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#political-protest — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #political-protest, aggregated by home.social.

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  1. Hexing the Bomb

    Hot on the heels of my little foray into the Battle of the Beanfield I decided to dig a little deeper into another important and largely forgotten nugget of social history. This one incorporates a couple of my favourite subjects, neither of which is politics. It does, however, have women standing up together and achieving the seemingly impossible and witches.

    Pull up a chair… 🙂

    There are moments in history when politics, folklore and belief collide in ways that seem almost impossible to imagine. One such moment unfolded on the windswept perimeter fences of Greenham Common during the final decades of the Cold War, when thousands of women gathered to oppose the presence of American nuclear missiles on British soil. Among the banners, songs and acts of civil disobedience was something few journalists expected to find at the heart of a major political protest. Witches.

    For nearly two decades, Greenham Common became one of the most significant centres of peace activism in modern British history. It was a place of arrests, demonstrations, campfires and confrontation. It was also a place where ancient symbols found new life. Women danced in circles, wove webs across military fences, invoked goddesses, cast symbolic spells and drew upon centuries of folklore to challenge one of the most powerful military alliances in the world.

    To understand why, we must first return to a Britain gripped by fear.

    The early 1980s were shadowed by the threat of nuclear war. Relations between East and West had deteriorated. The Soviet Union and NATO were engaged in a dangerous arms race. Television viewers watched films such as Threads and The Day After, which depicted the horrific consequences of nuclear conflict. Schoolchildren grew up with the knowledge that a single political miscalculation could end civilisation in an afternoon.

    Against this backdrop, the British government agreed to host American cruise missiles at RAF Greenham Common in Berkshire. To supporters, the deployment was a necessary deterrent. To opponents, it made Britain a target and increased the likelihood of nuclear confrontation.

    In September 1981, a small group of Welsh women marched from Cardiff to Greenham Common. Their intention was straightforward. They wanted a public debate about nuclear weapons. When their concerns were ignored, some chose to remain.

    Few could have imagined that their decision would create one of the most influential protest movements in modern British history.

    The Greenham Common Women’s Peace Camp became a permanent presence outside the military base. Women arrived from every corner of Britain and beyond. Some stayed for days. Others remained for years. Grandmothers camped alongside students. Teachers shared fires with artists, nurses, activists and travellers. The camp developed its own culture, traditions and rituals.

    Media coverage was often hostile. Newspapers portrayed the women as scruffy, eccentric or dangerous. Politicians dismissed them as naïve. Yet Greenham continued to grow. By December 1982, around 30,000 women joined hands around the nine-mile perimeter fence in one of the largest demonstrations Britain had ever seen.

    As the movement evolved, some participants began drawing upon folklore, mythology and spiritual traditions to express their opposition to nuclear weapons.

    For many women involved in the peace camp, the figure of the witch held profound significance.The witch has never been simply a character from fairy tales. Across European history she has represented independence, resistance and the refusal to conform. She is the village healer, the wise woman, the outsider and the scapegoat. She embodies knowledge that exists beyond accepted authority.

    Many women at Greenham recognised parallels between historical witch hunts and contemporary attempts to dismiss or marginalise female voices. The image of the witch became a powerful symbol of protest.

    Some protesters identified as pagans or practitioners of modern witchcraft. Others were not religious at all but embraced the symbolism. Together they transformed folklore into a political language.

    At various demonstrations, women dressed as witches, carrying besoms and wearing pointed hats. They conducted symbolic rituals outside the base gates. Circles were formed. Chants were spoken. Songs echoed through the Berkshire countryside.

    Perhaps most striking were the webs.Women frequently attached ribbons, wool, photographs, toys and personal objects to the military fences. These creations resembled enormous spider webs stretching across the perimeter. They symbolised connection, community and the fragile threads linking humanity together. Military planners saw security barriers. The women transformed them into canvases for storytelling.

