VIDEO — Turkish Unrest Could Encourage An Attack On Syria – Sheikh Imran Hosein
108morris108
June 19, 2013
Events in Turkey from the last week or two are still just unrest and not an uprising but social media is being applied in a crafty way, the agenda is not regime change but rather to create a need for a distraction by the government, and Syria is the most likely distraction.
This would likely create a civil war in turkey which would attract Muslims from abroad wishing to Free Turkey from NATO
Both Mursi and Erdogan are uncompromising
Regarding Egypt breaking off relations with Syria, Mursi is following a script from his paymasters, he had no choice, and neither Neither Iran nor Russia have reacted
Recorded June 19 2013 Apologies for poor internet connection…
More of the interview will go up within 24 hours (and probably within 8 hours)
VIDEO — Philladelphia Smokedown Prohibition V The Full Story
Adam VS The Man
June 13, 2013
This is definitive video of what went down at the Philly Smoke Down Prohibition 5.
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Turkey Protests: Government Targets Doctors Who Treated Injured Demonstrators
Doctors who treated protesters wounded in clashes with riot police in Turkey are to be investigated by the government in a move likely to inflame tensions further.
By Timur Moon
IBTimes
June 17, 2013
The Health Ministry had demanded a list of the names of all doctors who treated demonstrators from the Turkish Medical Association (TBB), the association said on Friday 14 June.
The TBB estimates that 7,500 people have been injured in the unrest, the overwhelming number suffering from teargas exposure.
The association said it was ordered to “immediately” give up the names of medical workers and their patients, but had vowed not to co-operate.
“We were notified that an investigation has been launched into the improvised clinics that treated the protesters,” said Osman Öztürk of the TBB.
The authorities also signalled they would take steps to close down media outlets that broadcast images of demonstrations last week.
Turkey’s state television regulator shut down one channel that offered continuous live coverage of the protests. Hayat TV went off air “for broadcasting from abroad without a licence”, the Radio and Television Supreme Council said.
On Tuesday, the regulator fined Hayat TV and three stations that ran extensive coverage of the protests for “encouraging people to violence”.
On Friday night, the BBC suspended its partnership with NTV after the private channel refused to air the Turkish version of the World Agenda programme.
However, the government was forced to back down on plans to redevelop Gezi park in Istanbul, which sparked the protests last month. Police were criticised for the heavy-handedness of their response to the initial protests.
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister, agreed to abide by a court decision on his plan to uproot Gezi Park. He said he would hold a referendum if the court rules in favour of it.
“If judiciary in the end allows the project we’ll still apply the public vote,” he said. “It won’t be a military barracks but a city museum – 80% of trees will be within the city museum, the rest will be planted around the complex.”
Taksim Solidarity, one group representing the protesters, hailed the move as “positive”.
The government also turned its sights on Twitter, demanding the company set up a local division as “they receive advertising revenue without paying a penny in tax”.
Police have arrested a number of people who are accused of stirring up protests by posting messages on the site, including information on the position of police lines.
Related Articles You Might Like:
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- Turkey: Protesters Drive Bulldozer to Prime Minister Erdogan’s Office (Video)
- Photos: Turkey Media Shows Cooking, Pet Shows as 1+ Million Protest
- Activists in Turkey Present Their List of Demands
- Turkish Police Arrest Dozens of Social Media Users For Posting About Protests
- Istanbul’s Skies ‘Filled with Teargas’ as Thousands of Police Storm Square
- Timeline of Events in Turkey: Police Escalate Attacks, Including on Healthcare Workers and Doctors
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EVENT — March Against Drones – MAD
via March Against Drones – MAD
Are you MAD? If so, march with us at the White House on 9/11 in Washington, DC. If you can’t make it, get MAD wherever you are! To join the event, go to: http://tinyurl.com/TheMarchAgainstDrones

VIDEO — Turkey And Morsi Fanning The Flames – Morris
108morris108
June 15, 2013
Has Morsi betrayed Iran by cutting ties with Syria on the day that Iran was busy with its presidential elections.
Turkey appears to have had more than a million people demonstrating for and against Erdogan.
VIDEO — WeAreChange Vlog #7: End of Bilderberg, Inside the Grove!
WeAreChange
June 13, 2013
In this video, Luke Rudkowski documents the end of the Bilderberg protest, gets inside the Grove hotel, interviews Mark Anderson of AFP and Jon Scoby of WRC Birmingham. The next vlogs will be taking place from the G8 summit in Northern Ireland so stay tuned.
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‘Free My Internet’: Hundreds march in Singapore against website licensing regime (PHOTOS)
RT News
June 8, 2013

A protester stands with a placard during a rally at a free-speech park called Speakers’ Corner in Singapore on June 8, 2013 (AFP Photo / Roslan Rahman)
In Singapore, up to 2,000 activists lead by local bloggers staged a rally against recently introduced licensing rules for news websites, including breaches of “racial or religious harmony”, which protesters see as an attack on freedom of expression.
A crowd with posters denouncing “internet censorship” gathered on Saturday in Speakers’ Corner at Hong Lim Park to demand the withdrawal of the policy. The peaceful demonstration in the Southeast Asian city-state was organized by a group of bloggers called “Free My Internet.”
The message of the gathering – “the government must trust us, and stop treating us like babies,” said Choo Zheng Xi, the group’s spokesperson. “It is an international embarrassment when governments around the world are working to deregulate the Internet, and Singapore, one of the wealthiest nations per capita, is going in the opposite direction,” the activist told AFP.

A Caricature of former Singapore prime minister Lee Kuan Yew is displayed during a rally at a free-speech park called Speakers’ Corner in Singapore on June 8, 2013 (AFP Photo / Roslan Rahman)
Under the rules that came into force in June, news websites must obtain annual licenses if they have over 50,000 unique visitors from Singapore every month and publish at least one weekly article on the island’s news over a period of two months.
[hat tip: Nile Bowie]
