Speaking at New Scotland Yard, he said, there was a "contrast" between the violent scenes in Westminster and houses with parents and shocked young wines, when police arrived.
He added: "I call, those who turn this for protests to think the effects could have on your future career."
Question at the press conference if the met would consider ban on future marches, Sir Paul replied: "this is one of the options we have." Banning is a very difficult step to take, these very balanced sentences.
"We can not ban a demonstration, but we can ban March, one subject to the approval of the Minister of the Interior."
But he went on: "If you people are willing to break the law in this way have, what the probability of you obey order to March or compliance with conditions is a demonstration?"
"Sometimes put this power in the situation could further will be."
Public buildings and monuments in London, as for example the Cenotaph, could be spiked, to protect you during future demonstrations before may protests happen in recent years, he said.
Sir Paul admitted the events are skills stretching to say his power's: "If you set 3,000 people, not only one day but a considerable number of days, the consequences for the rest of the Organization are clearly."
He said he is "very concerned" about the impact on the backup of neighborhoods and city centres, how hundreds of officers to Westminster to deploy again.
Sir Paul said he wanted a "paramilitary model" of police work in the UK but a fresh review is approved takes place whether or not water cannon against rioters should be used.
"I want in an arms race, a knee jerk reaction to thugs and hooligans who do not know how behavior, if you are accompanied by an overwhelming amount to demonstrate peacefully to get involved."
"I am most reluctant to move in this direction, but at the same time we should keep everything in the year under review."
Meanwhile said Ed Balls, shadow Home Secretary, planned reductions in the metropolitan police budget - the it 330 million £ see lose over the next four years - were a "reckless and dangerous gambling".
The met together with the other 42 police forces encountered alone a 15 percent cut in real terms over the next two years.
Headquarters was the topic of "human Kettle" on Tuesday Lunch by about 30 friends and supporters of the Alfie meadows, the emergency operation underwent after allegedly beaten by a police truncheon during a recent protests held.
Wear hard helmet and verspottet-Up bloody bandages around their heads, arms linked and banner read "Justice for Alfie" instead.
The injured student's mother, lecturer at Roehampton University joined the protest.
Susan Matthews, 55, said: "I think it is incredibly damaging to a country when the police forcibly, behavior because it removes trust."
His injuries were from Simon Hardy, who told the NIS highlighted in the House of Lords Joint Committee on human rights, the's met tactics could lead to a different death.
He said: "If you make more violent protests, to increase the police repression, it is want Ian Tomlinson or Blair Peach only a matter of time before you have a different demonstrations."
"At the 9." "December Alfie meadows fortunately not die but his situation could someone be hit by a police officer's truncheon or knocked over by a horse and could be killed."

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