    One protest became known as the “Embrace the Base” demonstration, during which thousands of women encircled Greenham Common. The act itself echoed ancient traditions of protective circles and boundary rituals found throughout British folklore.In many folk traditions, circles create sacred space. They mark a distinction between the ordinary and the extraordinary. Whether consciously or unconsciously, Greenham’s protesters drew upon symbolism that would have been recognised by generations of cunning folk, ceremonial magicians and village communities.

    There were also reports of symbolic spell-casting directed not at individuals but at the weapons themselves.

    These actions were largely theatrical and symbolic. Yet symbolism has always been one of humanity’s most powerful tools. Flags, crowns, crosses and national monuments derive their power from collective belief. Greenham’s witches understood this. They recognised that ritual could attract attention, build solidarity and create memorable images capable of travelling far beyond the camp itself.Photographs from the period remain remarkable. Women dance beneath military floodlights. Costumed protesters stand before coils of razor wire. Sacred imagery appears alongside anti-nuclear slogans. Ancient archetypes confront modern technology.

    The contrast could hardly have been more dramatic.

    Behind the spectacle lay a serious philosophical question. How should ordinary people respond when faced with systems that appear too vast to challenge?

    For some, the answer lay in petitions or political lobbying. For others, it involved direct action. At Greenham, many women chose creativity. They responded to missiles with songs, fences with artwork and military authority with myth.

    It is tempting to dismiss such actions as eccentric. Yet history suggests otherwise.Throughout the centuries, folklore has often emerged during periods of uncertainty and upheaval. Communities create stories to explain fears, express hopes and challenge power structures. Ballads mocked landlords. legends criticised rulers. Folk customs strengthened communities during times of hardship.

    Greenham Common followed the same pattern.The camp generated its own folklore almost immediately. Stories circulated among protesters. Songs were composed. Rituals evolved. Shared symbols developed meaning through repetition. What began as a political protest became something resembling a living folk tradition.

    Even the landscape itself absorbed these stories.

    Greenham Common is now remembered not only as a military site but as a place of resistance. The fences have gone. The missiles have long since been removed. Yet the stories remain. Visitors still encounter traces of the movement in memorials, artworks and local memory.

    The protest ultimately achieved far more than many observers predicted. Cruise missiles were removed from Greenham Common in 1991 following the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty. The peace camp remained for several years afterwards before finally closing in 2000.

    Whether Greenham alone changed government policy remains a matter of debate. Few historians would argue that it was the sole cause. Yet its influence on public discourse is undeniable. The movement helped shape conversations about nuclear weapons, gender, protest and citizenship. It inspired campaigns around the world and demonstrated the power of sustained grassroots activism.

    The witches of Greenham Common occupy a particularly fascinating place within that story.

    They remind us that folklore is not confined to dusty books or distant centuries. It remains a living force, capable of adapting to new circumstances and addressing modern concerns. Ancient symbols continue to resonate because they speak to enduring human experiences.

    The women who danced around Greenham’s fences were not attempting to retreat into the past. They were using the past to imagine a different future.

    In an age dominated by military technology, political rhetoric and the machinery of the Cold War, they answered with stories, songs, rituals and symbols that had survived for centuries.

    Whether one believes in magic is ultimately beside the point.

    The real magic of Greenham Common lay in its ability to transform fear into action, isolation into community and protest into legend.

    More than forty years later, the image remains unforgettable. A line of women standing beneath winter skies, facing one of the most formidable military establishments on Earth armed with banners, determination and the enduring power of folklore.

    History remembers the missiles.

    Folklore remembers the witches.

    Further Reading

    Common Women, Uncommon Practices by Sasha RoseneilGreenham Women Everywhere by Rebecca Mordan

    Peace Camps: A Study of Greenham Women by Lynne Jones

    The archives of the Greenham Common Women’s Peace

    CampRecords held by the Women’s Library at the London School of Economics

    Imperial War Museum collections relating to Greenham Common

    Oral history projects documenting former Greenham residents

    Copyright Notice:

    © 2026 Mysterious Times. All rights reserved.This article is published exclusively for Mysterious Times. No part may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form without prior written permission, except for brief quotations used for review, commentary or educational purposes with appropriate attribution.

