Trump greeted by cheers, some boos and protests at college football’s biggest game

The following article by Sonam Vashi and Marwa Eltagouri was posted on the Washington Post website January 8, 2018:

Demonstrators protested in Atlanta as president Trump arrived to the city to attend a college football championship game. (AP)

ATLANTA — President Trump was greeted by a roar of cheers and a smattering of boos as he stepped onto the field Monday night for the biggest game in college football, while activist groups demonstrated a president who has used sports to incite political battles.

Hours before, Trump, speaking to a group of farmers and ranchers in Nashville, again criticized athletes who do not stand for the national anthem.

“There’s plenty of space for people to express their views and to protest, but we love our flag and we love our anthem and we want to keep it that way,” he told the annual gathering of the Farm Bureau.

At the national championship game between the University of Georgia and the University of Alabama at Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Trump stood for the national anthem, and then he left to take his seat.

The Atlanta branch of the NAACP on Monday afternoon had encouraged those going to the game to wear white and wave white towels if they disagreed with Trump’s policies and statements, a move meant to mock conservatives who sometimes call liberals “snowflakes.” The organization also asked people to tweet during the game about the alleged falsehoods told by the president during his first year in office.

NAACP Atlanta did not plan any sort of demonstration aside from the tweetstorm, chapter president Richard Rose said, and did not want to disrupt the game. The group protested policies and statements by the Trump administration it deems racist, such as Trump’s hesitance in condemning white nationalists and Attorney General Jeff Sessions’s rollback of Obama administration policies on civil rights issues, including criminal justice, policing and voting rights, Rose said.

“This is a demonstration for American principles, American rights, American safety,” Rose said.

FEB. 16 “We had a very smooth rollout of the travel ban. But we had a bad court. Got a bad decision.” (The rollout was chaotic.) @realDonaldTrump

Lie 4: “I wasn’t a fan of Iraq. I didn’t want to go into Iraq.” https://www.buzzfeed.com/andrewkaczynski/in-2002-donald-trump-said-he-supported-invading-iraq-on-the  CC @buzzfeed

In 2002, Donald Trump Said He Supported Invading Iraq

“Are you for invading Iraq?” Howard Stern asked him, and Trump answered, “Yeah, I guess so.”

buzzfeed.com

Lie 6 “Obamacare covers very few people — and remember, deduct from the number all of the people that had great health care that they loved that was taken away from them — it was taken away from them.” (Obamacare increased coverage by a net of about 20 million.)

A second group, Refuse Fascism and Refuse Fascism ATL, held a protest outside CNN’s world headquarters nearby to support the athletes Trump has criticized for kneeling during the national anthem to protest social injustice and police brutality. As of 7 p.m., about 30 people marched in the rain, some holding signs that read “Keep your tiny hands off my button,” and “The City of Atlanta + Cobb County Hates Trump.”

Join Us — Against Trump at the National Championship Game – “Donald Trump is a chump.” – Kendrick Lamar. Mon., 1/8, 6-9 pm. Meet at CNN Center, corner of Marietta St. & Centennial Olympic Park Dr. – https://www.facebook.com/events/1538979832851212/ 

One protester, Katrina Griessman, said she was upset that Trump decided to attend “this particular, sacred, Georgia-Alabama game.”

“Everybody is so pumped up about the game, and he’s trying to take attention away,” she said.

View the post here.