March Against Fear
The original March Against Fear was launched in Memphis, Tennessee on 6 June 1966 by American civil rights activist James Meredith and finished 220 miles away with 15,000 marchers (including Martin Luther King) in Jackson, Mississippi on 25 June 1966.[1]
Fifty years on and following the mass murder in Brussels another March Against Fear was planned for Sunday, 27 March 2016 to mark the Brussels terror attacks. However, the organisers said they had cancelled the event after the Belgian authorities asked them to do so because of security fears and to allow the police to concentrate their resources on the investigation into the attacks:
- “We understand this request. The security of our citizens is an absolute priority. We join the authorities in proposing a delay and ask people not to come this Sunday,” the organisers said in a statement on Easter Saturday.
On the Activist Post website, Bernie Suarez commented:
- "Is everyone taking note on how the false flag script is developing? Apparently staged attacks that take place in Europe are followed up by these weird 'anti-fear' marches which only serve to bring more attention to the false flag event and 'state-sponsored terrorism'. It’s all part of the terrorism propaganda, fear and social engineering that the state is exerting over the masses on their road to their new global order. The irony of seeing the March Against Fear cancelled by 'fear' itself only goes to show that there is nothing genuine and organic about this effort. It also shows us that the state, not the people, is controlling these events."[2]