Sunday, October 9, 2011

THESE ARE OBAMA'S FOLLOWERS HIS PEOPLE


THESE ARE OBAMA'S FOLLOWERS HIS PEOPLE . SUPPORTERS OF THE MUSLIMS WHO WANT TO KILL ALL THE JEWS. THEY SUPPORT COMMUNISM . 


Obama is encouraging riots so he could declare marital law and no more elections.  According to main stream press this is not happening. Ignore the rioters it will go away.

Vote for Leah Lax and stop the riots. Arrest the leaders and it will stop.  Visit www.LeahLax.com and donate .

Smithsonian revolt: Protesters attacked with pepper spray after storming the Washington museum and forcing closure 

  • The National Air and Space Museum had to be closed down
  • Criticism of protests from politicians intensifying
  • Michael Bloomberg accuses protesters of 'trying to destroy jobs'
  • Occupy Wall Street camp infiltrated by party goers and homeless looking for sex, drugs and free food
Last updated at 4:08 PM on 9th October 2011

The National Air and Space Museum was closed yesterday after anti-war protesters stormed the building and were repelled by guards using pepper spray.
Hundreds of people, who were demonstrating in Washington DC against a drone plane exhibit at the museum in the Smithsonian Institution - the world's largest museum complex.
Some demonstrators got past the guards and unfurled a protest banner from the upper floor before it was torn down.
The latest protests came as politicians intensified their criticism of the protests.
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Protesters
Smithsonian
Pain: A female protesters has her eyes doused with water after being hurt with pepper spray, while guards, right, rush to stop more demonstrators getting inside the National Air and Space Museum
New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg accused the protesters of 'trying to destroy jobs'.
At the same time protest organisers raised concerns that they were being infiltrated by party goers and homeless people looking for sex, drugs and free food.
Pepper spray was used against the protesters - including several women - at the Smithsonian yesterday after security guards claimed that a colleague was held by the mob. 
David Swanson, 41, of Charlottesville, Virginia, said he was among dozens of people sickened by the pepper spray. He said he got sick even though he was outside the building when the spraying began.
'I began choking and vomiting and got a headache,' he said.

Support: The anti-war protesters, who were demonstrating against a drone exhibit, help those hurt by pepper spray
Support: The anti-war protesters, who were demonstrating against a drone exhibit, help those hurt by pepper spray
Placards: Some protesters remained outside the museum after the incident while others fled
Placards: Some protesters remained outside the museum after the incident while others fled

SHOCKING MAILONLINE EXCLUSIVE PHOTO THAT HAS GONE VIRAL

Enlarge Raw sewer: An unidentified man seen defecates on a NYPD patrol car in downtown Manhattan
This shocking picture of a demonstrator relieving himself on a police car at the protests in New York has gone viral after being published by MailOnline.
The exclusive photo has been shared by over 15,000 people on Facebook and linked to by hundreds on Twitter.
'Wondering how to get people to take your protests seriously? Poop on a police car,' tweeted one person.
Brookfield Office Properties, which owns Zuccotti Park, the site of the New York demonstration, have already railed against protesters, who they claim are creating sanitation problems.
'Sanitation is a growing concern,' Brookfield said in a statement.
'Normally the park is cleaned and inspected every week night. . . because the protesters refuse to cooperate. . .the park has not been cleaned since Friday, September 16th and as a result, sanitary conditions have reached unacceptable levels,' CBS News reported.
Mr Swanson, who says he has been part of the Freedom Plaza protest, says protesters were not looking to shut down the museum but to make a point about the massive military spending and the use of deadly drones.
He said the security officers got aggressive after some protesters unfurled a protest banner inside.
He posted videos on his blog, warisacrime.org, that shows a security officer yelling 'Get back' as pepper spray is apparently used. 
Several people fell to the ground outside in agony as others coughed, rubbed their eyes and fled the building.
The incident in the capital came as thousands of anti-greed protesters descended on New York's Washington Square Park in the latest Occupy Wall Street rally.
The crowd of about 3,000 flooded the iconic park and used slogans likening themselves to the 'Arab Spring' demonstrations that have toppled several Middle East regimes.
One speaker at the New York rally urged the crowd to squat in empty or abandoned buildings.
She shouted: 'There are foreclosed homes, empty school buildings that should be made available to all. Occupy everything.'
Officers kept a close eye on the protest but by late Saturday afternoon there were no reports of violence or arrests.
Police fenced off grassy areas in the park, and put up 10-foot high chain link fences around public bathrooms before the march from Zuccotti Park to Washington Square began.
Group spokesman Patrick Bruner said there were no plans to force a confrontation with police.
Officers, however, seem determined to enforce a curfew and prevent protesters from camping out there as they have done for weeks at Zuccotti Park, the New York Post reports.
Protest: A banner is unfurled by demonstrators inside the National Air and Space Museum before security guards tore it down
Protest: A banner is unfurled by demonstrators inside the National Air and Space Museum before security guards tore it down
Calm: A security officer gathers up the banner watched by demonstrators, one of whom brought his child along
Calm: A security officer gathers up the banner watched by demonstrators, one of whom brought his child along
One protest organizer Justine Tunney, 26, said: 'We plan to stay in Washington Square Park and form a second permanent occupation.'
The NYPD said it hadn’t issued any permits for yesterday’s rally.
Bruner said demonstrators have never applied for a permit - and don’t plan to.
He said: 'We don’t think it’s right that you need permission to peacefully assemble.'
Republican politicians are stepping up their criticism of the protests.
Masked: One of the protesters marching to Foley square from Liberty Park plaza on the 19th day of the Occupy Wall Street demonstrations
Masked: One of the protesters marching to Foley square from Liberty Park plaza on the 19th day of the Occupy Wall Street demonstrations
March: Elsewhere in Washington, Occupy Wall Street protesters marched through the city
March: Elsewhere in Washington, Occupy Wall Street protesters marched through the city
Bedding in: A camp set up at Freedom Plaza in Washington, DC
Bedding in: A camp set up at Freedom Plaza in Washington, DC


