德克萨斯州部署国民警卫队,为周末抗议做准备
Texas Prepares For Weekend Protests With National Guard Deployment

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/texas-prepares-weekend-protests-national-guard-deployment

德克萨斯州州长格雷格·阿博特正在全州部署超过5000名国民警卫队士兵和2000名州警,以应对预计将会发生的针对联邦移民突袭行动的大规模抗议活动。 此举是在洛杉矶和德克萨斯州发生示威活动之后做出的,其中奥斯汀的一些抗议活动导致了逮捕和催泪瓦斯的施放。阿博特强调要采取“零容忍”态度对待暴力行为,他表示和平抗议是合法的,但对人员或财产造成损害将导致逮捕。 州长发言人表示,此次部署旨在防止类似于加利福尼亚州发生的骚乱。由多个团体组织的众多“反国王”(No Kings)抗议活动计划在德克萨斯州各地举行,这些团体抗议特朗普总统的移民执法政策。执法机构正在为此做准备,哈里斯县警长办公室正在努力确保公共安全。奥斯汀市长支持和平抗议,但告诫不要进行破坏行为,以免加剧局势。此举与特朗普总统未经加利福尼亚州州长同意而将国民警卫队部署到洛杉矶的具有争议的举动如出一辙。抗议活动组织者呼吁保持冷静,同时挑战政府的策略。

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原文

Governor Greg Abbott of Texas said on Thursday that more than 5,000 Texas National Guard troops and 2,000 state troopers would be deployed across the state in anticipation of widespread protests against federal immigration raids, intensifying a week of mounting political tensions over immigration enforcement and civil unrest.

Sergio Martínez-Beltrán/The Texas Newsroom

The announcement follows demonstrations that erupted last week in Los Angeles and have since spread nationwide. In Texas, protests have already led to clashes with law enforcement. On Monday, a march through downtown Austin resulted in the arrest of thirteen people after police deployed tear gas to disperse a portion of the crowd that refused to leave. In San Antonio, where National Guard troops were already present on Wednesday, protests remained peaceful and ended without incident, according to the San Antonio Express-News.

Peaceful protest is legal. Harming a person or property is illegal & will lead to arrest,” Governor Abbott wrote in a social media post earlier in the week, underscoring the state’s zero-tolerance approach to any form of violence or property destruction. While Abbott did not specify which cities would receive troop deployments, his office said Guard members are “on standby in areas where mass demonstrations are planned.”

Andrew Mahaleris, a spokesperson for the governor, framed the move as a preemptive measure to prevent the sort of unrest seen in California. “Peaceful protests are part of the fabric of our nation, but Texas will not tolerate the lawlessness we have seen in Los Angeles,” he said.

More than two dozen “No Kings” protests are scheduled across Texas this weekend in cities including Houston, Austin, Lubbock, and Longview. Organized by progressive coalitions such as 50501 and Indivisible, the events are designed to protest what participants describe as President Trump’s increasingly authoritarian approach to immigration enforcement.

Additional demonstrations are also expected. Women’s March has called for a Saturday event titled “Kick Out the Clowns,” and FIEL, or Immigrant Families and Students in the Fight, is organizing a “Chant Down the Walls” protest in Houston on Friday.

Law enforcement agencies across Texas are preparing for the wave of activism. The Harris County Sheriff’s Office said it is working closely with local safety partners to ensure the demonstrations do not threaten public safety.

Harris County has a long history of people exercising their right to protest peacefully while respecting opposing viewpoints, and I fully expect Saturday’s demonstrations to continue that legacy,” Sheriff Ed Gonzalez said.

Austin Mayor Kirk Watson, a Democrat, offered a note of support for peaceful protest but warned against destruction. “Much of what we see out of Washington is to create fear and chaos — we should not play into these politics of fear,” he said. “Adding to the chaos — through destruction of property, hurting other people, including police officers, or otherwise — adds to the problems for those people being targeted while empowering those in Washington who want more pain and chaos.”

The deployment of state troops in Texas follows a contentious decision by President Trump over the weekend to send 2,000 National Guard troops to Los Angeles without the consent of California Governor Gavin Newsom, who denounced the move as “theatrics over public safety.” California’s state government has since filed suit against the administration, calling the action an “unprecedented usurpation of state authority and resources.”

As Texas braces for the weekend, officials remain wary of potential unrest — and protest organizers are urging calm, even as they prepare to challenge what they see as increasingly aggressive government tactics.

“There are no kings in a democracy,” said a spokesperson for one of the protest coalitions. “This is about holding power accountable — not provoking violence, but standing firm.”

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