Saturday 20 November 2021

Deliveryman Distracts, Shoots Two Armed Robbers

 

Deliveryman Distracts, Shoots Two Armed Robbers


A deliveryman in Philadelphia’s Mayfair neighborhood shot two alleged armed robbers Saturday after distracting them by telling them the money was in his car.

WPVI reports that the deliveryman had dropped off something at his own home at approximately 12:15 a.m. Saturday when alleged “armed teens” confronted him and demanded his money.

The deliveryman told them he kept the money in the car, and the teens turned their attention to the vehicle. As they did, the deliveryman pulled his own gun and opened fire, shooting two of them.

A third teen fled the scene.

NBC 10 notes that the two wounded teens were taken to the hospital and listed as critical.

The deliveryman is a concealed carry permit holder.

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2021/11/20/deliveryman-distracts-shoots-two-armed-robbers/

Leaked Audio Reveals How California Teachers Recruit Kids Into LGBTQ Clubs

 

Leaked Audio Reveals How California Teachers Recruit Kids Into LGBTQ Clubs

 
November 20, 2021 Updated: November 20, 2021


A student walks on the campus of a school in Temecula, Calif., on March 23, 2016

A leaked audio recording revealed California teachers mocking parents over concerns about homosexual and transgender indoctrination at school, said a source who attended a recent teachers union conference in Palm Springs.

The recording, obtained by The Epoch Times, captured two seventh-grade teachers, Kelly Baraki and Lori Caldeira from Buena Vista Middle School in Salinas, Calif., telling other teachers how to recruit students into LGBTQ clubs, also known as “Gay-Straight Alliance” (GSA) clubs, at school.

“It was horrifying to listen to not just one teacher but really all of the teachers in all of these seminars, excoriating parents,” said the source, who goes by the pseudonym Rebecca Murphy.

Murphy attended the California Teachers Association (CTA) conference in late October. She told The Epoch Times the teachers “mocked” parents for their concerns, and suggested they know better than parents about what’s best for their children.

“They laughed at the parents,” Murphy said.

The sold-out CTA conference, billed as the “2021 LGBTQ+ Issues Conference, Beyond the Binary: Identity & Imagining Possibilities,” was held Oct. 29 to 31.

The CTA has hosted similar “Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity” (SOGI) professional development training for at least the last two years, according to an event notice posted on the United Teachers of Los Angeles (UTLA) website, which asks teachers: “Do you have the courage to create a safe environment that fosters bravery to explore sexual orientation, gender identity and expressions?”

However, according to Murphy, the purpose of conference in Palm Springs appeared to be about teachers showing other teachers how to undermine the authority of parents and school administrators and conceal activities related to gender inclusion and sexual orientation from them.

The three classes Murphy attended were designed to recruit middle school students to GSA clubs, she said.

“The overarching theme of the classes that I attended were California Teachers instructing other teachers on how to sneak in the LGBTQ+ curriculum in a manner that does not alert parents,” Murphy said.

Caldeira and Baraki led a workshop called “How we run a ‘GSA’ in Conservative Communities,” and they described the obstacles they faced as activist teachers in concealing the activities of these clubs from parents.

In the audio clip, Caldeira advised teachers who lead LGBTQ clubs to maintain an air of plausible deniability so they can play dumb if they are questioned by parents.

“Because we are not official, we have no club rosters. We keep no records,” said Caldeira, who is also an LGBTQ club leader. “In fact, sometimes we don’t really want to keep records because if parents get upset that their kids are coming? We’re like, ‘Yeah, I don’t know. Maybe they came?’ You know, we would never want a kid to get in trouble for attending if their parents are upset.”

Baraki backed up Caldeira’s advice, suggesting activist teachers to disguise the nature of GSA clubs by calling them something less obvious. Baraki provided an example of this deception, pointing out she avoided naming her LGBTQ club a GSA. Instead, she called it the “Equity Club” and later changed the name to the “You Be You” club.

The teachers bragged about spying on students’ online searches and activity as well as eavesdropping on their conversations to identify and recruit sixth-grade students into these LGBTQ clubs whose membership rolls are kept hidden from parents.

