March 17, 2007, anti-war protest: Difference between revisions

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Many cities held anti-war protests on this day, including [[San Diego, California]]; [[San Francisco, California]]; [[New York City]]; and even smaller student-run protests in suburbs such as in the downtown of [[Walnut Creek, California]].{{Fact|date=March 2007}}
Many cities held anti-war protests on this day, including [[San Diego, California]]; [[San Francisco, California]]; [[New York City]]; and even smaller student-run protests in suburbs such as in the downtown of [[Walnut Creek, California]].{{Fact|date=March 2007}}


There was a small sub-protest composed primarily of [[anarchists]] but included a combination of [[Black Block]] members as well as members of various Socialist groups including the [[Revolutionary Communist Youth Brigade]] RCYB and the [[Revolutionary Communist Party]] RCP . The police officers on duty at the march utilized a number of [[less than lethal]] weapons including consussive grenades and chemical crowd control agents.
There was a small sub-protest composed primarily of [[anarchists]], a combination of [[Black Block]] members as well as members of various Socialist groups including the [[Revolutionary Communist Youth Brigade]] RCYB and the [[Revolutionary Communist Party]] RCP . The police officers on duty at the march utilized a number of [[less than lethal]] weapons including consussive grenades and chemical crowd control agents.


== External links ==
== External links ==

Revision as of 12:12, 19 March 2007

Marchers cross Memorial Bridge into Virginia en route to The Pentagon.

The March 17, 2007 anti-war protest was an anti-war demonstration sponsored by ANSWER Coalition that marched from Constitution Gardens in Washington, D.C. to The Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia. The date was selected to coincide with the fourth anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, and also the 40th anniversary of a similar anti-war march that occurred on October 21, 1967.

Many cities held anti-war protests on this day, including San Diego, California; San Francisco, California; New York City; and even smaller student-run protests in suburbs such as in the downtown of Walnut Creek, California.[citation needed]

There was a small sub-protest composed primarily of anarchists, a combination of Black Block members as well as members of various Socialist groups including the Revolutionary Communist Youth Brigade RCYB and the Revolutionary Communist Party RCP . The police officers on duty at the march utilized a number of less than lethal weapons including consussive grenades and chemical crowd control agents.

External links