Back in the late 60s and early 70s; ALL POLITICIANS were NOT TO BE TRUSTED! Democrat or Republican meant nothing...if he was a politician...he couldn't be trusted. This was "one" (one of many) reasons for young people rebelling back in those days...the war...race riots...college campus riots...draft riots...assassinations...YOUTH REBELLED! Today, people have simply forgotten the past, and are simply repeating history. Today's people are thinking, "Democrat..."; "Republican...", etc. Today is today. Back then, it was "he's a politician..."
Yippies carried out demonstrations in the streets outside the 1968 Democratic Convention. Chicago Police attacked them. Anti-War Protesters were trying to influence the Democratic Convention to choose a Peace Candidate to end the war in Vietnam which had escalated rapidly under LBJ.
See website: Anti-war
Thomas Jefferson was an anti-federalist. He was a democratic republican therefore he couldn't be a federalist.
Washington Monument.
Burning one's draft card.
Hubert Humphrey was nominated in 1968 at the Chicago Convention that provoked much protest from anti-war activists.
The massive protests in 1968 were primarily associated with the Democratic National Convention held in Chicago. Thousands of anti-Vietnam War demonstrators, civil rights activists, and counterculture participants gathered to protest the U.S. government's policies and the convention's nomination of Hubert Humphrey. The protests escalated into violent clashes with police, drawing national attention and highlighting the deep divisions in American society during that period. This event significantly impacted public perception of the Democratic Party and the broader anti-war movement.
Anti-Imperialist National Democratic Front was created in 1969.
Democratic Republicans
Kent State
Anti-War/Anti-Draft protests and riots. The "draft" fed the anti-war protests.
A protest against a government or the government's ideas.
They were all such a daily routine thing during those times; simply "Anti-war protest".
Yippies carried out demonstrations in the streets outside the 1968 Democratic Convention. Chicago Police attacked them. Anti-War Protesters were trying to influence the Democratic Convention to choose a Peace Candidate to end the war in Vietnam which had escalated rapidly under LBJ.
Nope
No, the word 'anti-war' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun: anti-war protest, anti-war movement, anti-war sentiment, etc.
You might attend an anti-slavery rally or protest advocating for the abolition of slavery.