View Full Version : UK POLICE violate civil rights! Shocking videos
pduffy4
28-10-2008, 09:11 PM
These video clearly demonstrate that we are already living in a Police State. There has just not been a public admittance by the Government of Scum.
The videos show Police confiscating leaflets and a video camera from peaceful, but pissed off, protestors in Liverpool on 11th October. This is horrifying! What are the chances of our "News media" broadcasting these videos.
Part 1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qGeQWcYErVs&feature=related
Part 2
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wPUTA4Gw7vk&feature=related
shodan
28-10-2008, 09:21 PM
just watching this now, cheers for the link. absolutely disgusting, excellent that its been caught on camera.
alfrmo
28-10-2008, 09:33 PM
Total disgrace the way the police acted, this should be on the news not Jonathan Ross and Russell Brand! This is the real news that is happening to our rights! great videos thanks!
daveashe
28-10-2008, 09:51 PM
Not good, they randomly arrested people (it says in another video linked in youtube).. still cant believe they shut down a peaceful protest, and confiscated their leaflets as well..
signalnorth
28-10-2008, 10:00 PM
I asked the news team at BBC Radio Merseyside why it wasn't covered and they said they knew nothing about it!
Yeah!
resistance
28-10-2008, 10:59 PM
That prick in the bike helmet holding the pen was going around like he was the law himself.. while signing away his own rights..not all 50 are that stupid.
goldenratio
29-10-2008, 09:25 AM
traitors!
what worries me the most is the empathy of the nation while our freedom disappears by the day:(
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=9O5A1Il_hJY&feature=related
bobhodge
29-10-2008, 09:27 AM
traitors!
what worries me the most is the empathy of the nation while our freedom disappears by the day:(
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=9O5A1Il_hJY&feature=related
i think most people are worrying about russell brands retarded set up stunt to grab public attention.
goldenratio
29-10-2008, 09:44 AM
i think most people are worrying about russell brands retarded set up stunt to grab public attention.
Im afraid your right :(
dooby
29-10-2008, 10:20 PM
I've been feeling the increasing need to protest myself. I'm getting increasingly concerned about the Police State, and Big Brother. It's really claustrophobic, and the media are spinning the "Big Brother" agenda too.
Everyone needs to get together and protest about the various violations of human rights occurring right now!
I'm just waiting for a UK internet filter to be implemented. That'll be something I won't tolerate.
danster82
29-10-2008, 11:15 PM
if that crowd had of just snapped and made citizen arrests on them police it would of been a major victory for this country.
lesactive
30-10-2008, 02:53 AM
If you notice that while the secretary for Liverpool University was being ignored by the bike cop, the guy to whom the cop was talking (mauve shirt, baldish) took out his wallet and handed over what I can only assume is some form of gov't ID. That was a mistake. By that one gesture he openly waived all of his natural rights and submitted himself as a person under statutory whim and thus under the officers jurisdiction which left him with only the rights that the gov't deems fit to bestow upon its chattel.
I strongly recommend for anyone wishing to join a protest of any sort in this age of incremental oppression tactics to be pro-active in seeking out the information written into their statutes that can remedy the fraud taking place over each and every one of you. We have to protect ourselves more than ever.
The name on that gov't ID is not your name, it belongs to them and they are letting you use it as a benefit. The counter balancing burden to that benefit is your liability for its use.
Be peaceful, do NOT argue.
Do not understand the charges but don't resist either; go under protest and duress.
Do not consent to be recognized by a legal name that is not your property; to be forced to do so would be fraudulent on the part of the officer.
Do not give hearsay evidence regarding your date of birth; most of us (!) weren't cognizant of the event, we were only told when it happened.
And finally, shut the hell up if arrested. Talking won't help no matter how good you are.
Things may have gone differently that day if only ONE in the crowd knew who they were.
tom bombadil
30-10-2008, 11:53 AM
Thats right. Just stand around and be bullied.
If you are following the rules for 'freeman on the land' then you need to know it all and not just a little. I am not picking on you lesactive.
If we all stood together, like some other folk, then the fuzz would have moved away for their own safety.
Follow the fuzz home and do.........something right.
Tom.
milston1
30-10-2008, 12:52 PM
Well done. Looks like people are starting to make a stand. I've just sent you a message. I'm in Glasgow and looking for good people to stand up in protest for our human rights. We are caught within a corporate business with us being the slaves "employees". Every one has to take some responsibilty and act out and let the common man know that they have the right to be free and experience being a human being.
