In DC people took to the streets, bashing a window at the EPA and replacing an american flag with an anonymous flag at Monsanto's headquarters.
Thousands of protesters took to the streets in hundreds of cities around the world for the 2015 Million Mask March, with police arresting dozens in London and activists storming the doors of biotech giant Monsanto in Washington, DC. Organized by the Hacktivist group Anonymous, the event featured thousands of people from around the world donning Guy Fawkes masks and protesting a variety of injustices ranging from inequality and corruption to police brutality and capitalism itself, RT reported.
Protests spanned the globe, with major events taking place in Europe and the United States, as well as Canada and Guatemala.As in the past, one of the biggest marches took place in London, where hundreds and potentially thousands of people flooded the streets. Although protesters were told to follow a specific route, some broke off from the main group and the scene quickly became chaotic.
Roughly 50 people were arrested as a result. According to Sky News, arrests were primarily for public order violations. Three officers were also injured during the day's events. At one point in the evening, a police car was set on fire, with some demonstrators standing around it, before police finally extinguished the blaze. Smoke devices were also deployed in London.
Comment: In Washington DC, protesters gave out money, food and hugs to the homeless:
In London, 3 officers were injured and a police car was set on fire. There were also dozens of arrests for 'public order violations'.
Below is video from Seattle where a few hundred protesters took to the streets and were stalked by police on bikes.
Here's another image from Washington, DC:
Comment: The surface reforms and new inspirational perspectives, for the most part, appear as accommodational restrooms. Other topics, such as circumcision, name-changing, gender-neutral language are areas less defined. Reformed Judaism (1.5M) represents less than 2% of the US population, but more than one-third of US Jewish ideology. The Union of Reform Judaism passed a resolution affirming the rights of gays and lesbians in 1977.