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  • 9
    Apr
    2013
    8:39pm, EDT

    Newark high school students walk out of class to protest budget cuts

     

    By Sofia Perpetua, NBCNews.com

    Nearly a thousand of Newark high schoolers walked out of their classes Tuesday to protest budget cuts that include teacher layoffs, school closures and hits to after-school programs.

    Students from half a dozen Newark schools walked out of class at noon chanting “Stand up, fight back.” They marched to Rutgers Law School, where the State Assembly was holding hearings on the proposed budget.

    Chris Christie, governor of New Jersey, proposed a $32.8 billion budget that includes an all-time high $8.9 billion for public education in the state.

    Newark schools will receive $714 million but the protest organizers don't think that is enough, as it would underfund the district by about $53 million.

    "This $53 million is real; students see it in the cutting of clubs and extracurricular activities, sports, teachers and administration," protest organizer Robert Cabanas of the group NJ Communities United told Reuters. "They don't think they should have to see any of those things go."

    New Jersey's state government has been in control of Newark schools for the past 18 years.

    When the Christie’s budget proposal was unveiled in February, he noted that there were no cuts in individual districts. Christie's office did not respond to calls seeking comment.

    When Christie took office in 2010, he cut state aid to schools by $820 million and districts in Newark and Camden were hit heavily with layoffs and closures. Last year, seven schools were shut down in March about 100 teachers and other school personnel were laid off.

    Other U.S. cities have also been hit with cuts. Last month, Chicago announced it would close 54 schools by the beginning of the next academic year.

    39 comments

    Didn't Zuckerberg give them $100 million? Whatever happened to that? I guess it went into the black hole that is the Newark school system. Amazing all that money spent and we have the worst schools in the industrialized world.

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    Explore related topics: newark, protest
  • 14
    Mar
    2013
    7:54am, EDT

    Kimani Gray death: Protesters clash with police at rally for teen shot by NYPD

    John Minchillo / AP

    Demonstrator Fatimah Shakur speaks during a vigil held for Kimani "Kiki" Gray in the East Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn on March 13, 2013, in New York. The 16-year-old was shot to death on a Brooklyn street last Saturday night by plainclothes police officers who claim the youth pointed a .38-caliber revolver at them.

    John Minchillo / AP

    Demonstrators march through the streets alongside police officers during a march following a vigil held for Kimani Gray on March 13, 2013.

    John Minchillo / AP

    Memorial candles stand beside a picture of Kimani Gray during a vigil for the deceased teen on March 13, 2013.

    The Associated Press reports — More than 100 people attended a candlelight vigil in Brooklyn Wednesday night for 16-year-old Kimani "Kiki" Gray just blocks from where he was shot to death by police Saturday night.

    But anger was palpable as a group of young people heckled police officers in helmets and later marched down a street.

    The vigil's organizers tried and failed to calm the young people, some of whom later threw bottles at police officers.

    "I'm not going to tell people don't be angry because we're all angry," said Franclot Graham, whose teenage son, Ramarley Graham, was shot and killed after police chased him into his Bronx home last year. Read the full story.

    NBC New York: 18 arrested on 3rd day of protests for Brooklyn teen slain by police

    Allison Joyce / Getty Images

    Demonstrators face-off against police during a protest against the shooting of Kimani Gray on March 13, 2013.

    John Minchillo / AP

    Police officers arrest a demonstrator during a march after a vigil held for Kimani Gray on March 13, 2013.

    View more videos at: http://nbcnewyork.com.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    541 comments

    Oh fricken imagine that. The looters are on the loose again! Why aren't the locals mad at the idiot 16 year old who was running around with an illegal gun again? I forget...

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    Explore related topics: protest, new-york-city, us-news, police-shooting, brooklyn, kimani-gray
  • 21
    Jan
    2013
    8:31pm, EST

    Abortion protester climbs tree at inauguration, annoys revelers

    Taylor Hill / Getty Images Contributor

    An anti-abortion heckler during the inauguration festivities on Monday climbed a tree to avoid police.

    By Isolde Raftery, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A known anti-abortion heckler tried to avoid police at Monday’s inauguration festivities by climbing a tree.

    Rives Grogan, a silver-haired man wearing a brown Carhartt-style jacket, had climbed up a tall, thin evergreen tree, protest sign in hand, near 1st and Maryland Avenue by the Capitol Building. The sign he held read, “Pray to end abortion.”

    Grogan, who was not carrying identification, had a ticket and went through security screening, according to a police report. He has been a pastor at New Beginnings Christian Church in Los Angeles, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer, and he has twice disrupted Supreme Court proceedings.

    As U.S. Capitol Police roped off the tree and propped a ladder up against it, the man kept climbing, reaching nearly 40 feet as he shouted, “Democrats are baby killers!” (He took a break when Beyoncé sang the National Anthem, politicker.com reported.)

    When he climbed down the tree some time later, police arrested the man - his identity unknown at the time -- and placed him in handcuffs. The crowd, frustrated by his disruptive shouts throughout the speeches, bid him adieu singing, “Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye.” 

