I really don't expect much down south here, but in the peoples republic of california and the cesspool around DC there should be plenty of action coming your way...
: It didn’t take but a few hours after Donald Trump was declared
: the new president of the United States for the protests to
: begin.
: Last week, I predicted that regardless of the outcome, that
: the aftermath could be ugly. Extreme emotions, the shock of
: a landslide victory after the widespread fake polls that
: predicted the opposite, and people who adamantly detest
: Trump were likely to blend to create a perfect storm.
: Less than two hours after Trump was declared president-elect,
: protesters gathered outside the White House to protest at
: the outcome of the vote.
: From Fox News: Donald Trump hadn’t even been declared
: president-elect when the first group of demonstrators
: gathered outside the White House early Wednesday morning to
: oppose a future Trump administration.
: A crowd of more than 1,000 people showed up in front of the
: White House – some protesters even taking to the trees – in
: the early hours of Wednesday morning with the election
: still in doubt, but trending towards Trump, the Republican
: nominee.
: Some demonstrators reportedly began chanting “F— Donald
: Trump.”
: Many of those in attendance appeared to be from nearby
: colleges.
: Others in the crowd were protesting Trump’s immigration
: policies. A group of about 20 Black Lives Matter supporters
: were also interspersed in the crowd at one point.
: CBS13 reported that Clinton supporters were marching in Davis,
: Sacramento shouting foul comments about Trump.
: DAVIS (CBS13) – A group of protesters is gathering in Davis
: early Wednesday morning.
: Davis police say about 200-300 protesters are walking from the
: UC Davis campus to downtown.
: In videos posted to social media, the protesters can be heard
: chanting explicatives about newly-elected president Donald
: Trump.
: Further south, in Oakland, demonstrators got even rowdier:
: Hundreds of angry protesters chanting “Not my president”
: filled the streets of Oakland and Berkeley Tuesday night
: after Donald Trump was elected president.
: They walked from downtown Oakland to Highway 24, setting fired
: on Broadway and briefly shutting down the highway.
: A protester suffered major injuries when she was hit by a car
: while demonstrating. Authorities say she is now in stable
: condition. (source)
: Today, the protests are increasing in number.
: KRON reports that demonstrators have planned to take to the
: streets in Oakland and San Francisco this evening to make
: their displeasure known about the newly named president.
: Market and Powell Street in San Francisco and the Frank H.
: Ogawa Plaza in downtown Oakland are the areas to avoid,
: where demonstrators intend to meet at 5 pm. Students walked
: out of Bay Area schools in protest.
: CDL Life, a website for long-distance truckers, reports that
: roadways all over America are being affected.
: “Anti-Trump demonstrations have been reported in Oakland,
: Berkley, Pittsburgh, Seattle, San Francisco, and
: Portland…An effigy of Trump was reportedly burned at a
: demonstration in Oakland…
: In Portland, Oregon, at least 200 protesters shut down I-5 for
: about an hour early this morning before police in riot gear
: moved them off the interstate onto the Broadway Bridge. One
: protester was hit by a car but not seriously injured.
: In Seattle, protesters blocked the streets on Capitol Hill.
: Many protesters even laid down in the roadway to impede the
: flow of traffic.
: In Pennsylvania, hundreds of University of Pittsburgh students
: took to the streets near campus to demonstrate.
: Thousands of University of San Francisco students marched on
: the streets to protest. They forced the temporary closure
: of 19th Avenue.
: In New Mexico, an anti-Trump rally turned violent.
: In one of the presidential campaign year’s more grisly
: spectacles, protesters in New Mexico opposing Donald
: Trump’s candidacy threw burning T-shirts, plastic bottles
: and other items at police officers, injuring several, and
: toppled trash cans and barricades.
: Police responded by firing pepper spray and smoke grenades
: into the crowd outside the Albuquerque Convention Center…
: …The altercations left glass at the entrance of the convention
: center smashed.
: Albuquerque attorney Doug Antoon said rocks were flying
: through the convention center windows as he was leaving
: Tuesday night. Glass was breaking and landing near his
: feet.
: “This was not a protest, this was a riot. These are hate
: groups,” he said of the demonstrators.
: Albuquerque police said several officers were treated for
: injuries after getting hit by rocks thrown by protesters.
: At least one person was arrested from the riot, police
: said.
: During the rally, protesters outside overran barricades and
: clashed with police in riot gear. They also burned T-shirts
: and other items labeled with Trump’s catchphrase, “Make
: America Great Again.”
: There were even Anti-Trump protests outside the American
: Embassy in London last night, with signs comparing him to
: Hitler.
: Get prepared…this is only the beginning.
: I suspect they’re just getting warmed up. We’re dealing with
: organizations who cheated, colluded with the media, and did
: everything they could to steal the election. Expect to see
: more unrest. If you can at all, stay home to avoid the
: potential of being in the wrong place at the wrong time.
: Make sure you have some emergency food on hand. If you need
: help to get prepped for a civil unrest situation, go here.
: Trump said he would deliver a Brexit style shock. He delivered
: Brexit on steroids.