Infos zum Thema police
15 Webseiten
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- The Informer is by profession a researcher of 40 years and worked for major 500 companies. He started the legal research into government as a whole in 1979 and went heavy into the taxation part, all phases, in 1981, and continues to this day. He is retired and uses his cognitive skills of 40 years to continue studying. His history research came about because of the government research that uncovered many inconsistencies in what people perceive to be true about government, but which is not. His inquiries and study led him to other historical researchers nationwide. These findings show governments are run by people other than the common man and woman of America and is not the "representative form" as people believe. http://wayback.archive.org/web/*/http://www.atgpress.com/inform/indexinf.htmspeichern vor 111 Tagen
- New video shows Israeli police beating a Palestinian man during a house eviction in Jaffa. The video raises fresh questions about Israel’s treatment of non-Jewish citizens. …read: http://972mag.com/watch-israeli-police-use-force-in-eviction-of-palestinian-family-in-jaffa/24763/speichern vor 127 Tagen
- A Small Country with a Big Struggle Needs Global Support and Attention By Hanna Nikkanen Special to The Narco News Bulletin April 4, 2011 It’s been a long, complicated spring in the Arab world. Bahrain is a small country, unfamiliar to most of us. Right now it’s very important that we know who they are, so even though I’ve never been there, I’ll try to explain… ...Bahrain in a nutshell On February 17, weeks of non-violent protests against King Hamad’s regime were followed by a ruthless crackdown. In hopes of avoiding the symbolism of Cairo’s Tahrir Square, the government later completely tore down Manama’s Pearl Roundabout, where the largest demonstrations had been taking place. Bahrain is a sandy archipelago in the Persian gulf, nestled between Saudi Arabia and Qatar. It’s tiny: its total area is slightly smaller than that of a nearby Saudi airport. Approximately 12 percent of the island nation’s population have participated in the recent protests. They started by demanding greater political rights and, when the regime didn’t budge, many started calling for an end to monarchy. In mid-March, 1000 troops from Saudi Arabia and 500 from UAE were deployed at the regime’s invitation to “protect assets” and “uphold stability”. The king has declared a three-month martial law that authorises the chief of the armed forces to take all measures to “protect the safety of the country and its citizens”. Bloggers have been arrested. Hospitals have been raided by the military, doctors and patients brutally beaten.speichern vor 313 Tagen
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- Why do you think the police was invented? ...to protect the people, the public, the slaves?!speichern vor 372 Tagen
- The place in question is San Luis Acatlán, Guerrero, Mexico, and it is engaged in a form of justice that is a new experiment and at the same time, is centuries old. San Luis Acatlán is a town of around 35,000 souls, laid out along a long street that stretches between two churches. It lies east along the Pacific coast and inland several miles from glittery Acapulco, its much more well-known neighbor. The rainy season has ended when I arrived there, and a pounding heat has replaced the rain. I’ve come here to find out about a group called La Policía Comunitaria, an autonomous police force and justice system that is something of a legend in Mexico. The idea is simple: local people are elected to act as temporary police officers, and justice is administered by a council of community members, not the local state system. The inspiration for the project arose after a period of violence in the region that everyone who is old enough remembers well, and doesn’t hesitate to describe. “It was horrible, the early 1990’s,” says Victorio, a man in his thirties with fierce dark eyes and a slight frame, clutching a well-oiled but ancient M1 carbine. “Women were being raped on the roads between villages, and nobody could travel anywhere, and I mean anywhere, after dark. Those years were absolutely terrible in these parts.” He tilts back his faded baseball cap emblazoned with POLICÍA COMUNITARIA on the front, the same emblem that is printed on his dull green t-shirt. We are sitting in the shade of some trees outside the small building that serves as the headquarters of the Policía Comunitaria, but the heat is still suffocating and everyone around us is glistening with tropical sweat. Victorio fingers the worn wooden stock of his rifle, the same model used by the U.S. Army during the Korean War. “This gun isn’t mine….none of our arms belong to us: the weapons belong to the community. When we’re finished with our service, we return our rifles and they are given to the next group of volunteers.” The Policía Comunitaria evolved out of a response to this plague of violence that Victoriano speaks of. A new priest that had started working in the area, Padre Mario, began holding assemblies of all the local villages, in order to discuss and organize around the many problems facing the inhabitants. “At first he [Padre Mario] spoke to us with his language, the language of concern… but we listened with the ears of indifference,” says Apolonio Cruz Rosas, one of the founders of the Policía Comunitaria, who lives in a small town up the road to the north from San Luis Acatlán. “In 1992 we held the first village assemblies…and we moved them around, from village to village, so that everyone could be involved. We went to the police, the judiciary, and the army to ask for them to help us to resolve this problem, the problem of the violence and the robberies, but they didn’t do anything.” And so after this initial frustration with the authorities, and many more village assemblies, in 1995 the Policía Comunitaria, a police force to be made up of volunteers from the villages themselves, was born. There was a long debate as to whether to call themselves La Policía Auxiliada, (The Auxiliary Police), or La Policía Comunitaria, (The Community Police). The former title implied that the villagers would be an extension of the local constabulary, while the latter implied a new form of policing and of justice. After a long night of debating, the new force was christened La Policía Comunitaria.speichern vor 395 Tagen
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- RT @tweeterglider: Seattle #Police Department Uses #Twitter To Catch Car Thieves http://bit.ly/dRgHXxspeichern vor 432 Tagen
- Das unternehmerische Risiko kann keine Versicherung übernehmen, wohl aber viele kleine und große Risiken rund um das Business. Viele Policen sind nützlich, einige kurios und manche überflüssig. Unser Schwerpunktbeitrag zu Spezialversicherungen verschafft den Durchblick.speichern vor 500 Tagen
- lesenswert: #Police forces and social media: a marriage made in hell - Telegraph http://bit.ly/dfBlRC #socialmedia #PR #Politikspeichern vor 543 Tagen
- T rider uses #Twitter to alert cops to perv - BostonHerald.com http://bit.ly/bxi6hc #socialmedia #PR #policespeichern vor 553 Tagen
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- LOL! Watch Swedish #Police Dance - Polis Dansar På Stortorget I Malmö http://bit.ly/b3oE31 #fun #humorspeichern vor 560 Tagen
- Entertaining: "#Gizmodo considers suing #police after #iPhone raid" @CNETnews http://bit.ly/cu93hospeichern vor 653 Tagen







