Trump-military parade protesters will face very heavy force
ASPartOfMe
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President Donald Trump warned Tuesday that anyone who protests at the U.S. military parade here on Saturday will be met with "very heavy force."
Trump told reporters in the Oval Office that they're going to be "celebrating big on Saturday," referring to the parade that will wind its way through downtown Washington, D.C.
"If there’s any protester that wants to come out, they will be met with very big force," Trump said. "I haven’t even heard about a protest, but you know, this is people that hate our country, but they will be met with very heavy force."
The White House didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
The military parade Saturday will mark the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army and is expected to feature tanks and hundreds of other military vehicles and aircraft. It's estimated to cost about $45 million, including as much as $16 million to repair D.C. streets afterward, U.S. military officials said last month.
Saturday is also Trump’s 79th birthday.
"We’re going to have a fantastic June 14 parade, Flag Day. It’s going to be an amazing day. We have tanks, we have planes, we have all sorts of things. And I think it’s going to be great. We’re going to celebrate our country for a change," Trump said Tuesday.
Trump said that other countries celebrate the end of World War II and that the U.S. was the only country that did not.
And we're the one that won the war," said Trump, who added that if it weren't for the U.S., Americans would be speaking German or Japanese.
"We won the war, and we’re the only country that didn’t celebrate it, and we’re going to be celebrating big on Saturday," he said.
Officials are expecting hundreds of thousands of attendees, Matt McCool, the U.S. Secret Service agent in charge of the Washington field office, said Monday. McCool said they plan to deploy "thousands of agents, officers and specialists from across the country." People attending the parade or a related festival will be required to go through checkpoints with magnetometers.
Asked about any changes to security planning in light of the L.A. protests, McCool said, "We plan for those things ahead of time”
“We were paying attention, obviously, to what is happening there, and we’ll be ready for that if it were to occur here,” he said, though he added, “We have no intelligence of that happening here, but if it does, we have the resources to handle it."
U.S. Park Police had several protest permits pending on Monday, but officials “don’t have any significant concerns," said McCool, who added that they're tracking “about nine First Amendment activity demonstrations.”
The anti-Trump group No Kings is expecting more than 1,800 rallies nationwide Saturday that organizers said were planned as "a peaceful stand against authoritarian overreach and the gross abuse of power this Administration has shown."
With Trump's decision to deploy the National Guard and U.S. Marines to respond to the L.A. demonstrations, the group said in a statement: "This military escalation only confirms what we’ve known: this government wants to rule by force, not serve the people. From major cities to small towns, we’ll rise together and say: we reject political violence. We reject fear as governance. We reject the myth that only some deserve freedom."
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If you're not careful, the newspapers will have you hating the people who are being oppressed, and loving the people who are doing the oppressing. —Malcolm X
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funeralxempire
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I'm going to take the radical position of maybe we shouldn't be even worse than fascists.
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The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.
If you're not careful, the newspapers will have you hating the people who are being oppressed, and loving the people who are doing the oppressing. —Malcolm X
Real power is achieved when the ruling class controls the material essentials of life, granting and withholding them from the masses as if they were privileges.—George Orwell
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Oh the 14th, well there are going to be nationwide protests that day as that's the day of the nation wide no kings protest. So, is he going to deploy the military to all the states? For telling him he's not a king and we're sick of his sh*t
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No Kings is a nationwide day of defiance. From city blocks to small towns, from courthouse steps to community parks, we’re taking action to reject authoritarianism—and show the world what democracy really looks like.
We’re not gathering to feed his ego. We’re building a movement that leaves him behind.
The flag doesn’t belong to President Trump. It belongs to us. We’re not watching history happen. We’re making it.
A core principle behind all No Kings events is a commitment to nonviolent action. We expect all participants to seek to de-escalate any potential confrontation with those who disagree with our values and to act lawfully at these events. Weapons of any kind, including those legally permitted, should not be brought to events.
On June 14th, we’re showing up everywhere he isn’t—to say no thrones, no crowns, no kings.
