Get Ready for the G 20- TORONTO

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G20 Toronto ? Provocateurs, Metal Cages and the Global Elite

G20 Toronto ? Provocateurs, Metal Cages and the Global Elite

G20 Toronto ? Provocateurs, Metal Cages and the Global Elite

Press for Truth
June 22, 2010

With just one week left until the international banksters invade Toronto I went downtown with PFT members Steven Davies and Bryan Law to document all the activity surrounding the up and coming G20 summit. Three meter high metal fences surround the inner security perimeter known as ?the red zone? and thousands of police have already taken to the streets in an unprecedented show of force.

While reporting near the CN tower I was surrounded by police who wanted to know who I was and what I was doing. I took the opportunity to inform them about our freedom of speech, freedom of the press, agent provocateurs and the difference between the mainstream media and Press For Truth. They eventually backed off (a few feet) and we continued our report.

For more information as the situation develops stay tuned to Press For Truth for our extensive coverage of the G8 and G20 summits.


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G20 Protesters Will Face Water Cannon

G20 Protesters Will Face Water Cannon

G20 Protesters Will Face Water Cannon
Kurt Nimmo

Infowars.com
June 21, 2010

?Police have added a water cannon to their arsenal as they step up security ahead of this week?s G20 summit in Toronto,? reports the Globe and Mail. ?Provincial police Const. Michelle Murphy of the Integrated Security Unit says the water projection system will be used to control large crowds if there are riots. Activists have promised to be out in force to protest the two-day summit of world leaders that starts Friday.?


In other words, if police provocateur ?anarchists? break the windows at banks and McDonalds ? as they invariably do at globalist confabs ? the cops will unleash water cannons on peaceful demonstrators.

People can walk away from an encounter with a water cannon with serious internal injuries such as a ruptured spleen. If such injuries are ignored, death could occur later. The high pressure modern water cannons can achieve pressure of up to 30 bar which can result in broken bones, according to Wikipedia.

The presence of the media at riots has had a significant impact on water cannon use. There is much pressure on police departments to avoid bad publicity, and water cannons often play badly in the press. It is considered that this is a likely reason that they are not used more often in countries with a free press.

Apparently that is not a concern in the modern Canadian police state.

Toronto?s finest will not wait until the globalists gather to decide how to implement world government. ?Toronto?s police chief has said 5,100 officers have been assigned to keep the city safe as the weekend summit nears. There was also a visible increase in the number of uniformed police officers on downtown streets over the weekend.?
 

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G20 Brings The Green Zone To Toronto

G20 Brings The Green Zone To Toronto

G20 Brings The Green Zone To Toronto

The Excavator
June 21, 2010

Excessively armed thugs parading through the streets, military checkpoints at traffic lights, police helicopters hovering over the city, a long chain-link fence around the center of downtown, secret snipers on rooftops, urban warfare weapons, bomb-sniffing dogs, sound canons; this is not the sight of the infamous Green Zone in blood-drenched Baghdad, but a picture of what downtown Toronto will look like this weekend when the city hosts the world?s leading heads of states, and government officials.

They are in Toronto for the G20 conference, where they plan to discuss a global economic order, and new austerity measures for heavily indebted nations. It is expected that U.S. President Barack Obama will fearmonger about Iran?s nuclear capabilities and motives, just as he did at the last G20 meeting that took place in Pittsburgh in September, 2009.

The heavy presence of ground troops on the streets are usually seen in war-torn countries, occupied countries, or countries that are on the edge of a violent revolution, so it has come as an unwelcome surprise to many Canadians that the downtown core of its major city, known for its safety and cleanliness, is being transformed into a military fortress to serve the world?s leading politicians.
resistg20.jpg

New austerity measures for heavily indebted nations will be discussed at the Toronto G20.

The billion-dollar expense for all the security gear and gadgets points to a burgeoning police state. Although most people think nothing of it, they know deep down that only leaders who conspire against the people?s interests require the protection of a thousand bodyguards, motorcades, and helicopters. The most famous assassination of the President of the United States was not done by a citizen, but by the C.I.A. and the U.S. National Security apparatus, whose fingerprints all over the current push towards Homeland Security in North America.

Members of the huge military apparatus at the conference claim that their chief role is to ?protect the public? but that begs the question, do unpopular world leaders represent the will of the people? Whatever modern poll you look at, and in whatever Western country, the answer is no.