    #1980sBritain #AlternativeBritain #AlternativeSpirituality #AntiNuclearMovement #BerkshireFolklore #BerkshireHistory #BritishCounterculture #BritishFolklore #BritishHistory #BritishSocialHistory #BritishWitchcraft #ColdWarBritain #ColdWarFolklore #ColdWarHistory #ContemporaryFolklore #Counterculture #CruiseMissiles #FeministHistory #folkMagic #FolkTraditions #FolkloreAndPolitics #GreenhamCommon #GreenhamCommonPeaceCamp #GreenhamWomen #HistoricalLongRead #HistoryOfProtest #LivingFolklore #MagicAndProtest #modernWitchcraft #MysteriousTimes #NewAgeMovement #NuclearDisarmament #NuclearProtest #Paganism #PeaceActivism #PeaceCampHistory #PeaceMovementHistory #PoliticalProtest #ProtestHistory #ProtestMovements #RitualAndResistance #SacredProtest #SocialHistoryUK #SymbolicResistance #ThatcherEraBritain #WitchcraftAndPolitics #WitchesOfGreenhamCommon #WomenSActivism #WomenSHistory #WomenSPeaceMovement
  2. Hexing the Bomb

    Hot on the heels of my little foray into the Battle of the Beanfield I decided to dig a little deeper into another important and largely forgotten nugget of social history. This one incorporates a couple of my favourite subjects, neither of which is politics. It does, however, have women standing up together and achieving the seemingly impossible and witches.

    Pull up a chair… 🙂

    There are moments in history when politics, folklore and belief collide in ways that seem almost impossible to imagine. One such moment unfolded on the windswept perimeter fences of Greenham Common during the final decades of the Cold War, when thousands of women gathered to oppose the presence of American nuclear missiles on British soil. Among the banners, songs and acts of civil disobedience was something few journalists expected to find at the heart of a major political protest. Witches.

    For nearly two decades, Greenham Common became one of the most significant centres of peace activism in modern British history. It was a place of arrests, demonstrations, campfires and confrontation. It was also a place where ancient symbols found new life. Women danced in circles, wove webs across military fences, invoked goddesses, cast symbolic spells and drew upon centuries of folklore to challenge one of the most powerful military alliances in the world.

    To understand why, we must first return to a Britain gripped by fear.

    The early 1980s were shadowed by the threat of nuclear war. Relations between East and West had deteriorated. The Soviet Union and NATO were engaged in a dangerous arms race. Television viewers watched films such as Threads and The Day After, which depicted the horrific consequences of nuclear conflict. Schoolchildren grew up with the knowledge that a single political miscalculation could end civilisation in an afternoon.

    Against this backdrop, the British government agreed to host American cruise missiles at RAF Greenham Common in Berkshire. To supporters, the deployment was a necessary deterrent. To opponents, it made Britain a target and increased the likelihood of nuclear confrontation.

    In September 1981, a small group of Welsh women marched from Cardiff to Greenham Common. Their intention was straightforward. They wanted a public debate about nuclear weapons. When their concerns were ignored, some chose to remain.

    Few could have imagined that their decision would create one of the most influential protest movements in modern British history.

    The Greenham Common Women’s Peace Camp became a permanent presence outside the military base. Women arrived from every corner of Britain and beyond. Some stayed for days. Others remained for years. Grandmothers camped alongside students. Teachers shared fires with artists, nurses, activists and travellers. The camp developed its own culture, traditions and rituals.

    Media coverage was often hostile. Newspapers portrayed the women as scruffy, eccentric or dangerous. Politicians dismissed them as naïve. Yet Greenham continued to grow. By December 1982, around 30,000 women joined hands around the nine-mile perimeter fence in one of the largest demonstrations Britain had ever seen.