Bolding=mine
Opinion=mine
Those of you who read my political musings know I blame the left for a major reason we find ourselves in the situation that we are in.
There are two basic types of Trump voters. The hard core MAGA ones and the ones that hate Trump but think he is the lesser evil because his opponents have for the most part spent the last decade alienating them. The scenes from Los Angeles of burning Wegrovy vehicles and throwing cinder blocks at ICE and waving Mexican Flags are the latest examples.
Yes flags are just a corny symbols, just a piece of cloth that has been misused for nefarious purposes so often it has become associated with these purposes for many of you. That said it means a lot to a lot of the voters the anti MAGA cause needs to win back. Burning flags, flying flags of other countries while protected speech alienates them. The term “Patriots” has been seeded to the MAGA’s.
Whomever is organizing “No Kings Day” gets this, gets that they have to do something different if they want a different result. If it is not to late(I’m not convinced that it isn’t) and if this is protest is not hijacked Saturday could be a very small start.
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“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman
ASPartOfMe
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Nationwide protests loom over Trump's upcoming military parade
The tanks and artillery launchers rolling through Washington on Saturday will honor the Army’s 250th anniversary, which falls on the day Trump turns 79.
About 7,000 soldiers will march. Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to line up along Constitution Avenue on the co-birthdays and cheer. Trump is set to watch the spectacle from a viewing stand south of the White House.
But in Washington and in all 50 states, organizers will be staging protests that could dwarf the parade in size. A coalition of pro-democracy, labor and liberal activists is arranging a full day of counterprogramming to make the case that Trump is hijacking the Army celebration to venerate himself.
“The goal here is to deprive Trump of what he wants in this moment, which is a story about him being the all-powerful political figure of our time, and instead create a contrast with normal, everyday people demonstrating that power in this country still resides with the people,” said Ezra Levin, a co-founder of the progressive group Indivisible, who is helping organize what participants have dubbed a nationwide “No Kings” demonstration.
Another group called Women’s March is also arranging protests to coincide with the parade, with a theme of “Kick Out the Clowns.” Organizers expect up to 5,000 people to participate in Madison, Wisconsin, alone, said Tamika Middleton, chief political and strategy officer of Women’s March.
“Nothing feels more absurd than the idea of this president having a massive military parade on his birthday,” she said. "It feels surreal for many of us.”
NBC News reached out to the White House for comment.
On Tuesday, Rand Paul of Kentucky became the first Senate Republican to criticize the parade, citing the imagery. Showing off lethal hardware is something other countries do, not the United States, he said.
“I wouldn’t have done it," Paul told reporters. He added that "we were always different than the images you saw in the Soviet Union and North Korea. We were proud not to be that."
Trump isn't deterred. Speaking in the Oval Office on Tuesday, he warned that protesters this weekend will face "very big force." He didn't distinguish between those who demonstrate peacefully or violently.
"And I haven’t even heard about a protest," Trump added, "but you know, this is people that hate our country. But they will be met with very heavy force." (At a news briefing this week, a Secret Service official said thousands of agents and officers will be on hand to provide security.)
The parade is happening at a fraught moment when Trump has drawn the military — among the nation’s most trusted institutions — into a tense standoff in Los Angeles over his aggressive efforts to deport people living in the United States illegally.
The military’s main purpose is to fight and win foreign wars, and it has largely retained its reputation as an apolitical body carrying out a national mission. Only in rare instances has the nation held military parades: The last one took place 34 years ago after the United States defeated Iraq in the first Gulf War.
Saturday will open with a festival on the National Mall. Soldiers will be on hand to meet people and take part in special military demonstrations.
The parade will start at 6:30 p.m. ET and follow Constitution Avenue from near the Lincoln Memorial to the Ellipse south of the White House. Workers have been laying down steel plates to protect the roads from the heavy tanks. Bradley Fighting Vehicles will also be on display, while dozens of helicopters will take part in a flyover. At the Senate Armed Services hearing last Thursday, Army Secretary Daniel Driscoll put the cost at $25 million to $40 million.
Driscoll justified the expense as a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to fill up our recruiting pipeline with young Americans.”
