Boston, Kings and Pride
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"Migration ... has turned once idyllic towns into scenes of Third World Dystopia." President Donald Trump said in a social media post directing ICE agents to step up deportations.
The Boston protest was one of many across the country in support of David Huerta, president of the California SEIU, who was detained by federal officials in Los Angeles on Friday.
Anti-Trump protests sprang up across the country the same day the president was hosting a military parade in Washington.
Boston filled with crowds Saturday for the annual Pride parade. But this year's event felt different to some, with a "No Kings" protest against President Trump folded in.
Hundreds of "No Kings" protests are planned across the country on the same day as Trump's military parade in Washington, D.C.
"Social movements defying our usual assumptions can also be powerful," writes one reader. "A case in point: White Men for Racial Justice."
A man who was believed to be part of a peacekeeping team for the “No Kings” protest in Salt Lake City shot at a person who was brandishing a rifle at demonstrators, striking both the rifleman and a bystander who later died at the hospital, authorities said Sunday.
Anti-ICE demonstrations spread to several cities including New York, Boston and Chicago following days of unrest in Los Angeles
From Seattle and Austin to Chicago and Washington, D.C., marchers have chanted slogans, carried signs against the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency
Will protests in Los Angeles set the stage for what could be more clashes Saturday as activists in hundreds of cities nationwide, including metro Detroit, organize?