    Grogan faces three charges, including contempt of court and injury to property.

    Related stories:

    • NBC/WSJ poll: Majority, for first time, wants abortion to be legal
    • 40 years after ruling, more states restrict abortion

     

    269 comments

    Why is this not a shock that to find a right wing, Bible thumping anti abortionist up a tree. Do they not understand that they and their ilk are the laughing stock of educated, insightful Americans?

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  • 14
    Sep
    2012
    2:54pm, EDT

    Americans killed in US consulate attack honored at Andrews

    The bodies of four idealistic patriots, all of whom were described as having lived the "American ideal," were mourned Friday by President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    The bodies of four Americans killed in an attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya, earlier in the week were returned to the United States and honored in a somber ceremony at Joint Base Andrews, Md., on Friday.


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    President Barack Obama arrived shortly before the transfer ceremony honoring the victims — U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens, information management officer Sean Smith and security personnel Tyrone Woods and Glen Doherty.

    Marines carried flag-draped coffins bearing the remains of the four across the tarmac and placed them before a gathering of family, friends, White House officials and high-level State Department personnel. In total, 800 to 1,000 were in attendance, an Air Force official said.


    After a moment of silence and a prayer, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton eulogized each of the victims.

    "We owe it to those four men to continue the long, hard work of diplomacy," Clinton said.

    "May God bless them, and grant their families peace and solace, and may God continue to bless the United States of America," Clinton said, before making way for comments by Obama.

    How much are taxpayers spending on Egypt and Libya?

    The president said the men embodied and lived "the American ideal," embracing what he called "the fundamental American belief that we can leave this world a little better than before."

    President Obama attends a ceremonial transfer of the remains of four Americans killed in an attack on the U.S. Consulate in Libya.

    In honoring the fallen Americans, he also made a case for continued diplomatic and aid commitments to allies in the Middle East.

    "Even as voices of suspicion and mistrust seek to divide countries and cultures from one another, the United States of America will never retreat from the world. We will never stop working for the dignity and freedom that every person deserves. ... That's the spirit that sets us apart from other nations. That was their work in Benghazi and this is the work we will carry on."

    After the national anthem and a prayer, "America the Beautiful" was played as the caskets were loaded into waiting hearses, which then departed.

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    709 comments

    Yes Hillary, by all means please keep trying to reason with irrational people who are blinded by ignorance and hatred.

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    Explore related topics: libya, attack, protest, ambassador, embassy, kari-huus, chris-stevens
  • 2
    Sep
    2012
    2:05pm, EDT

    Hundreds take part in 'March on Wall Street South' in Charlotte, NC

    Chuck Burton / AP

    Demonstrators gather at Frazier Park at the start of a protest march Sunday in Charlotte, N.C.

    By NBC News staff

    Updated at 6:18 p.m. ET: About 800 people chanting and carrying signs (among them, "Banks got bailed out. We got sold out") marched Sunday through the central business district in Charlotte, N.C., ahead of the Democratic National Convention to protest what they said was seedy corporate influence on politics.

    The protesters, who came from across the country, gathered at Frazier Park for a round of speeches before starting the march. They were from a coalition of more than 80 local and national groups. Media packets declared the group's mission as "building peoples' power during the DNC.

    Demonstrators had signs indicating that some were union workers, anti-war veterans and undocumented immigrants. 


    "Capitalism is holding back the human race," one sign read. "Bail out people, not banks," another sign said.

    Hundreds of chanting protesters march through uptown Charlotte, N.C., ahead of the Democratic National Convention. WCNC reports.

    The protest route was to take them past the corporate headquarters of Bank of America and a major office hub for Wells Fargo – financial institutions that some see as symbols of foreclosures and federal bailouts. Protesters also planned a stop at the headquarters of Duke Energy, the nation’s largest utility.

    Duke has been criticized for investing in nuclear energy and using coal, according to the Charlotte Observer. Protesters have asked the company to focus on wind and solar power, which emit less carbon into the atmosphere. Duke, in defense, says it aims to retire its older coal plants.

    Uniformed police officers on bicycles and on foot kept a close eye on the marchers. At least two people were arrested -- one for wearing a mask and carrying a concealed knife, and another for assaulting a government official, disorderly conduct and resisting arrest, the Observer reported.

    Ray Suarez, of PBS NewsHour, tweeted, "Just watched Occupy et. al. march through Charlotte, who were in turn watched by enough cops to invade a small country."

    Before the main event began, a small press conference was held highlighting a woman, Sylvia Sanchez, who says she must pay $20,000 to Bank of America by Sept. 14 to avoid foreclosure on a home she's owned for 12 years. The woman, whose daughter is suffering from a brain condition called hydrocephalus, said she is in debt after having retrofitted the home with wheelchair ramps.

    In interviews with NBC News, rank-and file-activists cited different reasons for coming.

    Kendall Hale, a massage therapist and Obama campaign volunteer from Asheville, N.C., said that climate change was among her concerns.

