Protestors in Houston being covered with a tent before being arrested.
At about 1:45, two groups of protesters - one numbering six and the other 12 - lay on the street, stopping traffic into a two-lane road that leads to the port entrance. Three trucks and four cars were halted before oncoming traffic was redirected to an alternate route.
HFD was called in to cut PVC pipes off of a group of protesters who used the devices to band their arms together. A large red tent was placed over the protesters to prevent sparks, said HPD spokesman John Cannon.
Protesters then came out of the tent individually, were handcuffed and detained by police. Ten protesters were charged with blocking a public roadway, and eight were arrested for using a criminal instrument to block a public roadway.
The demonstrators became increasingly angry during the arrests. Two lay down on the sidewalk, blocking the path of officers on horseback. Both were arrested for interfering with a public servant.
More here.
Undercover for safety? Or to obscure the media?
What are they trying to hide?
The video above is less than a minute long. Please take a moment to watch it.
I’ll wait.
Did you see it? Sure there is much to the revolution unfolding in Egypt, but that’s not the revolution I’m highlighting here.
In the video you’ll notice the events of the day are not getting captured by film crews and news reporters. They’re being documented by people with their mobile phones. Take another look at the video and count the number of illuminated mobile phone screens you see being raised overhead to capture pictures and video as the scenes in the streets unfolds.
I’m as guilty as anyone else for being overly enthused with investment opportunities as the world goes increasingly more mobile. But, in the case above, we’re not talking about some Stanford dropouts who’ve developed a hot new iPhone app. We’re seeing something much more fundamental. Not just a shift from the PC to handsets, but a shift from disconnected and isolated members of developing nations to connected global citizens. Many of whom skipped the PC altogether.
I had a conversation last week, that’s still rattling around in my head, which was both troubling and inspiring. In it my friend pointed out that people in the developing world have mobile phones before they have clean water or toilets. Indeed, India has over 500 million mobile subscribers while less than 400 million Indians have access to toilets.
By their nature, these phones were born social. They were built from the ground up to connect us. First with voice, then with text. Now, they’re packed capabilities like photos, videos and a wave of native and web applications. We’re just beginning to catch a glimpse of what a powerful and disruptive force they can be. Not just to incubent handset manufactures and telcos but to social movements and government regimes.
I’ve made clear my belief that we’re in the midst of a massive global reinvention. Not just a shift from analog to digital, but a shift from centralized control to distributed systems. From isolated single user experiences to a global social fabric. These mobile devices are the of Gutenberg presses of our generation. This is not a bubble, this is a revolution.
The new revolution — connected global citizens.
(via spytap)
Lord Christopher Monckton: Climate Protesters Compared to Hitler Youth
Here’s an interesting supplement to all of the news articles on the protests at the Copenhagen Climate Change Conference, via The Lede - New York Times News Blog:
Climate Protesters Compared to Hitler Youth
John Vidal of The Guardian reported that a climate change skeptic, Christopher Monckton, who is the hereditary third Viscount Monckton of Brenchley, created a stir when he compared protesters in Copenhagen to “Hilter Youth,” after some of them disrupted a meeting of the group Americans for Prosperity in the Danish capital on Wednesday night.
Here is video of the disruption that angered Lord Monckton, from the YouTube channel of American for Prosperity, a group of climate-change skeptics:
The article continues,
As Ben Smith of Politico noted on Friday, (12/11/09), Lord Monckton also explained to another YouTube video blogger that he meant just what he said. At the start of the exchange embedded below, Lord Monckton said, “The last time that that kind of robotic hysteria was ever seen in Copenhagen was when the Hitler Youth were here when it was occupied by the Germans.”
Looks like Lord Christopher Monckton isn’t afraid of taking a little heat in the climate change arena.