They suggested that parents who refuse to call their child by pronouns of the child’s choosing should be arrested and charged with child abuse, Murphy said.

Buena Vista Middle School falls under the jurisdiction of the Spreckels Union School District (SUSD). Another nearby district, Salinas Union High School District (SUHSD) has been a center of controversy over its mandatory ninth grade ethnic studies program, which teaches elements of critical race theory.

SUSD Board President Steve McDougall, Superintendent Eric Tarallo, and school board members did not respond to Epoch Times inquiries about the leaked audio. Neither did Caldeira and Baraki.

Anti-Bullying Presentation

Caldeira also discussed a yearly anti-bullying presentation she provides to students along with Baraki, and she said LGBTQ issues were not the only topics they discussed.

“We also covered religious differences, race, cultural backgrounds, family status poverty—everything that is listed in the Parents’ Rights handbook.”

However, when the kids went home and talked to their parents about the presentation, the parents complained about the LGBTQ content. Baraki suggested a different strategy to avoid resistance from parents.

“Next year, we’re going to do just a little mind-trick on our sixth graders. They were last to go through this presentation and the gender stuff was the last thing we talked about. So next year, they’ll be going first with this presentation and the gender stuff will be the first thing they hear about. Hopefully to mitigate, you know, these kind of responses, right?” Baraki said.

Baraki ridiculed a parent who complained she hadn’t planned on having a conversation about sexual orientation and gender identity issues with her middle-schooler but was pushed into it by the school.

“I know, so sad, right? Sorry for you, you had to do something hard!” Baraki told her audience. “Honestly, your 12-year-old probably knew all that, right?”

When a principal suggested to another parent to enroll their child in a private school over the controversy, Caldeira said, “We count that as a win.”

Controlling Morning Announcements

Caldeira also spoke about how she controls morning announcements at the school.

“That’s another type of strategy I can give you,” she said. “I’m the one who controls the messaging. Everybody says, ‘Oh, Ms. Caldeira, you’re so sweet, you volunteered to do that.’ Of course, I’m so sweet that I volunteered to do that, because then I control the information that goes out. And, for the first time this year, students have been allowed to put openly LGBT content into our morning announcement slides.”

She went on to boast about the students she recruited to help with the announcements.

“Three of the kids on the team, two of them are non-binary, and the other one is just very fluid in every way. She’s fabulous. So, it’s actually a nice group,” she said.

Caldeira pointed out more than once that she can’t be fired, and she thanked CTA for her tenure and for providing resources and tools.

“You can’t fire me for running a GSA,” she said. “You can be mad, but you can’t fire me for it.”

“CTA has made it very clear that they are devoted to human rights and equity,” she added.

Caldeira tells teachers, that she and Baraki have acted with “great integrity.”

“We never crossed a line,” she says. “We’ve wanted to, but we never have.”

School Response

After information about the leaked audio was made public this week, Supt. Tarallo, SUSD President McDougall and Kate Pagaran, the principal at Buena Vista Middle School, issued a letter Nov. 19 addressed to the “SUSD Community” that the “UBU You Be You” club has been suspended.

“Any future student clubs will be required to submit an outline of all activities and materials before being allowed to meet,” the letter states. “Student sign-in sheets will be maintained and parent/guardian permission slips will be sent home prior to a club holding a meeting.”

The letter states that “all messaging shared in the morning announcements” will be controlled and distributed by the principal, a practice that “will be in place permanently.”

“Teachers are prohibited from monitoring students’ online activity for any non-academic purpose.”

SUSD will follow state-approved standards and curriculum on all presentations involving “sensitive themes such as sexuality” and “materials of any sensitive themes will be shared with parents/guardians before being shown to students,” the letter states.

https://www.theepochtimes.com/mkt_breakingnews/leaked-audio-reveals-how-california-teachers-recruit-kids-into-lgbtq-clubs_4114896.html

Nan Khatai (Indian butter biscuits)

 

Nan Khatai (Indian butter biscuits)




Ingredients(9)

90 gchickpea flour
70 gsemolina
20 gflour — plain
cardomom — pinch, cinnamon powder
120 gbutter — unsalted, at room temperature
120 gsugar
1 Tbsalmonds — sliced
1 Tbspistachio nuts — sliced

Method:

Preheat the oven to 180°C and line an oven tray with parchment paper.