    As the movement evolved, some participants began drawing upon folklore, mythology and spiritual traditions to express their opposition to nuclear weapons.

    For many women involved in the peace camp, the figure of the witch held profound significance.The witch has never been simply a character from fairy tales. Across European history she has represented independence, resistance and the refusal to conform. She is the village healer, the wise woman, the outsider and the scapegoat. She embodies knowledge that exists beyond accepted authority.

    Many women at Greenham recognised parallels between historical witch hunts and contemporary attempts to dismiss or marginalise female voices. The image of the witch became a powerful symbol of protest.

    Some protesters identified as pagans or practitioners of modern witchcraft. Others were not religious at all but embraced the symbolism. Together they transformed folklore into a political language.

    At various demonstrations, women dressed as witches, carrying besoms and wearing pointed hats. They conducted symbolic rituals outside the base gates. Circles were formed. Chants were spoken. Songs echoed through the Berkshire countryside.

    Perhaps most striking were the webs.Women frequently attached ribbons, wool, photographs, toys and personal objects to the military fences. These creations resembled enormous spider webs stretching across the perimeter. They symbolised connection, community and the fragile threads linking humanity together. Military planners saw security barriers. The women transformed them into canvases for storytelling.

    One protest became known as the “Embrace the Base” demonstration, during which thousands of women encircled Greenham Common. The act itself echoed ancient traditions of protective circles and boundary rituals found throughout British folklore.In many folk traditions, circles create sacred space. They mark a distinction between the ordinary and the extraordinary. Whether consciously or unconsciously, Greenham’s protesters drew upon symbolism that would have been recognised by generations of cunning folk, ceremonial magicians and village communities.

    There were also reports of symbolic spell-casting directed not at individuals but at the weapons themselves.

    These actions were largely theatrical and symbolic. Yet symbolism has always been one of humanity’s most powerful tools. Flags, crowns, crosses and national monuments derive their power from collective belief. Greenham’s witches understood this. They recognised that ritual could attract attention, build solidarity and create memorable images capable of travelling far beyond the camp itself.Photographs from the period remain remarkable. Women dance beneath military floodlights. Costumed protesters stand before coils of razor wire. Sacred imagery appears alongside anti-nuclear slogans. Ancient archetypes confront modern technology.

    The contrast could hardly have been more dramatic.

    Behind the spectacle lay a serious philosophical question. How should ordinary people respond when faced with systems that appear too vast to challenge?

    For some, the answer lay in petitions or political lobbying. For others, it involved direct action. At Greenham, many women chose creativity. They responded to missiles with songs, fences with artwork and military authority with myth.

    It is tempting to dismiss such actions as eccentric. Yet history suggests otherwise.Throughout the centuries, folklore has often emerged during periods of uncertainty and upheaval. Communities create stories to explain fears, express hopes and challenge power structures. Ballads mocked landlords. legends criticised rulers. Folk customs strengthened communities during times of hardship.

    Greenham Common followed the same pattern.The camp generated its own folklore almost immediately. Stories circulated among protesters. Songs were composed. Rituals evolved. Shared symbols developed meaning through repetition. What began as a political protest became something resembling a living folk tradition.

    Even the landscape itself absorbed these stories.

    Greenham Common is now remembered not only as a military site but as a place of resistance. The fences have gone. The missiles have long since been removed. Yet the stories remain. Visitors still encounter traces of the movement in memorials, artworks and local memory.

    The protest ultimately achieved far more than many observers predicted. Cruise missiles were removed from Greenham Common in 1991 following the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty. The peace camp remained for several years afterwards before finally closing in 2000.

    Whether Greenham alone changed government policy remains a matter of debate. Few historians would argue that it was the sole cause. Yet its influence on public discourse is undeniable. The movement helped shape conversations about nuclear weapons, gender, protest and citizenship. It inspired campaigns around the world and demonstrated the power of sustained grassroots activism.

