Black lives matter

So you are inderectly encouraging people to go out on the street to commit violence, set fire to shops and private companies, with the justification that these will be compensated, maybe even those who die in these riots will be compensated? your violent ideology does not belong to the democracy of my country.
:ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO:
You're 18 years old, and from Europe!!! Of course you don't know ******* about MY country.
Using the word 'shops' should have been my first clue.
 
A Brit? What the hell? Get back to drinking tea and making funny TV shows for us to rip off, Brit. No more commenting on politics for you.
 
in any case the ideology of violence will always fail, whoever commits violence is an idiot and this has no connection with race, religion or bank account. In my school they taught me what democracy is, the boy inderectly justified violence with compensation, your comment makes me happy, you responded by discriminating against my person with epithets to make fun of me and this makes me understand your ideology , this would be the one you commit violence for more racism and discrimination, really fair, best regards

https://eu.courier-journal.com/stor...ally-support-la-bodeguita-de-mima/5562669002/

About Antifa
Antifa was born in Europe and we know it well, it is a terrorist organization that has killed people, it is the other side of the coin of the far right, same degenerate ideology, same violence.

They have exploited issues very dear to the American left to bring their Marxist anarchy to the country, even a naive person would be able to understand it.

 
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yeah sure man how dare civilians in france and former czechoslovakia mount an armed resistance to nazi occupation. such violence should be deplored.

pick up a book, you baby



a thing is born to fight evil and then it becomes evil itself.You take a book, Nazism is over in Europe, the occupation is over but Antifa continues to ******* people like the extreme right wing, many families have died here due to the Antifa attacks. What you are referring to was another thing, another generation, these that we have now follow the anarchist culture and are against capitalism, it doesn't matter your race or your religion if you don't agree their ideas you are an enemy to *******. This is their ideology. ...

in Europe, governments have taken preventive measures against the anarchy and violence of Antifa, in the USA the situation is out of control because there is a political part that justifies and encourages violence, however this is masochism because those who do not condemn violence will be judged from honest citizens. Regards



 
:ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO:
You're 18 years old, and from Europe!!! Of course you don't know ******* about MY country.
[
Using the word 'shops' should have been my first clue.


A Brit? What the hell? Get back to drinking tea and making funny TV shows for us to rip off, Brit. No more commenting on politics for you.

and remember, it is disrespectful to discriminate a person's opinion based on their sexual tastes or age or country, even the stereotype about tea...

these days I see the same bad ideology of right-wing supremacists in left-wing politics and in people who pretend to be tolerant and progressive but instead are equal to right-wing extremists, this is a perfect example of discrimination. You are two sides of the same coin, same hypocrisy. You have probably pursued your enemy so much that you have become the same...

I am honored to be a young man and not to be extremist and intolerant, I prefer peace, I prefer those who protest peacefully to have their rights, not idiots who destroy everything and vandalize cities, doing violence to other people

people died in the Capitol Hill Organized Protest Zone, or CHOP. Nobody remembers those people who died of anarchy, everyone turns their heads the other way and pretends nothing has happened.
If you want every city to become like CHOP .
I certainly don't want my city governed by anarchy and above all by hypocrisy, that's why I am honored not to belong to your ideology.

please don't tell me that in the past the protests were violent and therefore today in 2020 it must be the same, today using violence means that people condemn your protest and you will not get the support of good people

regards
 
the occupation is over but Antifa continues to ******* people like the extreme right wing, many families have died here due to the Antifa attacks.

This isn't true at all. Try finding any families that have been killed by antifa

people died in the Capitol Hill Organized Protest Zone, or CHOP

Yes, because the media covered it so fervently that criminals and right-wingers showed up to take advantage and attack people
 
