VIDEO: Activists demand D.C. ‘defund’ police amid peaceful protests after city renames street ‘Black Lives Matter Plaza’

Washington — Thousands marched and protested against police brutality in Washington, D.C. on Saturday, keeping the May 25 death of George Floyd on the White House’s collective mind by demanding the city defund its police force.

Just one person was arrested, according to the Washington Metropolitan Police Department.

D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser designed a city block near the executive mansion as “Black Lives Matter Plaza”; protesters added the words “=Defund the police” in bright yellow paint.

Derek Chauvin, a white police officer, is charged with killing Floyd, a 46-year-old black man, during an arrest in Minneapolis.

Rioting there began less than a day later and quickly spread to other American cities. Clashes between police and protesters escalated quickly in Washington.

Members of Black Lives Matter DC paint the words “Defund the Police” into 16th Street near the White House in Washington D.C. on June 6, 2020. (Ford Fischer/Zenger)

Bowser’s order included a paint job on the pavement large enough to be seen from orbiting satellites, according to Planet Labs, a private imaging company.

“We’ve walked this path before, and will continue marching on, hand in hand, elevating our voices, until justice and peace prevail,” Bowser said.

For members of Black Lives Matter DMV—the letters refer to D.C., Maryland and Virginia, not the motor vehicles bureau—her gestures were not enough.

The group claimed responsibility for adding the anti-police message to the road, which is technically still called 16th Street.

Saturday’s almost univerally nonviolent protests included a prayer service led by a man at a piano.

Recent Princeton graduate Mikal Walcott leads a small makeshift prayer service during George Floyd protests in Washington D.C. on June 6, 2020. (Ford Fischer/Zenger)

“God, I see people who walk as activists in love and justice and mercy and humanity,” recent Princeton University graduate Mikal Walcott prayed aloud. “God, would you set free people so that they may set free others?”

“When I see the civil rights movement, all those people were people of God,” Walcott told Zenger News. “As you can see behind me, people are being touched and transformed by the Holy Spirit.”

Behind him, two women who attended his service embraced and cried.

Others shoiuted louder and with less optimism.

Members of RefuseFascism, a project of the Revolutionary Communist Party USA, shouted “Fuck Trump! No KKK! No fascist USA!”

Jamel Mims led the chanting.

Jamel Mims, a member of “RefuseFascism” leads chants of “Fuck Trump! No KKK! No Fascist USA!” outside the White House in Washington D.C. on June 6, 2020. (Ford Fischer/Zenger)

“How long will it be before the Trump regime falls because of you?” he asked the crowd. “It’s going to take each and everyone one of us being out here. That’s where this shit needs to go.”

“George Floyd ain’t have to die!” he chanted in a call-and-repeat. “We all know the reason why.”

Their group condemned President Donald Trump’s order to deploy National Guard troops into Washington days earlier.

“We are at a serious crossroads.  Trump is not just speaking the language of fascism, but in calling out the military in D.C. and threatening to do so nationally, Andy Zee, one of the group’s leaders, said.

Zee blamed Trump for encouraging what he called “fascism, white supremacy, xenophobia and patriarchy wrapped in the Bible and the American flag,” said Andy Zee, who insisted that “removing” the president from office on election Day will be “too late.”

The New Black Panther Party led its own march.

“They tell you to be peaceful. They tell you to be non-violent,” party leader Malik Zulu Shabazz told the crowd. “But it wasn’t nonviolent for George Floyd when he was on the ground with that knee on his neck.”

The Southern Poverty Law Center considers Shabazz a “a racist black nationalist.”

“Black power!” his group chanted while marching to a newly erected fence in front of Lafayette Park, outside the White House. Shabazz’s call-and-response concluded with protesters shouting for justice “by any means necessary!”

New Black Panther Party leader Malik Zulu Shabazz speaks to George Floyd protesters outside the White House in Washington D.C. on June 7, 2020. (Ford Fischer/Zenger)

Some of his followers wore face masks depicting rifles and the insignia “Fred Hampton Gun Club.”

Police in Chicago killed 21-year-old Hampton and another Black Panther Party activist in December 1969 during a pre-dawn raid that the Cook County state’s attorney claimed was the result of an earlier gunfight instigated by the pair.

National Guardsmen were deployed Saturday on Washington street corners, but no violence erupted of the sort the city saw a week ago.

Widely seen video footage shot on May 25 showed Chauvin, now in custody and facing murder charges, kneeling on Floyd’s neck for nearly 9 minutes. Floyd pleaded “I can’t breathe” while three other officers stood by. He was pronounced dead at a nearby hospital.

Chauvin was quickly fired along with fellow officers J. Alexander Kueng, Thomas K. Lane and Tou Thao. The three face charges of aiding and abetting murder and manslaughter.

Editing by David Martosko



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