    The witches of Greenham Common occupy a particularly fascinating place within that story.

    They remind us that folklore is not confined to dusty books or distant centuries. It remains a living force, capable of adapting to new circumstances and addressing modern concerns. Ancient symbols continue to resonate because they speak to enduring human experiences.

    The women who danced around Greenham’s fences were not attempting to retreat into the past. They were using the past to imagine a different future.

    In an age dominated by military technology, political rhetoric and the machinery of the Cold War, they answered with stories, songs, rituals and symbols that had survived for centuries.

    Whether one believes in magic is ultimately beside the point.

    The real magic of Greenham Common lay in its ability to transform fear into action, isolation into community and protest into legend.

    More than forty years later, the image remains unforgettable. A line of women standing beneath winter skies, facing one of the most formidable military establishments on Earth armed with banners, determination and the enduring power of folklore.

    History remembers the missiles.

    Folklore remembers the witches.

    Further Reading

    Common Women, Uncommon Practices by Sasha RoseneilGreenham Women Everywhere by Rebecca Mordan

    Peace Camps: A Study of Greenham Women by Lynne Jones

    The archives of the Greenham Common Women’s Peace

    CampRecords held by the Women’s Library at the London School of Economics

    Imperial War Museum collections relating to Greenham Common

    Oral history projects documenting former Greenham residents

    Copyright Notice:

    © 2026 Mysterious Times. All rights reserved.This article is published exclusively for Mysterious Times. No part may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form without prior written permission, except for brief quotations used for review, commentary or educational purposes with appropriate attribution.

    #1980sBritain #AlternativeBritain #AlternativeSpirituality #AntiNuclearMovement #BerkshireFolklore #BerkshireHistory #BritishCounterculture #BritishFolklore #BritishHistory #BritishSocialHistory #BritishWitchcraft #ColdWarBritain #ColdWarFolklore #ColdWarHistory #ContemporaryFolklore #Counterculture #CruiseMissiles #FeministHistory #folkMagic #FolkTraditions #FolkloreAndPolitics #GreenhamCommon #GreenhamCommonPeaceCamp #GreenhamWomen #HistoricalLongRead #HistoryOfProtest #LivingFolklore #MagicAndProtest #modernWitchcraft #MysteriousTimes #NewAgeMovement #NuclearDisarmament #NuclearProtest #Paganism #PeaceActivism #PeaceCampHistory #PeaceMovementHistory #PoliticalProtest #ProtestHistory #ProtestMovements #RitualAndResistance #SacredProtest #SocialHistoryUK #SymbolicResistance #ThatcherEraBritain #WitchcraftAndPolitics #WitchesOfGreenhamCommon #WomenSActivism #WomenSHistory #WomenSPeaceMovement
  3. Almodóvar Wears Pin, Rejects Trump Rhetoric at Cannes

    Director Pedro Almodovar wore a pin at the 2026 Cannes Film Festival to protest Donald Trump and support Palestine. See how this affects the final awards.

    #cannes2026, #pedroalmodovar, #filmfestival, #politicalprotest, #cannesawards

    newsletter.tf/pedro-almodovar-

  4. Pedro Almodovar used his platform at the 79th Cannes Film Festival to speak against Donald Trump. This is one of many political moments at this year's event.

    #cannes2026, #pedroalmodovar, #filmfestival, #politicalprotest, #cannesawards
    newsletter.tf/pedro-almodovar-

  5. CW: Occasional Foul Language. Always Political.

    Florida Rising organized a protest that turned into a sit in for the ILLEGAL unconstitutional gerrymandering happening in Florida‼️

    #Florida #Gerrymandering #Redistricting #Fascism

    Link: bsky.app/profile/50501movement

    ----------------------------

    Reposted from 50501: The People's Movement

    Join the Movement at fiftyfifty.one

    This robot is unaffiliated w/ 50501

    Replies here are only seen in the Fediverse, not on Bluesky. 50501 volunteers do not monitor this account.

