Residents in communities across the United States showed up for protests against the Trump administration this year, and many ...
At last weekend’s "No Kings" protest in Washington, D.C., inflatable chickens bobbed above a crowd that, according to demographic research, was made up mostly of educated White women in their 40s.
No, the marches didn’t eradicate the problems that protesters wanted addressed. But in community, their souls found the sustenance to keep pushing forward. Last Saturday, more than 7 million people ...
I joined the Minnesota Reformer in April in a more regular capacity, as a photographer and social media runner, thanks to a grant from the Bush Foundation. I’ve been a freelancer for the past five ...
All across the country, huge crowds showed up in big cities and small towns to affirm their commitment to the founding principle that in America, there are, “No Kings.” Here in Jamestown, I joined ...
Tim Graham is director of media analysis at the Media Research Center and executive editor of the blog NewsBusters.org. One of the more tiresome mantras of leftist media coverage is President Donald ...
What could be more patriotically American? Our country was born by rejecting the rule of an unaccountable, tyrannical king. The principle that no person is above the law sets us apart from dictators ...
Billionaires of all political stripes fund groups that push their preferred sentiments, and some of the organizations working on the "No Kings" movement have received grant money or other funds from ...
When thousands of Americans across the country take to the streets wearing Minion costumes, orange wigs and signs that read “No Kings Except Burger King,” it is easy to laugh — but behind every joke ...
Now regarded as one of the largest recorded mass mobilizations in American history, the 7 million people who showed up for this month's No Kings protest surpassed the millions of Americans who turned ...