Trump told NBC News in May that the cost was "peanuts compared to the value."
“We have the greatest missiles in the world. We have the greatest submarines in the world. We have the greatest Army tanks in the world. We have the greatest weapons in the world. And we’re going to celebrate it,” he said in an interview with "Meet the Press."
Some military experts echoed that sentiment, seeing merit in an event that gives Americans a chance to thank their soldiers and see them up close.
“Only 9% of young Americans have an inclination toward military service,” said Kori Schake, who has worked at both the Defense Department and the White House National Security Council. “And so, exposing more Americans to our Army, where kids can talk to soldiers about their experience, is good for the country.”
Others said the money is being wasted. A better idea would be to restore programs serving veterans or rehiring some of those who lost their jobs in the Trump administration’s effort to shrink the government workforce, some lawmakers and veterans groups said.
Department of Government Efficiency cuts have fallen heavily on veterans, who make up a disproportionate share of the federal workforce. Meanwhile, the Veterans Affairs Department cut a program that provides mortgage assistance to veterans so they don’t face foreclosure on their homes.
The mortgage program “helped tens of thousands of veterans stay in their homes. And they want to spend $50 million on a parade?” said Chris Purdy, who heads the Chamberlain Network, a pro-veterans group. “It really shows this is about an individual’s pride and not the nation’s pride.”
Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., a member of the House Armed Services Committee, criticized the parade's price tag in an interview.
"The military is being required to spend resources and time on this, instead of training and preparing to meet the national security needs of the country," he said, adding, “It’s a horrible idea."
Trump has long championed a military parade. In 2017, he attended the Bastille Day ceremony in Paris with French President Emmanuel Macron and got a firsthand look as tanks rumbled past the reviewing stand.
The trip left an impression. After he returned to the White House, Trump spoke often about holding a similar parade at home, a former White House official said. Aides delayed and diverted him, mentioning the potential cost and telling him the United States didn't make a point of flaunting its hardware, the person said.
“Certainly, the French do it a lot and the North Koreans do it a lot and the Russians, but we don’t really tend to do those things,” the former official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
“He brought it up quite a bit,” the person continued.
In his Oval Office remarks, Trump didn't mention the parade in the context of his birthday. He noted instead that the day is Flag Day.
"We’re going to have a fantastic June 14th parade, Flag Day," he said. "It’s going to be an amazing day. We have tanks, we have planes, we have all sorts of things. And I think it’s going to be great. We’re going to celebrate our country for a change."
Whether the day comes off as a tribute to the Army or to Trump hinges on how Trump behaves in the moment, analysts said.
“The degree to which this is a violation of norms depends in part on what the president says and does on the margins of this event,” said Peter Feaver, a Duke University political science professor who has written about the military’s relationship with political leaders.
In the run-up to the parade, Trump is capitalizing on the Army's milestone birthday in partisan terms. Speaking Tuesday at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, he took aim at various Democratic foes, including the last commander in chief, Joe Biden. He invoked Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, another Democrat, eliciting boos from the audience.
Mentioning Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, the Democratic vice presidential nominee last year, Trump said: "I think he's running for president, but he's a radical lunatic."
Linking the military to the sitting president’s birthday and sending it into the streets to confront fellow Americans risk tarnishing its credibility while pushing the country away from its democratic roots, Trump's critics warn.
“Displays of hardware, whether its tanks or Stryker vehicles, is more characteristic of totalitarian militaristic states like North Korea or Russia,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, who questioned the event’s cost at a recent hearing with Army leaders. “And they are used in part to glorify the dictator in those countries. This parade falls on President Trump’s birthday and is as much a celebration of his birthday and him — at least it’s designed to be — as it is our Army.”
I don’t know how younger people view a parade like this but as a baby boomer I always associated them with “commie” countries such as the Soviet Union and Red China trying to intimidate us. At very high cost we won the cold war only to piss most of it away

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“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman
ASPartOfMe
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As horrible as Trump is he doesn’t belong in the same league as Pol Pot as far as evil is concerned.
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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity.
“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman
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