It’s a Sunday afternoon like no other in New York. Along the 14e Street, one of Manhattan’s main thoroughfares, workers are at work putting up protective panels in front of store windows, as if a hurricane was about to strike. In fact, they are preparing them for another night of clashes between demonstrators and the police. In the evening, shop windows will be broken, articles stolen and garbage cans set on fire.
Since the death of George Floyd, this black man killed by a white policeman who kept his knee on his neck during his inter …
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