Research on Hong Kong's protesters: mostly "young, educated, middle-class."https://twitter.com/alanwongw/status/1161276793627635712 …
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A sea of umbrellas, walking to Kwun Tong.
(Hong Kong’s public transportation authority has shut down metro stations around the protests area).pic.twitter.com/HiV2ix0y0n
Large march has started along the path to these “smart” lampposts—surveillance poles, basically. MTR shut down has meant many people have walked to here. #HongKongProtestshttps://twitter.com/maryhui/status/1165146776321454080 …
The protesters have been dispersed. This US-made tear gas canister is what the Hong Kong police have been throwing at the #HongKongProtesters. I’ve see this same brand, Pennsylvania based “nonlethal technologies” in many countries around the world.pic.twitter.com/pGzr95t2FC
The protesters dispersed and reassembled, and now a huge police parade moved in. (There is maybe a hundred police vehicles right behind that line. But the protesters mostly or completely left, let’s say, in a bit of a hurry.)pic.twitter.com/G7kqCl6qc3
There is a very very heavy police presence still around Kowloon Bay. Not a quiet night. Roads closed, MTR shut down.pic.twitter.com/OffMwD7NIW
NYT article about tear gas use and misuse by Hong Kong police—written before today’s protests and the latest round of tear gas. Below is a canister I photographed from today’s protests, canister made in the USA. https://twitter.com/nytimes/status/1163110841375477761 …pic.twitter.com/YSTL53TzdD
Interesting product to promote on the #antiELAB hashtag but better than state-sponsored misinformation, I guess.
pic.twitter.com/FXOyq7c0cS
A reminder of yesterday, ~200,000 person human chain in Hong Kong on the 30th anniversary of the historic Baltic one. I walked it for an hour, saw no gaps.https://twitter.com/lokinhei/status/1164949408766541824 …
This Saturday's protest march has been banned. (Same organizers as the one two weeks ago. Organizers say it was 1.7 million—ended without incident). Now the organizer was attacked. Closing of lawful means of protest, bringing in extrajudicial punishment. https://twitter.com/tomgrundy/status/1166979856753553408 …
This was already one country, 1.5 systems and it’s rapidly going down to one country, 1.25 systems. Hong Kong was never fully democratic, but residents are used to having protest as a key means of political expression. So far, it’s been effectively useless and now maybe banned.
Tonight in Hong Kong, there are simultaneous screenings of Winter of Fire—a documentary about Ukraine’s 2013-14 Euromaidan protests. Pop-up projectors. They’ve been doing this for weeks. HongKongers are searching for something—anything—that works to express their political will.pic.twitter.com/7aJcYDNM1u
Yes, the country whose president may have just suggested nuking hurricanes is so omnipotent and well-organized that it can somehow make millions of people across the ocean risk their lives to demand true democracy—the most basic demand for centuries now. https://twitter.com/fartron/status/1167073897843515398 …
Here’s the screenshot of the tweet the coward claiming Hong Kong’s brave protesters are just a “state department op” that he deleted. (And the next one he will likely delete). The deep racism of such claims is infuriating. HongKongers are risking everything for a freer future.pic.twitter.com/cqpJ9Xh3tx
These idiots who think the state department can “make” millions risk everything probably could not manage to run, say, a coffee shop with two employees. But they’re so racist that they believe in remote magic wands that work especially on nonwhite people, and by the millions.pic.twitter.com/f4HRbMCHbg
Maybe the state department tries to interfere here and there. Who cares? The idea that millions demand democracy at the behest of some foreign government (at great personal risk!) is deeply deeply racist. The fight for freedom is no culture’s monopoly. https://twitter.com/a_bad_sign/status/1167083357093670914 …pic.twitter.com/aKlGp3LLXe
People in my mentions still claiming that Hong Kong protests (and Ukraine!) were state department ops or somehow CIA-orchestrated etc!! The level of racism behind that assumption that non-white/non-Western Europe people can't have their own movements for freedom is mind-blowing.
Many high-profile activists were arrested in Hong Kong today. But none are key organizers because this movement doesn't work like that. Reminded me of how the Egyptian regime tried to get @Ghonim to retract some demands. He tried to explain he couldn't, even if he had wanted to.pic.twitter.com/A3yYrF7GFM
There’s a gathering tonight in Hong Kong about the effects of tear gas on... pets. So many residential areas have been tear gassed repeatedly that this is now an issue.
(Also the quality of protest art...)pic.twitter.com/esDSDAlmfH
I’ve seen this at multiple night protests in Hong Kong. People turn on their phone flashlight—sometimes explicitly for drone or overhead photos. (This one is at the rally about the effects of tear gas on pets).pic.twitter.com/yJoE1m8xJ2
Today’s march in Hong Kong had been banned, but thousands showed anyway up for what has been called as a “prayer gathering”—which does not necessarily need a permit. #HongKongProtestspic.twitter.com/ENeKvQrEJd
It’s been hours. There have been massive downpours. They are still marching.pic.twitter.com/yICZPaVhRv
13th week, and HongKongers are still in the streets. The protesters have just been tear gassed on Harcourt Road—the site of original Umbrella movement. A helicopter is hovering over. A political matter has been delegated to police methods and it’s not working. #HongKongProtestspic.twitter.com/cqJ9FUQNMP
Police threw a lot of tear gas and the protesters threw it back. Barricades moved back and forth. Now a police line about to forward. Facing them is a banner the protesters left behind. It says, simply, “We want democracy.” On the wall, “you can’t kill us all.” #HongKongProtestspic.twitter.com/WKBnBtJilg
It’s a small miracle and no small blessing that there have yet been no fatalities in the #HongKongProtests. It’s a terrible idea to outsource a political question to the police force. Hasn’t worked so far. 13 weeks and counting.https://twitter.com/natashakhanhk/status/1167756483645210631 …
It’s been like this all day. I just saw a lot of random people coughing and being helped to wash their eyes. Tear gas everywhere. 
#HongKongProtestspic.twitter.com/Tey2WYiFtL
I can’t get a good picture but the protesters haven’t dispersed. It’s been almost 10 hours of teargas, foam bullets, arrests... It sometimes looks like a scene out of Blade Runner. #HongKongProtests.pic.twitter.com/1KiKWfGkad
Does anyone have info on the blue dye water cannon used today by the Hong Kong police? I’ve seen it spiked with pepper spray in other places and lots of people are reporting pain and irritation after being sprayed. (Protesters left wipes and change of clothes at MTR entrance).pic.twitter.com/nlatPIikzA
Yesterday night, Hong Kong police stormed several subway stations after the protests. Videos emerging have been showing passengers being beaten and pepper sprayed in confined spaces. https://twitter.com/ariahychen/status/1167996538762625027 …
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