please don't tell me that in the past the protests were violent and therefore today in 2020 it must be the same, today using violence means that people condemn your protest and you will not get the support of good people
regards
You lied in your first message and tried to pass yourself off as an American, and then talked about Antifa in Europe, which is different and actually started off as an anti-Nazi group, hence the name Anti-fascist.
Your entire message is another example of why some foreigners will never understand us.
America is unique, in many ways. We were born, created and progressed through violent protest. Peaceful protest usually procede
18th century
  • 1783 – Pennsylvania Mutiny of 1783, June 20. Anti-government protest by soldiers of the Continental Army against the Congress of the Confederation, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • 1786 – Shays' Rebellion, August 29, 1786 – February 3, 1787, Western Massachusetts
  • 1786 – Paper Money Riot, September 20, Exeter, New Hampshire
  • 1788 – Doctors Mob Riot, New York City
  • 1791–1794 – Whiskey Rebellion, Western Pennsylvania (anti-excise tax on whiskey)
  • 1799 – Fries Rebellion, 1799–1800, Tax revolt by Pennsylvania Dutch farmers Pennsylvania
19th century
1800–1849
  • 1824 – Hard Scrabble and Snow Town Riots, 1824 & 1831 respectively, Providence, RI
  • 1829 – Cincinnati riots of 1829, August 15–22, Cincinnati, Ohio
  • 1831 – Nat Turner's slave rebellion, August 21–23, Southampton County, Virginia
  • 1834 – Anti-abolitionist riot, New York City
  • 1834 – Attack on Canterbury Female Boarding School, Canterbury, Connecticut
  • 1835 – Baltimore bank riot, August 6–9
  • 1835 – Gentleman's Riot, numerous riots throughout 1835 targeting abolitionists,[2] Boston, Massachusetts
  • 1835 – Snow Riot, Washington D.C.
  • 1835 – Destruction of Noyes Academy, Canaan, New Hampshire
  • 1835–1836 – Toledo War, a boundary dispute between states of Michigan and Ohio
  • 1836 – Cincinnati Riots of 1836, Cincinnati, Ohio
  • 1837 – Flour Riots, New York City
  • 1837 – ******* of Elijah Lovejoy
  • 1838 – Burning of Pennsylvania Hall
  • 1839 – Honey War, Iowa-Missouri border
  • 1839 – Anti-Rent War, Hudson Valley, New York
  • 1841 – Dorr Rebellion, Rhode Island
  • 1841 – Cincinnati Riots of 1841, early September, Cincinnati, Ohio
  • 1842 – Lombard Street Riot, (a.k.a. the Abolition Riots), August 1, Philadelphia
  • 1842 – Muncy Abolition riot of 1842
  • 1844 – Philadelphia Nativist Riots, May 6–8, July 6–7, Philadelphia (anti-Catholic)
  • 1849 – Astor Place riot, May 10, New York City, (anti-British)
1850–1859
  • 1851 – Christiana Riot, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania
  • 1853 – Cincinnati Riot of 1853, Cincinnati, Ohio
  • 1855 – Cincinnati riots of 1855
  • 1855 – Lager Beer Riot, April 21, Chicago, Illinois
  • 1855 – Portland Rum Riot, June 2, Portland, Maine
  • 1855 – Bloody Monday, Know-Nothing Party riot, August 6, Louisville, Kentucky (anti-immigration)
  • 1855 – Detroit brothel riots, 1855–1859, Detroit, Michigan {Source: Detroit Free Press' "The Detroit Almanac", 2001.}
  • 1856 – Pottawatomie massacre, May 24, Franklin County, Kansas
  • 1856 – Know-Nothing Riot of 1856, Baltimore, Maryland
  • 1856 – San Francisco Vigilance Movement, San Francisco, California
  • 1857 – Know-Nothing Riot, June 1, Washington D.C. (anti-immigration)
  • 1857 – New York City Police Riot, June 16, New York City
  • 1857 – Dead Rabbits Riot, July 4–5, New York City
  • 1858 – Know-Nothing Riot 1858, New Orleans, Louisiana
  • 1859 – John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry, October 16, Harpers Ferry, Virginia
1860–1869
  • 1861–1865: American Civil War, April 12 – 9, United States
  • 1861 – Baltimore Riot of 1861, April 19, (a.k.a. the Pratt Street Riot), Baltimore, Maryland
  • 1861 – Camp Jackson Affair, May 10, Union forces clash with Confederate sympathizers on the streets of St. Louis, 28 dead, 100 injured., St. Louis, Missouri
  • 1862 – Buffalo riot of 1862, August 12, Buffalo, New York
  • 1863 – Detroit race riot of 1863, March 6
  • 1863 – Southern bread riots, April 2, Riots which broke out in the South during the Civil War due to food shortages throughout the Confederate States of America
  • 1863 – Battle of Fort Fizzle, June, also known as the Holmes County Draft Riots, active resistance to the draft during the Civil War, Holmes County, Ohio
  • 1863 – New York City draft riots, July 13–16, (anti-draft)
  • 1864 – Charleston Riot, March 28, Charleston, Illinois
  • 1866 – Memphis Riots of 1866, May 1–3, Race riot that broke out during Reconstruction, Memphis, Tennessee
  • 1866 – New Orleans riot, July 30, New Orleans, Louisiana
  • 1868 – Pulaski Riot, Pulaski, Tennessee
1870–1879
  • 1870 – First New York City Orange riot
  • 1870 – Kirk-Holden war, July–November, Caswell and Alamance counties North Carolina
  • 1870 – Mamaroneck Riot, labor riot between Italian and Irish laborers
  • 1871 – Second New York City Orange riot
  • 1871 – Meridian race riot of 1871, March, Meridian, Mississippi
  • 1871 – Los Angeles anti-Chinese riot, Los Angeles, California
  • 1873 – Colfax massacre, April 13, Colfax, Louisiana
  • 1874 – Election Riot of 1874, Barbour County, Alabama
  • 1874 – Tompkins Square Riot, New York City
  • 1874 – Battle of Liberty Place, New Orléans, Louisiana
  • 1876 – South Carolina civil disturbances of 1876, South Carolina
  • 1877 – Widespread rioting occurred across the US as part of the Great Railroad Strike of 1877:
    • Baltimore railroad strike in Baltimore, Maryland
    • Chicago railroad strike of 1877, Chicago, IL
    • Philadelphia Railroad Strike, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
    • Pittsburgh Railway Riots, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
    • Reading Railroad massacre, Reading, Pennsylvania
    • Saint Louis general strike, July, East St. Louis, Illinois
    • Scranton General Strike, in Scranton, Pennsylvania
    • Shamokin uprising, Shamokin, Pennsylvania
  • 1877 – San Francisco Riot of 1877
1880–1889
  • 1880 – 1880 Garret Mountain May Day riot, May 1, Paterson, New Jersey
  • 1882 – Greenwood, New York, insurrection of 1882
  • 1884 – Cincinnati riots of 1884, March 28–30, Cincinnati, Ohio
  • 1885 – Rock Springs massacre, September 2, 1885, riot between Chinese miners and white miners; 28 killed, 15 injured, Rock Springs, Wyoming
  • 1886 – Seattle riot of 1886, February 6–9, Seattle, Washington
  • 1886 – Haymarket riot, May 4, Chicago, Illinois
  • 1886 – Bay View Massacre, May 4; 1400 workers march for eight hour work day; 7 killed and several more wounded after confrontation with National Guard. Milwaukee, Wisconsin
  • 1887 – Thibodaux Massacre, November 22–25; a racial attack mounted by white paramilitary groups in Thibodaux, Louisiana in November 1887 Thibodaux, Louisiana
  • 1888 – Jaybird-Woodpecker War, 1888–90, violent post-Reconstruction political conflict in Texas. Fort Bend County, Texas
1890–1899
  • 1891 – Hennessy Affair, New Orleans, Louisiana
  • 1892 – Homestead strike, July 6, 1892, Homestead, Pennsylvania
  • 1892–1893 – Mitcham War, Clarke County, Alabama
  • 1894 – May Day riots of 1894, May 1, Cleveland, Ohio
  • 1894 – Pullman strike participants burn World's Columbian Exposition buildings, Chicago, Illinois
  • 1894 – Bituminous Coal Miners' Strike, coal mining regions
  • 1895 – New Orleans dockworkers riot, New Orleans, Louisiana
  • 1897 – Lattimer massacre, September 1897, near Hazleton, Pennsylvania
  • 1898 – Battle of Virden, October 12, Coal strike; 11 killed, 35 wounded, Virden, Illinois
  • 1898 – Wilmington insurrection, November 10, Wilmington, North Carolina
  • 1899 – Pana riot, April 10, Coal mine labor conflict; 7 killed, 6 wounded, Pana, Illinois
  • 1899 – Coeur d'Alene, Idaho labor confrontation of 1899
20th century
1900–1909
  • 1900 – Akron Riot of 1900, Akron, Ohio
  • 1900 – New Orleans Riot
  • 1901 – Denver Riots, Denver, Colorado[citation needed]
  • 1901 – New York Race Riots[citation needed]
  • 1901 – Pierce City Riots, Pierce City, Missouri
  • 1902 – Liverpool Riots, Denver, Colorado[citation needed]
  • 1903 – Colorado Labor Wars, 1903–1904
  • 1903 – Anthracite Coal Strike, Eastern Pennsylvania
  • 1903 – Evansville Race Riot, Evansville, Indiana[citation needed]
  • 1903 – Motormen's Riot, Richmond, Virginia[citation needed]
  • 1905 – 1905 Chicago teamsters' strike, April 7 – July 19, Conflict between the Teamsters Union and the Employers' Association of Chicago by the end, 21 people killed and 416 injured, mostly workers. Chicago, IL
  • 1906 – Rioting and looting after the 1906 San Francisco earthquake
  • 1906 – Atlanta Riots, Atlanta, Georgia
  • 1907 – Bellingham riots, Bellingham, Washington
  • 1908 – Springfield Race Riot, Springfield, Illinois
  • 1909 – Greek Town riot, February 21, South Omaha, Nebraska
1910–1919
  • 1910 – Johnson–Jeffries riots
  • 1910–1919 – Bandit War Southern Texas
  • 1910 – Philadelphia general strike (1910), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • 1912 – Lawrence textile strike, Lawrence, Massachusetts (January to March)