    ----------------------------

    #Coup #Activism #FederalGovernment #USpol #Trump #NoKings #elections #50501Movement #WeAreTheResistance #WeHaveFriendsEverywhere #FDT #PeoplesMovement #FiftyFiftyOne #StopICE #protest #organize

    #Florida #Gerrymandering #Redistricting #Gerrymander #PoliticalProtest #CivicEngagement #Democracy #Unconstitutional #SitIn #FloridaPolitics

  6. The Social, Political, and Cultural Importance of Hats in Early Modern England

    📰 Original title: People once risked everything just to keep their hats on

    🤖 IA: It's clickbait ⚠️
    👥 Usuarios: It's clickbait ⚠️

    View full AI summary: killbait.com/en/the-social-pol

    #history #socialnorms #politicalprotest #fash...

  7. The Social, Political, and Cultural Importance of Hats in Early Modern England

    📰 Original title: People once risked everything just to keep their hats on

    🤖 IA: It's clickbait ⚠️
    👥 Usuarios: It's clickbait ⚠️

    View full AI summary: killbait.com/en/the-social-pol

    #history #socialnorms #politicalprotest #fas...

  8. Protests Erupt at Trump's Rare D.C. Dinner Engagement

    Protesters disrupted Donald Trump's dinner at Joe's Seafood in Washington D.C. on Sept 10. The restaurant later faced negative online reviews.

    #TrumpProtest, #DCEvents, #JoeSeafoods, #PoliticalProtest, #RestaurantReviews

    newsletter.tf/trump-dc-dinner-

  9. Protesters confronted Donald Trump during his dinner in Washington D.C. on September 10. Following the event, the restaurant received many one-star reviews online.

    #TrumpProtest, #DCEvents, #JoeSeafoods, #PoliticalProtest, #RestaurantReviews
    newsletter.tf/trump-dc-dinner-

  10. Left Parties Cry Foul Over Women's Quota Pace

    Left parties protest the delay in the women's reservation policy, accusing the government of stalling the law. What happens next?

    #WomensQuota, #LeftParties, #PoliticalProtest, #ReservationPolicy, #DelhiNews

    newsletter.tf/left-parties-pro

  11. ift.tt/UTsVGJS

    Protest by Marine veteran Brian McGinnis during a Senate hearing on the Iran conflict leads to a physical altercation and sparks a national debate.

    #USMarine #TimSheehy #ProtestIncident #PoliticalProtest

    Source: ift.tt/9YrZnQq

    Uploaded by Tech Plz

    March 5, 2026 at 05:26PM

  12. Congress Protest at AI Summit Sparks Political Clash

    Youth Congress protested at the AI Summit in New Delhi. BJP called it a national shame. Find out why and what happened next.

    #AIsummit, #YouthCongress, #BJP, #NewDelhi, #PoliticalProtest

    newsletter.tf/youth-congress-p

  13. दिल्ली दंगों में उमर खालिद‑शरजील को सुप्रीम कोर्टे ने क्यों नहीं दी जमानत? अगले एक साल तक अपील भी दायर नहीं कर पाएंगे।

    aliyesha.com/sub/articles/news

    #DelhiRiots #UmarKhalid #SharjeelImam #SupremeCourtDecision #NoBail #UAPA #LegalUpdate #IndiaJustice #CourtRuling #PoliticalProtest #HumanRights #TrialProgress #DelhiViolence #JusticeSystem #LawAndOrder #CurrentAffairs #NewsUpdate #IndiaNews #LegalNews #HumanRightsWatch