Ahead of protests, the Toronto police visited the homes of some activists, and warned them against protesting. The Toronto Sun reports:
Protestors allege they are being targeted for questioning or sometimes detained by police for helping to organize G8 and G20 demonstrations.Some protestors even claimed the immigration status of some members, or their families, are being threatened by police if they take part in demonstrations.

The actions by the G20?s Integrated Security Unit are reminiscent of the crackdown on protest activities by security forces at the Republican National Convention in St. Paul in 2008. The highly militarized atmosphere is meant to intimidate citizens, and make them avoid future public demonstrations. The establishment of ?security zones? and ?free speech zones? is another reminder that people?s political will are denied by politicians and the police in modern Western democracies.

Years from now, violent rebellion against the New World Order may be a fact of Western life. But in today?s world it is hard to justify the government?s fears of violence in Toronto. Unlike Baghdad, Toronto is not under occupation, and there is no history of rebels violently attacking police officers, and innocent people. Exaggerations about G20?s security have reached the point that NORAD?s commander, U.S. Admiral James Winnefeld, offered America?s military assistance. The idea of using NORAD?s help at a civil protest is despotic, and at the same time, stupid. Does the Canadian government expect that Iran is going to fire nuclear missiles at the Blue Jays stadium?

The whole cult about security began when politicians declared they will ?get tough on crime,? but it really took off after the terrorist attacks on 9/11. That tragedy is now viewed by a wide number of people around the world as the false-flag of the ages. Many Canadians are well aware that the greatest threat of terrorism to the public does not come from Muslim radicals, or anti-government protesters, but from Western intelligence agencies like the CIA, MI6, and Mossad.
Despite the mass political awakening, it is too soon to say whether the majority of people in North America fully realize that the end of their way of life begins with military barricades, and riot police. Although Toronto?s Green Zone will only be maintained for a short weekend, the new guidelines for security will be aggressively enforced in the future at the slightest notice of a protest, or any kind of civil unrest.
People can still afford to make fun of all the police pageantry at the G20, but they will soon regret that they did not immediately see military barricades, and riot police, as a direct harm to their security, freedom, and overall well-being. What will transpire at the G20 from June 26 to 27 are the clear manifestations of a police state that rules in the interests of an entrenched global elite.

If a visitor from Baghdad saw Toronto on June 26- 27, 2010 for the first and last time in his life, he would conclude that the city is occupied, and that the governing powers are thuggish. Iraqis know that the biggest criminals and terrorists are not their neighbors, but the military occupiers in the Green Zone. The people of Canada, America, and the West must learn that lesson too. And fast.

In the upcoming weekend, it would be best if the well-mannered citizens, and proud rebels of Toronto, decided to ignore the World Cup of politics. Instead of getting bombarded by LRAD sound weapons in the streets, they should stay inside, watch the World Cup of football, and get bombarded by another sound weapon, the Vuvuzela.
 

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Toronto Police Purchased 4 "Sound Cannons" For G20: Report

Toronto Police Purchased 4 "Sound Cannons" For G20: Report

Toronto Police Purchased 4 "Sound Cannons" For G20: Report

The near $1 billion price tag for the upcoming G8 and G20 summits may have your head spinning, but crowd control devices acquired by Toronto Police will have you covering your ears.

According to a report in the Toronto Star, authorities purchased four long range acoustic devices, or L-RADs, also known as sound cannons, for the upcoming G20 summit June 26th and 27th.

Police said the devices will likely be used as communication devices. The L-RADs also double as loud speakers.

Authorities in Pittsburgh were criticized for their use of sound cannons during the G20 summit last September when they unleashed an assault of piercing beeps before throwing tear gas and stun grenades to disperse a crowd marching toward the summit venue. It was the first time sound cannons had been used in public.

The truck-mounted model can emit an ear-splitting 143 decibels, far above the pain threshold of 110 to 120dB.

Some worry that if misued L-RADs could violate protesters? rights.

The Star reports three of the four L-RADs purchased by Toronto Police are handheld models capable of emitting sound heard up to 600 metres away with a volume up to 135dB.
 

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G20 law gives police sweeping powers to arrest people

G20 law gives police sweeping powers to arrest people

G20 law gives police sweeping powers to arrest people

Jennifer Yang



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Dave Vasey appears to be the first person to be arrested under a new law allowing police to pick up people refusing to identify themselves near the G20 security zone.
JAYME POISSON/TORONTO STAR


The province has secretly passed an
unprecedented regulation that empowers police to arrest anyone near the G20 security zone who refuses to identify themselves or agree to a police search.

