How Black Lives Matter reached every corner of America https://t.co/6waroYIarl
— Mara Gay (@MaraGay) June 13, 2020
The map of cities with BLM demonstrations now passes 2800 https://t.co/x1PV3VHztz
— James Fallows (@JamesFallows) June 10, 2020
And a report from one of them, the famed Punxsutawney PA:
https://t.co/2ypMZPChBL
I've only been alive for 37 yrs but dare I say that these anti-racism protests are an unprecedented show of global solidarity. They underscore that though racism may take different forms depending on where you live, it infects every corner of the world. https://t.co/IYW5hjF96Q
— John Eligon (@jeligon) June 7, 2020
Something happening here…
— Claire McCaskill (@clairecmc) June 7, 2020
This is Maryville,MO. Population around 12,000. NW Missouri in the middle of corn and bean land. Wow. Very moving to me. https://t.co/sJjuLRNUGQ
hazard kentucky https://t.co/xk75Md3my9
— Campbell Robertson (@campbellnyt) June 7, 2020
#BlackLivesMattter protest in Alliance, Nebraska. Population is less than 9,000. https://t.co/MoTHBEHmMJ
— Arielle Zionts (@Ajzionts) June 7, 2020
Just a few of the towns in today's @annehelen Twitter thread of protests in smaller communities across USA:
— Brian Stelter (@brianstelter) June 6, 2020
Shawnee, KN
Henderson, KY
Vidor, TX
Rochester, NY
LaGrange, IL
Woodstock, VA
Kent, OH
Provo, UT
Bristol, PA
Lewiston, ID
Alpine, TX
Wasau, WI
Troutdale, OR
Norman, OK
wow. vidor. https://t.co/oOL37lfKq5
— Campbell Robertson (@campbellnyt) June 6, 2020
The patterns, they are a shifting. See https://t.co/4m4MF6VL8k and https://t.co/1c3Z7wW2tg
— Daniel W. Drezner (@dandrezner) June 6, 2020
I grew up in rural KS, and a HS friend now lives in Winfield, KS.
— Meg Guliford (@mkguliford) June 6, 2020
My soul was happy to see her pics from #BLM protest she attended. It's not many people, but it takes tremendous courage to protest racial injustice in such small numbers in the face of (likely) deep opposition. pic.twitter.com/yQ1KBmVHwz
A #BlackLivesMatter march in Harvard, Nebraska—a town with fewer than 1,000 residents and exactly one African American man. Something is, indeed, happening in America and not just in big cities. (H/t @redcloud_scribe)https://t.co/yxVetlkCNQ
— Ted Genoways (@TedGenoways) June 6, 2020
George Floyd was killed in America. His death has sparked a global movement. https://t.co/7bIhFXpede pic.twitter.com/2MrUPVjIkJ
— Yahoo News (@YahooNews) June 11, 2020