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  • It's definitely true. For instance, you can't just walk onto the Senate floor and protest.

    You might be exercising your first amendment right to protest, and the US Capitol is a public building, but that doesn't mean it's illegal to throw you out.

    And honestly, if this was a maga person protesting at a Democrat town hall, would anyone here jump to their defense that they were exercising their right to protest?

    If someone is interrupting an event, it's perfectly reasonable for them to be removed from that event. The removal and the police brutality are two separate conversations.

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  • Just because the property is public doesn't mean the public can do whatever they want in it. People who are interrupting whatever is going on can definitely be removed from the proceedings.

    And cops use violence with impunity, so legalities are moot there.

    This is not an endorsement of what happened, just the legal justification for removing a person from an event at a public building.