    "The era of compromise may not be working so well," Hale said. She urged President Obama to "forge ahead with the issues [he's] speaking about so eloquently."

    Andie Marion, a college student also from the Asheville area, said her chief concern was "money in politics."

    "The amount of corporate power that influences a lot of the politics I think is really huge," she said.

    On the sidelines, Sunday's protest in Charlotte triggered a conversation about where the Occupy movement is headed. 

    Todd Gitlin, who wrote Letters to a Young Activist and Occupy Nation: The Roots, the Spirit, and the promise of Occupy Wall Street, told NPR: "The initial wave moved its metaphors into the household conversation and shaped politics. But I think they essentially reached the limits of what they could achieve. Now there's a sorting process."

    The Democratic National Convention opens Tuesday in Charlotte's Time Warner Cable Arena. President Barack Obama will be nominated for a new term on Wednesday. He will deliver his acceptance speech Thursday night at the outdoor Bank of America Stadium.

    The convention starts less than a week after Republicans gathered in Tampa, Fla., to nominate Mitt Romney as the party's presidential candidate.

    NBC's Jamie Novogrod and Mark Potter and contributed to this report.

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    903 comments

    Don't protest corporate involvement in the Republican and Democratic races. It's a waste of time. Vote for someone else instead! If you elect a corporate tool to the White House, you've only yourself to blame.

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    Explore related topics: protest, banks, charlotte, democratic-national-convention, march-on-wall-street-south
  • 2
    Aug
    2012
    8:11pm, EDT

    Oak Ridge uranium plant shut after protesters breach 4 fences, reach building

    Duncan Mansfield / AP

    The Y-12 nuclear weapons plant in Oak Ridge, Tenn., is seen in this July 10, 2007, photo.

    By Mark Hosenball, Reuters

    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The U.S. government's only facility for handling, processing and storing weapons-grade uranium has been temporarily shut after anti-nuclear activists, including an 82-year-old nun, breached security fences, government officials said on Thursday.

    WSI Oak Ridge, the contractor responsible for protecting the facility at Oak Ridge, Tenn., is owned by the international security firm G4S, which was at the center of a dispute over security at the London Olympic Games.

    Officials said the facility was shut down on Wednesday at least until next week after three activists cut through perimeter fences to reach the outer wall of a building where highly enriched uranium, a key nuclear bomb component, is stored.

    The activists painted slogans and threw what they said was human blood on the wall of the facility, one of numerous buildings in the facility known by the code name Y-12 that it was given during World War Two, officials said.

    While moving between the perimeter fences, the activists triggered sensors that alerted security personnel. But officials conceded the intruders were still able to reach the building's walls before security personnel got to them.

    3 face charges
    Ellen Barfield, a spokeswoman for the activists who called themselves "Transform Now Plowshares," said three were arrested and charged with vandalism and criminal trespass.

    She said the three, identified as Megan Rice, 82, Michael Walli, 63 and Greg Boertje-Obed, 57, were being held in custody and appeared for a hearing before a U.S. magistrate judge in Knoxville, Tennessee, on Thursday.

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com

    A detention hearing is set for Friday afternoon, when prosecutors must show the defendants are a flight risk and a danger to the community in order to keep them in custody, according to court officials. The trial date is Oct. 9.

    Barfield forwarded a statement from the group in which it said the activists had passed through four fences and walked for "over two hours" before reaching the uranium storage building, on which they hung banners and strung crime-scene tape.

    Ralph Hutchinson, coordinator for the Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance, said the group's intention was not to demonstrate the lack of security at the plant, but to take a stance against the making of nuclear weapons.

    "It wasn't so they could show how easy it was to bust into this bomb plant, it was because the production of nuclear weapons violates everything that is moral and good," Hutchinson said. "It is a war crime."

    Building contents secure, officials say
    Officials said that the storage building itself, which was built after the Sept. 11, 2001, al-Qaida attacks on New York and Washington, was designed with modern security features and that its contents were not compromised.

    WSI Oak Ridge, the private firm employed by the U.S. Department of Energy to provide security at Y-12, is a subsidiary of the giant international security firm G4S.

    G4S drew criticism for failing to provide the number of security personnel it promised to protect the London Olympic Games, forcing the British government to deploy extra army troops.

    A spokeswoman for G4S declined to comment and referred inquiries to government spokespeople.

    The security failure was an embarrassment both for the security firm and for the National Nuclear Security Administration, or NNSA, the Energy Department branch that operates U.S. nuclear weapons plants. "It was obviously a pretty serious incident," NNSA spokesman Joshua McConaha told Reuters.

    "We're taking this very, very seriously," added Steve Wyatt, a spokesman for the NNSA office in Oak Ridge, which supervises the activities of Y-12 contractors.

    The NNSA officials said the activists cut through two chain-link fences surrounding the sprawling facility and a third fence surrounding the ultra-secure enriched uranium stockpile building, known as the "Highly Enriched Uranium Materials Facility."

