• BalderSion@real.lemmy.fan
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    15 天前

    On Feb. 15, 2003, millions of people marched in over 600 cities against the plans of U.S. President George W. Bush to invade Iraq.

    First time?

  • meowmeowbeanz@sh.itjust.works
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    15 天前

    Fifty states, one message: we see through the facade. Simultaneous protests coast-to-coast, and the propaganda machines are in stealth mode. Convenient, isn’t it? A nation erupts, and the so-called “free press” opts for strategic amnesia.

    This isn’t apathy—it’s suppression. When every state rises up, the system panics. The Capitol steps become battlegrounds, yet the narrative is buried under celebrity gossip and stock market fluff. They’re scared. Scared of what happens when people realize that unity in dissent is their greatest weapon.

    Keep marching. If they won’t cover it, we’ll document it ourselves. The truth doesn’t need their permission to exist.

    • xor@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      15 天前

      they did this to “Occupy Wall Street” too… once they couldn’t ignore it anymore, they just made fun of them.
      as much as i hate protests blocking the freeway, because it’s dangerous and pisses off innocent people, it does manage to get you on the news….
      oh, also because it gives cops an excuse to raid you violently

      • meowmeowbeanz@sh.itjust.works
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        15 天前

        Exactly. They ran the same playbook with Occupy Wall Street—ignore, ridicule, and then unleash the riot squads when the message hits too close to home. It’s not about “safety” or “order”; it’s about silencing dissent before it becomes unmanageable.

        Blocking freeways? Sure, it’s inconvenient—but so is systemic corruption, unchecked corporate greed, and a government that treats its people like collateral damage. If a traffic jam is what it takes to make the propaganda machines blink, then so be it.

        And yeah, cops love an excuse to escalate. The state’s monopoly on violence doesn’t tolerate competition, even when it’s peaceful resistance. But let them overplay their hand—every raid, every crackdown only fuels the fire they’re desperate to extinguish.

        • xor@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          15 天前

          i don’t mind traffic jams, it’s stuff like medical emergencies being stuck in traffic, people driving freeway speeds and then coming across stopped traffic, activists getting run over by chuds… that sort of thing….

          but, traffic news has a broad market, and it pisses people off enough to go viral… i dunno, it’s effective….

          i liked how blm in portland kept finding dumpsters and lighting them on fire in the middle of the street… made for great pictures….
          but, every time a fire started, the cops switched to ultra-violent mode and a lot of people got seriously hurt… fire was always their legal justification….

          • meowmeowbeanz@sh.itjust.works
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            15 天前

            The system thrives on fear—fear of disruption, fear of unity, fear of people refusing to play by its rules. Blocking freeways isn’t the problem; it’s a mirror held up to a society that values convenience over justice. If ambulances can’t move, that’s not on the protesters—it’s on a government that built a house of cards where one roadblock collapses everything.

            But you’re right: fire is their favorite excuse. It’s not the flames they fear; it’s the spark in people’s minds. Every crackdown is their attempt to extinguish that spark before it spreads. The challenge isn’t just to disrupt but to outmaneuver their narratives.

            Keep pissing them off, but don’t hand them the script they’re desperate to use against us.

          • Hacksaw@lemmy.ca
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            14 天前

            The protests almost always made sure emergency vehicles made it through without delay.

    • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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      15 天前

      Then we start picketing them, too. Right outside their media buildings, asking when they plan to grow a spine and start covering what’s happening. Add media companies to the places being protested and show what cowards they are.

  • شاهد على إبادة@lemm.ee
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    15 天前

    The largest protests in the history of the world were in opposition to the invasion of Iraq. The invasion of Iraq still happened.

    Protesting sends a message but it isn’t enough.

    • Natanox@discuss.tchncs.de
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      15 天前

      If protests aren’t enough to sway a democratic system, then the democratic system is broken and resistance becomes mandatory. To quote what the german constitution established after Hitler to prevent exactly what’s currently happening again in the US:

      Article 20 [Constitutional principles - Right of resistance]

      […]

      (4) All Germans shall have the right to resist any person seeking to abolish this constitutional order if no other remedy is available.

      I do not know if there’s something akin to this in the US constitution (I know your culture very much thinks there is every time it’s about guns though). But even if it isn’t, fuck it. The system is evidently broken, do what’s necessary to regain the power of the people. Do it the French way if you must.

  • Ketchup@reddthat.com
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    15 天前

    By all means, protest. Push these bad actors. Stick up for democracy! But Is anyone else mildly anxious that JD Vance’s hero, Curtis Yarvin, suggested in 2022, that all Trump needs to do is declare a state of emergency to extend executive immunity to prosecution, and to do it early on? So far, project 2025 combined with the manifestos of Dark Gothic Tech Bros are aligned.

    “If the institutions deny the President the Constitutional position he has legally won in the election, the voters will have to act directly. Trump will call his people into the streets—not at the end of his term, when he is most powerless; at the start, when he is most powerful. No one wants to see this nuclear option happen. Preparing for it and demonstrating the capacity to execute it will prevent it from having to happen.”

    Apr. 7, 2022 Curtis Yarvin

  • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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    15 天前

    Elon and the felon: “Does their protesting stop what we’re doing in any way? No? Then why would I care?”

  • Commiunism@beehaw.org
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    15 天前

    A couple weeks ago Trump stated the following: “and he (Musk) knows those computers better than anybody, all those computers, those vote counting computers, and we ended up winning Pennsylvania like in a landslide it was pretty good”.

    No mainstream news source reported on it despite the fact that it’s a borderline confession, and the fact that back in 2020 they gave an insane amount of attention and signal boosting to election fraud claims that had 0 evidence.

    Media is on the side of the money, they’re not a friend.

  • teri@discuss.tchncs.de
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    14 天前

    Really?! The worlds largest propaganda machine is playing tricks on us?!1!

    Facebook knows who is sensitive to this kind of news, they know who would join a protest and who not. And they can decide to whom to show which news. How many people use Facebook & co. as their main source of information? Or main medium to organize?

  • spujb@lemmy.cafe
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    14 天前

    Feb 5* also thank you for this post I am glad it is getting reach.

    On February 5 (when this was happening) there was an infuriating number of posts saying “why aren’t pro-Palestine protesting?”

    And then I’d get downvotes for pointing out people, in fact, protesting.

    So many people with their eyes intentionally closed… felt so hopeless.

  • 🎨 Elaine Cortez 🇨🇦 @lemm.ee
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    14 天前

    Great work to everyone who stands up to hatred and fascism! ❤️

    I watched some of the protests when they were live on YouTube. The fact there was apparently so little media coverage of people protesting against a fascist racist who appointed a Nazi as a special government employee and wants to annex Canada is simply mindboggling.

  • teri@discuss.tchncs.de
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    14 天前

    Protests alone will not stop the nazis. They also didn’t in Germany ~90 years ago. I hooe people get that and organize. Fast.

  • kandoh@reddthat.com
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    14 天前

    If you plan to do protesting - i wpuld highly recommend getting a Faraday bag gor your phone. Just turning it off isn’t good enough

  • technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    14 天前

    For y’all who’ve never protested before… The reason why they don’t cover it is because they never cover protests (unless people actually FSU then it’s a “riot”)… Maybe if libs cared when it happened to activists for BLM, anti-genocide, etc… Now it’s just completely normal.