The website featured maps to organize blockades of intersections arranged around various themes — like feminism, gay rights, racial justice, climate change, immigrant rights, antiwar, and labor — and tips for legal observers. It offered printable protest signs, many critical of Mr. Trump, and afterward it posted pictures of protests. But a smaller group of anarchists — sometimes called the “black bloc” of the so-called Antifa, or anti-fascist, movement — protested violently. More than 200 people were indicted on felony rioting charges related to property damage and assault during the inauguration. “That could have a real chilling effect on web-based free speech.”Judge Leibovitz had set a hearing for Friday.
Source: New York Times August 15, 2017 18:04 UTC