Rally: Protesters fill Washington Square during an
Rally: Protesters fill Washington Square in New York during an 'Occupy Wall Street' rally yesterday
In his weekly radio address, Michael Bloomberg warned that the protesters risked driving tourists away.
'They're trying to take away the tax base we have, because none of this is good for tourism,' he said.
He claimed that they are 'trying to destroy the jobs of working people in this city'.
'If the jobs they’re trying to get rid of in the city - the people that work in finance, which is a big part of our economy - go away, we’re not going to have any money to pay our municipal employees or clean the parks or anything else,' he said.
Concerns are being raised that the protesters' camp in Zuccotti Park in New York City is being infiltrated by opportunists.
Blame: A protester carries a picture of Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein on a pole
Blame: A protester carries a picture of Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein on a pole
Point: Officers kept a close eye on the protest but by late Saturday afternoon there were no reports of violence or arrests
Point: Officers kept a close eye on the protest but by late Saturday afternoon there were no reports of violence or arrests
Extra: Four hundred people converge on the Boston Common - widening the Wall Street protests
Boston: Four hundred people converge on the Boston Common - widening the Wall Street protests

Protesters have warned that homeless people looking for food and party goers looking for sex and drugs have been joining the camp.
'Most of the kids are trust-fund babies. They don’t need to be here,' one activist called Andre told the New York Post. 'I’ve seen some making out, having sex. It doesn’t look good.'
Newcomers are reportedly being drawn by donated freebies including pizza, sandwiches, clothes and even complimentary condoms.
Organisers said they have set up an internal police group to stop drug-taking and sex in the tented city.
'We want to make sure everyone is here for the right reason,' Ricky Torres, 23, who is part of the security unit, told the New York Post.
'Some are homeless and people who are not really up to any good.
'If we see someone doing something we think the cops are not going to be down with, we take it upon ourselves to stop it.
Anger: Demonstrators hold slogans in downtown Los Angeles, in solidarity with the OWS protesters
Anger: Demonstrators hold slogans in downtown Los Angeles, in solidarity with the OWS protesters
Protesters with Occupy Wall Street march up Broadway from Zuccotti Park to Washington Square Park
Protesters with Occupy Wall Street march up Broadway from Zuccotti Park to Washington Square Park
'We make sure everybody’s doing the right thing - to be peaceful and not upset the cops because they’re here to protect us.'
There were protests in more than a dozen other U.S. cities yesterday - including another one in Washington and also in Boston and Los Angeles.
The protesters are angry about the 2008 Wall Street bailout that they say allowed banks to reap huge profits while average Americans suffered high unemployment and job insecurity.
More than 700 people were arrested last Saturday when thousands of the protesters tried to get across the Brooklyn Bridge and spilled on to the roadway.
Dozens more were arrested at the biggest rally so far on Wednesday when about 5,000 people marched on Wall Street. 
The demonstrators are also campaigning against other social and economic inqualities, including the gap between rich and poor, as well as what they regard as a corrupt political system.
The protest movement has now to more than 100 cities coast to coast.


Read more: : none;">http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article- 2046948/Washingtons-Air--Space-museum-protesters-attacked-pepper-spray.html#ixzz1aIY2Wp6z

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