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Bernie’s Anti-oligarchy Tour/Anti-Trump Resistance

So do I, hopefully. I’ve been watching Maddow in the evenings. She always starts off showing scenes from protests around the nation. Usually ends her show that way as well. Love reading all the signs, and feel encouraged watching.

Like what I’m seeing in the polls as well. Has to have a political effect eventually. Saw a headline this morning that said he has the lowest approval rating after the first 100 days, in 80 years.


Holy crap. You actually watch Maddow??!?? That explains so much.
 
For some no good reason, MAGA seems to agree with Trump that nobody in the United States should be allowed to criticise Trump, or disagree with him in public. Strangely, perhaps, that does not seem to conform to how I thought things worked in the United States. If Trump is so insecure, that nobody alive can question him, on any subject on Earth, without being identified by Trump as the “enemy within”, or a “radical left lunatic”, perhaps our president is in need of therapy? Maybe it’s not us? Maybe he needs help? lol…

 
Trump is ready to crack down hard, as we head into summer. Insurrection Act might be next.











View: https://x.com/NewsTalk4BC/status/1931960820654903340


A reporter from channel 9 getting shot is one of the few positives out of this mess....

For context, they are an Australian commercial television network that is consistently right wing, both 7 and 9 are staunch supporters of the Liberal party and are by and large anti worker. Both are owned by oligarchs with significant interests in mining.
 
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A reporter from channel 9 getting shot is one of the few positives out of this mess....

For context, they are an Australian commercial television network that is consistently right wing, both 7 and 9 are staunch supporters of the Liberal party and are by and large anti worker. Both are owned by oligarchs with significant interests in mining.
Thanks for that context.
 

Dozens of protests and rallies opposing ICE raids and government immigration policies were held across the country on Monday, with more planned for the rest of the week, after a weekend of protests and unrest in Los Angeles.

Since Sunday, the anti-ICE movement has spread across California and beyond, with events held from New York to Texas. Activists plan more events on Tuesday, with events due in New York, Chicago, Dallas, and Atlanta. A series of so-called "No Kings" nationwide demonstrations are planned for Saturday.


Some 56 people were arrested in L.A. over the weekend as some 700 marines and more than 2,000 National Guard troops were deployed by President Donald Trump in response to protests that began on Friday, sparking an extraordinary showdown with California Gov. Gavin Newsom and L.A. Mayor Karen Bass, who strongly criticized the move as executive overreach.

The state of California is suing the Trump administration over the National Guard deployment, calling the move "unlawful."

NBC News counted at least 25 rallies and demonstrations coast to coast. Some of them only involved a few dozen participants, while others attracted thousands to make a stand against the detention and removal of suspected undocumented migrants.

Many protesters across the country were trade unionists calling for the release of SEIU California President David Huerta, who was arrested on Friday.
 
Photos from No Kings Day. Here’s hoping our movement grows and grows!


IMG_6333.webp


 
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The No Kings Resistance is not going anywhere.


I went to a protest today, for the first time in years. It was the “No Kings” protest in San Francisco, part of a nationwide series of protests against Donald Trump’s authoritarianism. The protests reportedly drew about 5 million people across the country — about the same as the Women’s March in 2017.

In almost every city, protests were completely peaceful — the only city to see significant violent clashes between protesters and police was Los Angeles, where leftist career-activists have gathered in recent days. Certainly, the SF protest I attended was totally nonviolent — I didn’t even see a single police officer. No stores were looted, no windows smashed, no cars overturned, no bricks thrown.

This was also the single most patriotic protest I’ve ever been to. Tons of people were carrying American flags — they absolutely overwhelmed the number of Palestine, Mexico, trans, Ukraine, and other flags. Many of the signs referenced the Constitution, the Statue of Liberty, or the American Revolution of 1776:

IMG_6342.jpeg
Notably, there was none of the angry energy and racial grievance of the BLM protests of summer 2020, nor the anti-Americanism of the Palestine protests. There was no 1619 or 1948, only 1776. It was all just liberty and democracy and the Constitution. My overpowering impression was that this was the country I grew up in. These were the things that Americans valued — or at least, said they valued — when I was young.


Millions of Americans peacefully participated in “No Kings” protests Saturday, demonstrating against — in the words of the organizers — “authoritarianism, billionaire-first politics, and the militarization of our democracy.” They came out in massive numbers in hundreds of locations, from urban metropolises to small towns to rural areas across the country. Together the attendees dwarfed the sparse crowds at President Donald Trump’s military parade the same day in Washington, where the crowds fell far below expectations.

It’s satisfying that such a vast number of Americans came out — many of them in rain, andmany of them asfirst time-protesters — to reject Trump’s autocratic agenda. It’s even more satisfying to notice that taking to the streets is emerging as a habit of the body politic: Mass protests are becoming more common, and fatigue from resisting Trump seems to have ebbed in a definitive way.