    Wyatt said the building served as the U.S. government's only "warehouse" for storing highly enriched uranium used in nuclear weapons.

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    Highly enriched uranium is a radioactive material used in the core of bombs to produce a nuclear detonation. The Oak Ridge plant is one of the most important government installations involved in the maintenance and production of the U.S. nuclear arsenal.

    Although the security breach occurred overnight last Friday, officials confirmed that the shutdown - which applies to "all nuclear operations" at the Y-12 site - did not begin until Wednesday. Officials said it was expected to continue into next week.

    In the meantime, personnel at the facility would be given additional security training.

    Peter Stockton, a former congressional investigator and security consultant to the Energy Department, expressed skepticism at government assertions the nuclear material was not at risk.

    "It is unbelievable this could happen," Stockton said. "The significance is outrageous. If they were terrorists, they could have blown open the door and got inside."

    Stockton said the security breach was the "worst we've ever seen." He said it was more serious than the case of Wen Ho Lee, a Taiwan-born scientist who was suspected of espionage at the Los Alamos nuclear laboratory. He pleaded guilty in 2000 to a less severe charge when the case against him collapsed.

     

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    385 comments

    This a bad sign of so called security. Do they arm the guards with BB guns and use steel cans on a rope to for early warnings?? Fire WSI Oak Ridge and lock all the protesters up for a good long time, yes even Mother Theresa.

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  • 23
    Jul
    2012
    3:07pm, EDT

    Deadly police shooting in Anaheim sparks violent protests

    Mindy Schauer/The Orange County Register

    Activist Marlena Carrillo shouts at police inside the Anaheim Police Department in Orange County, Calif., Sunday, July 22, where a press conference took place in response to the officer involved killing of Manuel Diaz Saturday.

    By Andrew Mach, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The deadly police shooting of an unarmed man in Anaheim, Calif., on Saturday sparked a series of violent protests over the weekend, aggravating already high tensions between police and citizens.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    More than a hundred residents of northeastern Anaheim reacted to the fatal shooting of 24-year-old Manuel Diaz by police by setting fire to garbage dumpsters in the street and throwing bottles at police officers Saturday night.

    Police fired pepper balls and bean bags to control the crowd. The unrest escalated when a police dog escaped a squad car through an open window and bit at least two people. Five people were arrested.

    The protests continued on Sunday, with dozens of people lining the streets outside police headquarters and then storming into the lobby chanting “shame,” “no justice, no peace,” and “cops, pigs and murderers,” as officials went into a press conference regarding the controversial shooting.

    Protesters said they wanted to know what threat Diaz posed to officers.

    The protest at the Anaheim Police Department was the latest in a series of actions by families of shooting victims, some of whom have been holding weekly protests for nearly two years at police headquarters in Orange County, NBCLosAngeles.com reported.

    Anaheim Police Chief John Welter said two officers were placed on paid leave after one of them shot Diaz around 4 p.m. Saturday.

    Welter said officers were patrolling a neighborhood in northeastern Anaheim when they approached three men allegedly acting suspiciously in an alley, NBCLosAngeles.com reported. 

    As police started questioning Diaz, who was standing outside a car talking to the two men inside, the car drove off and Diaz started running. Police chased him down and shot him.

    “He was shot first in the back, but he was down," Diaz’s mother, Genevieve Huizar, told NBCLosAngeles.com through tears Sunday, “then they shot him a second time. They shot him in the head.”

    Welter said he can’t say why police shot Diaz during the chase, but he did confirm no weapon was found at the crime scene.

    “At this time, there’s no information that he was armed when he was shot,” Welter said at a press conference, “but we don’t know what was thrown away as he was running away from the officers, and that was not found, according to the district attorney’s office.”

    Anaheim Mayor Tom Tait called for an independent probe into a fatal police shooting, asking the state attorney general’s office to get involved.

    “Transparency is essential,” Tait said during a press conference at the Anaheim Police Department. “The investigation will seek the truth, and whatever the truth is, we will own it.”

    Anaheim was one of six California cities with populations greater than 100,000 that saw a big spike in violent crime last year, according to an analysis of FBI crime data released in June. 

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

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    209 comments

    Don't run from the cops

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  • 4
    Jun
    2012
    5:15am, EDT

    US urges China to free prisoners on Tiananmen Square anniversary

    Andrew Kelly / Reuters

    Protesters lay in front of a mock tank as part of a demonstration in New York on Sunday to mark the 23rd anniversary of the The Tiananmen Square protest in China.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    The United States urged China to free all those still jailed over the 1989 Tiananmen Square pro-democracy demonstrations on the 23rd anniversary of the brutal crackdown.

    State Department deputy spokesman Mark Toner issued a statement late on Sunday calling on the Chinese government on Sunday "to provide a full public accounting of those killed, detained or missing."


    The statement said the U.S. "joins the international community in remembering the tragic loss of innocent lives" -- a comment unlikely to be welcomed by China’s ruling Communist Party.

