OK, Kids, while it's still legal, we will be protesting at Zac Bears' residence (read: mommy and daddy's basement) tonight before it is illegal.
Zac is prancing around, more like flopping around, his Royal Rotundancy, at midnight disturbing the peace, we should get to protest his stupidity
THE REAL REVOLUTION,
SCREW 'OUR REVOLUTION"
PROTESTS
1)ZAC BEARS RESIDENCE 3/27/22
2)CARAVIELLO'S OUTHOUSE AT HIS BOATING DOCK 3/28/22
3)MADAME KNIGHT'S HOUSE OF ILL REPUTE 3/29/22
4)CHIEF BUCKLEY'S HOUSE 3/30/22
5)GEORGE SCARPELLI'S LOCKER AT JENNY CRAIG'S 3/31/22
6)NICOLE MORELL'S COTTAGE WITH HER ILL-GOTTEN GAIN AT COUNCIL 4/1/22
YES, APRIL FOOL'S DAY, A YEAR AFTER MADAME KNIGHT SMASHED A BANK DOOR.
https://www.bostonglobe.com/2022/03/25/metro/should-massachusetts-ban-protests-within-100-yards-an-elected-officials-home/
Should Massachusetts ban protests within 100 yards of an elected officials’ home?
By John Laidler Globe Correspondent,Updated March 25, 2022, 6:46 p.m. Now, these
types of constitutionally questionable restrictions are being proposed
right here in Massachusetts. A recently introduced bill threatens people
with fines and jail time for protesting within 100 yards of an elected
official’s house. Boston’s new progressive mayor, Michelle Wu —who has
been the target of anti-vaccine protests — has also proposed an
ordinance subjecting people to fines for protesting outside a particular
residence between the hours of 9 p.m. and 9 a.m.
Such
restrictions sound reasonable on their face — no one wants to deal with
noisy protesters before they’ve had their morning coffee. But giving
the government more power to restrict peaceful assembly is not just
legally questionable, it’s wrong and dangerous.
_________________________________________________________
Like it or not, the most effective protests
are often the most disruptive ones. From the no-nonsense picket lines of
the early labor movement that helped bring us the weekend and child
labor protections to the marches and sit-ins of the civil rights
movement, social justice advocates have employed a wide range of tactics
to make their voices heard. And there’s a long tradition of protests
outside the homes of elected officials, and other powerful figures.
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