In a bowl sift together the gram flour, semolina, plain flour, baking powder and cardamom or cinnamon powder.

In a separate bowl cream together the butter and sugar until light and fluffy.

Add the dry ingredients to the butter mixture a little at a time and mix together thoroughly.

From the dough, break off ping pong sized chunks and roll into ball between your palms.

Flatten the biscuits slightly and cut criss-crosses in the top with a sharp knife.

In the middle of each biscuit place half a pistachio or almond.

Arrange the biscuits on the baking tray three fingers apart – they will expand and flatten in the heat of the oven.

Bake for 15 – 20 minutes until golden brown.

Remove the biscuits from oven and leave them to cool before picking up or they will break apart.

Serve with Masala Chai (Spiced Indian Tea).

https://www.food24.com/recipe/nan-khatai-indian-butter-biscuits/


Museums must not bow to the woke’s sanitised view of history

 

Museums must not bow to the woke’s sanitised view of history

Damian Wilson
Damian Wilson
is a UK journalist, ex-Fleet Street editor, financial industry consultant and political communications special advisor in the UK and EU.
Museums must not bow to the woke’s sanitised view of history
The British Museum is facing new calls from Greece to return the Elgin marbles to Athens. The dispute highlights the growing demand for artefacts to be returned to their original countries – a trend that distorts history horribly.

The way the Greek government tells it, there are four burning issues facing the people in the cradle of democracy: climate change, immigration, the coronavirus pandemic and the nagging insistence that the British Museum returns the Elgin marbles.

Surely, there are more important issues than what’s on display at one of London’s biggest tourist attractions? Apparently not, according to Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, who has reiterated his nation’s demands for the return of the artefacts at a meeting with UK PM Boris Johnson this week.

However, he’s not just stamping his feet and making wild demands; Mitsotakis has raised the prospect of sending some of ancient Greece’s most priceless treasures on a rotational tour to the UK. Those antiquities on offer could include the bronze mask of Agamemnon and a large statue of Zeus or Poseidon that would be expected to attract crowds by the thousands if they went on show in London.


Before we reach for the packing tape, it’s worth bearing in mind the line from Roman poet Virgil, who as far back as 19BC, reminded readers of his epic ‘Aeneid’ to “beware Greeks bearing gifts”. Not that I’m questioning their motives, of course, but if Britain agrees to the return, then it sets a dangerous precedent.They’re all ours for a crowd-pulling super-show if – and here’s the if – the British Museum will just return its collection of marbles (taken from the Parthenon by Thomas Bruce, the seventh Earl of Elgin, in the early 1800s) for permanent display in Athens.

There’s no doubt that the Greek PM is genuine in his desire to have the Elgin marbles returned. It would be a huge political win and lead to a public outpouring of celebration on par with Greece’s shock win in football’s 2004 European Championships. But it ain’t gonna happen.

Because what the Greeks choose to ignore is that the British Museum does actually own the marbles, having bought them from Lord Elgin. And no doubt, as is the way with museum curators, there is most probably a receipt tucked away at the back of a drawer in a dusty desk that can be waved in their faces if needed.

It might come to that. While Mitsotakis is eager to turn the restitution of the disputed artefacts into an inter-governmental conversation, BoJo has confirmed that as far as the UK is concerned, the discussion is one for the trustees of the British Museum. Which is one way of turning down the heat on the matter, but it also coincides with demands from Nigeria that the museum return its collection of Benin bronzes that were, it seems, looted from the country in the 19th century.

Only a cynic would suggest that the Greeks are fully aware of the Benin bronzes situation and the recently agreed return of one from Cambridge University and have chosen the timing of their latest claim to ramp up the pressure upon the British Museum. Coincidence, surely?