    Hundreds, perhaps thousands, are believed to have died when the government sent in tanks and soldiers to clear Tiananmen Square on the night of June 3-4, 1989, violently crushing six weeks of protests.

    Regaining moral high ground? Google tells Chinese when they're being censored


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    More than two decades later, Beijing still considers the incident a "counter revolutionary rebellion" and has refused to acknowledge any wrongdoing or consider compensation for those killed, The Australian newspaper reported.

    Meanwhile, China censors blocked internet access to the terms "six four," "23," "candle" and "never forget" on Monday, broadening extensive efforts to silence talk about the anniversary.

    Searches for the terms related to the anniversary, such as "six four" for June 4, were blocked on Sina Weibo, the most popular of China's Twitter-like microblogging platforms. Users encountered a message that said the search results could not be displayed "due to relevant laws, regulations and policies."

    Chinese activist: My nephew may be being tortured

    "It's that day again and once more numerous posts are being deleted," a Sina microblogger wrote. Sina was not immediately available for comment.

    China's censors also blocked access to the term "Shanghai stock market" on microblogs after the index fell a bizarre 64.89 points on the anniversary.

    PhotoBlog: Thousands remember Tiananmen Square crackdown

    In another twist, the Shanghai Composite Index opened at 2346.98 points on the 23rd anniversary of the killings in either a deft piece of manipulation or an uncanny double coincidence. The numbers 46.98 are June 4, 1989, backwards.

    "Whoa, these figures are too freaky! Very cool!" said a microblogger. "The opening figure and the drop are both too creepy," said another. 

    For more coverage of China, see Behind The Wall

    The anniversary of the date on which troops shot their way into central Beijing in 1989 has never been publicly marked in mainland China.

    The government has never released a death toll of the crackdown, but estimates from human rights groups and witnesses range from several hundred to several thousand.

    Yao Jianfu, author of a new book of interviews with Chen Xitong, the Beijing mayor at the time of the crackdown, told Reuters that Chen had said "this was a tragedy that should have been averted but wasn't".

    "I never foresaw there would be shooting, because Mao Zedong said that ordinary people should not be shot at and suppressing student protests comes to no good," said Yao.

    An elderly Chinese man has forced work to stop on a building development in the Chinese city of Kunming. The 70-year-old has turned his home into a fortress, and is fighting against eviction. ITN's Angus Walker reports.

    The government has restricted the movements of dozens of dissidents, former prisoners and petitioners during the anniversary period and warned them against speaking to journalists or organizing activities, said Songlian Wang of rights group Chinese Human Rights Defenders.

    A coalition of lawyers and rights activists began a one-day fast in their homes on Monday to commemorate the anniversary, said a Shandong-based lawyer, Liu Weiguo.

    Tens of thousands of people are expected to attend a candlelight vigil in Hong Kong, said organizers, who had erected a replica of the Goddess of Democracy that was built in Tiananmen Square in 1989.

    Chinese tourists stopped on Tiananmen Square shook their heads and appeared mystified when asked about the anniversary. There were no obvious signs of extra security on the already well-guarded square.

    But a trinket vendor said he was well aware what day it was.  "Do foreigners also know about June 4?" he asked a Reuters reporter in a hushed tone, looking around to make sure nobody heard him. "I think it is important we remember but nobody will talk about it now." 

    Reuters and msnbc.com's Alastair Jamieson contributed to this report.

     

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    46 comments

    The U.S. needs to get its own house in order before it criticizes other countries over what are essentially internal matters. What good does it do to provoke China? Are we trying to convince the Chinese that we truly are their enemy? Good luck with that!

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    Explore related topics: us, human-rights, china, protest, beijing, tiananmen-square, featured
  • 21
    May
    2012
    4:26pm, EDT

    'They got walloped': Masked group attacks alleged white supremacists in Illinois restaurant

    By Sevil Omer, NBC News

    A group of masked radicals is accused of brutally attacking alleged white supremacists eating lunch at a restaurant in a suburb of Chicago, and the town’s mayor is calling the melee a bizarre and bloody spillover of the NATO Summit.

    Tinley Park Mayor Edward J. Zabrocki said as many as 18 people wearing masks and black hoods stormed into the Ashford House in Tinley Park on Saturday, pummeling a group of alleged white supremacists who had gathered at the Irish-American eatery known for its corned beef and bacon.



    Follow @msnbc_us

    Zabrocki said he believed the group of assailants had come into town from Indiana to participate in the protests at the NATO Summit, but instead headed to his town to pick a fight. Tinley Park is about 30 miles southwest of Chicago.  

    “This was a real riot,” Zabrocki told msnbc.com on Monday. “These guys started beating the crap out of the other group. A lot of tables were knocked over, dishes were broken and there was food all over the walls. It was terrible. It was a mess.”

    Zabrocki said five members of the group were arrested; 13 others were still being sought.

