No Kings

Yes—**protests have repeatedly made a real, measurable difference in U.S. history**. They don’t always succeed, and change is often slow, but many major rights and policies came about *because of sustained public pressure*.

Here are some of the clearest examples:

---

## 🗳️ Civil rights movement

* The Civil Rights Movement used marches, boycotts, and protests to challenge segregation.
* Key figures like Martin Luther King Jr. helped mobilize national attention.

**Impact:**

* Civil Rights Act of 1964 (ended legal segregation)
* Voting Rights Act of 1965 (protected voting rights)

👉 These are some of the strongest examples of protests leading directly to major laws.

---

## 🪧 Women’s suffrage

* Decades of protests, marches, and civil disobedience pushed for voting rights.
* Activists like Susan B. Anthony played a central role.

**Impact:**

* Nineteenth Amendment (1920) gave women the right to vote.

---

## ☮️ Anti–Vietnam War protests

* Large-scale protests across the country opposed U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War.

**Impact:**

* Shifted public opinion dramatically
* Increased pressure on leaders to withdraw troops

👉 While not the only factor, protests helped make continuing the war politically unsustainable.

---

## 🏳️‍🌈 LGBTQ+ rights

* The Stonewall Riots sparked a broader movement for LGBTQ+ rights.

**Impact:**

* Long-term cultural and legal change
* Eventually contributed to rulings like Obergefell v. Hodges (legalized same-sex marriage nationwide)

---

## ⚙️ Labor movement

* Workers organized strikes and protests for better conditions in the late 1800s and early 1900s.

**Impact:**

* Minimum wage laws
* Safer workplaces
* The 8-hour workday becoming standard

---

## ⚫ Black Lives Matter era

* Protests after the killing of George Floyd spread nationwide.

**Impact:**

* Police reforms in some cities
* Increased national focus on racial justice
* Changes in corporate and institutional policies

---

## ⚖️ So—do protests “work”?

**Yes, but with caveats:**

* ✅ Most effective when sustained and organized
* ✅ Often work by shifting public opinion, not instantly changing laws
* ❌ Not all protests succeed
* ❌ Change can take years or decades

---

## 🧠 Bottom line

Protests are **one of the main ways ordinary people influence policy in the U.S.**. They rarely act alone—but when combined with legal action, elections, and media attention, they’ve helped drive some of the biggest changes in American history.

---

If you want, I can also show examples w
here protests *failed* or backfired—that’s just as important for understanding the full picture.
 
Trump was president in 2020 during worst of it. He supported all of it. Kind of stupid to deny it.
Per Goggle:
Proof of COVID-19 vaccination began in earnest in early 2021, shortly after the vaccines became available, with widespread mandatory, documented proof required by many entities starting in the summer and fall of 2021.

I remember it well because that id the timeframe that I retired from Oak Ridge. Kind of stupid to rewrite it.
 
Yes—**protests have repeatedly made a real, measurable difference in U.S. history**. They don’t always succeed, and change is often slow, but many major rights and policies came about *because of sustained public pressure*.

Here are some of the clearest examples:

---

## 🗳️ Civil rights movement

* The Civil Rights Movement used marches, boycotts, and protests to challenge segregation.
* Key figures like Martin Luther King Jr. helped mobilize national attention.

**Impact:**

* Civil Rights Act of 1964 (ended legal segregation)
* Voting Rights Act of 1965 (protected voting rights)

👉 These are some of the strongest examples of protests leading directly to major laws.

---

## 🪧 Women’s suffrage

* Decades of protests, marches, and civil disobedience pushed for voting rights.
* Activists like Susan B. Anthony played a central role.

**Impact:**

* Nineteenth Amendment (1920) gave women the right to vote.

---

## ☮️ Anti–Vietnam War protests

* Large-scale protests across the country opposed U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War.

**Impact:**

* Shifted public opinion dramatically
* Increased pressure on leaders to withdraw troops

👉 While not the only factor, protests helped make continuing the war politically unsustainable.

---

## 🏳️‍🌈 LGBTQ+ rights

* The Stonewall Riots sparked a broader movement for LGBTQ+ rights.

**Impact:**

* Long-term cultural and legal change
* Eventually contributed to rulings like Obergefell v. Hodges (legalized same-sex marriage nationwide)

---

## ⚙️ Labor movement

* Workers organized strikes and protests for better conditions in the late 1800s and early 1900s.

**Impact:**

* Minimum wage laws
* Safer workplaces
* The 8-hour workday becoming standard

---

## ⚫ Black Lives Matter era

* Protests after the killing of George Floyd spread nationwide.

**Impact:**

* Police reforms in some cities
* Increased national focus on racial justice
* Changes in corporate and institutional policies

---

## ⚖️ So—do protests “work”?

**Yes, but with caveats:**

* ✅ Most effective when sustained and organized
* ✅ Often work by shifting public opinion, not instantly changing laws
* ❌ Not all protests succeed
* ❌ Change can take years or decades

---

## 🧠 Bottom line

Protests are **one of the main ways ordinary people influence policy in the U.S.**. They rarely act alone—but when combined with legal action, elections, and media attention, they’ve helped drive some of the biggest changes in American history.

---

If you want, I can also show examples w
here protests *failed* or backfired—that’s just as important for understanding the full picture.
How many were peaceful without riots ?
 
Per Goggle:
Proof of COVID-19 vaccination began in earnest in early 2021, shortly after the vaccines became available, with widespread mandatory, documented proof required by many entities starting in the summer and fall of 2021.

I remember it well because that id the timeframe that I retired from Oak Ridge. Kind of stupid to rewrite it.
The vax came in late 2020, but the shutdown was in early mid 2020 under trump.
 
And he kept saying "It's just the Flu and it will go away"... uh...and it DID!

u-s-president-donald-trump-wears-a-trump-was-right-about-everything-hat-as-he-makes-an-announcement-on-the-2026-fifa-world.jpg

Meanwhile the Evil Swamp Monsters like Collins, Fauci, Pence, Walensky & Others AROUND Trump... Lied/Contrived/Hide/Sided AGAINST Trump as THEY were ALL on the Payrolls of BIG Pharma...and they developed/brought on the "Vaccine Scam" (as well as they needed to hide their secret years of ILLEGAL gain of Function Research funded by the U.S. Taxpayer!)

THIS POST BY A PROUD PURE BLOOD!!!

ENJOY YOUR HEALTH ISSUES Sheeples!

sheep-chewing.gif
Trump was president. He had the power and did nothing to prevent the lockdowns.
 
Biden left office without complaint and the dem party chose kamala. She didn't seize the nomination for herself. Is false equivalency the only means of argumentation the right has to try to justify trump literally seizing power for himself the way he has?
Dem party leaders chose Kamala by way of solicitation. She was never on the Primaries.
 

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