What they are choosing to ignore is the British Museum Act (BMA) 1963, which explicitly forbids restitution on most grounds unless in exceptional circumstances, such as looted Nazi treasure. This has turned out to be a handy and prescient piece of legislation to prevent claims for artefacts to be returned to their point of origin – which would empty not just the halls of the British Museum but other collections at the likes of South London’s Horniman Museum.


The UK government does seem to be offering some pushback on the woke concept that museums are places of shame, chock full of plunder from nations subjugated under former empires and ruled by colonial brutality.A High Court case in 2009 reinforced the powers of the BMA by determining the act could not be overridden by “moral obligation” but that hasn’t deterred the Greeks from playing the emotional card with personal appeals to BoJo to intervene, to which so far he has proved admirably resistant.

It could certainly make its case more forcefully, however, so that trustees of places such as the British Museum aren’t left exposed to the trolling of statue topplers and the mob who would prefer their own, self-serving sanitised view of history.

In the case of the Elgin marbles, the museum makes the case that every year around 6 million visitors to London have free access to view the 80-metre section of frieze that once adorned the Parthenon in Athens. Meanwhile in Greece, another 7 million tourists pay to see the 50 metre-long section of decorative frieze in the on-site museum. 

That’s a lot of people soaking up history from a true golden age thanks, in part, to the foresight of Thomas Bruce, who thought the artefacts worthy of a wider audience when he saw them back in the 19th century.

While the narrative around their removal from Greece and subsequent purchase by the British Museum may have changed over the years, there is no doubt that if they had been left among the ruins of the Acropolis high on the hill above Athens, fewer people would have been left slack-jawed at their beauty over the years.

The Greeks have made a generous offer in suggesting loaning treasures to the UK that have never left Greece in exchange for a permanent return of the Elgin marbles, but the British Museum’s response to PM Mitsotakis must be the same as earlier suitors: ‘Thanks, but no thanks.

https://www.rt.com/op-ed/540550-uk-greece-elgin-marbles-woke/

After the Trial: Some of the Riots in Democrat Cities

Protesters march in NYC, looting erupts in Chicago and a RIOT is declared in Portland after Kyle Rittenhouse acquittal: Senator Tom Cotton calls on Biden to APOLOGIZE for calling teen a 'white supremacist' before trial

  • Hundreds of people marched through downtown Brooklyn, New York, on Friday evening in one of several protests across the country following the acquittal of Kyle Rittenhouse
  • Protest in Portland, Oregon was declared a riot after people smashed windows and threw objects at the cops
  • Rittenhouse, 18, was found not guilty in the shootings of three people during a racial inequity protest in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on August 25, 2020
  • Those outraged by the verdict marched  and chanted 'no justice, no peace' but Kenosha remains quiet Friday
  • President Joe Biden called for peace, while the Wisconsin governor released a statement calling for calm 

Police in Portland were forced to declare a riot after protestors turned violent, clashing with officers and smashing windows as looting and protest erupted overnight in major cities following Kyle Rittenhouse acquittal.

Masses of people gathered coast-to-coast Friday night to decry Kyle Rittenhouse's acquittal in protests that reflected the divisiveness and anger stoked by the high-profile case. 

Hours after the verdict police in Portland were forced to declare a riot after about 200 protestors turned destructive, damaging the front gate of the Multnomah County Justice Center and clashing with officer.   

'Due to violent, destructive behavior by a significant part of the crowd, the gathering in downtown Portland is a RIOT. All participants are instructed to proceed away to the WEST,' the Portland Police Bureau wrote on Twitter.