    According to the Chicago Tribune, Tinley Park Police Chief Steve Neubauer said five men were charged with aggravated battery, mob action and criminal damage to property. The group included three brothers, Jason W. Sutherlin, 33, of Gosport, Ind.; Cody Lee Edward Sutherlin, 23, of Bloomington, Ind.; and Dylan James Sutherlin, 20, also of of Bloomington. Alex R. Stuck, 22, of Bloomington, and James S. Tucker, 26, of Spencer, Ind., were also charged, the Tribune reported.

    Nine people were injured and three people were hospitalized, Zabrocki said. He said victims' conditions had improved since the attacks.

    The mayor said he believed the victims had ties to white supremacist groups, but he could not confirm their affiliation.

    Zabrocki said the Anti-Racist Action, an organization that says it protests "fascist and neo-Nazi activities," claimed responsibility and posted its reasoning on its website. 

    According to the Anti-Racist Action website:

    “On Saturday, May 19th a group of 30 anti-fascists descended upon Ashford House restaurant in the Chicago suburb of Tinley Park where the 5th annual White Nationalist Economic Summit and Illinois White Nationalist Meet-and-Greet was taking place. The White Nationalists were targeted inside the restaurant and physically attacked, causing several injuries and completely shutting down their meeting.”

    Zabrocki said city and police officials had been on alert on Saturday and Sunday because of demonstrations at the NATO Summit in Chicago. He said quick action by police helped law enforcement collar at least five of the suspects.

    “We believe that the same group of attackers had been in town for the summit and if they had not been in town, they wouldn't have found this group,” he said.

    'Walloped'
    Michael Winston, owner of the Ashford House, said the group that was attacked had made a reservation for up to 20, saying they were from an Irish heritage association.

    "We had no idea who these people were," Winston said. "We don’t ask for people’s political stuff when they come in the door. Did they look like white supremacists? One or two did, but just because they have a shaved head doesn’t mean they’re a skinhead, right? I know a lot of good-looking guys who have their heads shaved and they aren’t skinheads or white supremacists. And the group that stormed in, it was too fast and too late. It took us by surprise.

    “The other group marched into the restaurant, all were in hooded sweatshirts,” Winston told msnbc.com. “Each had a chair leg, baton or a bat. They came in and went straight to a table of white guys and whoever stood up or got in the way, they got walloped.”

    He said business inside Ashford House has taken a blow from the weekend violence.

    "It was a ghost town in here on Sunday,” Winston said. He said customers have been afraid to come in and others have canceled their reservations. He said a few loyal patrons have stopped by to see if everything was OK.

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    923 comments

    Wow. On the one hand I believe violence doesn't solve much. On the other, I kind of admire these guys for what they did.

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    Explore related topics: nato, protest, white-supremacist, anti-racist, tinley-park
  • 16
    May
    2012
    8:31am, EDT

    US veterans to return war medals in protest

    Narayan Mahon for msnbc.com

    Iraq War veteran Steven Acheson at his home in Platteville, Wis., on May 14, 2012.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Iraq war veteran Steven Acheson will engage in the rarest of protests this weekend: He will hand back his military service medals at the NATO summit in Chicago, an act one veteran calls "disgraceful."

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    Acheson, who served for five years in the Army, including more than a year in Iraq that he says left him with PTSD and nightmares, is taking this step to protest the "war on terror" and the force leading it, NATO. He will be joined by a few dozen veterans from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars who are concerned about the wars' fallout on veterans and civilians alike.

    “I feel like this is a really good way for me to kind of, not clear my conscience, but just make a step in the direction of healing and kind of reconciling with the Afghan people and the Iraq people,” said Acheson, a 27-year-old college student from Wisconsin and a member of Iraq Veterans Against the War, which includes soldiers who served in any of the post- 9/11 conflict zones, “… and let them know that we’re standing by their side and we’re not standing with NATO anymore. We don’t agree with the policies that are driving these wars.”

    Acheson and 30-50 fellow 9/11-era veterans will carry their medals as they lead an anti-war march this Sunday through Chicago’s downtown area to the convention center where NATO is holding its summit. President Obama and other world leaders are scheduled to be among the summit attendees, and the city of Chicago is bracing for major protests.

    Organizers are hoping the rally, which caps a week-long series of anti-NATO actions, will draw thousands. The Iraq and Afghanistan veterans will be flanked by Vietnam veterans and will hold a reconciliation ceremony with Afghans for Peace.

    They intend to carry an American flag that they will lower and replace with a white one as they approach the summit venue. They are planning to pin their medals to the American flag, which they’d like to present to NATO officials. If they’re unable to do so, they may construct an ad hoc memorial or toss the medals toward the convention center -- like some 900 Vietnam veterans did in 1971 on Capitol Hill in an anti-war protest dubbed “Operation Dewey Canyon III.”

    Barry Romo was West Coast coordinator for the Vietnam Veterans Against the War during the 1971 week-long demonstration.

    “Wives left husbands; parents said … those medals were something you should be giving the grandkids. But I mean, the level of death was just really too much for us to deal with at that time and we said, you know, if there’s a question of medals versus lives then there was no question,” he said.

