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Subject: Another Global Warming nut
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jhallUser is Offline

Posts:1237


06/05/2008 10:55 AM Alert 

Another Global Warming nut... what a surprise... he's french! haha

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/06/05/man-scales-new-york-times-building/

 

Man Scales Times Building and Is Arrested

Alain RobertAlain Robert, a stuntman, climbed the 52-story New York Times building on Thursday before he was arrested. His banner read, “Global warming kills more people than 9/11 every week.” (Photo: Sewell Chan/The New York Times)

Updated, 1:34 p.m. |

Listen to an interview with Alain Robert

Alain Robert, a French stuntman known for climbing tall buildings, scaled the north face of the New York Times building on Thursday, climbing 52 stories to the roof and clutching a bright green banner, before police officers arrested him around 12:22 p.m.

Police and security officials cordoned off the sidewalk below, on West 41st Street, as a crowd assembled. The words on the banner were illegible from the sidewalk, but from office windows inside the tower the slogan on the banner could be clearly read: “Global warming kills more people than 9/11 every week.”

The man later confirmed, moments after being arrested on the roof of the tower, that he was Alain Robert, a 46-year-old stuntman famous for scaling structures like the National Bank of Abu Dhabi, the Sydney Opera House in Australia and the Eiffel Tower and Montparnasse Tower in Paris. He wore a T-shirt with his name and the address of a Web site (thesolutionissimple.org), exercise pants and climbing shoes. He had long blond hair. He used no rope, harness or parachute.

Alain RobertA view of Alain Robert from inside the Times building, as he climbed it. (Photo: Matthew Orr/The New York Times)

Police officers blocked off the sidewalk at the base of the building and asked members of the crowd to move along. Construction workers on a building directly across West 41st Street, facing the northern face of the building, looked on with expressions of astonishment and amusement. A crowd gathered on the sidewalk, pointing, gawking and capturing pictures and images with cellphones, digital cameras and video cameras.

“This is a publicity stunt, it looks like,” Janet L. Robinson, the chief executive of The New York Times Company, said as she entered the building. “There is definitely going to be an arrest.”

Wearing a backpack slung over one shoulder, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr., the chairman of The Times Company and publisher of The Times, who is himself an avid climber, ducked under the police tape and examined the spectacle. He declined to comment.

Inside the building, reporters and editors pressed their faces to the glass windows to catch a glimpse of the climber. He weaved in and out of the ceramic rod facade, seeming to rest on the building’s exterior beams every few floors before swinging himself back out the face of the rods to resume his climb. He stopped occasionally to wave to the crowd, which included construction workers on a building across the street and others in front of the Port Authority.

Each time he took his hand away to wave, there were gasps from observers who feared he might fall.

As Mr. Robert climbed the building, police officers from the Emergency Services Unit, using a freight elevator, assembled on the roof. “He’s up to 30-something,” one police officer radioed another. “No, he’s up to 45,” another officer radioed back.

A security guard remarked, “Apparently, he’s a professional climber,” and a police officer replied: “To be honest, looking at this building, you don’t have to be a professional. This building is like a ladder.” (Designed to be environmentally sensitive, the tower is sheathed in distinctive horizontal ceramic rods that are intended to allow light while keeping the building energy-efficient.)

Around a dozen police officers were on the roof when Mr. Robert arrived there. One of them put on a hard hat, harnessed himself to the building and sat out on a beam, a couple of feet from the building, as Mr. Robert reached the top. When he got to the top, he calmly perched himself on the same beam, beside the officer, and raised his hands. The pair began talking.

Mr. Robert was placed in handcuffs and led across the roof and into a service elevator. The police officers had evidently made preparations in case he resisted, but he submitted peacefully. A Times reporter asked, “Where are you from and why are you doing this?” Mr. Robert said, “France. Paris.”

Mr. Robert was taken down through the service elevator to an underground service area of the building. A reporter asked why he had chosen The Times’s building. His reply: “This is a green building, which is a fantastic step.” He proceeded to talk about global warming as the police led him away. He said he believed the news media would give more prominence to coverage of global warming if a man climbed a prominent building.

Asked about the difficulty of the climb, he replied: “No, the building was easy. It was just a statement. Plus, I’m a professional climber.”

He added: “My name is Alain Robert. I did climb about 18 buildings around the world and I climbed even the five tallest.”

Then he was moved into a squad car and driven away, east on West 40th Street toward Seventh Avenue.

New York’s skyscrapers have long been sites for death-defying stunts. In 1974, a French stunt artist, Philippe Petit, famously walked a high-wire strung between the twin towers of the World Trade Center. (Mr. Petit’s feat is the subject of a new documentary, “Man on a Wire,” which has received critical acclaim.)

