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September 3 Press Release: “Movement being born” WASHINGTON– The largest environmental civil disobedience in decades concluded at the White House this morning with organizers pledging to escalate a nationwide campaign to push President Obama to deny the permit for a new tar sands oil pipeline. “Given yesterday’s baffling cave on ozone standards, the need for a fighting environmental movement has never been more clear,” said Bill McKibben, who spearheaded the protest. “That movement is being born right here in front of the White House and reverberating around the country.” The proposed Keystone XL pipeline has become the most important environmental decision facing President Obama before the 2012 election and sparked nationwide opposition, from Nebraska ranchers to former Obama campaigners. A petition with 617,428 names opposing the pipeline will be delivered to the White House today.

“Back home we are fighting to protect our land and water. “We are not going to do President Obama the favor of attacking him,” said McKibben. P.O.L.1.C.£. B.U.T.A.L.1.T.Y. Documentary on how the media lies to manipulate us. LAND IS MARKED WITH A RULING... IT IS NOT ILLEGAL TO FILM POLICE IN AMERICA!!! Every other case involving people arrested for filming cops has been thrown out of court, but media promulgates hoax that recording police is illegal Paul Joseph Watson & Alex Jones Infowars.com Wednesday, August 31, 2011 41-year old Illinois mechanic Michael Allison faces life in jail for recording police officers after authorities hit him with eavesdropping charges based on the hoax that it is illegal to film cops, a misnomer that has been disproved by every other case against people filming police officers being thrown out of court. The state of Illinois is trying to charge Allison with five counts of wiretapping, each punishable by four to 15 years in prison.

Allison refused a plea deal which would have seen him serve no jail time but would reinforce the hoax that it is illegal to film police officers, as well as acting as a chilling effect to prevent other Americans from filming cases of police brutality. Paul Joseph Watson is the editor and writer for Prison Planet.com. Historic! OpPaparazzi. Martha's Vineyard | Obama Protesters | Inflatable Rat. Local police deflated an advocacy group’s Thursday plans to showcase a large inflatable rat at Five Corners on Martha’s Vineyard, according to a local news report. Americans for Job Security had barely set up its giant rat when local police told the group’s organizers to take it down. In a release, the group wrote it was using the display to remind the vacationing President Barack Obama of his administration’s “job-killing policies.”

The Martha’s Vineyard Times reported Tisbury Police Chief Dan Hanavan as saying the inflatable rat was too close to a major intersection and that the group could’ve set it up elsewhere in a safer location. Hanavan said the display was also on federal property without permission. “If the guy is in the right spot he can fly his mouse all he wants,” said the police chief, according to the MV Times. AJS first displayed its giant inflatable rat outside a National Labor Relations Board hearing in Washington, D.C., in July. [WATCH]: Another arrest for taking a picture in public! | How To Start A Business. Social media could render covert policing 'impossible' - social networking, social media, security, Mick Keelty - Security - Techworld. Facebook has proven to be one of the biggest dangers in keeping undercover police officers safe due to applications such as facial recognition and photo tagging, according to a adjunct professor at ANU and Charles Sturt University.

Mick Keelty, a former Australian Federal Police (AFP) commissioner, told the audience at Security 2011 in Sydney that because of the convergence of a number of technologies including biometrics, undercover policing may be "impossible" in the future. He explained that were safety risks associated with undercover policing if people could be identified online. “You can’t just immerse an officer into a crime group; it takes up to seven years to get them into the right place [in the gang] where they can feed back the intelligence that you need," Keelty said. Keelty is currently undertaking research into the policy implications of social networking for covert operations by police and security agencies. The most popular site was Facebook, followed by Twitter.