In an interview on June 15 with RT news agency, The LaRouche Organization (TLO) President Diane Sare gave a stern review of the “No Kings Rallies” that took place the day before in more than 1,000 U.S. cities, in protest of U.S. President Donald Trump. Sare pointed to a dangerous political climate, dubious intentions of those sponsoring the demonstrations, and the danger that most Americans can get “played” because they aren’t currently thinking in the big terms required to shift the U.S. and the world into a new paradigm of peace and development.
Asked who she thinks is truly behind the well-organized demonstrations, Sare replied: “I don’t know. But I think people who participate in such rallies—and I’m going to be a little harsh now, because I think actually we’re in a very dangerous situation inside the United States, as evidenced by the assassination of the Minnesota lawmaker that just occurred—that people who participate are fools. These are rallies to have kings and have war.
Sare described a New York Times advertisement supporting the rallies: Funded by Walmart heiress Christy Walton, the ad demands that we should honor our commitments and stick by our allies [Zelenskyy? Netanyahu?—ed.], and it says nothing about stopping war, stopping weapons flowing around the country, or about defending freedom of speech.
Explicit threats to assassinate President Trump are also made at the demonstrations with the mafia code number “8647” displayed on signs. There is a very advanced process of an attempted coup d’état within the United States.
Asked about the intentions of Trump’s opponents who appear to have co-opted a movement of protests over concerns such as immigration, Sare said this is “a dangerous situation to emerge … because I think the deployment of this is on a much higher level. I think that the United States, and especially in our 250th year of our revolution against the British Empire against colonialism, will be the decisive factor as to whether a new paradigm—as typified by the BRICS, the Belt and Road Initiative, a respect for the sovereignty of every nation—whether that can come into being depends very much on which way the United States goes. And I’m afraid most Americans are not thinking that large. They don’t have a real sense of the purpose of our republic, so they don’t realize how we are being played. And they tend to get very sucked into local divisive issues.”