A woman stands next to the spray painted message 'fascism is poison!' at the Justice Center in Downtown Portland on Friday

A woman stands next to the spray painted message 'fascism is poison!' at the Justice Center in Downtown Portland on Friday

A Portland police officer raised his weapon towards protestors in Downtown Portland rallying against the acquittal of Kyle Rittenhouse on Friday

A Portland police officer raised his weapon towards protestors in Downtown Portland rallying against the acquittal of Kyle Rittenhouse on Friday

A small trash fire was started near the Justice Center by protestors who were declared rioters by police after police said they became destructive and were told to clear the area

A small trash fire was started near the Justice Center by protestors who were declared rioters by police after police said they became destructive and were told to clear the area

Portland Police are equipped in riot gear as they square off with protestors who police said smashed windows and threw objects at police on Friday

Portland Police are equipped in riot gear as they square off with protestors who police said smashed windows and threw objects at police on Friday

According to police, rioters threw objects at officers, smashed the rear window of a police car as well as windows from the city print shop and spray-painted the justice center building with graffiti that read 'all cops are Kyles, no justice, no peace', FOX 12 reported.  

Protestors were warned they would be arrested and were subject to force if they remained in the area. 

In total, one person was arrested for a warrant and five citations and 17 warnings were issued, FOX 12reported.  

Rittenhouse, 18, was acquitted by jurors on all charges - two counts of homicide, one count of attempted homicide for wounding a third man, and two counts of recklessly endangering safety - after killing two people during protests marred by arson, rioting and looting on Aug. 25, 2020, in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

The high profile case has riled the nation and led to Republican senator Tom Cotton to call on President Joe Biden to publicly apologize to Rittenhouse for suggesting the teen was a white supremacist during his presidential campaign. 

Biden tweeted a video where he featured an image of Rittenhouse alongside footage of white supremacist groups. 

'Joe Biden needs to publicly apologize to Kyle Rittenhouse,' Cotton tweeted.

In Chicago looters broke into a Neiman Marcus and a Game Stop on the Southside as protest went on in the downtown area.  

FOX 32 reported that 15 males stormed into a Mag Mile Neiman Marcus store, stealing merchandise and escaping in three separate vehicles. 

In New York City, hundreds gathered outside the Barclays Center in Brooklyn to express their fury in the verdict as similar events unfolded across the nation.

Scores of people were seen marching through New York about 7 p.m. carrying signs that branded Rittenhouse as a 'racist killer' and the judicial system as biased.

'The message is that when you stand up for black liberation, when you stand up for black lives, no matter who you are you automatically become a target of the system,' Na-Lakan Masego, a protester, told CBS New York. 

Another speaker at the rally said the jury's verdict was a blow to the entire nation.

'By allowing Kyle Rittenhouse to walk away, this entire country – this government – has slapped us all in the face for the millionth time,' he told the crowd. 'We cannot allow them to continue treating us like we do not exist because they hurt us.' 

Mass protest broke out in downtown Chicago on Friday night following as police reported a Neiman Marcus was broken into

Mass protest broke out in downtown Chicago on Friday night following as police reported a Neiman Marcus was broken into 

A Chicago Game Stop in the city's South Side was vandalized the same night protestors took to the streets following Rittenhouse's acquittal

A Chicago Game Stop in the city's South Side was vandalized the same night protestors took to the streets following Rittenhouse's acquittal 

People throughout the nation gathered to protest Friday after a jury acquitted Kyle Rittenhouse of all charges related to him shooting and killing two people in Kenosha, Wisconsin, last year. Pictured: demonstrators protest against the Kyle Rittenhouse verdict at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York, on November 19

People throughout the nation gathered to protest Friday after a jury acquitted Kyle Rittenhouse of all charges related to him shooting and killing two people in Kenosha, Wisconsin, last year. Pictured: demonstrators protest against the Kyle Rittenhouse verdict at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York, on November 19

Dozens of people in Chicago gathered to oppose the verdict, with one man holding a sign that reads 'Kyle will kill again!'

Dozens of people in Chicago gathered to oppose the verdict, with one man holding a sign that reads 'Kyle will kill again!'

