No Kings, Los Angeles
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No Kings, protests
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No Kings, rallies
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No Kings, Texas and protest
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Do I get lonely? Of course, but I have cats,” the journalist said while livestreaming “No Kings” demonstrations from a helicopter.
More than 1,500 events were announced throughout the U.S. to send a loud message to President Donald Trump: “In America, we don’t do kings.”
Stu Mundel told viewers about his separation from his wife and his feelings for bourbon while the station streamed his coverage to its YouTube channel.
The protests were timed to Flag Day and Trump's 79th birthday as he held a military-style parade to celebrate the Army's 250th anniversary in Washington, D.C., featuring tanks, so
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass announced that the nightly curfew will be extended for a few more days amid ongoing protests against immigration raids.
The tens of thousands of "No Kings" protesters who hit the streets across the nation this weekend were vibrant and vocal but largely peaceful, with perhaps the biggest gathering drawing an estimated 30,
At least one demonstration, about 70 miles from Washington, D.C., in Northern Virginia, was met with violence when a man intentionally drove an SUV through a crowd of departing protesters, striking at least one person,
I, uh, I am married. I am legally married. I am legally married. That’s about the only way you can really say it,” Mundel muttered