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186 Sentences With "congregate in"

How to use congregate in in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "congregate in" and check conjugation/comparative form for "congregate in". Mastering all the usages of "congregate in" from sentence examples published by news publications.

As passengers, they tended to congregate in the front car.
Often, people congregate in the kitchen because they know the host.
In the U.S., hyperpartisan fringe groups congregate in Facebook's private areas.
No protest groups have announced plans to congregate in La Malbaie.
When it gets dry, hippos congregate in the remaining water and crap.
Firms congregate in industrial parks for the reliable electricity and decent roads.
Millennials congregate in TV rooms around the 20-storey, 550-person block.
We don't congregate in tax-free churches, but we are not alone.
"Twenty minutes!" someone shouts, and the band start to congregate in the wings.
Most of the time, women and men do not congregate in public together.
The CDC has been absolutely clear, people should not congregate in large groups.
Scientists can't figure why humpback whales are beginning to congregate in big numbers.
Animals that congregate in groups, like us, invariably share parasites and other infections.
Now, only four to five sex workers congregate in the area, according to Amy.
Then again, when two or more Starks congregate in one place, zero leave alive.
On any given night, around 1,800 people congregate in the Skid Row homeless encampment.
There, they congregate in caves like living shingles, and go dormant over the summer.
Employees congregate in common areas, where there are bowls of fruit and free snacks.
During cold weather, people typically spend more time indoors and congregate in smaller spaces.
Business visionaries and leaders congregate in clusters where the best tools for success already exist.
But the rest of the millennial generation doesn't live and congregate in one convenient location.
At any rate, they seem to congregate in relatively wealthy, elderly and less educated counties.
Doctors tend to congregate in large urban centers, where the patients, technology and money are.
The peace agreement obliged the FARC's 7,000 fighters to congregate in 26 camps across the country.
Before you go into the classrooms to take the test, you congregate in a big atrium.
"We wanted our family to be able to congregate in the living room," Dr. Mak said.
Another nontraditional event, Luftgekuhlt ("air-cooled"), saw hundreds of Porsche owners congregate in Hollywood last month.
Around the plaza's edges, tourists and locals congregate in cafes for morning cappuccini and evening aperitivi.
Servers wearing latex gloves deliver them to the car so crowds don't congregate in concession stands.
"The CDC has been absolutely clear, people should not congregate in large groups," she tweeted Monday.
Guests congregate in the lobby and other common areas to watch the storm and wait for updates.
"For a while we would all just kind of congregate in the parking lot," she told me.
Outdoor activities, like walking or running, are still allowed, as long as people don't congregate in crowds.
Officials will ask people to congregate in malls, libraries, and rec centers to minimize the cooling load.
Our freedom to safely congregate in these churches and exercise our religious beliefs must be jealously guarded.
A ton of eligible bachelors/bachelorettes congregate in and around McDonald's during the wee hours of the night.
Certain bacteria that congregate in your gut and nose are particularly good at fighting the flu, she notes.
But that strategy has had mixed results, as some senators continue to congregate in the chamber during votes.
Biohackers congregate in dedicated online networks, in Slack and WhatsApp groups — WeFast, for example, is for intermittent fasters.
These vehicles would congregate in centrally located plazas within Toyota's prototype city to sell goods or provide services.
People naturally congregate in the opening, standing and chatting, enjoying the cross breeze, surveying the activity within the Pavilion.
Big fish, seals, cormorants, gulls, and terns congregate in the tides, plucking out herring and mackerel as they move.
This means that many gay men and women, particularly youngsters, do not feel the need to congregate in one spot.
Tightly bundled trees congregate in matchbox-like alcoves, carving out moments of quick recession in these ambiguously sprawled out masses.
Case in point: Harajuku Day in Los Angeles, when fans of Harajuku's many subcultures congregate in their most decorative looks.
The cows have been kept away from some streams on the monument, where they naturally congregate in this arid environment.
To avoid the camera's stare, they sometimes congregate in a blind spot near the front of the classroom, they said.