The Justice Center in Portland, Oregon, was painted with graffiti calling for it to be burned down after Kyle Rittenhouse was acquitted on all charges in court in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Friday

The Justice Center in Portland, Oregon, was painted with graffiti calling for it to be burned down after Kyle Rittenhouse was acquitted on all charges in court in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Friday

The Justice Center in Portland, Oregon, was also egged overnight on Friday as angry protesters took to the streets following a not-guilty verdict for Kyle Rittenhouse

The Justice Center in Portland, Oregon, was also egged overnight on Friday as angry protesters took to the streets following a not-guilty verdict for Kyle Rittenhouse 

Protesters marched through Boston, Massachusetts on Friday night holding a communist flag and a sign reading 'Death to Fascism' after Kyle Rittenhouse was acquitted on all charges

Protesters marched through Boston, Massachusetts on Friday night holding a communist flag and a sign reading 'Death to Fascism' after Kyle Rittenhouse was acquitted on all charges

Riot police were seen preparing to face off with protesters in Portland, Oregon, on Friday night as angry demonstrations over the acquittal of 18-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse went on through the night

Riot police were seen preparing to face off with protesters in Portland, Oregon, on Friday night as angry demonstrations over the acquittal of 18-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse went on through the night

The Justice Center in Portland, Oregon, is painted with graffiti after the full acquittal verdict of teenager Kyle Rittenhouse on Friday

The Justice Center in Portland, Oregon, is painted with graffiti after the full acquittal verdict of teenager Kyle Rittenhouse on Friday

Angry protesters marched through the center of Boston, Massachusetts after Kyle Rittenhouse was found not guilty by a jury in Kenosha

Angry protesters marched through the center of Boston, Massachusetts after Kyle Rittenhouse was found not guilty by a jury in Kenosha

Rittenhouse faced life in prison if convicted on the most serious charge for using an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle to kill two men - Anthony Huber and Joseph Rosenbaum - and wound a third, Gaige Grosskreutz. 

Kenosha itself remained largely quiet as the night wore on.

A crowd of around 40 people gathered at the courthouse but remained peaceful. Many carried signs, including one saying 'Welcome to AmeriKKKa.'

A middle-aged man, wearing a Stars and Stripes hat tried to provoke the crowd with a sign saying 'Rittenhouse Rules!' 

One young woman was arrested after she scrawled the words 'White supremacists are cowards' and 'Judge Schroeder must go' on the courthouse steps. She was referring to the trial's judge, Bruce Schroeder.

Police, who had largely stayed out of sight as the crowd grew, swooped in quickly and hauled her away. 

President Joe Biden has urged peace, saying the country must abide by the jury's verdict. 

Protesters carried plaques reading 'the KKK are in the courts' as protests broke out across the country after Kyle Rittenhouse was acquitted on two counts of homicide, one count of attempted homicide for wounding a third man, and two counts of recklessly endangering safety

Protesters carried plaques reading 'the KKK are in the courts' as protests broke out across the country after Kyle Rittenhouse was acquitted on two counts of homicide, one count of attempted homicide for wounding a third man, and two counts of recklessly endangering safety

Protesters set a fire in the streets of Portland, Oregon, during angry demonstrations after Kyle Rittenhouse, who killed two people during protests last year, was acquitted on all charges after arguing self defense

Protesters set a fire in the streets of Portland, Oregon, during angry demonstrations after Kyle Rittenhouse, who killed two people during protests last year, was acquitted on all charges after arguing self defense

Demonstrators hold placards during a protest against the Kyle Rittenhouse not-guilty verdict near the Barclays Center in New York on Friday evening

Demonstrators hold placards during a protest against the Kyle Rittenhouse not-guilty verdict near the Barclays Center in New York on Friday evening

Protesters called to 'Disarm, Defund, Abolish' the police at a protest in New York after Kyle Rittenhouse was found not guilty in a Kenosha court

Protesters called to 'Disarm, Defund, Abolish' the police at a protest in New York after Kyle Rittenhouse was found not guilty in a Kenosha court

Protesters march across the Brooklyn Bridge during a demonstration after Kyle Rittenhouse was found not guilty of two counts of homicide, one count of attempted homicide for wounding a third man, and two counts of recklessly endangering safety

Protesters march across the Brooklyn Bridge during a demonstration after Kyle Rittenhouse was found not guilty of two counts of homicide, one count of attempted homicide for wounding a third man, and two counts of recklessly endangering safety 

A demonstrator carrying a sign reading 'Rittenhouse is guilty, revolution, nothing less' took part in protesters in the West Village on Friday night