  • 1912 – Grabow riot (July 7)
  • 1913 – Wheatland Riot, August 3, Wheatland, California
  • 1913 – Paterson silk strike, February 25 – July 28 Paterson, New Jersey
  • 1913 – Copper Country Strike of 1913–1914, Calumet, Michigan
  • 1913 – Colorado Coalfield War, September 23 – April 29, 1914, Southern Colorado
  • 1913 – Indianapolis streetcar strike of 1913, October 30 – November 7, Indianapolis, Indiana
  • 1914 – Ludlow massacre, April 20, Ludlow, Colorado
  • 1916 – Preparedness Day bombing, July 22, San Francisco, California
  • 1916 – Everett massacre, November 5, Everett, Washington
  • 1917 – East St. Louis Race Riots, July 2, St. Louis, Missouri & East St. Louis, Illinois
  • 1917 – Chester race riot, July 25–29, Chester, Pennsylvania
  • 1917 – Springfield Vigilante Riot, Springfield, Missouri
  • 1917 – Green Corn Rebellion, August 3, A brief popular uprising advocating for the rural poor and against military conscription, Central Oklahoma
  • 1917 – Houston Race riot, August 23, Houston, Texas
  • 1917 – St. Paul Streetcar Riots, October and December, St. Paul, Minnesota
  • 1918 – Detroit trolley riot, Detroit, Michigan {Source: Detroit Free Press' The Detroit Almanac, 2001.}
  • 1919 – Seattle General Strike, February 6–11, Seattle, Washington
  • 1919 – May Day Riots, May 1, Cleveland, Ohio, Boston, Massachusetts, New York City, New York (state)
  • 1919 – Red Summer, white riots against blacks
    • Blakeley, Georgia (February 8)
    • Memphis, Tennessee (March 14)
    • Morgan County, West Virginia (April 10)
    • Jenkins County, Georgia (April 13)
    • Charleston, South Carolina (May 10)
    • Sylvester, Georgia (May 10)
    • New London, Connecticut (May 29)
    • Putnam County, Georgia (May 27–29)
    • Monticello, Mississippi (May 31)
    • Memphis, Tennessee (June 13)
    • New London, Connecticut (June 13)
    • Annapolis, Maryland (June 27)
    • Macon, Mississippi (June 27)
    • Bisbee, Arizona (July 3)
    • Dublin, Georgia (July 6)
    • Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (July 7)
    • Coatesville, Pennsylvania (July 8)
    • Tuscaloosa, Alabama (July 9)
    • Longview, Texas (July 10–12)
    • Garfield Park riot of 1919 (July 14)
    • Port Arthur, Texas (July 15)
    • Washington, D.C. (July 19–24)
    • Norfolk, Virginia (July 21)
    • New Orleans, Louisiana (July 23)
    • Darby, Pennsylvania (July 23)
    • Hobson City, Alabama (July 26)
    • Chicago, Illinois (July 27 – August 3)
    • Newberry, South Carolina (July 28)
    • Bloomington, Illinois (July 31)
    • Syracuse, New York (July 31)
    • Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (July 31)
    • Hattiesburg, Mississippi (August 4)
    • Texarkana, Texas riot of 1919 (August 6)
    • New York, New York (August 21)
    • Knoxville, Tennessee (August 30)
    • Ellenton, South Carolina (September 15–21)
    • Omaha, Nebraska (September 28–29)
    • Elaine, Arkansas (October 1–2)
    • Baltimore, Maryland (October 1–2)
    • Corbin, Kentucky (October 31, 1919)
  • 1919 – Annapolis riot of 1919, June 27, Annapolis, Maryland
  • 1919 – Boston Police Strike, September 9–11, Boston, Massachusetts
  • 1919 – Steel Strike of 1919, September 22 – January 8 Pennsylvania
  • 1919 – Centralia Massacre, November 11, Centralia, Washington
1920–1929
  • 1920 – Battle of Matewan, May 20, Matewan, West Virginia
  • 1920 – Ocoee massacre, November 2–3, Ocoee, Florida
  • 1921 – Tulsa Race Massacre, May 31 – June 1, Tulsa, Oklahoma
  • 1921 – Battle of Blair Mountain, August–September, Logan County, West Virginia
  • 1922 – Herrin Massacre, June 21–22, Herrin, Illinois
  • 1922 – Straw Hat Riot, September 13–15, New York City, New York
  • 1922 – Perry race riot, December 14–15, Perry, Florida
  • 1923 – Rosewood Massacre, January 1–7, Rosewood, Florida
  • 1925 – Ossian Sweet incident, September, Detroit, Michigan
  • 1927 – Yakima Valley Anti-Filipino Riot, November 8–11, Yakima Valley
  • 1927 – Columbine Mine Massacre, November 21, Serene, Colorado
  • 1929 – Loray Mill strike, Gastonia, North Carolina
1930–1939
  • 1930 – Watsonville Riots, January 19–23, Watsonville, California
  • 1931 – Battle of Evarts, May 5, Harlan County, Kentucky
  • 1931 – The Housing Protests, August 3, Chicago, Illinois
  • 1931 – Hawaii Riot, Hawaii
  • 1932 – Bonus Army March, Spring/Summer 1932, Washington, D.C.
  • 1932 – Ford Hunger March, March 7, 3,000 unemployed workers march on Ford Motors, five are killed, River Rouge plant, Dearborn, Michigan
  • 1934 – Minneapolis Teamsters Strike of 1934, Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • 1934 – Auto-Lite strike, April 4 – June 3, the "Battle of Toledo" riot, Toledo, Ohio
  • 1934 – 1934 West Coast Longshore Strike, May 9 – October 12, San Francisco Bay Area, California; Portland, Oregon; Seattle, Washington
  • 1934 – Textile workers strike (1934)
  • 1934 – Detroit World Series riot, October 10, Detroit, Michigan {Source: Detroit Free Press' The Detroit Almanac, 2001.}
  • 1935 – Harlem Riot, March 19–20, New York City
  • 1935 – Southern Tenant Farmers' Union Riot, Arkansas
  • 1935 – Terre Haute General Strike, July 22–23, A labor dispute between an enameling company and a labor union led to a two-day general strike. Indiana National Guard was called out and martial law was declared by the Governor. The city was under a state of martial law for six months. It was the third general strike in U.S. History. Terre Haute, Indiana
  • 1937 – Flint Sit-Down Strike, General Motors' Fisher Body Plant, Flint, Michigan
  • 1937 – Battle of the Overpass, May 26, Dearborn, Michigan {Source: Detroit Free Press' The Detroit Almanac, 2001.}
  • 1937 – Republic Steel Strike, May 30, Chicago, Illinois
  • 1939 – U.S. Nazi Riot, New York City
1940–1949
  • 1942 – Sojourner Truth Homes Riot, February 28, Detroit, Michigan
  • 1943 – Beaumont race riot of 1943, June, Beaumont, Texas
  • 1943 – Zoot Suit Riots, July 3, Los Angeles, California (anti-Hispanic and anti-zoot suit)
  • 1943 – Detroit race riot of 1943, June 20–21, Detroit, Michigan
  • 1943 – Harlem riot of 1943, August 1–3, New York City, New York
  • 1946 – Columbia race riot of 1946, February 25–26, Columbia, Tennessee
  • 1946 – Battle of Athens (1946), August, revolt by citizens against corrupt local government, McMinn County, Tennessee
  • 1946 – Airport Homes race riots, Chicago, Illinois
  • 1947 – Fernwood Park race riot, mid-August, Fernwood, Chicago, IL
  • 1949 – Fairground Park riot, June 21, St. Louis Missouri
  • 1949 – Anacostia Pool Riot, June 29, Anacostia, Washington, D.C.
  • 1949 – Peekskill riots, Peekskill, New York
  • 1949 – Englewood race riot, November 8–12, Englewood, Chicago, IL
1950–1959
  • 1950 – San Juan Nationalist revolt, Utuado Uprising, Jayuya Uprising, October 30, Various uprisings against United States Government rule during the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party Revolts of the 1950s in Puerto Rico
  • 1951 – Cicero race riot of 1951, July 12, Cicero, Illinois
  • 1956 – Mansfield School Integration Incident 400 pro-segregationists brandishing weapons and racist signage prevent 12 black children from entering Mansfield High School Mansfield, TX
  • 1958 – Battle of Hayes Pond, January 18, Maxton, North Carolina, Armed confrontation between members of the NC Lumbee tribe and the KKK.
  • 1959 – Harriett-Henderson Cotton Mills Strike Henderson, North Carolina
1960–1969
  • 1960 – HUAC riot, May 13, Students protest House Un-American Activities Committee hearings, 12 injured, 64 arrested, San Francisco, California
  • 1960 – Newport Jazz Festival Riot, July 2, Newport, Rhode Island
  • 1960 – El Cajon Boulevard Riot, August 20, San Diego, California
  • 1960 – Ax Handle Saturday, August 27, Jacksonville, Florida
  • 1962 – Ole Miss riot 1962, September 3 – October 1, The University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi
  • 1963 – Birmingham riot of 1963, May 11, Birmingham, Alabama
  • 1963 – Cambridge riot 1963, June 14, Cambridge, Maryland
  • 1964 – Chester School Protests, April 2–26, Chester, Pennsylvania
  • 1964 – 1964 Monson Motor Lodge protests June thru August, St. Augustine, Florida
  • 1964 – the July 16 killing of James Powell by police in the Yorkville neighborhood just south of East Harlemprecipitates a string of race riots in July and August, including:
    • 1964 – Harlem Riot of 1964, July 16–22, New York City
    • 1964 – Rochester 1964 race riot, July 24–25, Rochester, New York
    • 1964 – Jersey City Riot, August 3–5, A disorderly conduct arrest set off accusations of police ******* and were followed by protests and riots.[3] At least two residents were shot and several police and rioters were injured,[4] Jersey City, NJ
    • 1964 – Dixmoor race riot, August 15–17, Dixmoor, Illinois
    • 1964 – Philadelphia 1964 race riot, August 28–30, Philadelphia
  • 1965 – Selma to Montgomery marches, March 7–25, Alabama
  • 1965 – Watts riots, August 11–17, Los Angeles, California
