This weekend saw the G-20 economic summit meeting, and it was much like many previous meetings: leaders of the world’s wealthiest nations made bad decisions; legions of protesters took to the streets; and local police broke the law and told monstrous lies so that they could imprison hundreds of said protesters.
Let’s start with the bad decisions: most of the leaders at the conference decided that they needed to cut back on government spending, to trim their budget deficits. To an individual person who’s broke, cutting back on spending makes sense. When a broke nation does it, it means less investment, fewer jobs, a deeper recession and longer suffering for millions. Noted economist Paul Krugman is warning that this G20 decision could lead to a worldwide economic depression. And just as bad, much of these budget cuts are likely to be social welfare programs that are keeping the poorest citizens afloat. These cuts will hurt them severely.
Next, we had thousands of activists who protested the event, on issues directly related, and not related at all. A gathering of world leaders often seems like the perfect time to speak your mind and organize with others.
Then, we had the police that used the so-called “Miami Model” of dealing with protests. In other words, the local police spend weeks and months telling scary stories to the media about protesters and anarchists and terrorists, so that the public is actually scared of them. Then the police set up their own version of “free speech zones”, where protesters are told they must go if they want to use their, y’know, freedom of speech. Then, there’s usually a mass arrest of innocent activists on one of the first days of the protest, to try to justify their scary stories and to intimidate the rest of the protesters. Then, when the protest is over, it is revealed that the hundreds of arrestees are innocent of all charges, that the police abused their authority, and sadly, only the activists themselves seem to know the real story. This gets used at mass protests time and time again.
The Toronto police even went one step further this year, claiming that they were arresting people on a just-recently-passed law prohibiting people from getting near the official security fence. People were outraged that this new secret law was passed and not publicized. Until it turned out there was no such law. Yes, police made up their own law, arrested people for breaking it, and then admitted that they’d lied about the whole law thing anyway.
In one silver lining to this story of lies, abuse, and economic catastrophe, is that the activists of Toronto showed up in the streets again, after the G20. This time, it was to show support for the masses of innocent arrestees, and to speak out against the police’s violations of law and civil rights. A little solidarity can be a good thing.
Photos by Andrew Louis/Torontoist.
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Axis of Justice is a non-profit organization formed by Tom Morello and Serj Tankian. Its purpose is to bring together musicians, fans
of music, and grassroots political organizations to fight for social justice. 
