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Scenes From a Crackdown
...a number of disturbing images, videos, and witness accounts   have come out of Pittsburgh, as well as from similar high-stakes   political events in recent years, that reveal the disquieting   ease with which authorities are willing to crush dissent—and at   the very sorts of events where the right to dissent is the entire   purpose of protecting free speech. That is, events where   influential policymakers meet to make high-level decisions with   far-reaching consequences...
...A number of police departments from across the   country came to Pittsburgh to help police the summit, and nearly   all were dressed in paramilitary garb. In one widely-circulated video from the   summit, several police officers dressed entirely in camouflage   emerge from an unmarked car, apprehend a young backpack-toting   protester, stuff him into the car, and then drive off. It evoked   the sort of "disappearance" one might envision in a Latin   American junta or Soviet Block country. Matt Drudge linked to the   video, describing the officers in it as members of the military.   They weren't, though it's certainly easy   to understand how someone might make that mistake.
Another video shows a police unit with what seems to be a   handcuffed protester. Officers surround the protester and prop   him up, at which point another officer snaps what appears to be a   trophy photo. (YouTube has since removed the   video, citing a terms of use violation.) Other Twitter feeds   and uploaded photos and videos claim police fired tear gas   canisters into dorm rooms, used sound cannons, and fired bean   bags and rubber bullets. One man was arrested for    posting the locations of riot police on Twitter...  Continue...