pittsburgh during last week’s G-20 protests.

Nearly 200 arrests were made and civil liberties groups charged the many thousands of police (most transported on Port Authority buses displaying “PITTSBURGH WELCOMES THE WORLD”), from as far away as Arizona and Florida with overreacting…and they had plenty of weaponry with which to do it.

Bean bags fired from shotguns, CS (tear) gas, OC (Oleoresin Capsicum) spray, flash-bang grenades, batons and, according to local news reports, for the first time on the streets of America, the Long Range Acoustic Device (LRAD).

Mounted in the turret of an Armored Personnel Carrier (APC), I saw the LRAD in action twice in the area of 25th, Penn and Liberty Streets of Lawrenceville, an old Pittsburgh neighborhood. Blasting a shrill, piercing noise like a high-pitched police siren on steroids, it quickly swept streets and sidewalks of pedestrians, merchants and journalists and drove residents into their homes, but in neither case were any demonstrators present. The APC, oversized and sinister for a city street, together with lines of police in full riot gear looking like darkly threatening Michelin Men, made for a scene out of a movie you didn’t want to be in.

As intimidating as this massive show of armed force and technology was, the good burghers of Pittsburgh and their fellow citizens in the Land of the Brave and Home of the Free ain’t seen nothin’ yet. Tear gas and pepper spray are nothing to sniff at and, indeed, have proven fatal a surprising number of times, but they have now become the old standbys compared to the list below that’s already at or coming soon to a police station or National Guard headquarters near you. Proving that “what goes around, comes around,” some of the new Property Protection Devices were developed by a network of federally-funded, university-based research institutes like one in Pittsburgh itself, Penn State’s Institute for Non-Lethal Defense Technologies.

· Raytheon Corp.'s Active Denial System, designed for crowd control in combat zones, uses an energy beam to induce an intolerable heating sensation, like a hot iron placed on the skin. It is effective beyond the range of small arms, in excess of 400 meters. Company officials have been advised they could expand the market by selling a smaller, tripod-mounted version for police forces.

· M5 Modular Crowd Control Munition, with a range of 30 meters "is similar in operation to a claymore mine, but it delivers...a strong, nonpenetrating blow to the body with multiple sub-munitions (600 rubber balls)."

· Long Range Acoustic Device or "The Scream," is a powerful megaphone the size of a satellite dish that can emit sound "50 times greater than the human threshold for pain" at close range, causing permanent hearing damage. The L.A. Times wrote U.S. Marines in Iraq used it in 2004. It can deliver recorded warnings in Arabic and, on command, emit a piercing tone..."[For] most people, even if they plug their ears, [the device] will produce the equivalent of an instant migraine," says Woody Norris, chairman of American Technology Corp., the San Diego firm that produces the weapon. "It will knock [some people] on their knees." CBS News reported in 2005 that the Israeli Army first used the device in the field to break up a protest against Israel's separation wall. "Protesters covered their ears and grabbed their heads, overcome by dizziness and nausea, after the vehicle-mounted device began sending out bursts of audible, but not loud, sound at intervals of about 10 seconds...A military official said the device emits a special frequency that targets the inner ear."

· In "Non-lethal Technologies: An Overview," Lewer and Davison describe a lengthy catalog of new weaponry including the "Directed Stick Radiator," a hand-held system based on the same technology as The Scream. "It fires high intensity ‘sonic bullets' or pulses of sound between 125-150db for a second or two. Such a weapon could, when fully developed, have the capacity to knock people off their feet."

· The Penn State facility is testing a "Distributed Sound and Light Array Debilitator" a.k.a. the "puke ray." The colors and rhythm of light are absorbed by the retina and disorient the brain, blinding the victim for several seconds. In conjunction with disturbing sounds it can make the person stumble or feel nauseated. Foreign Policy in Focus reports that the Department of Homeland Security, with $1 million invested for testing the device, hopes to see it "in the hands of thousands of policemen, border agents and National Guardsmen" by 2010.

· Spider silk is cited in the University of Bradford’s Non-Lethal Weapons Research Project, Report #4 (pg. 20) as an up-and-comer. “A research collaboration between the University of New Hampshire and the U.S. Army Natick Research, Development and Engineering Center is looking into the use of spider silk as a non-lethal ‘entanglement’ material for disabling people. They have developed a method for producing recombinant spider silk protein using E. coli and are trying to develop methods to produce large quantities of these fibres.”

· New Scientist reports that the (I'm not making this up) Inertial Capacitive Incapacitator (ICI), developed by the Physical Optics Corporation of Torrance, California, uses a thin-film storage device charged during manufacture that only discharges when it strikes the target. It can be incorporated into a ring-shaped aerofoil and fired from a standard grenade launcher at low velocity, while still maintaining a flat trajectory for maximum accuracy.

· Aiming beyond Tasers, the Homeland Security Advanced Research Projects Agency, (FY 2009 budget: $1B) the domestic equivalent of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), plans to develop wireless weapons effective over greater distances, such as in an auditorium or sports stadium, or on a city street. One such device, the Piezer, uses piezoelectric crystals that produce voltage when they are compressed. A 12-gauge shotgun fires the crystals, stunning the target with an electric shock on impact. Lynntech of College Station, Texas, is developing a projectile Taser that can be fired from a shotgun or 40-mm grenade launcher to increase greatly the weapon's current range of seven meters.

· "Off the Rocker and On the Floor: Continued Development of Biochemical Incapacitating Weapons," a report by the Bradford Disarmament Research Centre revealed that in 1992, the National Institute of Justice contracted with Lawrence Livermore National Lab to review clinical anesthetics for use by special ops military forces and police. LLNL concluded the best option was an opioid, like fentanyl, effective at very low doses compared to morphine. Combined with a patch soaked in DMSO (dimethylsufoxide, a solvent) and fired from an air rifle, fentanyl could be delivered to the skin even through light clothing. Another recommended application for the drug was mixed with fine powder and dispersed as smoke.

· After upgrades, the infamous "Puff the Magic Dragon" gunship from the Vietnam War is now the AC-130. "Non-Lethal Weaponry: Applications to AC-130 Gunships," observes that "With the increasing involvement of US military in operations other than war..." the AC-130 "would provide commanders a full range of non-lethal weaponry from an airborne platform which was not previously available to them." The paper concludes in part that "As the use of non-lethal weapons increases and it becomes valid and acceptable, more options will become available."

· Prozac and Zoloft are two of over 100 pharmaceuticals identified by the Penn State College of Medicine and the university's Applied Research Lab for further study as "non-lethal calmatives." These Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs), noted the Penn State study, "...are found to be highly effective for numerous behavioral disturbances encountered in situations where a deployment of a non-lethal technique must be considered. This class of pharmaceutical agents also continues to be under intense development by the pharmaceutical industry...New compounds under development (WO 09500194) are being designed with a faster onset of action. Drug development is continuing at a rapid rate in this area due to the large market for the treatment of depression (15 million individuals in North America)...It is likely that an SSRI agent can be identified in the near future that will feature a rapid rate of onset."

In Pittsburgh last week, an enormously expensive show of police and weaponry, intended for “security” of the G20 delegates, simultaneously shut workers out of downtown jobs for two days, forced gasping students and residents back into their dormitories and homes, and turned journalists’ press passes into quaint, obsolete reminders of a bygone time.

Most significant of all, however, was what Witold Walczak, legal director of the Pennsylvania ACLU, told the Associated Press: “It's not just intimidation, it's disruption and in some cases outright prevention of peaceful protesters being able to get their message out.”

Mike Ferner is a writer from Ohio and president of Veterans For Peace

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