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Dozens of protesters overtook two blocks of El Camino Real mid-day Saturday, including the traffic island, to protest aggressive Immigration and Customs Enforcement actions and President Trump’s agenda. Photo by Miranda de Moraes.

For just shy of two hours, a blaring orchestra of honks reverberated down El Camino Real mid-day Saturday, when protesters occupied close to two blocks of the busy street.

Even spilling onto the traffic island, the demonstrators, around 70 of them, took over the town from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., occupying all four corners of the El Camino Real and Jefferson Ave. intersection in protest of President Trump’s agenda. Most signs were dedicated to rejecting the president’s ambitious utilization of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, including its killing of an American citizen this week.

A white mother of three, Renee Nicole Good, 37, was fatally shot in her car by Immigration and Customs Enforcement on Wednesday in Minneapolis, blocks away from the site of the 2020 murder of George Floyd by a police officer.

Signs at the demonstration like “Trust your eyes, not lies!” refer to the controversy spun up over whether Good was unlawfully murdered by a federal agent, or if the agent’s gunshot was a legitimate means of his own self-defense. Camera footage from an agent’s cellphone made publicly available Friday includes Good’s last words before the agent killed her — “That’s fine dude, I’m not mad at you” — which ICE critics argue demonstrates Good’s innocence.

Demonstrators walked the crosswalk back and forth, showcasing their homemade signs rejecting the president. Photo by Miranda de Moraes.

Among the dozens of protesters was Ron Hess, 79, a Redwood City resident who said he was born in 1946.

“I’ve never seen anything like it in my lifetime,” Hess said. “After 250 years of democracy… they really think they can just take that away from the American people, it’s just stunning.”

He can’t recall attending any protests before Trump’s second term, in part because he was busy raising a family, but also because he believes the stakes have escalated.

“It’s up to us older people who are still paying attention to protect our grandchildren,” the 79-year-old resident said.

The majority of the attendees did have white hair, which was what the protest organizer, JoAnn Loulan of Portola Valley, predicted. She told this news organization on Friday that the demographic at many of her protests are “basically old, white people who aren’t afraid of being arrested.”

Josh Levinson, a Redwood City dad, and his three children. Photo by Miranda de Moraes.

Even so, Josh Levinson, a Redwood City dad of three, attended the protest with his children because he wants his kids to understand that “if you ignore what’s happening, eventually it will come for you.”

“It just feels like we’re going down the toilet bowl,” Levinson said.

Regardless of the demonstrator demographics, folks of all ages and races, who drove everything from two-seater Smart cars to hefty semi-trucks, honked with gusto down El Camion Real in solidarity with the protesters.

Indivisible Mid-Peninsula, a local group dedicated to progressive, grassroots activism, was the organization responsible for coordinating the Saturday protest and will have many more slated for this month.

A “No War on Venezuela!” event, for one, will be held on Saturday, Jan. 17 from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at 1250 Jefferson Ave., as part of Global Day of Action, when other resistors across the country will speak out against the president. The demonstration is based on President Trump’s polarizing direction on Jan. 3 to capture the president of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro, in his stated interest to capitalize on the country’s rich oil reserves and address alleged narco-trafficking national threats.

Concerned that we’re “already in fascism,” Leslie McNeil, 70, said she’s not close to backing down. The Palo Alto resident who came out to Redwood City Saturday is planning to attend a protest outside of the headquarters of Palantir Technologies Inc., a powerful data analytics company that partners with the U.S. government and military. Organized by the nonprofit Women’s March, the “No Tech for ICE” protest will be held on Jan. 20 from 2 to 5 p.m. at 100 Hamilton Ave. in Palo Alto.

A candlelight vigil in memory of Good, hosted by Indivisible’s Palo Alto unit, will be held Sunday, Jan. 11, from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at King Plaza at the Palo Alto City Hall. For more information, visit this link.

Countless upside-down American flags peppered El Camino Real on Saturday, conveying civic disapproval of the country’s administration and systems. Photo by Miranda de Moraes.

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Miranda de Moraes is a Brazilian-American So-Cal native, who earned her bachelor's at U.C. Santa Barbara and master's at Columbia Journalism School. She’s reported up and down the coast of California...

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1 Comment

  1. This is a weirdly biased article with ageist comments. Was the author actually at the event? rwc pulse should probably vet articles before publishing.

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