They congregate in front of the parliament, which police, summoned from across the island, have blocked off with steel barriers.
The butterflies congregate in Mexico and then go through several generations as they fly north on their long migration to Canada.
It's steps from the beach, where crowds congregate in the summer, but its battlements are hidden by thickets of coastal vegetation.
We are urged to patronize our local businesses, owned by friends and neighbors, and yet not to congregate in large groups.
Reporters harangue him at all hours via e-mail or Twitter, and they sometimes congregate in the hallway outside his office.
Afrormosia, he finds, "will congregate in places that were open in the past," where space was available and light flooded in.
If Oculus owns the way you congregate in VR, it could use network effect to entrench itself as the premier virtual platform.
Shooting a video It's mid-afternoon and a small group of twenty-somethings has started to congregate in front of Wu's farm.
Think the Agora in ancient Athens, coffee houses in pre-Revolutionary Paris, and whatever parking lot goth teens congregate in after school.
Days later, after people continued to congregate in parks and outside cafes, the government announced a 15-day lockdown on March 18.
Members of the group congregate in a way that puts them in close contact with one another for long periods of time.
Here they meet traffickers who promise to get them to the Serbian border, or simply congregate in groups to try the crossing again.
In the earliest stages of a criminal case, defense attorneys and prosecutors will congregate in courtroom lobbies and attempt to resolve their cases.
Every year, sapeurs congregate in their finest outfits to pay their respects to the Niarcos—also known as "the Pope"—at his grave.
Republican legislators argue that any Wisconsin map will look biased, because Democratic voters tend to congregate in big cities like Milwaukee and Madison.
Now they congregate in alternative forums like 8chan, Discord, Gab or Telegram, where they trade in incredibly violent —even terroristic — language and threats.
"We'll all congregate in the same office where we saw him clinch the presidency in CNN," said Martinez Rosa, of United We Dream.
And while the Wests, Jenner and Kim's inner circle congregate in N.Y.C., oldest sister Kourtney Kardashian has joined Rob her on the West Coast.
Writers no longer need to congregate in one location to find community; Literary Twitter is a digital stand-in for the salons of old.
But for its detractors it's a nuisance that's led people to randomly congregate in residential areas and wander aimlessly in pursuit of imaginary creatures.
Once a year, rave crews from all over America congregate in dance music's homeland for a long weekend of spiritual renewal and self-indulgence.
Apparently millennials are people who congregate in Manhattan's SoHo neighborhood and also on Facebook, shop at the Gap and can be described as metrosexual.
On March 16, 2020 Trump urged Americans to halt most social activities for 15 days and not congregate in groups larger than 10 people.
This one, yes, there is a general recommendation or guideline from the federal government that we should not congregate in groups of 10 people.
For instance, we're now seeing fresh patterns of "reverse" segregation, in which poor, minority groups congregate in suburbs as whites move into thriving city centers.
With gaps of an hour or so between films, attendees congregate in the limited gathering space outside the theaters, all but forced to chit-chat.
The fish can grow up to 300 pounds and like to congregate in deep pools in front of waterfalls, like the Murchison Falls in Uganda.
It also now requires the estimated 7,000 remaining FARC members to congregate in special UN-monitored camps and hand over their weapons within six months.
Unlicensed traders tend to congregate in tourist hotspots near Barcelona's beaches, or line the streets hugging the marina, with its super yachts and private members' clubs.
It's much for people to stay within their comfort zones, on Facebook, or in these dispersed communities of the internet, rather than congregate in real life.
Freed from the grip of Islamic State (IS) jihadists, residents of Mosul, in Iraq, congregate in revamped cafés that have sprouted around the city's wrecked university.
This city is basically consumed with people who work for Amazon, Microsoft, and Google, and they tend to congregate in certain neighborhoods that I deliver in.
Egypt may be on the verge of a catastrophe, as Egyptians continue to congregate in coffee shops and mosques and argue that God will protect them.