A 31-year-old man has already been arrested under the new regulation, which was quietly passed by the provincial cabinet on June 2.

The regulation was made under Ontario?s Public Works Protection Act and was not debated in the Legislature. According to a provincial spokesperson, the cabinet action came in response to an ?extraordinary request? by Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair, who wanted additional policing powers shortly after learning the G20 was coming to Toronto.

The regulation kicked in Monday and will expire June 28, the day after the summit ends. While the new regulation appeared without notice on the province?s e-Laws online database last week, it won?t be officially published in The Ontario Gazette until July 3 ? one week after the regulation expires.

?It?s just unbelievable you would have this kind of abuse of power where the cabinet can create this offence without having it debated in the Legislature,? said Howard Morton, the lawyer representing Dave Vasey, who was arrested Thursday under the sweeping new police powers.

?It was just done surreptitiously, like a mushroom growing under a rock at night.?
According to the new regulation, ?guards? appointed under the act can arrest anyone who, in specific areas, comes within five metres of the security zone.

Within those areas, police can demand identification from anyone coming within five metres of the fence perimeter and search them. If they refuse, they face arrest. Anyone convicted under the regulation could also face up to two months in jail or a $500 maximum fine.

?It reminds me a little bit of the War Measures Act,? said lawyer Nathalie Des Rosiers of the new regulation. Des Rosiers is a lawyer with the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, which has been working to monitor arrests during the summit. ?This is highly unusual to have this declaration done by order-in-council without many people knowing about it.?

Des Rosiers learned of the regulation Thursday afternoon, shortly after Vasey was arrested while standing near the security fence.
Vasey said he was exploring the G20 security perimeter with a friend when they were stopped by police and asked for identification. Vasey says he had also been searched by police the night before.

According to Vasey, police explained there was a bylaw in place obligating him to provide identification but he refused, acting on the advice of a ?Know Your Rights? information pamphlet given to him by the Toronto Community Mobilization Network, a group assisting protesters.

The York University master?s student was taken into custody at around 4 p.m. He was brought to the Eastern Ave. detention centre, a former movie studio that has been temporarily converted into a prisoner holding pen. According to his charge sheet, he was charged with refusing to comply with a peace officer under the act.

Vasey said he only learned of the new regulation after his release, at around 9 p.m. The summit?s Integrated Security Unit did not respond to interview requests from the Star.
According to Vasey?s lawyer, neither he nor his colleagues at the law union were aware of this draconian new regulation. Des Rosiers said the CCLA and protesters have met with summit officials on several occasions and the regulation was never mentioned.

?They don?t even have signs up saying you can?t be within five metres or you?re subject to the following,? Morton said. ?If they really wanted to keep the peace, they would have announced the regulation.?

According to Laura Blondeau, an aide to Community Safety Minister Rick Bartolucci, the regulation ?ensures that police have the legal authority? they need for such a massive security zone.

?They really wanted to ensure they could provide a certain level of security,? Blondeau said Thursday. ?The regulation does not include private residences or businesses. It?s for certain streets and sidewalks in the security perimeter.?
Blondeau said ?rightly or wrongly,? the new regulation can be compared with airport security.

?You don?t have to get on that plane if you don?t want to be searched and wanded,? she said, adding that Bartolucci carefully weighed public safety and civil liberty concerns before agreeing to the one-time amendment.

?It was an extraordinary request. This is just for Toronto, just for the G20,? she said. ?Given the environment that the police were expecting, they needed to be prepared.?

Blondeau emphasized the law only affects those trying to enter the security zone and applies solely to police officers, not to private security guards contracted for the summit.

If someone declines to comply it empowers the police to turn them away ? or face being searched.

According to government lawyers, the regulation was passed by cabinet using what is known as a ?covering? order-in-council.

?The authority for the regulation is contained in the PWPA (Public Works Protection Act). The PWPA authorizes the designation by cabinet of places as ?public works,?? the lawyers said.

The Public Works Protection Act was created in 1990 and defines a ?public work? as everything from a railway to a bridge or a provincial building. The act says any other building, place or work can also be ?designated a public work by the Lieutenant Governor in Council.?

Morton said he?s unaware of any precedents to such a regulation being passed in Ontario and questions if it is even constitutional.