In the early months of Trump’s second term, it was common to ask“Where is the resistance?” Whereas Trump’s first inauguration triggered the largest single-day protest in American history, his second inauguration was met with far smaller demonstrations. Combined with Democratic Party leaders’ timidity and a business community that was much more receptive to Trump than in his first term, there was a widespread sense that Trump’s victory had fundamentally demoralized the left and that MAGA was the new normal.

In April, that began to change with the “Hands off!” rallies that swept scores of cities across the country. A group of researchers affiliated with Harvard University’s Crowd Counting Consortiumhave said that those protests were the largest the group had recorded “since the nationwide uprising following the killings of Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd, and Breonna Taylor in 2020.” Those rallies were followed just two weeks later by the first round of national “No Kings” protests. Combined, the researchers estimate that those two days “account for between 1.2 million and 1.8 million in participants.”

(This): Activist fatigue is a very real thing, and I can understand why Trump’s second inauguration was met by more of a grumble than a shout. That the anti-Trump coalition is getting its footing and establishing a rhythm with wide-scale protests may be a sign that some have gotten a bit of rest — or have decided that, tired as they may be, the pace of democratic backsliding is intolerable. Whatever the reason, momentum is building, and when public protest movements become big and loud enough, they can be a source of energy and inspiration unto themselves.
 
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The No Kings Resistance is not going anywhere.


I went to a protest today, for the first time in years. It was the “No Kings” protest in San Francisco, part of a nationwide series of protests against Donald Trump’s authoritarianism. The protests reportedly drew about 5 million people across the country — about the same as the Women’s March in 2017.

In almost every city, protests were completely peaceful — the only city to see significant violent clashes between protesters and police was Los Angeles, where leftist career-activists have gathered in recent days. Certainly, the SF protest I attended was totally nonviolent — I didn’t even see a single police officer. No stores were looted, no windows smashed, no cars overturned, no bricks thrown.

This was also the single most patriotic protest I’ve ever been to. Tons of people were carrying American flags — they absolutely overwhelmed the number of Palestine, Mexico, trans, Ukraine, and other flags. Many of the signs referenced the Constitution, the Statue of Liberty, or the American Revolution of 1776:

View attachment 18881
Notably, there was none of the angry energy and racial grievance of the BLM protests of summer 2020, nor the anti-Americanism of the Palestine protests. There was no 1619 or 1948, only 1776. It was all just liberty and democracy and the Constitution. My overpowering impression was that this was the country I grew up in. These were the things that Americans valued — or at least, said they valued — when I was young.


Millions of Americans peacefully participated in “No Kings” protests Saturday, demonstrating against — in the words of the organizers — “authoritarianism, billionaire-first politics, and the militarization of our democracy.” They came out in massive numbers in hundreds of locations, from urban metropolises to small towns to rural areas across the country. Together the attendees dwarfed the sparse crowds at President Donald Trump’s military parade the same day in Washington, where the crowds fell far below expectations.

It’s satisfying that such a vast number of Americans came out — many of them in rain, andmany of them asfirst time-protesters — to reject Trump’s autocratic agenda. It’s even more satisfying to notice that taking to the streets is emerging as a habit of the body politic: Mass protests are becoming more common, and fatigue from resisting Trump seems to have ebbed in a definitive way.

In the early months of Trump’s second term, it was common to ask“Where is the resistance?” Whereas Trump’s first inauguration triggered the largest single-day protest in American history, his second inauguration was met with far smaller demonstrations. Combined with Democratic Party leaders’ timidity and a business community that was much more receptive to Trump than in his first term, there was a widespread sense that Trump’s victory had fundamentally demoralized the left and that MAGA was the new normal.

In April, that began to change with the “Hands off!” rallies that swept scores of cities across the country. A group of researchers affiliated with Harvard University’s Crowd Counting Consortiumhave said that those protests were the largest the group had recorded “since the nationwide uprising following the killings of Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd, and Breonna Taylor in 2020.” Those rallies were followed just two weeks later by the first round of national “No Kings” protests. Combined, the researchers estimate that those two days “account for between 1.2 million and 1.8 million in participants.”

(This): Activist fatigue is a very real thing, and I can understand why Trump’s second inauguration was met by more of a grumble than a shout. That the anti-Trump coalition is getting its footing and establishing a rhythm with wide-scale protests may be a sign that some have gotten a bit of rest — or have decided that, tired as they may be, the pace of democratic backsliding is intolerable. Whatever the reason, momentum is building, and when public protest movements become big and loud enough, they can be a source of energy and inspiration unto themselves.
I regret not trying to get the day off from work and going to the local one.
 
I regret not trying to get the day off from work and going to the local one.
We feel the same. I wish I had been at the Ogden event. My daughter and her partner went. They said it was way more people than they expected, like around 500, and for Ogden that is a pretty good turnout really.
 
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