Thursday, January 26, 2017

Greenpeace Activist Hangs "Resist" Banner And Joining Women's March in Washington

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Greenpeace Activist Hangs "Resist" Banner And Joining Women's March in Washington
Picture Credits: www.greenpeace.com

Greenpeace Activist Hangs "Resist" Banner And Joining Women's March in Washington


Activists in Greenpeace opened a 70-foot banner on Wednesday morning, saying "resistance" near the White House.

At the age of 26, Pearl Robinson told the Guardian, talking to a 300ft cranes from an air that he held on the banner: "I can see the White House, we have a president who is not here. Have the interests of the majority"

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The Anti-Trump activist described the message as "everything surrounding it." Donald wants to know that we will support crony capitalism, women's reproductive rights, and assault on the environment. "

The activists were on a crane parked in a building site three blocks from the president's house. From the ellipse park, the poster seems to hang directly over the White House.

"It was a bit cold this morning, but when we were in the crane area, President Trump was colder in the Oval Office, where he decided to sign the executive orders by taking the North Dakota pipeline, bringing the North Dakota pipeline back to its former state, bringing the Keystone pipeline back to its former status. , We hear that Muslim belief will sign a clear immigration law that will restrict entry into the country.

As of last week at Greenpeace Women in Washington officially became partners with March. On January 21, 2017 - a day after Donald Trump takes an oath to the presidency - Tens of thousands of people come together in Washington, DC and the Sister Wings all over the country to send a message to the new ruling: women's rights are human rights.

I will join them. As Greenpeace's organizer, I have spent almost every day since the day when Trump and the administration made choices to fight with hateful rhetoric and dangerous politics. And as a woman and activist, I was fighting for years in these fronts.

After an activist traveled in college in Washington, I remember one of the first things I felt after talking to other women who wanted their representatives to accept the International Act on Women's Violence. We have made some progress since then, but now the government is threatening to push us back and exclude the rights we are trying to win to win us.

In the face of these attacks, I will walk to show solidarity and keep all women alive.

Greenpeace and our supporters are fighting every day for a green and peaceful future. I will walk this weekend because I believe that we can not have that future for all without equality and justice. Now we must protect our communities rather than ever, and we must show every person and group under threat.

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