    Enjoy tracker free reading with us. #privacy #privacymatters

  14. दिल्ली दंगों में उमर खालिद‑शरजील को सुप्रीम कोर्टे ने क्यों नहीं दी जमानत? अगले एक साल तक अपील भी दायर नहीं कर पाएंगे।

    aliyesha.com/sub/articles/news

    #DelhiRiots #UmarKhalid #SharjeelImam #SupremeCourtDecision #NoBail #UAPA #LegalUpdate #IndiaJustice #CourtRuling #PoliticalProtest #HumanRights #TrialProgress #DelhiViolence #JusticeSystem #LawAndOrder #CurrentAffairs #NewsUpdate #IndiaNews #LegalNews #HumanRightsWatch

    Enjoy tracker free reading with us. #privacy #privacymatters

  15. CovertAction Bulletin: A General Strike Can Change Everything

    Millions of people in over 2,700 cities and towns took part in No Kings Day protests across the country on October 18th…

    The post CovertAction Bulletin: A General Strike Can Change Everything first appeared on CovertAction Magazine.

    This post has been syndicated from CovertAction Magazine, where it was published under this address.

  16. Clematis and honeysuckle growing together, seemingly as one plant, over an arch, which I built a couple of years ago in the garden.
    In gardens, as much as with people, we want different species and races to join, mingle and thrive together.
    You can look at this photo as a protest against the right-wing nationalist populism of today, which promotes human monoculture.

    #ArtistsGarden #ImperfectGarden #garden #gardener #gardening #GardenPhotography #Artist #wolfkettler #Photography #GardenWiltshire #WiltshireGarden #Wiltshire #sustainable #summer #bloomscrolling #biodiversity #natural #NaturalGarden #WildlifeFriendly #PlanetFriendly #PollinatorFriendly #ecology #climate #ClimateChange #conservation #sustainability #PoliticalProtest #rightwing #nationalism

  17. Clematis and honeysuckle growing together, seemingly as one plant, over an arch, which I built a couple of years ago in the garden.
    In gardens, as much as with people, we want different species and races to join, mingle and thrive together.
    You can look at this photo as a protest against the right-wing nationalist populism of today, which promotes human monoculture.

    #ArtistsGarden #ImperfectGarden #garden #gardener #gardening #GardenPhotography #Artist #wolfkettler #Photography #GardenWiltshire #WiltshireGarden #Wiltshire #sustainable #summer #bloomscrolling #biodiversity #natural #NaturalGarden #WildlifeFriendly #PlanetFriendly #PollinatorFriendly #ecology #climate #ClimateChange #conservation #sustainability #PoliticalProtest #rightwing #nationalism

  18. This morning in #SilverSpring, Maryland there was a "Unite to Save NOAA" rally outside of the headquarters of #NOAA to support the organization. It started at 10 am and ran for about an hour. #protest #PoliticalProtest #activism #democracy #politics silverspringsprinkles.blogspot

  19. This morning in #SilverSpring, Maryland there was a "Unite to Save NOAA" rally outside of the headquarters of #NOAA to support the organization. It started at 10 am and ran for about an hour. #protest #PoliticalProtest #activism #democracy #politics silverspringsprinkles.blogspot

  20. JD Vance Gets Trolled on the Slopes: Protesters Greet Him with Brutal Signs

    JD Vance didn't expect this man, and hundreds of others, to show up in the mountains of Sugarbush Vermont to troll and ruin his ski tip. 1. “Vance is a traitor. Go ski in Russia.” 2. “Vance skis in jeans.” 3. “Our cows 💩 better ideas than Vance.” 4. “J.D. Vance puts his cast iron skillet in the dishwasher.” 5. “If you’re going to try to f*** the country, we’re going to make it very uncomfortable for you.” 6. “SORRY VP SOLD […]

    streetartutopia.com/2025/03/02

  21. JD Vance Gets Trolled on the Slopes: Protesters Greet Him with Brutal Signs

    JD Vance didn't expect this man, and hundreds of others, to show up in the mountains of Sugarbush Vermont to troll and ruin his ski tip. 1. “Vance is a traitor. Go ski in Russia.” 2. “Vance skis in jeans.” 3. “Our cows 💩 better ideas than Vance.” 4. “J.D. Vance puts his cast iron skillet in the dishwasher.” 5. “If you’re going to try to f*** the country, we’re going to make it very uncomfortable for you.” 6. “SORRY VP SOLD […]

