Trump, Good trouble and Denver
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CHICAGO (AP) — Protests and events against President Donald Trump’s controversial policies that include mass deportations and cuts to Medicaid and other safety nets for poor people have started Thursday at more than 1,600 locations around the country.
The owner of a Denver cafe is finding out there is some truth to the old adage “no good deed goes unpunished.” Jamie Sanchez is the owner […]
Jamie Sanchez, owner of The Drip Café in Denver, which employs formerly homeless people, has encountered regular protests from communists.
Protesters in five cities in the US, including Denver, Palo Alto, Seattle, Washington D.C., and New York City, are demanding that Palantir Technologies and its billionaire co-founder Peter Thiel end its role in surveillance and policing,
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Axios on MSN"Good Trouble Lives On" protests scheduled across ColoradoAxios Visuals Tens of thousands of people are expected to protest the Trump administration again on Thursday, the fifth anniversary of the death of civil rights leader and former congressman John Lewis.
Jamie Sanchez, owner of The Drip Café, never thought his mission to help the homeless would make him a target. But that’s exactly what’s happening. His café, still new to the neighborhood, sits in the crosshairs of protests fueled by anger, suspicion, and online firestorms.
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An activist is recovering from a traumatic brain injury after he was violently attacked during a protest in Denver, and the entire incident was caught on camera.
Protesters gather in Seattle, condemning Palantir's involvement in Gaza and ICE operations. Join the discussion on tech accountability.
Jamie Sanchez, owner of Drip Cafe in Denver, talks about his homeless ministry, Recycle God's Love, and left-wing protests against his business.
The latest anti-Trump protest in Sheboygan drew about 100 people to Peace Park. Some participants marched down Broughton Drive.