You will also find a terrifying glimpse of what the drunkest and hungriest of humans are capable of when they congregate in a 24-hour diner.
Smokers often congregate in the small park across from the hospital where she worked as a lab manager, but something about him gave her the creeps.
Democrats will next congregate in a caucus meeting Thursday, where several of the proposed leadership changes and amendments related to them may come up for vote.
They said they expected that wildlife, pushed out by the fires, would congregate in what was now a garden of Eden among miles of decimated forest.
Authorities are allowing campaign groups and demonstrators to congregate in the towns of Hendaye and Irun, which straddle the France-Spain border 30 kilometers (18.6 miles) away.
The attacks would target "places where U.S. citizens congregate in South Africa, such as upscale shopping areas and malls in Johannesburg and Cape Town," the statement said.
By its sheer glut of permutations and international acts that still congregate in Austin, SXSW will always have an advantage over much of the major festival circuit.
And those other people tend to congregate in clubs, trapped in a selfish bubble that sees them flouting every term of the social contract with reckless abandon.
Members range from their mid-teens to their late 20s and come from all over New York City to congregate in the Bronx and practice their tricks.
And they've never been seen coordinating their efforts, he said — which is hard to distinguish from snakes just happening to congregate in the same space while hungry.
At a tactical level, civilians tend to congregate in larger numbers in public, which increases the chances of a devastating mass casualty attack, especially one using vehicles.
However, California's statewide "stay at home" order as of Thursday prompted the weekend's online matches to be scrapped with production staff unable to congregate in Los Angeles.
As is customary whenever young adults are made to congregate in person, Ms. Lawson and her friends occasionally pulled out their phones to find, well, anything interesting.
Google Hangouts is a great platform for friends or family who want to congregate in a digital group, as well as for companies to create virtual meetings.
And for centuries, segregated by age but never by background, all students congregate in the large meeting room for their 40 minutes of quiet reflection every week.
"Our freedom to safely congregate in these churches and exercise our religious beliefs must be jealously guarded," US Attorney David C. Joseph said in the Wednesday statement.
"A community center that's open in the evening, somewhere to study, play — just to congregate in general and having balance around them," Miller told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
While honeybees may congregate in insect cities of 100,000 bees or more, bumblebees live in the equivalent of small towns, with colonies of 50 to a few hundred.
The doc reveals the stories of the often lonely and marginalized (and now displaced) people who would congregate in Tzina Dizengoff square to watch the world go by.
Regardless of what corner of the internet they congregate in, incels often talk about different ways of "coping" with the unfortunate genetic hand they feel they've been dealt.
In other Kirk photos, unfazed commuters ready their bags for inspection at city checkpoints, or congregate in their Sunday best as they assist one another with milk distribution.
The stars are promenading down the red carpet past the thousands who daily congregate in front of the Palais, the concrete sprawl that serves as the festival's headquarters.
The cast congregate in this oasis of allotments and ramshackle studios in east London to participate in Cardboard Citizens, a theatre project founded in 1991 by Mr Jackson.
In the Georgian capital of Tbilisi, residents have redrawn the map and come up with innovative ways for locals to congregate in their ancient and fast-changing city.
Thanks to summer leagues, the best players congregate in April and July showcases in a few cities near large airports in front of coaches from across the country.
For its quarterly ceremonies, so-called "crypto officers" from all over the world congregate in one of the key management facilities, after passing layers of physical and digital security.
The cells stayed open, and we were free to go in and out and congregate in the central area or stroll on the catwalk that girded the whole tier.
Inmates have been housed in individual cells since ADX opened in 2125, but groups were initially allowed to congregate in an outdoor rec yard surrounded by high concrete walls.
She said about 15% of canceled bridal appointments at the brand's pop up store in San Francisco were a result of people being afraid to congregate in public spaces.
That alone felt like something special and grounding: to realize that we all still have the need to congregate in such large numbers to feel the vibrations of music.