    streetartutopia.com/2025/03/02

  22. I stumbled upon a large protest against Austria's Freedom Party (FPÖ) in Vienna late at night, showing that many don’t agree with their right-wing populism. I wished I had my Leica M11 instead of an Ilford HP5 loaded M2. But I made it work. #ProtestVienna #wien #PoliticalProtest #FPÖ #Austria #FreedomParty #Activism #Wahl #Nationalratswahl #NRW24 #streetphotography #streetphotographers #LeicaM2 #ilfordhp5 #anaog #analogphotography #monochrome #voitländernokton #28mm #Street

  23. Фотографиня Ю Ю Мьин Тан наложила портреты друг на друга для того, чтобы лица невозможно было опознать нейроалгоритмами? Квир-активист:ки тоже присоединились к гражданским протестам против военного переворота в Мьянме. Через несколько месяцев в Мьянме началась гражданская война, которая продолжается и сейчас. Это четвёртый по величине военный конфликт в мире. #YuYuMyintThan #politicalprotests #politicalprotest #rightsactivists #LGBTQactivists #civilwar #warsin2024

  24. Фотографиня Ю Ю Мьин Тан наложила портреты друг на друга для того, чтобы лица невозможно было опознать нейроалгоритмами? Квир-активист:ки тоже присоединились к гражданским протестам против военного переворота в Мьянме. Через несколько месяцев в Мьянме началась гражданская война, которая продолжается и сейчас. Это четвёртый по величине военный конфликт в мире. #YuYuMyintThan #politicalprotests #politicalprotest #rightsactivists #LGBTQactivists #civilwar #warsin2024

  25. I just saw a post on one of the social media outlets/twitter clones that says there is going to be an Anti Project 2025 rally in Times Square on Saturday July 27th at 7:00pm.

    Huh…

    I’ve been looking for an excuse to spend a weekend in New York. Usually just having a fun weekend get away to the biggest city around is all the reason I need. Maybe we could add something more productive as additional incentive?

    Huh… I wonder… let’s think on this a little bit…

    https://robertjames1971.blog/2024/07/10/times-square-rally/

    #antiFascist #antiNazi #antiRepublican #antiTrump #politicalProtest #Politics #Protest #rally

  26. Bangladesh's Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has been in and out of power for decades.But tens of thousands of opposition supporters have joined protests in the...
    Can Bangladesh's opposition unseat the prime minister? | Inside Story
  27. Police in Bangladesh are cracking down on anti-government protests, firing tear gas and beating demonstrators on the streets of the capital Dhaka.Several pro...
    Bangladesh protests: Police fire tear gas in Dhaka
  28. Police in Bangladesh have fired tear gas and rubber bullets during the latest anti-government protest.The opposition blames the government for soaring food a...
    Bangladesh protests | AJ #shorts
  29. Thousands of supporters of several opposition alliances have held a mass sit-in.They are demanding the government's resignation, the release of jailed opposi...
    Bangladesh protests: Calls for caretaker gov't until 2024 election
  30. Police in Bangladesh have fired tear gas and rubber bullets during the latest anti-government protest.The opposition blames the government for soaring food a...
    Bangladesh protests: Police fire tear gas in Dhaka
  31. In a week’s time on Wed 1st Feb, many (perhaps the vast majority of) UK schools will be closed due to #Teachers going on #Strike . The Tory line is that this will unfairly inconvenience parents and employers, while harming children’s education.

    In #Norwich on this day there will be a big rally of the trade unions through the city centre. How many parents will take the opportunity to educate their children about the value of #TradeUnions and #PoliticalProtest on this day?