Love and respect to all my brothers and sisters. Lets unite and stand up for our freedom.
eternal_spirit
30-10-2008, 02:25 PM
Any updates on the story?
lesactive
31-10-2008, 01:04 AM
I'm not necessarily just talking about being a freeman. That's merely a label. It's more about knowing who you are (man/woman or person), how to ask questions and how not to wilfully submit to alleged authority. Unanswerable questions do far more to establish yourself as being free than wasting time arguing with low agents of the state.
How did they claim their authority over you? Is it contractual? Can you rescind your signature? What words do they use to describe you? Do you consent to be described that way? Can one rule over another without their consent? Are people in jail over statutory 'crimes' (no harm, no damage, no breach of peace) there because they agreed to go?
Most simply accepted what happened that day and weren't prepared for the inevitable confrontation and that's a shame.
I agree that solidarity would've done much to dissuade the events of that day but then you have to be careful of the immovable object/ irresistable force scenario. One side is armed.
onourwayto2012
31-10-2008, 01:28 AM
I've never been actually involved in anything like this but from what I have seen on videos your UK cops are somewhat mellower than their US counterparts who often appear to bust heads first...ask questions later. This is of course a generalization but it's the impression I get. Ours seem to be more testosterony... yours seem to carry about their violations in a calmer more matter of fact way. If this is not the case please let me know.
tom bombadil
31-10-2008, 12:14 PM
I'm not necessarily just talking about being a freeman. That's merely a label. It's more about knowing who you are (man/woman or person), how to ask questions and how not to wilfully submit to alleged authority. Unanswerable questions do far more to establish yourself as being free than wasting time arguing with low agents of the state.
How did they claim their authority over you? Is it contractual? Can you rescind your signature? What words do they use to describe you? Do you consent to be described that way? Can one rule over another without their consent? Are people in jail over statutory 'crimes' (no harm, no damage, no breach of peace) there because they agreed to go?
Most simply accepted what happened that day and weren't prepared for the inevitable confrontation and that's a shame.
I agree that solidarity would've done much to dissuade the events of that day but then you have to be careful of the immovable object/ irresistable force scenario. One side is armed.
I understand a bit better now lesactive. But what I was meaning was the issue of being a 'Freeman' will soon filter down to the police in general, and they will soon shove it back in our faces if we dont know it to the letter.
Very soon, if one cries out that 'you cant touch me', to the law, then they will find a way. It will quench the fire that is this new movment. Soon it will hit the news that this 'new wave of independance' is sweeping the nation. Then a big furore will ocour and some one will kill a cop or someother sacrifice on prime time tv, and then the general public will be against the movement.
So we have to get it right.
Tom.
armoured_amazon
31-10-2008, 12:18 PM
I've never been actually involved in anything like this but from what I have seen on videos your UK cops are somewhat mellower than their US counterparts who often appear to bust heads first...ask questions later. This is of course a generalization but it's the impression I get. Ours seem to be more testosterony... yours seem to carry about their violations in a calmer more matter of fact way. If this is not the case please let me know.
Yeah but that's scarier because they are like agents in The Matrix or robots lol
tom bombadil
31-10-2008, 12:30 PM
I've never been actually involved in anything like this but from what I have seen on videos your UK cops are somewhat mellower than their US counterparts who often appear to bust heads first...ask questions later. This is of course a generalization but it's the impression I get. Ours seem to be more testosterony... yours seem to carry about their violations in a calmer more matter of fact way. If this is not the case please let me know.
Could it be onourwayto2012 that your cops carry arms all the time, that they think that they are above the law? In a mall, not all the guys in uniforms are ex-cop (or are they?) so they have not had the training on how to deal (that the training is shite anyway is not the issue here :rolleyes:) with Flo and Jo.
Over here also, a cop can work, mostly without fear of being shot. So they can act in a calmer manner. I am not against guns by the way, or the ability to carry them.
"This is of course a generalization but it's the impression I get" you said above. Well me too. Could it be that we are all taught on tv that cops are tops? Any us show has them above the law. Even the 'funny ones like http://images.play.com/covers/3595050m.jpg
In this show, a cop is shown to be better than the techie guys. This is not a bad thing in itself, but every week!! He is the moraly high one of the town, and the rest are babies with little control. Hmmm.
If we only see the high and mighty side of the law as something to look forward too, then god help us all.
Tom.