A demonstrator carrying a sign reading 'Rittenhouse is guilty, revolution, nothing less' took part in protesters in the West Village on Friday night

Scores of people were seen marching through New York throughout the evening carrying signs that branded Rittenhouse as a ‘racist killer’ and the judicial system as biased - one protester held a sign reading 'it's wrong and you know it'

Scores of people were seen marching through New York throughout the evening carrying signs that branded Rittenhouse as a 'racist killer' and the judicial system as biased - one protester held a sign reading 'it's wrong and you know it'

A woman reacts in anger after learning of the verdict outside the courthouse in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on November 19

A woman reacts in anger after learning of the verdict outside the courthouse in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on November 19

Pictured: protestors hold up signs in Los Angeles, California, following the acquittal

Pictured: protestors hold up signs in Los Angeles, California, following the acquittal

New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams said the issue revolves around the definition of self-defense, which Rittenhouse claimed to be acting in when he shot the three men.

'It also depends who has a gun, and it also depends on what they're actually fighting for,' he told CBS New York. 'It seems if you are trying to say something about Black Lives Matter or something about justice and equity, it doesn't have the same weight.'

Others chanted 'no justice, no peace,' and 'these racist cops have got to go' as they marched.

One event speaker called on attendees to continue participating in such events as long as it remains necessary, despite the approaching winter.

'Black lives are still mattering and they're still going to be shot down,' she said. 'And when we call on you to show up, I need you to f***ing show up.' 

In Los Angeles, the Coalition for Community Control Over the Police called on its supporters to step up in protest.

About 100 demonstrators marched through Oakland, California carrying signs that said 'Rittenhouse: Racist killer'

About 100 demonstrators marched through Oakland, California carrying signs that said 'Rittenhouse: Racist killer'

Business boarded up windows and police erected barricades ahead of Friday's protest in Oakland

Business boarded up windows and police erected barricades ahead of Friday's protest in Oakland

Rittenhouse faced life in prison if convicted on the most serious charge for using an AR-style semi-automatic rifle to kill two men and wound a third

Rittenhouse faced life in prison if convicted on the most serious charge for using an AR-style semi-automatic rifle to kill two men and wound a third

'Kyle walked,' the group said on its Facebook page.

It invited protesters to meet Friday afternoon at Florence and Normandie, where outraged masses gathered in 1992 after a jury acquitted four police officers in the brutal beating of Rodney King, sparking the LA riots.

'Bring water and mutual aid items if u want to continue that work.'

Dozens of people gathered at Chicago's Federal Plaza carrying signs that said 'reject racist vigilante terror' and chanting 'lock him up,' the Chicago Tribune reported.

'He is part of a whole fascist movement that is gaining ground around the country and it will not stop until we recognize it and take matters into our own hands nonviolently refusing to accept a racist America,' event speaker Jay Becker told attendees during the peaceful event.

Protests remained peaceful throughout the nation, including at the Brooklyn demonstration pictured above

Protests remained peaceful throughout the nation, including at the Brooklyn demonstration pictured above

Some shouted: 'The whole damn system is guilty as hell. Indict, convict, send Rittenhouse to jail.'

In Northern California, businesses were boarding their windows and police were erecting barricades to prepare for planned protests, ABC News 7 reported.

About 100 people participated in an Oakland protest 

Portland Police Bureau Chief Chuck Lovell said during a Friday press conference that it was 'reasonable' to expect protests in that city as well.

'Here in Portland especially, it's reasonable to expect there will be some type of reaction to the verdict,' Lovell told reporters. 'Like we've said many, many times, we're supportive of peaceful protest, people exercising their First Amendment rights.'

Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers also called for calm in a statement released Friday afternoon.

'I echo the calls of local Kenosha community leaders and join them in asking everyone who might choose to assemble and exercise their First Amendment rights in any community to please only do so safely and peacefully,' the governor said.

'We must have peace in Kenosha and our communities, and any efforts or actions aimed at sowing division are unwelcome in our state as they will only hinder that healing.'