Posted on 10/11/2017 12:12:22 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
For August 2017, we tallied 834 protests, demonstrations, strikes, marches, sit-ins and rallies in the United States, with at least one in every state and the District. Our conservative guess is that between 175,625 and 205,178 people showed up at these political gatherings, although it is likely there were far more participants. Because mainstream media often neglect to report nonviolent actions especially small ones it is probable that we did not record every event that took place. At 31 percent of the events we listed this month, we lacked an estimate of the size of the crowd.
Nevertheless, we think our tally gives us a useful pool of information to better understand political mobilization in the United States particularly how reports of crowds change from month to month. In this case, we estimate that August 2017 saw a notable increase in people protesting compared with July, during which we observed between 85,837 and 108,344 people participating in crowds.
Who demonstrated against and for what in August?
1) Charlottesville and its aftermath
The most prominent August protests were the events at Charlottesville on Aug. 11 and 12, sparked by the citys efforts to remove a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. After a dramatic confrontation on the University of Virginia campus on Friday night, the Saturday protests included a smaller group of white supremacists and larger groups of counterprotesters decrying racism and bigotry. The former group included Identity Evropa, the Traditionalist Worker Party, the National Socialist Movement and Vanguard America. Members of the Three Percenters, a right-wing militia, also came to the city. Counterprotesters included clergy, progressive organizers and activists, antifa activists, and many others.
On Aug. 12, one person drove a car into a crowd of counterprotesters, killing Heather Heyer and injuring 19 others. Before the attack, the man identified by police as the cars driver had been marching with Vanguard America.
President Trumps response was controversial. While at times condemning white supremacy and Heyers death, he also expressed some sympathy for the cause, including equating the two groups of protesters (theres blame on both sides). There were, he said, some very fine people, on both sides.
The events at Charlottesville, as well as Trumps response, sparked a slew of political gatherings all across the country. We counted 341 events, including vigils to remember Charlottesville and demonstrations against white supremacy or against Confederate statues. People came together at Town Square in Anchorage, marched to City Hall in Atlanta, and gathered at the University of Iowa Pentacrest in Iowa City. In Durham, N.C., protesters pulled down a Confederate statue.
A smaller number of protests (28) after Charlottesville were arguably white supremacist or, in most cases, organized to rally in favor of retaining Confederate statues. Those took place in Hot Springs, Ark.; Graham, N.C.; Portsmouth, Va.; San Antonio; and elsewhere.
Counterprotesters met every gathering of white supremacists. In Boston, where a few dozen people attended a free speech rally that opponents called a white-supremacist gathering, 40,000 to 50,000 counterprotesters showed up.
The vast majority of rallies for Confederate statues were side-by-side with those calling for the statues removal. Near the Confederate monument in Lee Square in Pensacola, Fla., supporters and opponents of the monument protested, shouted, sang, argued, and waved signs and flags. Even the location was contested, with opponents of the monument demanding a return of the square to its pre-1889 name, Florida Square. In Greenville, S.C., local police tried to manage the dueling protests by sharing space and time for each, with protesters allowed to rally around the monument for four hours before switching sides of the street with the counterprotesters.
2) The opposition to Trump
Resistance against the Trump administration continued to drive most protests. We estimate that 82.7 percent of the events we recorded were opposing Trumps policies, a higher percentage of events than in July. About 62 percent overall were explicitly anti-Trump while another 21 percent overall took stances on issues that contradict those of the president.
In addition to the many post-Charlottesville protests and vigils, about 50 protests dealt with immigration issues. In Fort Worth, about 400 people came to city hall to protest a bill outlawing sanctuary cities in Texas. In Billings, Mont., people came to protest Immigration and Customs Enforcements detention of Audemio Orozco-Ramirez. In places such as Grand Junction, Colo.; Kansas City; Lafayette, Ind.; and Los Angeles, protesters rallied to support the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.