    Returning the medals – even those that are given just for showing up to the theater of conflict, as are some of the ones the veterans plan to return – is not without controversy.

    “They’re as much of a disgrace as the veterans back in the Vietnam days that did the same thing,” said retired Army 1st Sgt. Troy Steward, of New York, who served 22 years and is now a military blogger. “If these veterans aren’t proud of the service that they did … then they should never have accepted them (medals) in the first place.”

    Steward, 43, who served in Afghanistan, said the action was “disgraceful and disrespectful” to others who had served. While the veterans were welcome to express their opinions, he said, there were a lot of “better ways to do it than essentially shaming your military service and your brethren.”

    Acheson will return his “Global War on Terrorism Service Medal” and the “Iraq Campaign Medal”; he is keeping others he received.

    Aaron Hughes, a 30-year-old organizer for IVAW who served six years in the Army, including 15 months in Iraq and Kuwait, also will return two medals.

    In the process of searching for a way to heal “we came to these symbols of the occupations, which are these medals that we carry around and we still have,” Hughes said. “They’re these … reminders of what we’ve done, that it’s time to let go of.”

    “I think it’s something that many of us are conflicted about, but we also feel like this is the right action to take,” he noted, adding that there was a lot of consensus on the returning of the medals. “It is a sacrifice, but it’s one that we feel is worth it.”


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    But some cautioned the veterans to think carefully before handing over the medals.

    “They become almost like family heirlooms in some ways,” said Adrian Lewis, a professor specializing in 20th century warfare at the University of Kansas in Lawrence. “It's not the norm to give them back. Most folks are proud of them. They feel like they earned them and they’re indications that they served their country.”

    “They may regret it at some point ... and their family may ultimately regret it, too,” he added.

    Unlike the Vietnam War, Americans today don’t have the same outrage over the current conflicts, Lewis said.

    “Most Americans are not paying attention to the war ... they have no stake in it, no commitment to it,” he added, noting that he therefore didn’t expect the veterans’ medal protest to “be a big deal. It's not a game-changer.”

    It’s not clear how many other veterans have taken similar action. The Department of Defense, the Air Force and Army said they did not keep records on how many medals have been given back.

    "We're very proud of the service rendered by our soldiers and veterans, and they are free to do with their awards and decorations as they please," George Wright, an Army spokesman at the Pentagon, said in an e-mail.

    Acheson said the veterans don’t have high expectations for how NATO officials will receive their protest. He also noted that he was keeping some of his medals because he was proud of his service, even though he was upset that he ended up fighting in a country that had nothing to do with 9/11.

    “I’m tired of seeing … fellow vets being redeployed with traumatic brain injuries and post-traumatic stress disorder, and I’m tired of seeing soldiers being deployed in general to an illegal war,” he said. “I just feel like we’ve spent enough money and enough lives over there … it’s time to come home.”

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    1143 comments

    Its a free country that he fought for, so he is free to do as he sees fit.

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    Explore related topics: iraq, afghanistan, nato, protest, featured
  • 14
    May
    2012
    12:10pm, EDT

    Catholic worker group storms building housing Obama campaign headquarters, starting week of protest

    A group of demonstrators are handcuffed after refusing to leave the lobby of President Obama's Chicago campaign headquarters as they kick off a movement called "Week without Capitalism." Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Kari Huus, msnbc.com

     

    Dozens of demonstrators calling for an end to war rushed into President Barack Obama’s campaign headquarters in Chicago on Monday morning, and eight were arrested, NBCChicago reported.

    The protest, led by a group associated with the Catholic Worker movement, was the first of a series of planned demonstrations and marches by groups highlighting poverty, environmental, and education issues during the May 20-21 NATO summit in the city and the May 18-19 G8 summit at Camp David in Maryland.


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    Kari Huus


    Follow Kari Huus on Twitter and Facebook.



    "We are here today to boldly proclaim our desire to live in a world where we say no to NATO and yes to community," said Chantal de Alacuaz from Chicago in a release by the Chicago-based White Rose Catholic Worker posted late Sunday night. "As Catholic Workers, we serve the poor by practicing the works of mercy — feeding the hungry, sheltering the homeless, taking care of the sick and the works of war are directly opposed to that."


    The plan, according to the release was to “invite Obama and other NATO leaders to break bread over a symbolic meal to discuss how to transform NATO from an instrument of war and empire into an instrument of peace and love that embodies the biblical works of mercy instead of the works of war.”

    About 100 people took part in the demonstration, according to the Chicago Tribune.  As eight protesters were led out of the building in handcuffs, other demonstrators danced and sang folk songs and gospel, and handed rolls to commuters, it said.

    NBCChicago

    A protester is seen being taken from President Barack Obama's campaign headquarters in Chicago on Monday.

    "We see NATO as using up a lot of resources in the city and the world," said Jesica Arents, a member of the group speaking to the paper.

    She said some of the demonstrators had come from across the Midwest and would be joining NATO protests throughout the week, the Tribune reported. The group was committed to remaining non-violent, she said.

