
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
here is an update on the Quebec situation:
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2012/05/22/bill-78-quebec-protests-stu...
MONTREAL - A river of red-clad protesters rippled through downtown Montreal to mark the 100th day of Quebec's student strikes, while smaller events were held in other cities Tuesday.
Tens of thousands of people clogged Montreal's city core in a festive, multi-headed march designed to make a mockery of a new provincial law that demands protest routes be approved in advance.
Even a famous provincial politician, Independent MNA Pierre Curzi, joined the crowds that strayed off the announced path in a mass demonstration of defiance against the law. A prominent student organizer wandering in the throng went further, practically daring authorities to punish him.
"Angry protesters balk at Quebec emergency law" has mostly been covered up in the U.S. mainstream media. Lots of righteous anger and action, understandably so.
Intense fear for some these days: Visiting ETs, Planet X, and the pending pole shift have been massively covered up since at least 1947. But even more Council of World allowed Punches await (or loom).
Demonstrations in Quebec's long-running tuition protest again turned violent Friday, as marchers hurled Molotov cocktails during a show of defiance against controversial new legislation designed to end the standoff.
Police said that an incendiary device was hurled in Montreal at a busy downtown intersection, and The Canadian Press reported that at least two Molotov cocktails were thrown.
Participants are already numbered at 10,000 and organizers expect 20,000 to eventually come. Protesters, calling themselves Blockupy, are against the powers of the banks and untamed capitalism. They are gathering as a key conference on monetary policy is taking place in Frankfurt. Five thousand police have been assigned to the protest to keep the peace. On Friday they arrested 400 during unauthorized protests, which included erecting barricades and staging sit-ins.
Source: http://youtu.be/k0OO0ZPifcI
The struggles of capitalism are clearly intensifying, with shareholders taking assertive action.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2012/may/06/executive-pay-anger-...
http://rt.com/news/europe-schengen-border-control-025/
Published: 26 April, 2012, 14:54

French gendarmes stand at their posts as they check identity papers and cars in La Turbie, near the Franco-Italian border (Reuters/Eric Gaillard)
TAGS: Conflict, Election, Politics, Human rights, Law, Immigration
A bill proposed by Germany and France may impose border security checks in EU countries in an attempt to tackle rising levels of illegal immigration. Many worry the new measures could be another nail in the eurozone’s coffin.
The draft legislation says that the 25 countries party to the European Schengen agreement may reintroduce border controls for a period of ten days if they feel there is a threat to public order.
European interior ministers meet in Luxembourg on Thursday to discuss the Franco-German proposal; French Minister Claude Guéant is expected to defend the controversial bill.
“The Council is due to approve a roadmap to ensure a coherent EU response to continued migratory pressures,” said an EU press release.
Members of the European parliament also carried out a separate vote on Wednesday backing the reintroduction of visa travel for third-country nationals crossing the EU's external frontiers.
The bill has received a mixed reaction among EU leaders, head of the European council Herman Van Rompuy condemning it as a “populist threat” sweeping through Europe.
"Nationalist and extremist movements are on the rise; many of them blame 'Brussels' for bad news,” he tweeted on a visit to Romania on Wednesday.
The comments come after the first round of French presidential elections on Sunday where immigration issues took center stage.
Hardline anti-eurozone candidate Marine Le Pen achieved an unexpected 18 per cent in polls.
Current President Nicolas Sarkozy also deplored EU immigration laws, describing the continent as “leaking like a sieve.”
"If Europe can't control its borders then France will do so. A Europe that doesn't control its migration flows is finished," stressed the French president.
France restored border security checks with neighboring Italy in April of last year after Rome granted thousands of immigrants from North Africa temporary visas. Denmark then followed suit creating checkpoints on borders with Germany and Sweden.
Illegal immigration from third-party countries into the EU became increasingly problematic during the economic downturn. Over 90 percent of immigrants heading into the eurozone arrive over the Greek border with Turkey. Michalis Chrisochoidis, the Greek Minister for Civil Protection appealed to the EU on Wednesday to tackle the escalating crisis in the country.
''We want obligations from Europe for deals with third-party countries from where migration flows arrive… countries will therefore be forced to reabsorb their citizens, which at the moment they do not do at all,” said Chrisochoidis.
Concerns have been voiced that a restriction of EU borders would be detrimental to European economies, drastically affecting the tourist industry.
Taleb Rifai, secretary-general of the World Tourism Organization said on the sidelines of an EU conference on Tuesday that the proposed bill would be “very damaging” for tourism.
“The Schengen zone is depriving itself of tremendous potential of more tourists [and] more benefits by actually insisting on procedures and formalities that belong to the 19th century,” Rifai said.
He then cited the example of Turkey where Russian tourist numbers have doubled since the government agreed on a visa-on-arrival regime in 2009.
80,000 - 90,000 Rally Against Czech Government
http://news.yahoo.com/tens-thousands-rally-against-czech-government...
"Tens of thousands of protesters gathered for an anti-government rally in Prague's central Wenceslas Square on Saturday as the centre-right ruling coalition was teetering on the verge of collapse..."
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