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Despite worst fears and weather, this was the day Sydney took a stand for humanity

Despite the worst fears of the NSW police and Premier Chris Minns, the pro -Filestin protest on Sunday’s Port Bridge will be remembered as Sydney appeared collectively to beg for humanity. Protesting against a human crisis in Gaza entered the mainstream.

There is no other way to explain 90,000 people who stand – standing – for the end of the terrible wet air or for a large part of the occupied region – standing – standing – standing.

Nobody should suggest that the city has returned to our Jewish community. On the contrary, many ordinary Sydneysider felt strong enough to join the masses about the crisis in Gaza and to cross the city’s iconic turning point.

Of course, there would be malicious actors who participated in the big crowd. Likewise, the Palestinian Action group, led by serial protesters Josh Lees, could not get all the loans to attract tens of thousands of people to the city, but without them.

However, the weekly PAG protests and the police had the power to close through the CBD, which Minns had previously said that it was “a big eviction on the public wallet ,, and a mass solidarity against the worsening disaster in Gaza.

Despite the previous interpretations of the Protest by some of his own labor force deputies, he claimed that he was worried about the safety of thousands of people to land in the city (and will continue).

Carefully stressed that he was not against people who protested. But he opposed Sydney’s closing the “central artery”. He stamped his foot and said he had repeated the police protests.

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The NSW Police Commissioner asked the Supreme Court of the Supreme Court to prevent PAG’s application to protest the bridge. At that stage, 10,000 people were expected to emerge. The police failed.

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