More recently, in 2006, another stuntman, Jeb Corliss, was arrested after trying to jump off the observation deck of the Empire State Building. (Mr. Corliss challenged his indictment in court. A trial judge ruled last year that as a professional jumper, he was experienced and careful enough to jump off a building without endangering his own life or anyone else’s. But this year, an appellate court overturned the ruling, although it reduced the charge in the indictment from a felony charge of reckless endangerment with depraved indifference to life, to a misdemeanor charge of reckless endangerment.)

Mr. Robert is a practitioner of free-climbing, done without ropes, harnesses or other external supports.

“Climbing is my passion, my philosophy of life,” Mr. Robert states on his Web site, adding, “Although I suffer from vertigo, although my accidents left me disabled up to 60 percent, I have become the best solo climber.” The Web site states that in eight years, Mr. Robert has climbed more than “70 skyscrapers and mythical monuments around the world.”

Alain RobertAlain Robert stands on a ledge outside the building. (Photo: Matthew Orr/The New York Times)

The 52-story steel-and-glass Times building, at 620 Eighth Avenue, between Seventh and Eighth Avenues, was designed by Renzo Piano and opened last year. A personal assistant at Mr. Piano’s architectural studio in Paris said he was traveling and not immediately available for comment.

Along with The Times, it is occupied by several law firms, including Covington & Burling, Seyfarth Shaw and Goodwin Procter. Before The Times moved last year, it had previously occupied a neo-Renaissance building at 229 West 43rd Street since 1913.

Inspector James McCarthy, the commanding officer of the Midtown South police precinct, said Mr. Robert would likely face several criminal charges, including, at the least, reckless endangerment.


All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.
--Edmund Burke
drummer72User is Offline

Posts:3605


06/05/2008 3:12 PM Alert 
Takes more of a man to do what he did, than post a stupid article on this forum about it.

"Everything for everyone and nothing for ourselves"
jhallUser is Offline

Posts:1237


06/05/2008 4:02 PM Alert 
He is a criminal and a coward. What disrespectful puke would compare the propaganda of global warming to the worst attack on this nation? Besides you and him of course

All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.
--Edmund Burke
JasonYUser is Offline

Posts:2581


06/05/2008 4:15 PM Alert 
His sign is retarded, but I would hardly call climbing a building with no rope a coward.....maybe dumb....this guy has climbed a ton of tall stuff without ropes before............

"My favorite health club is the International House of Pancakes" -- Lewis Black
drummer72User is Offline

Posts:3605


06/05/2008 11:15 PM Alert 
You calling me puke, Jhall?

"Everything for everyone and nothing for ourselves"
JasonYUser is Offline

Posts:2581


06/06/2008 7:36 AM Alert 
Posted By jhall on 06/05/2008 4:02 PM
He is a criminal and a coward. What disrespectful puke would compare the propaganda of global warming to the worst attack on this nation? Besides you and him of course



I would rank the attack on Pearl Harbor the worst attack on this nation......


"My favorite health club is the International House of Pancakes" -- Lewis Black
missPolitickUser is Offline

Posts:644


06/06/2008 9:26 AM Alert 
Doesn't that guy know that smoke from Mary Jane also contributes to "global warming"?? What a self-righteous, short sighted, highly coordinated, weirdooooo!

Despite All My Rage I Am Still Just A Rat In A Cage
JasonYUser is Offline

Posts:2581


06/06/2008 12:00 PM Alert 
Mary Jane comes from Mother Earth, so no pollution there..........

"My favorite health club is the International House of Pancakes" -- Lewis Black
missPolitickUser is Offline

Posts:644


06/06/2008 5:37 PM Alert 
...but they are exhaling a lot of hot air....

Despite All My Rage I Am Still Just A Rat In A Cage
JasonUser is Offline

Posts:3378


06/06/2008 7:15 PM Alert 
I think global warming fried his brain...

Joined: Jul 2005
jhallUser is Offline

Posts:1237


06/07/2008 1:48 PM Alert 
Posted By JasonY on 06/06/2008 7:36 AM
Posted By jhall on 06/05/2008 4:02 PM
He is a criminal and a coward. What disrespectful puke would compare the propaganda of global warming to the worst attack on this nation? Besides you and him of course



I would rank the attack on Pearl Harbor the worst attack on this nation......

I would not, simply because it was a target against our military, not a direct and deliberate cowardly attach on civilians.

All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.
--Edmund Burke
geewizUser is Offline

Posts:323


06/09/2008 10:13 PM Alert 
They should have cleared the sidewalks below him and put a nice warm bullets in his head.
drummer72User is Offline

Posts:3605


06/09/2008 10:49 PM Alert 
"Put a nice warm bullets"? Are you italian or something?

"Everything for everyone and nothing for ourselves"
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