3) The support for Trump
About 10.6 percent of the events we recorded were rallies supporting the president and his policies, either directly or indirectly. As a share of events, last months total increased almost four percentage points over July. In addition to the post-Charlottesville protests and rallies, Trump held large rallies in Huntington, W.Va., on Aug. 3 and Phoenix on Aug. 22.
4) Neither for nor against Trump
The final 6.6 percent of the crowds were involved in actions directed at other politicians or about issues that were neither pro- nor anti-Trump. We found a broad range of such topics, consistent with the trends from previous months, including protesting the installation of smart home energy meters in Ann Arbor; Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauners rally at the fairgrounds in Springfield; and a rally against puppy mills outside a mall in Lake Grove, N.Y.
5) How many people were arrested and/or injured in political crowds?
At about 787 events (94.4 percent), no arrests were made. This was almost exactly the same percentage as in July. The numbers of people arrested dropped from 585 in July to 251 in August, with at least 130 (about 53 percent) of those August arrests coming in 11 cases of nonviolent civil disobedience.
The number of events with arrests that appeared to be connected to violence or property destruction was still small but climbed noticeably from Julys nine events to 31 events in August. In addition to the death of Heyer on Aug. 12, we counted 111 injuries.
You can download the data here. Well release the data for September 2017 soon. Meanwhile, we are still counting. Click here to be counted, and click here to volunteer to help us count.
For this project, Chenoweth collaborated with Jeremy Pressman, associate professor of political science and director of Middle East studies at the University of Connecticut.
This article first published in The Washington Post on Sept 28, 2017.
BETTER THAN 83 BEING AGAINST HILLARY!!!!
I’d rather have the presidency with the protests, than protest without the presidency :)
I wonder how many of the protests are predominantly paid protestors. I also wonder how many of the injuries are inflicted by those paid protestors who are hired by the Left. I suspect the percentages are high for both questions.
And 100% were financed by George Soros.
“Because mainstream media often neglect to report nonviolent actions especially small ones it is probable that we did not record every event that took place. “
______________________________________________
Anti-Trump protests are, by design, violent. The MSN was intentionally silent about conservative (i.e., non-violent) protests. Why can the MSM not connect the dots?
Yes, and I'm sure this "research" is *completely unrelated* to and not at all coordinated with the concerted, orchestrated, partisan and racist astroturf involved in the demonstrations, fewer of which were riots than the pro-Obama rioting that went on for eight years uunder Obama. Thanks 2ndDivisionVet.
“...guess is that between 175,625 and 205,178 people showed up at these political gatherings...”
So in other words less than 0.07% of the US population were angry at president Trump, and the remaining 99.3% went on with their normal lives.
How many of these “protests” (political stunts) were performed by the same Occutards going from city to city, block to block?
At the Womyn’s March in DC, Ashley Judd famously denounced Donald Trump for being a sexist pig.
She was silent over Harvey Weinsteins’s sexual offers to massage her or to force her to watch him shower. Today she’s being called a “hero”.
She’s a traitor to all women, she let a sexual predator attack women for 20 years. Some activist. Sounds like a political hack to me, the sort who was okay with Bill Clinton raping women and sexually harassing women in his office because he was a political advocate for public funding of abortion.
Those educrats in Denver need to lay off the hash oil candies.
The snowflakes doth protest too much, methinks.
Wow, that’s a pretty involved piece of research there. I notice they didn’t get into how much the protea were paid. Not to mention how much the organizers of the protests were paid.
I am convinced that the Las Vegas Jihadi Pollard— fed his HATE for America by such anti-Trump Rallies. Be interesting to see if my gut is confirmed by anybody other than myself.
Of course, not tallied were the pro-Trump gatherings which were NOT reported by the legacy press.
A lot of strangely exact numbers for an ‘estimate’...
And all those protesters were being paid through the $640,000,000 Obama extorted from the banks and gave to community agitation organizations.
What is the significance (if any) of “protests”?
Soros funds over 800 groups in the USA.
THAT is why there are over 800 protests.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.