  • 1966 – Division Street riots, June 12–14, Humboldt Park, Chicago, Illinois
  • 1966 – Omaha riot of 1966, July 2, Omaha, Nebraska
  • 1966 – 1966 Chicago West-Side riots, July 12–15, Chicago, Illinois
  • 1966 – Hough riots, July 18–24, Cleveland, Ohio
  • 1966 – Marquette Park housing march, August 5, Chicago, Illinois
  • 1966 – Waukegan riot, August 27, Waukegan, Illinois
  • 1966 – Benton Harbor riots, August 30 – September 4, Benton Harbor, Michigan
  • 1966 – Summerhill and Vine City Riots, September 6–8 Atlanta, Georgia
  • 1966 – Hunters Point social uprising, September 27 – October 1 San Francisco, California
  • 1966 – Sunset Strip curfew riots, November 12, various other flareups, basis for the song "For What It's Worth (Buffalo Springfield song)", West Hollywood, California
  • 1967 – Long Hot Summer of 1967refers to a year in which 159 race riots, almost all African-American, erupted across the United States, including:
    • 1967 – Avondale riots, June 12–15, Cincinnati, Ohio
    • 1967 – Buffalo riot of 1967, June 27, Buffalo, New York
    • 1967 – 1967 Newark riots, July 12–17, Newark, New Jersey
    • 1967 – 1967 Plainfield riots, July 14–21, Plainfield, New Jersey
    • 1967 – Cairo riot, July 17, Cairo, Illinois
    • 1967 – 1967 Detroit riot, July 23–29, Detroit, Michigan
    • 1967 – Cambridge riot of 1967, July 24, a.k.a. the H. Rap Brown riot, Cambridge, Maryland
    • 1967 – 1967 Saginaw riot, July 26, Saginaw, Michigan
    • 1967 – Milwaukee riot, July 30, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
  • 1968 – Orangeburg Massacre, S.C. State Univ., February 8, Orangeburg, South Carolina
  • 1968 – Memphis Sanitation Strike riot, March 28, Memphis, Tennessee
  • 1968 – Assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., April 4, Memphis, Tennessee, precipitates all April 4–14 riots, including:
    • 1968 – 1968 Detroit riot, April 4–5, Detroit, Michigan
    • 1968 – 1968 New York City riots, April 4–5, New York City, New York
    • 1968 – 1968 Washington, D.C. riots, April 4–8, Washington, D.C.
    • 1968 – 1968 Chicago riots, West Side Riots, April 5–7, Chicago, Illinois
    • 1968 – 1968 Pittsburgh riots, April 5–11, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
    • 1968 – Baltimore riot of 1968, April 6–14, Baltimore, Maryland
    • 1968 – Avondale riot of 1968, April 8, Cincinnati, Ohio
    • 1968 – 1968 Kansas City riot, April 9, Kansas City, Missouri
    • 1968 – Wilmington Riot of 1968, April 9–10, Wilmington, Delaware
    • 1968 – Trenton Riot of 1968, April 9–11, Trenton, New Jersey
  • 1968 – Columbia University protests of 1968, April 23, New York City, New York
  • 1968 – Louisville riots of 1968, May 27, Louisville, Kentucky
  • 1968 – Akron riot, July 17–23, Akron, Ohio
  • 1968 – Glenville Shootout, July 23–28, Cleveland, Ohio
  • 1968 – 1968 Miami riot, August 7–8, Miami, Florida
  • 1968 – 1968 Democratic National Convention protests, including the police riots of August 27–28, Chicago, Illinois
  • 1969 – Zip to Zap riot, May 9–11, Zap, North Dakota
  • 1969 – People's Park Riots, May, Berkeley, California
  • 1969 – 1969 Greensboro uprising, May 21–25, Greensboro, North Carolina
  • 1969 – Cairo disorders, May–December, Cairo, Illinois
  • 1969 – Stonewall riots, June 28 – July 2, New York City, New York
  • 1969 – 1969 York Race Riot, July 17–24, York, Pennsylvania
  • 1969 – Days of Rage, October 8–11, Weathermen riot in Chicago, Illinois
1970–1979
  • 1970 – San Francisco Police Department Park Station bombing, February 16, San Francisco, CA
  • 1970 – University of Puerto Rico riot, March 4–11, at least one killed, Río Piedras, Puerto Rico
  • 1970 – Student strike of 1970, May 1970
  • 1970 – Kent State riots/shootings, May 1970, four killed, Kent, Ohio
  • 1970 – New Haven Green Disorders, Yale University, May 1970, New Haven, Connecticut
  • 1970 – Augusta Riot, May 11–13, Augusta, Georgia
  • 1970 – Hard Hat Riot, Wall Street, May 8, New York City
  • 1970 – Jackson State killings, May 14–15, two killed, Jackson, Mississippi
  • 1970 – 1970 Asbury Park race riots, July 4–10, Asbury Park, New Jersey
  • 1970 – 1970 Memorial Park riot, August 24–27, Royal Oak, Michigan
  • 1970 – Sterling Hall bombing, Univ. of Wisc., August 24, one killed, Madison, Wisconsin
  • 1970 – Chicano Moratorium riot, August 29, Los Angeles, California
  • 1971 – Wilmington riot 1971, February 9, Wilmington, North Carolina
  • 1971 – May Day protests 1971, May 3, Washington, D.C.
  • 1971 – Camden riots, August 1971, Camden, New Jersey
  • 1971 – Attica Prison uprising, September 9–13, at least 39 killed, Attica, New York
  • 1973 – Wounded Knee incident, February 27 – May 8, Wounded Knee, South Dakota
  • 1973 – Shooting of Clifford Glover Riot, April 23, Rioting broke out in South Jamaica, Queens after an undercover NYPD officer shot and killed a ten-year-old African-American youth. New York, New York
  • 1974 – SLA Shootout, May 17, Los Angeles, California
  • 1974 – Baltimore police strike, July, Baltimore, Maryland
  • 1974 – Boston busing race riots anti-busing riots throughout Boston, Massachusetts
  • 1975 – Livernois–Fenkell riot, July 1975, Detroit, Michigan
  • 1976 – Escambia High School riots, February 5, Pensacola, Florida
  • 1976 – Anti-busing riot in downtown Boston, April 5, Boston, Massachusetts
  • 1976 – Marquette Park unrest, June–August, Chicago, Illinois
  • 1977 – Humboldt Park riot, June 5–6, Chicago, Illinois
  • 1977 – New York City Blackout riot 1977, July 13–14, New York City, New York
  • 1978 – Fireman Strike Arson, July 2, 1978, Memphis, TN
  • 1978 – Moody Park riot, May 5, 1978, Houston, Texas
  • 1979 – Herman Hill riot, April 15, Wichita, Kansas
  • 1979 – White Night riots, May 1979, San Francisco, California
  • 1979 – Levittown Gas Riot, June 23–24, Thousands rioted in response to increased gasoline prices in the U.S., 198 arrested, 44 police and 200 rioters injured. Gas stations were damaged and cars set on fire, Levittown, Pennsylvania
  • 1979 – Greensboro massacre, November 3, Greensboro, North Carolina
1980–1989
  • 1980 – New Mexico State Penitentiary riot, February 2–3, Santa Fe, New Mexico
  • 1980 – Miami riot 1980, May 17–19, Miami, Florida
  • 1982 – Miami riot 1982, December 28, A Miami policeman shoots a black video game player in an arcade. Riots breakout in the Overtown section of Miami. Miami, Florida
  • 1986 – Marquette Park KKK rally, June 28, Chicago, Illinois
  • 1988 – Tompkins Square Park riot, August 6–7, New York City
  • 1988 – Cedar Grove, Shreveport, Louisiana
  • 1989 – 1989 Miami riot, January 16–18, Miami policeman kills a black motorcycle rider. Riots breakout in the Overtown section of the city. Miami, Florida
1990–1999
  • 1991 – 1991 Washington, DC riot, Mount Pleasant riot, May 5–9, Washington, D.C.
  • 1991 – Crown Heights riot, August 1991, Brooklyn, New York
  • 1992 – L.A. Rodney King riots, April–May 1992, Los Angeles, California
  • 1992 – West Las Vegas riots, April 29, Las Vegas, Nevada
  • 1992 – 1992 Washington Heights riots, July 4–7, Manhattan, New York, Dominican community
  • 1996 – St. Petersburg, Florida Riot 1996, October 1996, St. Petersburg, Florida
  • 1997 – North Hollywood shootout, February 1997, Los Angeles, California
  • 1999 – Michigan State University student riot, April 1999, East Lansing, Michigan
  • 1999 – Woodstock '99 music festival incident, July 1999, Rome, New York
  • 1999 – WTO Meeting of 1999, "The Battle in Seattle", November 1999, Seattle, Washington
21st century
2000–2009
  • 2000 – Elián González affair, Miami, Florida
  • 2000 – Brooks Brothers riot, Miami-Dade County, Florida
  • 2000 – Puerto Rican Day Parade attacks, June 11, Central Park, New York City
  • 2001 – Seattle Mardi Gras riot, February 27, 2001, Seattle, Washington
  • 2001 – 2001 Cincinnati Riots, April 10–12, Cincinnati, Ohio
  • 2003 – Benton Harbor riot, June 2003, Benton Harbor, Michigan
  • 2003 – Miami FTAA Protests, November 2003, Miami, Florida
  • 2004 – 2004 American League Championship Series, October 21, 1 dead, Boston, Massachusetts
  • 2005 – Civil disturbances and military action in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, August – September, New Orleans, Louisiana
  • 2005 – 2005 Toledo riot, October 15, Toledo, Ohio
  • 2006 – San Bernardino punk riot, March 4, San Bernardino, California
  • 2007 – The Los Angeles May Day mêlée, May 1, Los Angeles, California
  • 2009 – Riots against BART Police shooting of Oscar Grant, January 7, 120 arrested, Oakland, California
  • 2009 – Akron riots, March 14, 2009, 7 arrested; and July 2009, unknown number arrested, Akron, Ohio
  • 2009 – 2009 G-20 Pittsburgh summit protests, September 24–25, 193 arrested
2010–2019
  • 2010 – Springfest riot, April 10, 200 police disperse crowd of 8,000 using tear gas, pepper spray, rubber bullets, and bean bag rounds, near the campus of James Madison University; dozens injured. 30–35 arrested; Harrisonburg, Virginia.
  • 2010 – Santa Cruz May Day riot, May 1, 250 rampage through downtown Santa Cruz attacking 18 businesses, causing an estimated $100,000 in damages. 1 arrested. Santa Cruz, California.