    Those arrested were charged with criminal trespass, according to NBCChicago.com.

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    570 comments

    Obama's next 4 years are going to define his presidency. He will end the wars. He will raise taxes on corporations who outsource and end taxes on corporations who operate in the usa and actually create jobs for u.s. citizens.

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    Explore related topics: chicago, nato, protest, catholic, occupy, kari-huus, ows
  • 11
    May
    2012
    5:16am, EDT

    Bad neighbors for Team USA? Occupy protesters face eviction from park near training base

    Alastair Jamieson / msnbc.com

    Jim L., left, and other members of the Occupy Mile End protest group at their camp in east London on Thursday.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    LONDON -- An eviction notice has been served on dozens of Occupy protesters who have set up camp in a park next to Team USA's Olympic track and field training base.

    About 50 demonstrators are occupying Mile End Park – two miles from the main London 2012 site and next door to a sports stadium where American athletes will prepare for events in July.


    The park is also visible from the priority traffic lanes that will be used to whisk VIPs and other participants from central London to the Olympic Village, which is located to the east of the U.K. capital.

    The protesters say they are part of the anti-capitalist Occupy movement, which has seen sit-ins and clashes with police in cities including New York, Seattle, Washington, D.C., and Oakland.

    An Occupy London camp was forcibly removed from the grounds of St Paul's Cathedral by police at the end of February, resulting in 20 arrests.

    Local authorities have now secured a court order to close down Occupy Mile End, which began five weeks ago and includes about a dozen tents, a campfire and makeshift toilet facilities.

    Police evict Occupy London protesters from camp

    Tower Hamlets Borough Council applied for the order following complaints from local residents. The manager of a nearby nature reserve also accused camp members of damaging important trees by taking branches for firewood, according to a report in the East London Advertiser newspaper.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    One of the protesters, who gave his name as Jim L., told msnbc.com the group had agreed to leave the site voluntarily on Sunday.

    "This is one of Britain's poorest boroughs and we don't want to take council resources away from things like schools and hospitals so we have agreed to vacate the site without costing the council a penny," he said.

    Mark Taylor, spokesman for the Mile End Residents' Association, said locals were "looking forward" to a "constructive and companionable relationship with Team USA."

    He said: "We are very pleased that the council has secured a possession order to reclaim the park for its intended purpose. It's very sad that trees had to be pulled down for firewood and children's activities disrupted before the council acted."

    Slideshow: When the Olympics is your neighbor

    /

    A diverse community in East London will welcome the world to Britain for the 2012 Olympic Games. Meet residents and hear how they feel about having a huge, world stage in their backyard.

    Launch slideshow

    Council officials insisted that nobody from the United States Olympic Committee, Team USA or the London 2012 organizers had expressed concern about the Occupy protest on their doorstep.

    A spokesman for the council told msnbc.com: "The USA track and field team will be training at Mile End Stadium during the Olympic Games. They have funded extensive improvements to the stadium, and will be providing a variety of community benefits including free coaching sessions and opportunities to watch the team training.

    Olympic housing crunch: London landlords evict tenants to gouge tourists

    "We are working with the United States Olympic Committee (USOC) on security issues, understandably these issues are sensitive and therefore we are not able to comment in detail, but we do not anticipate that these will impact on the local community."

    The council said it would go to the High Court to have the protesters moved if they did not leave the site, which is owned by a private trust on behalf of the council for use as a public park.

    Brits revel in gloom ahead of London Olympics, but don't believe the gripe

    Jim L. said the Occupy camp would move to a new, unidentified, site on Sunday. He added that there was little chance of protests targeting the Olympic Games.

    "It would be impossible because of the security, in my own view," he said. "We're not against the Olympics as everybody likes a bit of sport, but I believe it is just one big advertising event for the benefit of corporate sponsors."

    At London Olympics, dogs have sniffed out a key anti-terror role

    He said the camp location had been chosen to highlight the issue of poverty in Tower Hamlets and not because of the proximity to Team USA's stadium.

    Slideshow: Venues for 2012 London Olympic Games

    Oda / Getty Images

    From Wimbledon to Wembley Stadium to The Dome, a look at the venues for the 2012 London Olympic Games.

    Launch slideshow

    "There are huge problems here -- lack of affordable housing, unemployment and poverty," he said. "This is not so much a protest as a process, which is why we've come here – to listen to people and gather support. There isn’t much point in trying to occupy private land in order to disrupt the institutions of capitalism.”

    American competitors at the Games will have several bases across London for different sports. Other sites include the University of East London campuses in Docklands and Stratford.

    Langdon School, in the nearby Poplar area, will be home to the Canadian Olympic team.

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    114 comments

    Not sure where these losers are from, but they look about as bright as the protestors in the U.S. Those in the Occupy crowd in U.S. and elsewhere are lazy, entitled, unwashed, and stupid. My advice; grow up, get a job, stop complaining, and start making something of your life.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us, olympics, games, security, london, protest, 2012, team-usa, featured, occupy
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