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To get us all ready for the upcoming No Kings protest that's happening on Saturday, I thought we might want to revisit the Schoolhouse Rock!/America Rock song "No More Kings," which first aired ...
On July 4 th, some local chapters of Indivisible, a progressive organization that organized in reaction to Trump’s election, will be holding “No Kings 2.0” rallies.
A flyer for a proposed "No Kings 2.0" national protest on July 4 circulated on X, drew harsh criticism from those calling it "anti-American." The post has garnered 380,000 views.
Other No Kings protests happened in communities across the country Friday, including cities like Charleston, S.C., Worcester, MA, and Memphis, TN.
Millions took to the streets on Saturday for No Kings Day, nationwide protests in cities big and small, timed to provide counter-programming for Donald Trump’s own military parade in Washington ...
"Like Trump and too many of the GOP (DFLers, too; all of us, actually), Chalberg tilts, obfuscates, buries, ignores, changes facts and history to suit his political perspective," Ray Anschel writes.
"No Kings" rallies provided cover for extremists, with peaceful protests followed by assaults and vandalism in Seattle, Spokane, and Portland, mirroring tactics seen during BLM protests.
The nascent No Kings effort is laden with absurdities and has been since its inception. It has a catchy name but like most leftist agitprop, it’s entirely vapid and seemingly merged with a ...
OpEd: No Kings was never about a single rally. It’s about a people rising. Because no one is coming to save us from Donald Trump’s autocracy.
Organizers of "No Kings" demonstrations that filled Cleveland's Public Square announce "Good Trouble Lives On" events for July 17, invoking civil rights leader John Lewis.