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City Launches “We Are Red Deer” Videos

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3 minute read

By Sheldon Spackman

The City of Red Deer has launched a series of new videos aimed at marketing and growing our community.

“We are Red Deer” is a 2:25 minute video showing Red Deer like you’ve never seen it before. In a release, Mayor Tara Veer says “It is Red Deer in our best light – featuring our community landmarks, our all-season activities and our parks and trails that connect us to the outdoors and to one another. It is a portrait of our community we can share as we approach the 2019 Canada Winter Games and market our city. Citizens will recognize their community in this video and be proud.” There are five videos in total, including the 2:25 feature and four other one minute videos.

The launch of the video series was made Thursday afternoon at the Collicutt Centre with Mayor Tara Veer, City Manager Craig Curtis and members of City Council all on hand. The Videos are also being played at the G.H. Dawe Community Centre and at Red Deer City Hall.

City officials say it’s hoped these videos can be used by the City of Red Deer, Red Deer and District Chamber of Commerce, Downtown Business Association, RDC, Westerner Park, Tourism Red Deer, Red Deer Airport and the 2019 Canada Winter Games Host Society to recruit students, increase memberships, entice visitors and attract new customers and investment to Red Deer.

Mayor Veer says these videos will allow the partnering agencies involved to promote the community with a unified message, adding “Red Deer needs to position itself to be competitive, not only in our region but also our province in terms of attracting new population and business”. Veer says roughly fifteen hundred residents were consulted when making these videos and their messages were that “Red Deer is a welcoming city, an entrepreneurial city, an innovative city and a dynamic and active city.”

You can watch the main video “We Are Red Deer” right here, followed by the one minute features below:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L_2VTTcEtuE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-amnzInby0Q

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DCePTpJNaE8

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VYKQM77ij-M

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HYHLCyl45VM

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWtD0y0XtU4

(Photo by Lindsay Wiebe)

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NYPD says protesters had weapons, gas masks and ‘Death to America!’ pamphlets

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NYPD Deputy Commissioner Kaz Daughtry posted on X photos of items he said the police confiscated from protesters who took over Hamilton Hall at Columbia University.

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“These are not the tools of students protesting, these are the tools of agitators, of people who were working on something nefarious”

A high-ranking official with the New York Police Department said protesters had weapons including knives and hammers as well as pamphlets with “Death to America!” written on them.

Michael Kemper, a NYPD’s chief of transit, posted photos Friday of what police confiscated from the protesters.

“For those romanticizing the protests occurring on college campuses, ‘Death to America!’ is one sentiment that runs counter to what we believe in, what we stand for, and what many have fought for on behalf of this country,” Kemper stated on X. “And if you think the words written on this piece of paper are disturbing … you should hear the vile, disgusting, hateful, & threatening words coming out of the mouths of far too many of these so called ‘peaceful protestors.’”

Kemper posted a video of a pamphlet that stated, “Death to Israeli Real Estate” and “Death to America!” The pamphlet also stated, “DISRUPT/RECLAIM/DESTROY Zionist business interests everywhere!”

NYPD Deputy Commissioner Kaz Daughtry posted on X photos of items he said the police confiscated from protesters who took over Hamilton Hall at Columbia University. The photo showed gas masks, ear plugs, helmets, goggles, tape, hammers, knives, ropes, and a book on terrorism. The book is by Charles Townshend, Professor of International History at Keele University in England. It was published in 2011 and is 161 pages.

“These are not the tools of students protesting, these are the tools of agitators, of people who were working on something nefarious,” Daughtry said on X. “Thankfully, your NYPD was able to prevent whatever they were planning and stop them before they could do it.”

Kemper asked who was organizing the protests.

“However, as we have been stating for the past 2 weeks, there is an underlying radical indoctrination of some of these students. Vulnerable and young people being influenced by professional agitators. Who is funding and leading this movement?” Kemper asked on X.

Kemper also posted a letter from The New School requesting the NYPD’s assistance in removing protesters from their campus on Friday.

“The actions and continuing escalation of these individuals are a substantial disruption of the educational environment and regular operations of the university,” the letter stated.

The New School is a university in New York City. It closed all academic building on Friday and classes were moved to online. The college said classes on campus would resume Saturday.

Fox News reported that 56 protesters were arrested at The New School and New York University.

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NYPD storms protest-occupied Columbia building, several arrested

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Image courtesy of the City of New York

From The Centre Square

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“Early Tuesday, protesters chose to escalate to an alarming and untenable situation – including by vandalizing property, breaking doors and windows, blockading entrances, and forcing our facilities and public safety workers out – and we are responding appropriately”

Following weeks of tense standoffs between pro-Palestinian demonstrators leading to violent escalation at Columbia University, officials at the Ivy League institution finally gave the green light for the New York Police Department to enter a recently seized building, resulting in dozens of arrests.

Flanked with heavy armor, NYPD officers stormed Hamilton Hall late Tuesday night “at the University’s request.”

The university released a statement after NYPD took action, saying the decision was “made to restore safety and order to our community.”

The university said it was “left with no choice” after university public safety personnel “were forced out of the building,” by agitators. The school added that a member of their facilities teams was threatened.

“Early Tuesday, protesters chose to escalate to an alarming and untenable situation – including by vandalizing property, breaking doors and windows, blockading entrances, and forcing our facilities and public safety workers out – and we are responding appropriately as we have long made clear we would. The safety of our community, especially our students, remains our top priority,” the statement said.

The statement emphasized the school “will not risk the safety of our community or the potential for further escalation.”

The school appears to have examined all its options before calling in NYPD to help resolve the tense situation.

“The leadership team, including the Board of Trustees, met throughout the night and into the early morning, consulting with security experts and law enforcement to determine the best plan to protect our students and the entire Columbia community. We made the decision, early in the morning, that this was a law enforcement matter, and that the NYPD were best positioned to determine and execute an appropriate response,” according to the statement.

City officials, including Mayor Eric Adams and members of the NYPD, held a press briefing Tuesday night, warning Columbia students and protesters to leave the area before the situation “escalated,” pointing the blame for violence on “outside agitators” and “professional actors.”

The university echoed city officials, pointing fingers at outside agitators for the violent uprising.

“We believe that the group that broke into and occupied the building is led by individuals who are not affiliated with the University,” the statement said.

Both city and university officials warned protesters to leave the hall and area before eventual action by NYPD, using the press briefing to issue one final warning.

Videos from the chaotic scene showed several people under restraints, hulled away in a large bus.

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