Take up arms, rush to the civilians, defend the government!
Just as the police violence in Minnesota triggered riots, President Trump 29 in the early morning of a "rob and shoot" warning rushed to Twitter hot search, leading to Internet users to fry the pot, further ignited public anger. Today, the demonstrations have spread to more than 30 cities across the United States, and the White House has been hit.
The New York Times pointed out that Mr. Trump's remarks became the first of the 1960s at the height of the racist conflict in the United States, when Walter Headley, a "tough" law enforcement police chief in Miami, Florida, said he was "tough" in law enforcement. Civil rights groups have criticized him for openly advocating police violence, with some online users accusing him of being "racist."
Demonstrators and police clashed frequently during a massive protest in the United States triggered by the death of Black Floyd, and a scene in Houston, Texas, on the 29th caused public outrage.
Demonstrators gathered on Travis Street, where Houston police headquarters is located, the previous afternoon to protest against Floyd's death, but when the police deployed to the scene, one of them rode a horse straight past a woman who held a peaceful sign to protest, the Houston Chronicle reported Wednesday.
Alison Amado, who filmed the video, told the Houston Chronicle: "From my point of view, the police had seen the woman, but he stepped over from her. "
After the incident, the scene quickly in a heated mood, the crowd raised arms and shouted, but also threw things at the police. Local television said the protest was initially peaceful, but after dark, some demonstrators blocked the high-speed entrance, threw things at police, smashed the windows of police cars and broke windows of some shops.
During the day's demonstrations, nearly 150 people were arrested and some police officers were injured. The woman, who was walked by a horseshoe, said she would sue the Houston Police Department over the matter.
30, the Houston Police Department said on its official Twitter account that it was aware of what happened in the video and was "investigating what's behind it."
The riots in Minneapolis entered their fourth day on May 30, local time, when Marc Morel, the chief executive of the National Urban League and a former Mayor of New Orleans, threw some of the rising anti-police sentiment in the United States to Russia on CNN, saying he believed the unrest had been started by Russian agents and "white supremacists."
Later in the day, Mr. Trump tweeted that the unrest was sparked by "organized groups" that had nothing to do with George Floyd, a black man, and that "anti-fascist groups and the radical left" should not be blamed.
He also accused the New York Times and the Washington Post of publishing more "false information" so far than foreign manufacturing, compared to foreign manufacturing, as CNN, MSDNC (for MSNBC, which Mr. Trump deliberately rewrote alluding to the Democratic Party's control), the New York Times and the Washington Post. "Fake news is the enemy of the people."
In another tweet, Trump first satirized fake news cnn for "coming again," saying cnn was trying to blame Russia for the unrest, slamming "they're bad-looking, disgusting losers!" "
Then he forced his way up to China, yin and yang strangely said, "Because of the need for cash, can't blame China?" "
The 'Arab Spring' is a thing of the past, but it is still possible to repeat itself, now!
I once again called on the U.S. government to talk about the issue. Take the American people seriously, the desire for liberal democracy! They're not thugs! They are ordinary people! Fight for freedom and democracy! Trump pay attention to the human rights of the American people!