Des Rosiers said the regulation runs contrary to the Charter of Rights because it prohibits people from generally circulating on public land.
The G20 security fence has been a magnet for passersby and protesters alike, with many people approaching to take pictures or just quench their curiosity.

For Des Rosiers, she is especially worried because most people, including protesters, will operate under the assumption they have a right to refuse handing over identification to police.
?Protesters would have been told that the law of the land is that you don?t have to talk to police officers if you don?t want to,? she said. ?This changes things because even if you attempt to approach, it gives the power to the guard to demand identification.

?It?s a significant intrusion on people?s rights.?
 

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What to expect this weekend in 'Fortress Toronto'Batten down the hatches. Oh wait, th

What to expect this weekend in 'Fortress Toronto'Batten down the hatches. Oh wait, th

What to expect this weekend in 'Fortress Toronto'

Batten down the hatches. Oh wait, they already did


Raveena Aulakh Staff reporter


Call it Fortress Toronto.

The fenced area around the Metro Convention Centre is under a lockdown, and there are more police officers than ordinary citizens on the streets. Wait, there?s more: protesters are flooding the downtown core and the well-heeled are fleeing.

This is downtown Toronto ? this last weekend of June.

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A woman walks along an empty street with boarded-up buildings before the G20 Summit.




?It could be lots of fun, it could be downright miserable,? said Sgt. Tim Burrows, media relations officer for the Integrated Security Unit, in charge of security for the G8 and G20 summits. ?What the protesters decide to bring is what we will respond to.?

We?ll see protesters of every stripe and colour, Burrows said.

If they bring a ?party atmosphere and just want to yell and be boisterous, that?s great. We?ll stand all day and listen. But if protesters bring violence, we?ll respond to that,? he said.

Burrows is expecting ?several thousand protesters.? Be prepared, he warned.

We?ll see what really happens. But this is what is already happening: the fenced area was to come under lockdown sometime in the wee hours of Friday. Now, only those people who live or work in the area and have obtained security clearance can enter.

For everyone else: No amount of pleading or tears, or identification, will let you in. At least one condo building and several office buildings are included in the fenced-off area.

Traffic patterns in the core are a mess: the York, Yonge and Bay ramps to the Gardiner Expressway have been shut down and will remain closed until Sunday.

As world leaders and their entourages arrive in Toronto ? G8 leaders are already in Huntsville ? Highways 401 and 427 and the Gardiner will have rolling blockades as their motorcades travel. Construction barriers to reduce lanes and restrict access to parts of the highways are already in place.

Burrows doesn?t know how long each blockade may last. (Think of it as highways peppered with traffic lights.)

In the downtown core, too, away from the fenced zone, traffic will be slow because many streets will be totally or partially blocked. Protesters marching in various patterns through downtown will also slow down traffic.

Expect anything out of the ordinary, including police officers randomly searching cars or stopping pedestrians, asking for identification.

Many people have already left for the weekend, but if you think Toronto?s about to become a ghost city, forget it. There are roughly 14,000 police officers in Toronto. Many are inside the perimeter, others outside on horseback, golf carts or just on patrol. They?re in helicopters, boats and on rooftops, too.

?I feel like I am living in a police state,? said Rachel Pfau, who lives at Scott St. and The Esplanade, well away from the fenced area. ?I would love to leave the city but I can?t ? I don?t have another place to go. So I?m just going to stay in my apartment,? said Pfau, a massage therapist.

The security measures will definitely disrupt life and make driving downtown tough. But it?s worth it, said Aaron Goldrup, who lives at 25 The Esplanade.

?A lot of people are saying there?s no way to justify all this. I don?t agree. These are crazy times and there are some crazy people out there,? said Goldrup, who works for a bank in the financial district.

?We need to be secure ? better safe than sorry,? he said.

?As long as I can go for a run on the waterfront, I?ll live with G20,? said Christy MacMillan, who lives near King St and Blue Jays Way, a five-minute walk from where the leaders are converging. ?But yeah, I have to remember to carry some kind of identification? the concierge in my building warned us.?

A student at the University of Toronto, she is excited about the G20 brouhaha, but adds that the police presence is a bit unnerving.

But it?s not all grim and gloomy.

Those brave enough to go to work downtown on Friday or over the weekend won?t face long lineups at Tim Hortons, and they?ll definitely get the otherwise rare seat on the GO train or the streetcar.

And for all of you who scramble to find a parking spot in the financial district, it?s your lucky weekend!
 
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