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Author Topic:   Minerva protesters met by angry residents
teasel
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Registered: Apr 2009

posted July 08, 2020 06:11 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for teasel     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
http://www.cantonrep.com/article/20200707/NEWS/307079912

"A Black Lives Matter protest in Minerva turned testy Tuesday as marchers were met by a large crowd of counterprotesters in the village’s Municipal Park.

Ohio Community Coalition conducted the rally, which was organized on its social media platforms. The group has led protests throughout Stark County over the past few weeks.

About 40 protesters walked through Minerva streets chanting as they made their way to the park as an intermittent rain fell.

Counterprotesters lined the route, many shouting at the protesters and telling them to go home.

As the protesters walked, some people stood alongside the roadway holding weapons. One man held a large semi-automatic rifle.

As marchers chanted, those on sidewalks or amassed in a group behind the protesters shouted back.

Chants of “I can’t breathe” were met by shouts of “bull(expletive).” Later, that chant was met with “then shut the (expletive) up.”

At one point in the walk to the park, in response to a chant from one of the protesters over the loudspeaker, a counterprotester shouted “Run you out of town you (slang term for female anatomy), that’s what we came to do.”

Shouts of “I want justice” were met with “I want Trump.” Shouts of “Say his name,” bringing responses of “George” and “Michael” from marchers, were met by “Trump” from counterprotesters.

When marchers yelled “Black Lives Matter,” the crowd answered with “All lives matter,” and “White lives matter.”

Responding to one of the counterprotesters who yelled at the group, a woman holding a loudspeaker said, “I love you and your passion.”

The protesters repeatedly admonished each other not to spread out too wide on the roadway, so they took up only one lane of traffic. While the group walked along, vehicles frequently passed by and some of the drivers could be heard shouting profanities at those walking.

Minerva police officers stood by to ensure the safety of the crowds along the route and at Municipal Park.

As the rain fell, counterprotesters who were open-carrying weapons stood by watching the group from a pavilion at the park, periodically shouting for them to leave the village."

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teasel
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Posts: 15085
From:
Registered: Apr 2009

posted July 08, 2020 07:08 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for teasel     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
http://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/annehelenpetersen/bethel-ohio-black-lives-matter-protest

What Happened In Bethel, Ohio?

quote:

Lois Dennis started teaching second grade in the village of Bethel, Ohio — official population just under 2,800 — back in 1976. People in town call her Mrs. Dennis. And that’s the name people used online when they started denouncing what happened that Sunday afternoon in June when Bethel made national news for an explosion of violence on its streets: I can’t believe they did that to Mrs. Dennis.

Lois’s adult daughter, Andrea, was visiting from Chicago. Earlier in the week, they’d heard that local substitute history teacher Alicia Gee was planning a small demonstration in Bethel in solidarity with Black Lives Matter. They made some signs on poster board, and Lois put on a blue T-shirt with “I TEACH” and the Superman logo.

They parked at the middle school and began walking east on Plane Street, the main thoroughfare through the village. “That’s when we were accosted by the counterprotesters,” Andrea recalled. “They started pushing us, being aggressive, yelling at us. We couldn’t believe it. We were stunned.”

On one side of the street, they saw around 50 Bethel residents — teachers, city council members, hairdressers, retirees — who’d shown up for the BLM demonstration. On the other, there were hundreds of people, including representatives from four different biker gangs, who, at the invitation of a local construction worker, had come to “protect” the town from looters and rioters and rumored antifa. Ultimately, the number of people “uptown,” as Bethel residents refer to the center of the village, swelled to over 800.

Watching footage of the day, you can see the energy grow darker and heavier. You can hear a man yell “you came to the wrong ******* town,” a woman scream “you’re supporting the ******* ___,” another man threaten to “break your ******* jaw, ***** .” You can see rifles and handguns and a literal bag full of baseball bats. You can see a woman in a pink sweatshirt repeatedly calling a Black woman the n-word. You can see people grabbing sign after sign from the pro-BLM demonstrators and ripping them to shreds. You can see a biker come up behind Nick Reardon and punch him directly in the skull. And you can see the police officers watching the encounter do nothing.

“People were screaming at us to go back where we came from,” Anwen Darcy, who attended the demonstration with her mom and sister, recalled. “But I was looking around, and I saw Mrs. Dennis, who’d been a teacher for 30 years. I saw my mom, who’d been on the PTA for years and served as the drama director. I saw the woman who ran all the prom fundraisers and a city councilman. The people yelling at us weren’t from here, because if they were, they would’ve known we were home.”


I hope nobody tries to tell me that these counter-protesters who decided that America is their country, aren't racist.

quote:

When Lois and Andrea first entered the scene, someone yanked Lois’s sign and tore it in half. She didn’t recognize that person, or any of the others pushing her around. But later, once she’d made it to the rest of the demonstrators, she looked across the street. Like everyone else, she saw people she knew. She got in a “stare down,” as her daughter later described, with one of her former colleagues.

“Lois, I cannot believe you’re here,” the other teacher yelled.

Andrea and her mom knew it was time to go. When they arrived home, Lois walked straight to the backyard to debrief with her husband and drink a glass of water. Andrea thought her mom would be mad at her. But Lois was resolute. “I wanted to be there,” she said. “I needed to be there.”

Lois Dennis needed to be there, she later told me, because when she was a kid, growing up 30 minutes away in Ripley, Ohio, she would spend her summers at the local pool. From that pool, she could see a nearby hillside. And on that hillside, silently watching the kids in the pool, were her Black classmates. The schools weren’t segregated. But private pools still could be. “I never questioned or asked why. That’s why I want to stand with Black Lives Matter — that sort of quiet racism, that’s accepted for so many years, and never questioned.”

A lot of people have stories like Lois’s. Some of those stories are about how a place like Bethel, whose official slogan is “small town, big heart,” have ignored or left unexamined years of overt and covert racism. But others have different stories: of what it felt like to be the only Black person, the only Filipino family, the only mixed kid in your class. Stories of isolation, and fear, and of trying to make yourself invisible.

The people who showed up to “protect” the town say a Black Lives Matter demonstration doesn’t belong in a place like Bethel, Ohio. There’s no need, they say, for those sorts of conversations. Others blame the demonstrators for giving Bethel a bad name: for the dozens of articles in the national press, the outsiders flooding local Facebook comment sections, the Wikipedia entry for the village briefly changed to describe it as “composed of many, many racists.” After what happened on June 14, the village instituted a curfew — the first anyone in town can remember.

“I’ve known Lois Dennis and her husband my whole life,” Andrew Stober, who runs the Facebook Group “Bethel ******** Together,” told me. “I love them and respect them. But was it really the right thing to do, bringing that protest here? It’s okay to have one of those in the city, but in a predominantly white town — what they were doing was basically doing was inviting racists in.”

If there hadn’t been a protest, the reasoning goes, there wouldn’t have been a problem, and everything in Bethel would’ve been like it always has been: just fine. But what happened on that Sunday afternoon showed just how unsustainable that belief has become.


The article is too long to copy, I have other things I'm trying to do. I'm sharing, because the "All lives matter" people were the problem, not the BLM protesters.

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