A plea heard across America: Families belong together

These people have nothing better to do than to listen to this dumb, ugly buffoon bark? My goodness, talk about wasting away a weekend!

I posted a comment earlier today and mentioned the tribalism that is associated with this issue, as people’s emotions become altered with talk of displaced children. Look at the photo below of the woman with the placard. If this is not someone in a wild frenzy, I don’t know what is. 

Once again you morons. Why not protest relentlessly regarding American kids, born and raised here in the USA, so that they don’t go to bed hungry at night? I know why, because you don’t care about those kids, or any kids for that matter. These are anti-Trump rallies, not pro-kids’ rallies! Liberals are hypocrites!!! TGO

Refer to story below. Source: CNN

By Ralph Ellis, CNN

Hundreds of thousands of defiant and determined protesters gathered nationwide, their resounding pleas to keep families together echoing from coast to coast. In major cities and small towns, crowds rallied against President Donald Trump’s immigration policy. a woman looking at the camera: Ocasio-Cortez: Socialism is 'part of what I am, not all of what I am'

Galvanized by images of migrant children separated from their parents at the US southern border, they carried signs, chanted and called for an end to family separations.

They demanded the government quickly reunite families, their calls repeated from Washington to Los Angeles, to Chicago, Atlanta, Milwaukee, San Francisco and beyond. Here are the top moments from the marches:

Broadway comes to Washington

The creator of the hit musical “Hamilton” dedicated a song to parents who are separated from their children.

“We’re here because there’s parents right now who can’t sing lullabies to their kids,” Lin-Manuel Miranda told the crowd in the nation’s capital. “We’re not going to stop until they can sing to their kids again.”

With that, he launched into “Dear Theodosia,” which tells the story of parents trying to make a better world for their children. In the musical, the lullaby is sung by two of America’s founding fathers, Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr.

Maxine Waters scolds the President

US Rep. Maxine Waters spoke directly to the President about his immigration policies. And she was angry.

“How dare you?” Waters, a Democrat from California, said at the Los Angeles rally. “How dare you take the babies from mothers’ arms? How dare you take the children and send them all across the country into so-called detention centers? Donald Trump, you think you can get away with everything, but you have gone too far when you are trying to break up families in the way that you do.

Protesters head to the White House

Protesters marched by the White House in Washington, as well as the Trump International Hotel on Pennsylvania Avenue. They yelled, “shame, shame, shame” and “Hey, hey, ho, ho, Donald trump has got to go.” In New York City, thousands marched across the Brooklyn Bridge and massed outside Trump Tower to chant and wave signs.

But President Trump was not in either place.

Trump and his family stayed at Trump National Golf Club in New Jersey for the weekend. Protesters followed, of course, but they only got as close as downtown Bedminster, New Jersey, about 4 miles from the golf club.

Fire departments help cool protesters

It was blistering hot in some parts of the nation, with daytime temperatures hovering close to 90s and organizers urging crowds to drink water.

The protesters on the streets of Chicago found relief when the fire department sprayed them with water on the street.

Firetrucks sprayed water on the crowds in Washington, too, where two people were taken to a hospital for heat emergencies, DC Fire and EMS said.

Calls to abolish ICE ring out

US Sen. Elizabeth Warren joined the chorus of Democrats calling for US Immigration and Customs Enforcement to be replaced.

“The President’s deeply immoral actions have made it obvious — we need to rebuild our immigration system from top to bottom, starting by replacing ICE with something that reflects our morality and that works,” Warren said at a rally in Boston.

Rep. Joe Kennedy III, a Democrat from Massachusetts, also addressed the Boston crowd.

“We stand up and we say: Not on our watch. Not while we have something to say about it,” he said.

12-year-old makes impassioned plea

A child stole the show in Washington.

Leah, 12, the daughter of undocumented immigrant parents, took the stage and told the crowd about the her daily fear as the daughter of undocumented immigrants. Leah said she wants to be a role model for other children like her and the children who were separated from their families at the border.

“I don’t like to live with this fear. It’s scary. I can’t sleep. I can’t study. I am stressed,” she said. “I am afraid that they will take my mom away while she is at work, out driving or at home.”

John Legend had a message and a song

Singer John Legend had a passionate message for people at the rally in Los Angeles.

“I think some of us have a strong temptation to just disengage, but we can’t. We can’t do that. I can’t do that. I have to do something.”

He also had a musical gift. Legend sat down at a piano and played a new song, “Preach,” which he said “feels right for this moment.”

Legend was introduced by his wife, Chrissy Teigen, who was holding their infant son. Legend was one of several celebrities who attended the marches nationwide.

Grandfather’s heartbreaking letter read at rally

In Washington, actress America Ferrera read a letter from a Salvadoran grandfather who lives in Oakland, California. He is separated from his granddaughter, who is being held in Manvel, Texas.

He wants her to come live with him, and was visited by a home investigator.

“I got the impression the investigator thought I didn’t make enough money,” the letter said. “I know I don’t make enough money, but I make enough to care for (you). Everything I have I will give to you.”

Singer Alicia Keys read an affidavit from a woman who wanted to know why her son was still detained at a facility in Oregon. Keys brought her 7-year-old son, Egypt.

“I couldn’t even imagine not being able to find him,” Keys said about her son. “I couldn’t imagine being separated from him or scared about how he is being treated. So this is all of our fight. Because if it can happen to any child, it can happen to my child and your child and all of our children.”

First-timers traveled hundreds of miles to protest

Two women from Fayetteville, North Carolina, traveled to Washington. They both said this was their first protest.

“Separating a child from a parent — as a parent — is the most inhumane thing ever,” said Allison Thompson, who said she’s a Republican and the mother of two kids. “There is just nothing worse to me.”

Carrie Amabile carried a sign that said “Love thy neighbor.”

“I shared with my daughters a video of the children’s detention centers and we cried,” Amabile said.

Atlanta protesters carried dolls in crates

In Atlanta, protesters carried a dog crate with baby dolls inside it, an apparent reference to the chain-link fences some migrants — including children — have been kept behind. During the protests, US Rep. John Lewis and others criticized the Trump administration for separating children. “We must teach people in power that we will not be satisfied with the order of things,” Lewis said.

CNN’s Jay Croft, Dakin Andone, Ray Sanchez and Catherine Shoichet contributed to this report.

About The Great One

Am interested in science and philosophy as well as sports; cycling and tennis. Enjoy reading, writing, playing chess, collecting Spyderco knives and fountain pens.
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