I steer clear of books that offer big, overconfident diagnoses of an entire country or continent, written by the kind of "public intellectuals" who congregate in Davos every year.
And even without rigged electoral maps, demographic changes continue to give Republicans an edge: Because so many Democrats congregate in urban areas, their growing numbers translate into fewer electoral districts.
Casually attired millennials and Gen Zers congregate in open spaces, brainstorming about things like Apollo 11, the consumer-centric, data-driven innovation program named, no doubt, to inspire moonshot ideas.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo had a stark warning for young people who continue to congregate in bars, restaurants, and beaches as confirmed cases of coronavirus skyrocket around the country.
Polis also told the Department of Motor Vehicles to temporarily allow residents over 65 to renew their driver's licenses online rather than forcing them to "congregate" in public DMV offices.
" One of the most powerful tools to address the high-tech medical shortage is decidedly low-tech — getting people to stay home and not congregate in crowds, that "social distancing.
And the city's infrastructure was not adequately reinforced, he said, citing a lack of sidewalks and public transportation, as well as areas for citizens to congregate in the Italian tradition.
Starbucks has also said it wants to expand its "third place" idea: Starbucks has long said it is another place for customers to congregate, in addition to work and home.
Authorities have urged demonstrators to congregate in an official protest zone in a parking lot in La Malbaie, a town about 5 kilometers (3 miles) from the French-style castle resort.
CNN said Tuesday it would not provide the traditional media filing center for reporters or "spin room," where campaign surrogates and the media often congregate in close quarters after a debate.
For a few hours a week, they congregate in gyms, nightclubs and social clubs to perform under the guises of brutish and flamboyant personae, before returning to their otherwise routine lives.
The new rules also made it possible for the homeless to congregate in the downtown area and stay closer to resources and jobs, rather than in the woods, away from view.
A lot of the events we cover are decisions — a decision to reform health care or write a tweet — so we tend to congregate in the cities where decision makers live.
Because malassezia fungi love oil, they'll most often congregate in the T-zone (forehead, nose, and chin), but also cause breakouts elsewhere on the face and on the chest, back, and shoulders.
When They See Us begins with the introduction Korey Wise, Yusef Salaam, Kevin Richardson, Antron McCray, and Raymond Santana as they congregate in the park with a larger group to goof around.
Four employees congregate in one room with a view of the parking lot, while Wang and his wife, Brittany, a program manager he met at a gerontology conference, work in the foyer.
In 2010 we had more than 120 youngsters shot dead for protesting on the streets, you can't even protest, you can't even congregate in a crowd and march in a peaceful protest.
What makes the brown marmorated stinkbug unique, though, is not just its tendency to congregate in extremely large numbers but the fact that it boasts a peculiar and unwelcome kind of versatility.
Young men often congregate in front of corner stores or liquor stores, sometimes just hanging out, other times selling drugs; the city would have a record 692 fatal opioid overdoses in 2017.
Every week, senators and members of the House travel between their homes all across the country, where they interact with constituents, and Washington, DC, where they all congregate in the same rooms.
"Jersey skaters are usually shufflers, but I think there are more dancers from New York," he said, describing skaters who congregate in the middle of the floor to show off their moves.
Well, there's a Great South American Eclipse coming next year, and eclipse watchers are making plans to congregate in Argentina and stare up at the cosmic spectacle (while safely bespectacled, of course).
Meridian indulges her passion by studying the crows that congregate in a nearby canyon, where, some years later, she happens upon the second passion of her life, a young Vietnam veteran named Clay.
Guidebooks, online travel forums and even the websites of the authority and the Police Department still encourage riders to congregate in the designated spots at night, even as they are being phased out.
White House visitors congregate in the legendary basement bar of the Hay-Adams Hotel appropriately named Off the Record, or in the cozy dark bar of the Bombay Club, an excellent Indian restaurant.
Despite progressive winds sweeping the nation, New York was notorious for its strict enforcement of anti-homosexual laws that made it risky for gay people to congregate in public, let alone at a bar.
