Washington, D.C. January 2017.
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Washington, D.C. January 2017.
we are the ones who will never be broken
black lives matter women’s march anti-trump protests
Pencils. The cheap ones. Paper Mate Sharpwriter. But I mess with the levels to darken the scans.
This too is part of history.
Crowd scientists say women’s march in D.C. had three times as many people as Trump’s inauguration
Two crowd scientists from Manchester Metropolitan University in Britain worked with the New York Times to compare the size of Trump’s Friday crowd with the next day’s women’s march. They “analyzed photographs and video taken of the National Mall and vicinity” to draw their conclusions.
January 21, 2017
Who knew President Trump’s lewd 2005 “Access Hollywood” video, particularly his ugly “grab ’em by the pussy” line, would start a movement? A lot of political observers thought it would sink his presidential candidacy — wrong — but few might have predicted it would bring hundreds of thousands of pussy-obsessed protesters to Washington. And yet that is what happened with the Women’s March on Saturday, the day after Trump’s inauguration.
People bring signs to protest marches. At some demonstrations, there are hundreds or thousands of professionally-printed placards, each bearing the small-print note that they were produced by, say, the AFL-CIO or NARAL. That’s a sure sign of out-in-the-open astroturfing.
The Women’s March wasn’t that. There were zillions of signs, and only a tiny minority were professionally done. Instead, nearly all the signs were homemade, apparently heartfelt expressions of deep feelings on the part of the marchers. Some of the signs seemed angry, but the people carrying them mostly did not. Many of the signs were all over the lot, plain-vanilla denunciations of Donald Trump or Republicans; there were immigration-based signs, gun control-based signs, Muslim rights-based signs, signs about Trump’s combover.
But many, many signs were rooted in the “Access Hollywood” video — a fixation which suggests protesters will try to make the video a recurring theme in resistance to President Trump. If that’s the case, then here, from the Women’s March, is a preview of things to come.
Jan. 21, 2017: Protesters gather on the National Mall in Washington. (FoxNews.com)
Byron York: Scenes from a pussy riot January 21, 2017 Who knew President Trump's lewd 2005 "Access Hollywood" video, particularly his ugly "grab 'em by the pussy" line, would start a movement?