  • 2010 – Oakland protest riot, November 5, Police made more than 150 arrests as a crowd broke windows and knocked down fences, protesting sentence of former BART officer in shooting of Oscar Grant on New Years Day 2009; see BART Police shooting of Oscar Grant. Oakland, California
  • 2011 – Madison Occupation. Protestors storm and occupy the Wisconsin state capitol building for 18 days.
  • 2011 – Occupy Wall Street (Brooklyn Bridge protests). Demonstrators blocked the bridge and more than 700 people were arrested. New York, New York
  • 2011 – Occupy Oakland Oakland protests riots. October. Protesters shattered windows, set fires, and plastered buildings with graffiti. Riot police fired heavy amounts of tear gas on the protesters.
  • 2012 – Kentucky Wildcats supporters in Lexington, Kentucky[5]
  • 2012 – NATO 2012 Chicago Summit, May. Conflict between riot police and protesters. Dozens of demonstrators clubbed and arrested.
  • 2012 – Anaheim police shooting and protests, July 28. Violence erupted after multiple shootings in the neighborhood by police that included unarmed Manuel Diaz. 24 people were arrested.
  • 2013 – Flatbush Riots, March 11, Riots in Brooklyn, New York after the death of Kimani Gray who was shot and killed by NYPD.
  • 2014 – Bundy Standoff, April 5–May, an armed confrontation between supporters of cattle rancher Cliven Bundy and law enforcement following a 21-year legal dispute in which the United States Bureau of Land Management (BLM) obtained court orders directing Bundy to pay over $1 million in withheld grazing fees for Bundy's use of federally-owned land adjacent to Bundy's ranch in southeastern Nevada.
  • 2014 – Ferguson unrest, Ferguson and St. Louis, Missouri, August 10 and November 24. Following the shooting death of Michael Brown by a Ferguson police officer, protests erupt in the streets. Police respond with riot gear, tear gas, sound canons, police dogs, concussion grenades, rubber bullets, pepper balls, wooden bullets, beanbag rounds, tasers, pepper spray, and armored vehicles. Unrest occurred continuously for weeks in August, and sporadically through December, with nearly daily protests throughout the period and rioting following the non-indictment announcement on November 24. Unrest again occurred on the one year anniversary in August 2015, with dozens of arrests.
  • 2014 – St. Louis, Missouri – October 8, police vehicle windows broken as rage at the killing of Vonderrit Myers Jr. Protests continued for days afterward, during the nearby and ongoing Ferguson Unrest.
  • 2014 – New York, New York, and Berkeley, California – After prosecutors and a grand jury refused to indict a police officer in the death of Eric Garner, protests erupted in New York City and other cities.
  • 2014 Oakland riots, November–December, A series of riots and civil disturbances that took place in Oakland and the surrounding area, in reaction to the events involving the Shooting of Michael Brown and later, the death of Eric Garner, Oakland, California
  • 2014 – Berkeley, Missouri, December 23–24. Antonio Martin is shot to death by police in a St. Louis suburb nearby to Ferguson, leading to violent conflict with police, and looting.
  • 2015 – 2015 Baltimore protests, April 25–28. Days of protests break out following the death of Freddie Gray while in police custody. 34 people are arrested and 15 Officers injured after rioting and looting break out. Gray's funeral was held on April 27 and followed by further protests and looting. Governor Hogan had preemptively activated the Maryland National Guard, while the Maryland State Police had activated at least 500 officers.
  • 2015 – St. Louis, Missouri, August 19. Conflict with police following fatal shooting by St. Louis police officers of black teenager Mansur Ball-Bey leads to deployment of tear gas then burned car, buildings, and looting. Protests continue in subsequent days with tensions remaining high.
  • 2016 – Occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, January–February 2016. 1 killed and several dozen arrested at Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, Oregon.
  • 2016 – 2016 Donald Trump Chicago rally protest, March 11. Five people arrested and two police officers injured during a demonstration at the UIC Pavilion.
  • 2016 – Democracy Spring rally in April. March to Washington D.C. and sit-ins lead to arrests.
  • 2016 – 2016 Sacramento riot, June 26, A confrontation between white nationalists and left-wing counter protesters at the California State Capitol. Ten people were hospitalized for stabbing and laceration wounds.
  • 2016 – Widespread protests erupt in response to two deaths at the hands of police, the Shooting of Alton Sterling and shooting of Philando Castile. At least 261 people were arrested in protests in New York City, Chicago, St. Paul, Baton Rouge, and other cities.
  • 2016 – 2016 Milwaukee riots, Sherman Park, August 13–15. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, sparked by the fatal police shooting of 23-year-old Sylville Smith.
  • 2016 – 2016 Charlotte riot, September 20–21, Protests and riots break out in response to the shooting of Keith Lamont Scott by a Charlotte police officer.
  • 2016 – Dakota Access Pipeline protests, 411 protesters arrested. Multiple skirmishes with police, with vehicles, hay bales, and tires set on fire.
  • 2016 – Anti-Trump protests, November 9–27. As a result of Donald Trump elected as 45th President of the U.S., thousands protested across twenty-five American cities, and unrest broke out in downtown Oakland, California, and Portland, Oregon. In Oakland, over 40 fires started and police officers were injured.
  • 2017 – Berkeley, California, February 1, civil unrest ensued at UC Berkeley as Milo Yiannopoulos was scheduled to speak on the campus.[6][7]
  • 2017 – 2017 Anaheim, California protests, February 21, protesters demonstrate after police officer grabs boy and fires his gun. Protesters damage property and throw bottles and rocks at police.
  • 2017 – May Day, in Olympia, Washington and Portland, Oregon, protestors demonstrated for workers rights. Protestors damaged property and confronted law enforcement.
  • 2017 – 2017 Unite the Right rally, Charlottesville, Virginia, August 11–12. At a Unite the Right rally of white nationalists and white supremacists opposing the removal of a statue of Robert E. Lee, rally attendees and counter-protesters clashed, sometimes violently. A woman, Heather Heyer, was killed and 19 other injured when a rally attendee drove his car into a crowd of counter-protestors. Two law enforcement officers also died in a helicopter crash while monitoring the event.
  • 2017 – 2017 St. Louis protests, beginning September 15, large protests erupted when police officer Jason Stockley was found not guilty of ******* in the shooting death of Anthony Lamar Smith on December 20, 2011. Some of the protests turned destructive and the police became violent. Windows were broken at Mayor Lyda Krewson's house and in the Central West End business district on the first night, many windows were broken in the Delmar Loop on September 16, a few were broken downtown on September 17 after police drove swiftly through a crowd following a peaceful march. Police conducted a kettling mass arrest operation of nonviolent protesters and bystanders, beating and pepper spraying many, including journalists, documentary filmmakers, and an undercover officer. Protests and sporadic unrest continued daily for weeks.
  • 2019 – Memphis riot, June 13, following the fatal shooting of Brandon Webber by U.S. Marshals, Memphis, TN.
2020
  • 2020 – New York City FTP protests, January 31, Anti-Transit Police and MTA protest resulting in hundreds of arrests over the three separate days of demonstration. Vandalism and violence on train stations was reported.
  • 2020 – The Minneapolis Uprising and George Floyd protests began on May 26 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, after the ******* of George Floyd by Minneapolis Police. Derek Chauvin, the then policeman who held his knee on Floyd's neck for nearly eight minutes, was fired along with the three other officers involved. Chauvin was charged with manslaughter and second-degree *******. The other three policemen were charged with aiding and abetting *******. Protests spread to other American cities and then to other countries with Floyd's ******* garnering international condemnation.[8] Protest tactics included peaceful occupation and resistance, defensive action and barricading following violent escalation by the police and state agencies, and looting and arson of corporate commercial property. Minneapolis Police Department's 3rd Precinct, where all four policemen were stationed, was set on fire and partially destroyed. In the Seattle neighborhood of Capitol Hill, an occupation protest and self-declared autonomous zone was established on June 8, 2020 covering six city blocks and a park after the Seattle Police Department left their East Precinct building. The area was cleared of occupants by police on July 1, 2020.
 