If walking outside is not a safe option, The National School Walkout encourages students to congregate in their hallways, school gym, or stand up in their classrooms during the 17 minutes of the protest.
Business and media leaders tend to congregate in a few high-wealth, high-education zip codes in cities like New York, Washington, Los Angeles and San Francisco, where liberal and progressive politics are dominant.
"China has a huge population, and Chinese people usually congregate in large groups, but there are still a lot of introverts, like me," Ms. Li, 22, said in an interview conducted via Weibo messages.
With no clear timeline for a return to normalcy and no updates on when it will be safe again for people to congregate in groups to watch a concert, venues are currently in limbo.
There are "bercha-houses," secret khat dens, where young people congregate in cramped rooms, bobbing their heads to Teddy Afro, a popular Ethiopian pop singer whose lyrics are considered veiled criticisms of the government.
Most of Williams' bridesmaids seemed to congregate in the sizeable eat-in kitchen, it's barn-inspired design accented with navy cabinets, a wood kitchen island and an oversized dining table with clear plastic dining chairs.
A record number of wildfires ravaging the Amazon, the world's largest tropical rainforest, is influencing the political discourse as world leaders congregate in France for the Group of Seven summit and protestors call for action.
The coronavirus public health emergency has triggered deep, and possibly lasting, changes in many industries and institutions — airlines, cruise ships, public schools, entertainment venues and other places where large numbers of people congregate in limited space.
On any given weekend night, various subcultural groups—rebels, groovers, housers, and mods, among others—within the party scene would congregate in backyards from East and South Los Angeles to the surrounding valleys and Orange County.
Weaver's story is echoed online, among people of all ages and backgrounds who congregate in forums to share stories about how they've overcome their opiate addictions with kratom, an obscure plant that grows naturally in Southeast Asia.
Ranging from three to six inches long at this time of year, silversides have little with which to defend themselves but their numbers; the fish congregate in tight schools that dart and skip nervously at any disturbance.
Although they congregate in the southern part of the gulf, they have been crossing major shipping lanes, which puts them at risk, according to Catherine Johnson, a biological oceanographer who was a co-author on the paper.
Flies that orgasmed, as opposed to a control group that had not been stimulated, shunned the alcohol, preferring to congregate in the "red light district" because "it feels good" there, said Shir Zer Krispil, who led the study.
Before the digital age when lesbians could congregate in chat rooms and online forums, women often signaled their persuasion to one another with simple things like the calendars on their walls and the date books in their pockets.
A senior Indian government official tells CNBC that Modi's administration is preparing a massive rally in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, where both leaders will likely congregate in front of a massive crowd that will be similar to the Howdy, Modi!
This means that a series that spread all over the globe in recent seasons now feels downright compact, as it finds reasons for the vast majority of its surviving characters to congregate in the greater Washington, DC, metropolitan area.
Since Durham Police announced that they won't be going after low-level cannabis offenders, multiple other forces have followed—and it stands to reason that police would prefer to see weed users congregate in private and not in public.
The large crowds of people who congregate in unsecured areas of an airport -- like security checkpoints, check-in counters, and baggage claim -- make appealing targets for terrorists, who like nothing better than maximum loss of life with minimum effort.
The village had cleaned up and collected dead walruses from the coast and put the carcasses in one area (tens of thousands of Pacific Walrus congregate in the area during the year, meaning some naturally die on the shore).
I think maybe we'll reach a point where we will have to be really militant in a more forceful way, but I think right now the best thing to do is to congregate in large groups to pressure our legislators.
House members, most of whom are currently in their districts across the nation, are increasingly fearful for their safety if they have to travel back to Washington, D.C., and congregate in large groups to vote on the next economic stimulus package.
College admission tests like the SAT and ACT, where test takers and moderators must congregate in-person, have already been canceled through May, and it's raising questions for anxious high-school graduates about how the delays will impact their applications.
But, eventually, there is a point at which voters — literal voters — congregate in the cafeterias and conference centers of Iowa and, over a period of hours, select a Democratic candidate, and then this moves to the next state and the next.
