Some violence at latest Los Angeles protests
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Anti-ICE protests pop up in cities across country
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Donald Trump, Protest and Army Parade
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What started as a small protest against immigrant arrests escalated over a few days, after President Trump called in the National Guard.
Journalists have been hit with rubber bullets or pepper spray while covering the protests in Los Angeles, including an Australian TV reporter struck while doing a live shot on Sunday.
Unlike the 1992 riots, protests have mainly been peaceful and been confined to a roughly five-block stretch of downtown LA, a tiny patch in the sprawling city of nearly 4 million people. No one has died. There’s been vandalism and some cars set on fire but no homes or buildings have burned.
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2hon MSN
More demonstrations are under way in Los Angeles as the Trump Administration more than tripled the number of troops in the city and Gov. Gavin Newsom sued to stop him.
Experts who study protest movements say the scenes unfolding in California broadly follow a script that has played out many times in other countries — sometimes with deadly consequences.
Togo’s President Faure Gnassingbé is facing growing pressure following government clampdown on protests calling for his resignation
Sheinbaum's comments followed Noem's Oval Office statement in which the secretary accused Sheinbaum of encouraging unrest.
President Trump’s ability to call in troops on such a “small whim” is what we should be fearing, according to Rep. Adam Smith (D-WA). Rep. Smith joins Alex Witt to explore how President Trump is using multiple forms of the military as “his personal police force.