You're still lying. I think two of us on here have broken down your claim and it's a lie. I just happen to be someone who has property in commercial districts that sustain damage. I know exactly what I'm talking about. Maybe you insurance agent saw you as an ignorant rube and took advantage.
Antifa is not a terrorist organization. This is how anybody who doesn't understand how insurance works, but understand how people lie.

Where's your proof that you and your 'insurance agent' have that Antifa has been designated a terrorist group?
And, what clause excludes terrorist acts in insurance?
You're all over the place. I guess it's hard to know where you're going when your head is up your ass.
You dont own a business and you are talking out your ass!!!! Antifa is a Bolshevik run organization that wants socialism and communism in this country. They infiltrated the demonstrations that started out as good intentions and I agreed with. My business was destroyed and I am rebuilding. I explained that my building was almost 100 years old and I could get full business coverage on it. You mentioned Goerge Floyd in your comments. Please quit putting this individual on a pedestal like god!!! For god sake he held a pregnant woman at gun point with the gun on her stomach as his freak crone buddies ransacked her house and robbed her. He had the amount of fentanyl to ******* a lot of people!!! He also had methamphetamine in his system. There is the full videos of the encounter that has him saying I can’t breath way before the cop put his knee on his neck!!! This was just a great opportunity for this movement to take off. This was no excuse for the lawlessness and anarchy that ensued after this incident. You ma’am have no ground to stand on if you condone this behavior!!! If your a business owner or not if you condone this behavior you are part of the problem. We are a nation of laws and if you break the laws you should be held accountable. The problem with this nation is we have become a law of the jungle and not the law of the land!!!! No I am not Donald Trump voter or fan and I am not a Joe Biden voter or fan!!! I am a United States citizen that thinks all Americans are the same and this lawlessness is out of hand and should be confronted with the utmost resistance!!! If you think differently then we can agree to disagree!!!
 
