Thousands of “No Kings” rallies kicked off nationwide on Saturday against President Trump and his policies.
Defiant Democrats have embraced this weekend’s protests, while GOP lawmakers bash the protests as “hate America” demonstrations. “Showing up to express dissent against an out-of-control administration, that’s as American as motherhood, baseball and apple pie,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) said Friday.
Saturday’s protests follow a series of June marches that coincided with the U.S. Army’s 250th anniversary military parade in Washington, D.C., which also happened to be Trump’s 79th birthday.
The rallies are taking place amidst the government shutdown as well federal troop deployments across the country.
Insurrection 2025
The Insurrection Act of 1807 has suddenly popped into the news again. It is a quick way to get into Martial Law, and has been in the news a number of times in the past few years. Let’s revisit the issues and see if this time, in 2025, will be different. The Insurrection Act or 1807 was frequently mentioned then the 2020 election was stolen from President Trump, and again in 2021 when the National Guard was called up for January 6 unrest in Washington DC. Now we have the National Guard in a number of cities. Are we poised for Martial Law again?
https://www.zetatalk.com/newsletr/issue997.htm
Comment
Ferguson protests
Using Ferguson protests to extrapolate what public opinion will be once it is apparent all is not right.......
The familiar routine comforts, and the average citizen lives paycheck to paycheck and does not have the capacity to take action. They will wait, and see what plans and policies are put into place by their governments. Martial Law will not be imposed automatically, but in stages. Earthquakes and tidal waves and crop shortages will begin to alarm the populace who will make strident demands on their governments, and when they discover that no solutions are being offered to them, rioting will indeed begin. - Zetatalk (on Honk Kong protests).
One banner proclaimed: “It is the not the people who are destabilizing Mexico, it is the state.”
Thursday’s march was preceded by photographs circulating on social media of youths in plane clothes travelling in army vehicles, and claims that the government was preparing to spark violence with the help of provocateurs in an effort to discredit the march.
The two apparently unrelated issues have fed the widespread perception that unbridled political corruption is the underlying cause of the country’s many problems.
(Ppl became furious upon revelations that the president's mansion "is still owned by a subsidiary of a company with a long history of obtaining lucrative contracts from Peña Nieto administrations, dating back to his term as governor of the state of Mexico").
http://news.yahoo.com/anti-government-protest-haiti-turns-violent-1...
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — An anti-government protest that snaked through sections of Haiti's capital on Tuesday turned violent as three people were apparently shot in a volatile neighborhood.
The march began peacefully when a crowd grew to a few thousand people in slums that are opposition strongholds. But as demonstrators walked by an intersection in Delmas 32, the critics of President Michel Martelly's administration and pro-government residents began shouting and throwing rocks at each other.
As the melee quickly escalated, Associated Press journalists witnessed three people apparently getting hit by bullets. One was hit in the neck and appeared gravely wounded. The two others sustained wounds to limbs.
As a panic ensued in the densely-packed area of cinderblock houses, officers with the Haitian National Police fired tear gas and most demonstrators dispersed. Police spokesman Frantz Lerebours and other authorities made no immediate comment about the violence or any arrests.
Even after the violence, nearly 1,000 protesters continued their Tuesday march demanding Martelly's resignation and a chance to vote in long-delayed legislative and municipal elections.
The president was supposed to call elections in 2011 for a majority of Senate seats, the entire Chamber of Deputies and local offices. But he hasn't done so because the Senate has yet to approve an electoral law authorizing the vote.
The Chamber of Deputies has approved the legislation, but it is being held up in the Senate by six senators who have blocked a vote, arguing it is unconstitutional and favors the government.
Martelly administration officials blame the standoff on the six senators, insisting that the government wants to hold the elections but can't because the lawmakers are blocking the vote by preventing a quorum.
Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe said Tuesday on Twitter tweeted that the six senators need to "unlock the democratic process" and the "opposition must break with their outdated chaotic policies."
If laws are not changed they will be ignored by the common man, as the trend toward massive and widespread protests worsens. This leaves the common man working things out among themselves, casting the control by the elite aside. The elite will react at first by rage, calling out all legal remedies, all political chits they have in their pockets. When this does not work they will retreat sooner than planned to their bunkers, or their island enclaves, pouting. - Zetatalk
on weekend of Nov 14-16 (most likely evening of Nov 14).
It might provide a preview into what future police responses in the U.S. will look like, post-announcement
In its 7th week, Nine out of 10 Hong Kong activists say [they] will fight on for a year
The straw poll found 87 percent said they were willing to keep up the campaign for more than a year, while 93 percent said that even if police forcibly cleared them away, they would regroup to launch fresh street occupations elsewhere
However, 70% of Hong Kong residents want the protesters to stop occupying.
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