You're still lying. I think two of us on here have broken down your claim and it's a lie. I just happen to be someone who has property in commercial districts that sustain damage. I know exactly what I'm talking about. Maybe you insurance agent saw you as an ignorant rube and took advantage.
Antifa is not a terrorist organization. This is how anybody who doesn't understand how insurance works, but understand how people lie.

Where's your proof that you and your 'insurance agent' have that Antifa has been designated a terrorist group?
And, what clause excludes terrorist acts in insurance?
You're all over the place. I guess it's hard to know where you're going when your head is up your ass.
How bout I put my head up your ass!!! I’m sure it would fit!!! You too are a liar and you own no business that was destroyed and would know nothing about running a business. If you condone this behavior you are part of the problem!!! I have no problem with exercising 1st amendment rights but when it involves lawlessness and silencing my 1st amendment rights I have a major problem with your argument. When everything I say or do has to be deciphered and monitored to see if it’s a racist comment is bullshit!!! If what I say is considered racist then that’s your problem!!! **** A call to violence and ******* is not allowed, removed by the moderator****!!!! Is that racist? If it is then that’s your problem!!!!!
 
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This isn't true at all. Try finding any families that have been killed by antifa



Yes, because the media covered it so fervently that criminals and right-wingers showed up to take advantage and attack people
each individual must take their responsibilities, especially when you create anarchy, when people die you have to take responsibility, if you create a city without rules and then people die you cannot point others for your failure.

A common tactic used by Antifa in Europe is to resort to extreme violence and the destruction of public and private property to provoke the police reaction, which will then be "proof" that the government is "fascist".

The Antifa adopt the Marxist-Leninist definition of fascism which identifies it with capitalism. According to the German group Antifa, Antifaschistischer Aufbau München, "the struggle against fascism is only won when the capitalist system has been destroyed and a classless society has been established".

The BfV, the German domestic intelligence agency, in a special report on leftist extremism, notes that:

"The struggle of the Antifa against right-wing extremists is a red herring. The real target remains the 'bourgeois democratic state', which, from the point of view of left-wing extremists, accepts and promotes 'fascism' as a possible form of government and therefore do not fight it sufficiently. After all, the Antifa argue that 'fascism' is rooted in the social and political structures of 'capitalism'. Therefore, the extremists of the Left, in their 'anti-fascist' activities, focus mainly on the elimination of the 'capitalist system' ".
In an essay entitled "What Antifa and the Original Fascists Have In Common", Antony Mueller, a German professor of Economics holding a university chair in Brazil, describes how the militant anti-capitalism of the Antifa disguised as anti-fascism reveals its own fascism:

"After the Left appropriated the concept of liberalism and transformed the term into the opposite of its original meaning, the Antifa movement uses false terminology to disguise its true agenda. While calling itself 'anti-fascist' and declaring fascism its own enemy, Antifa is primarily a fascist movement.

"The Antifa militants do not fight against fascism, but are themselves authentic representatives of fascism. Communism, socialism and fascism are united by anti-capitalism and anti-liberalism.

"The Antifa movement is a fascist movement. The enemy of this movement is not fascism, but freedom, peace and prosperity

In Europe, during the post-war period, the German Antifa movement reappeared under various identities including the radical student protest movement of the 1960s and the Left insurgent groups active during the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s.

The RAF - Rote Armee Fraktion (Red Army Fraction), also known as the Baader-Meinhof Gang, was a Marxist urban guerrilla group that perpetrated murders, bombings and kidnappings in order to instigate the revolution in West Germany, which the group considered a fascist legacy from the Nazi era. In thirty years, the RAF killed more than thirty people, injuring more than two hundred.

Ulrike Meinhof, founder of the RAF, explained the relationship between the violent extremism of the Left and the police by saying: "The wearer of the uniform is a pig, not a human being. This means that we must not talk to the wearer of the uniform. . And it is certain that you can shoot ".

The goal of their terror campaign was to trigger an aggressive response from the government, which group members believe would spark a wider revolutionary movement


In July 2017, more than 100,000 Antifa protesters gathered in the German city of Hamburg to protest the G20 summit. Left rioters devastated the city center. Hundreds of injured. An Antifa group called "G20 Welcome to Hell" bragged about how it was able to mobilize Antifa groups from around the world
 
each individual must take their responsibilities, especially when you create anarchy, when people die you have to take responsibility, if you create a city without rules and then people die you cannot point others for your failure.

A common tactic used by Antifa in Europe is to resort to extreme violence and the destruction of public and private property to provoke the police reaction, which will then be "proof" that the government is "fascist".

The Antifa adopt the Marxist-Leninist definition of fascism which identifies it with capitalism. According to the German group Antifa, Antifaschistischer Aufbau München, "the struggle against fascism is only won when the capitalist system has been destroyed and a classless society has been established".

The BfV, the German domestic intelligence agency, in a special report on leftist extremism, notes that:

"The struggle of the Antifa against right-wing extremists is a red herring. The real target remains the 'bourgeois democratic state', which, from the point of view of left-wing extremists, accepts and promotes 'fascism' as a possible form of government and therefore do not fight it sufficiently. After all, the Antifa argue that 'fascism' is rooted in the social and political structures of 'capitalism'. Therefore, the extremists of the Left, in their 'anti-fascist' activities, focus mainly on the elimination of the 'capitalist system' ".
In an essay entitled "What Antifa and the Original Fascists Have In Common", Antony Mueller, a German professor of Economics holding a university chair in Brazil, describes how the militant anti-capitalism of the Antifa disguised as anti-fascism reveals its own fascism:

"After the Left appropriated the concept of liberalism and transformed the term into the opposite of its original meaning, the Antifa movement uses false terminology to disguise its true agenda. While calling itself 'anti-fascist' and declaring fascism its own enemy, Antifa is primarily a fascist movement.

"The Antifa militants do not fight against fascism, but are themselves authentic representatives of fascism. Communism, socialism and fascism are united by anti-capitalism and anti-liberalism.

"The Antifa movement is a fascist movement. The enemy of this movement is not fascism, but freedom, peace and prosperity

In Europe, during the post-war period, the German Antifa movement reappeared under various identities including the radical student protest movement of the 1960s and the Left insurgent groups active during the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s.

The RAF - Rote Armee Fraktion (Red Army Fraction), also known as the Baader-Meinhof Gang, was a Marxist urban guerrilla group that perpetrated murders, bombings and kidnappings in order to instigate the revolution in West Germany, which the group considered a fascist legacy from the Nazi era. In thirty years, the RAF killed more than thirty people, injuring more than two hundred.

Ulrike Meinhof, founder of the RAF, explained the relationship between the violent extremism of the Left and the police by saying: "The wearer of the uniform is a pig, not a human being. This means that we must not talk to the wearer of the uniform. . And it is certain that you can shoot ".

The goal of their terror campaign was to trigger an aggressive response from the government, which group members believe would spark a wider revolutionary movement


In July 2017, more than 100,000 Antifa protesters gathered in the German city of Hamburg to protest the G20 summit. Left rioters devastated the city center. Hundreds of injured. An Antifa group called "G20 Welcome to Hell" bragged about how it was able to mobilize Antifa groups from around the world
WE are not Europe.
Some of you sat back and watch the rise of Communism, the Nazis, the Holocaust, neo-nazis, nationalism and Isis cells in your own suburbs. You allowed discrimination to fester (no right to organize as group and protest the government) the point of homegrown terrorists and saboteurs.
You'll have to excuse me for not listening to someone born after 9/11 try to preach to me on terror. Not when your country, and the rest of world look to us to lead the way. Well, before Trump, they did. Not so much anymore.
 
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WE are not Europe.
Some of you sat back and watch the rise of Communism, the Nazis, the Holocaust, neo-nazis, nationalism and Isis cells in your own suburbs. You allowed discrimination to fester (no right to organize as group and protest the government) the point of homegrown terrorists and saboteurs.
You'll have to excuse me for not listening to someone born after 9/11 try to preach to me on terror. Not when your country, and the rest of world look to us to lead the way. Well, before Trump they did.
I believe that a country like the US should not be subjugated by organizations that don't care about the life of African American people and don't care about the lives of Native Americans. I don't know how it will go in November but this stuff we see in the streets is not a stuff that helps change your country for the better.
 
I believe that a country like the US should not be subjugated by organizations that don't care about the life of African American people and don't care about the lives of Native Americans.
The "great dividers" can't prosper, themselves, if there's not division among the people. Its not the citizens causing the division and hate, they're simply the results of what others intentionally cause. And they do it so fewer people share the real wealth of the country ... the fewer sharing, the bigger the piece of pie those at the top get.
 
I'm still waiting for that list of families killed by Antifa. I can point to several right-wing terror attacks in the US and in Europe (Anders Breivik, Timothy McVeigh, etc), not to mention terror groups with ties to the police in the US like the KKK.

Playing the "both sides" card is tired and worn-out, @maruyyy . Especially when you have to go as far down the rabbit hole as a random professor in Brazil to try to do it.

I don't know why I bother though. You're 18. You're going to either get red-pilled and start reading Mencius Moldbug, or start taking systematic oppression seriously and start reading Chomsky. Maybe the first then eventually the second.
 
How bout I put my head up your ass!!! I’m sure it would fit!!! You too are a liar and you own no business that was destroyed and would know nothing about running a business. If you condone this behavior you are part of the problem!!! I have no problem with exercising 1st amendment rights but when it involves lawlessness and silencing my 1st amendment rights I have a major problem with your argument. When everything I say or do has to be deciphered and monitored to see if it’s a racist comment is bullshit!!! If what I say is considered racist then that’s your problem!!! Michael Vick should have been beaten and put to death!!!! Is that racist? If it is then that’s your problem!!!!!
Why is Michael Vick involved in this? That man is being lowkey now and chilling, shawty! Anyway, that dogfighting ******* happened in my home state though most Georgians felt that it was some BULLSHIT! Me and my cousin were like, "You sending somebody to prison over some DAMN DOGS?" I was totally shocked that they sentenced him to prison for that as if the dogs CANNOT be replaced! Now, I may be mean for saying that, but I am not a FAN of dogs! *******, only pet that I have and that is BECAUSE of my cousin since she loves her turtle! Though, I have wondered this though, as much as most Whites love themselves some pets, how come that same affection cannot be done for Black people? I am curious for that answer!
 
You dont own a business and you are talking out your ass!!!!
I do, however, I never said it was destroyed during the riots. I was speaking and quoting, and referencing insurance policy. Which you have yet to prove or dispute. Which I am sure I know much more about than you, and whomever you're claiming to be your insurance agent. For all you know, I could be an Allstate agent with my own thriving 17 person agency in Illinois specializing in legal insurance from some of the bigger law firms in the Chicagoland area since 2010. Or not.
Antifa is a Bolshevik run organization that wants socialism and communism in this country. They infiltrated the demonstrations that started out as good intentions and I agreed with. My business was destroyed and I am rebuilding. I explained that my building was almost 100 years old and I could get full business coverage on it.
I am not here to defend Antifa. However, saying they want socialism AND communism in this country show you are still coming up short on knowledge. And has NOTHING to do with whether they are a terrorist organization. The Trump Administration has NOT officially, or otherwise, put Antifa in the terrorist category. See, Trump could get the Senate to vote on the bill (he cannot do it himself) but he hasn't shown leadership there either. So, no official designation, no relationship to your insurance claim.
You said you could not get covered because Antifa is an official terror group and its not covered under the 2003 legislation which is weird, because that's exactly what it was written for, post 9/11. And, if you are an HVAC business, aren't your equipment and tools insured? Or are they 100 years old too?
You mentioned Goerge Floyd in your comments. Please quit putting this individual on a pedestal like god!!! For god sake he held a pregnant woman at gun point with the gun on her stomach as his freak crone buddies ransacked her house and robbed her. He had the amount of fentanyl to ******* a lot of people!!! He also had methamphetamine in his system. There is the full videos of the encounter that has him saying I can’t breath way before the cop put his knee on his neck!!! This was just a great opportunity for this movement to take off.
No Bro, you got a few things wrong:
1. I don't put Floyd on a pedestal. I was clear to point out his death was symbolic of a systematic problem with law enforcement and people of color. He had the police called on him because they thought the $20 bill was fake. He did not resist arrest. And, he ended up dead by the abuse of power of the state (the police). Seeing his life snuffed out on video, made it real for a lot of people and a reminder that it could have been any of us, or our sons killed over a misdemeanor accusation.
2. Those details of the break-in are not true. First it was 13 years ago and he served his time. Second, the woman never said any of that happened and said Floyd was not the one she scuffled with. Regardless, what has this to do with a man being murdered because the cop was annoyed with him talking too much???
3. It was an opportunity, it was the last straw. You won't understand that statement.
4. YOU brought Floyd in this by making that comment about him being someone's buddy, demeaning the unnecessary death of a man. And, now trying to justify it with a crime he committed almost a decade and a half ago with details that did not happen. You're dick.
This was no excuse for the lawlessness and anarchy that ensued after this incident. You ma’am have no ground to stand on if you condone this behavior!!! If your a business owner or not if you condone this behavior you are part of the problem. We are a nation of laws and if you break the laws you should be held accountable.
"IF" I condone this action? I don't. Never said I do. And, did you call me ma'am? Is that an attempt at some type of humor? You fail.
And, if you believe that law breakers should be held accountable, as I do, then you may want to check your support for Trump at the door.
The problem with this nation is we have become a law of the jungle and not the law of the land!!!!
"law of the jungle"?!?! 😳
I'll just let that stand on it's own and go to your next message. Unbelievable.
 
How bout I put my head up your ass!!! I’m sure it would fit!!! You too are a liar and you own no business that was destroyed and would know nothing about running a business. If you condone this behavior you are part of the problem!!! I have no problem with exercising 1st amendment rights but when it involves lawlessness and silencing my 1st amendment rights I have a major problem with your argument.
Really? With that fucking dump truck in your pictures, you're going to comment on my ass? :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO:
Never said I had a business that was destroyed. I did say I know about running a business, because I do. I've got the education, experience and stress to prove it. I know what it's like to have other families dependent on your abilities. I think you've shown us, you do not. Your boss probably does, you do not.
No one is stopping you from your freedom of speech. Though, the moderators have a right to do it because this is not a public owned site.
I do not condone lawlessness, and do not support criminals. Period. I also do not stand quietly when misinformation designed to weaken or conflate criminality and demonstrations. So, you're going to read me exercising those same rights you talked about.
When everything I say or do has to be deciphered and monitored to see if it’s a racist comment is bullshit!!! If what I say is considered racist then that’s your problem!!! Michael Vick should have been beaten and put to death!!!! Is that racist? If it is then that’s your problem!!!!!
You are an adult. If you don't want to be held accountable for what you say, don't say it.
You are responsible for the dumb ******* and racist ******* YOU type.
Are you asking me is that racist about Vick because of his dogfighting and ******* cruelty?
Yes! It's another example of blacks being handled much more harsh than white.
You give a pass to Ben Roethlisberger. Vick deserved the death penalty while Ben was accused of ******* by two HUMAN BEINGS!
How is that fair?
Even today, Vick goes out in public and he is shamed and booed and murdered on social media. This will be what he known for. Fine. He earned the public scorn.
But, Ben R. will be in the record books and a Superbowl ring (though as one of the shittiest performers). How the fuck is that even fair?
Well, the death penalty is not the law, so you have a problem with the law.
 
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