"It's the extent to which these high-potency opioids are being distributed within the illicit drug markets," he said, adding that people who are using opioids might congregate in certain communities in an attempt to purchase higher-potency versions when they are available.
After her post went viral in Vox Media's Slack rooms and out loud in Verge HQ, we (myself and Verge culture reporter / news editor Lizzie Plaugic) knew we had to congregate in a very dark closet and talk about it at some length.
Ms. Kauffman said that one of the most spectacular wildlife viewing experiences she's ever had was in March in Nebraska's Platte River valley, when more than 26957 percent of the world's sandhill cranes, more than 550,000 in all, congregate in the area.
The patriarch of the family is so outspoken that the Lakers have been enforcing a policy in which the news media is not permitted to congregate in a section of the arena where family and associates of the players wait after the game.
As guests began to congregate in a clearing beneath old sails strung from the treetops, Mr. Hansen poured aperitifs and introduced himself to the crowd, which that evening was all couples, a mix of younger and middle-aged pairs, almost all from Denmark.
Drop those measures — allow people to congregate in big groups again — while the virus is still out there, and it can start new outbreaks that gravely threaten public health, particularly the older and chronically ill people, those most vulnerable to severe illness.
Dr. Glenn Geher, a professor of psychology at the State University of New York at New Paltz, says, on an unconscious level, we're all just trying to cope with the fact that we were never meant to congregate in cities in the first place.
There were British people, too — tens of thousands — but unlike the foreign visitors who tended to congregate in the cramped, uncomfortable spots closest to the castle, they were willing to sacrifice physical proximity to the bodies of the royal family for general health and happiness.
Extra Crunch media columnist Eric Peckham took part in all the craziness that has become VidCon this past week, where 75,000 influencers, YouTubers, advertisers, and more congregate in one place to see how many likes they all can generate (and I guess to discuss business strategy).
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has recommended no gatherings of 50 people or more over the next eight weeks; and the White House on Monday said Americans should not congregate in groups of more than 10, while older Americans were asked to stay home.
Stocks fell further late in the session as President Donald Trump urged Americans to halt most social activities for 2500 days and not congregate in groups larger than 211 people, in a newly aggressive effort to reduce the spread of the coronavirus in the United States.
In essence, McDonald's didn't just host a publicity stunt — it also essentially invited the same Rick and Morty fans who have become known for online trolling to congregate in a real-life space, and then gave them a reason and an opportunity to troll in real time.
Ten minutes isn't usually enough time for festival-goers to congregate in front of a stage, let alone build up to a good crescendo—but the Pleasant Park crowd had been waiting for the gig for days, and so everyone nobly held up their end of the party transaction.
The American government warned it had "received information that terrorist groups are planning to carry out near-term attacks against places where U.S. citizens congregate in South Africa, such as upscale shopping areas and malls in Johannesburg and Cape Town," the State Department said in its travel advisory on June 4.
"I have been furious, furious at baby boomers and millennials ... for people who would just have the hubris and arrogance to ignore what's going on," McCain said, adding that "people are going to die" if they continue to congregate in large groups, allowing the highly contagious virus to spread throughout communities.
Today, no one can say exactly when schools will reopen or when it will be safe to congregate in bars or how long the economy will be in a downturn or how many people will die, but in 15 days we will be significantly less ignorant than we are now.
All of the living winners I meet congregate in their usual positions on the side of the bar closest to the door—it's the shortest distance between them and a beverage, according to 30-year Frank's devotee Eric Lavalley, who proudly introduces himself by both name and title ("Customer of the Year, 2011").
The university has now been closed down until January 5, 2020, internet services in the city were suspended, and in the wake of the protests, Uttar Pradesh&aposs government has imposed Section 144 — this means that if four or more people congregate in one area, they could be charged with engaging in rioting.
There are, however, downsides for a brand whose fans congregate in online spaces over which it has no control: Shipping delays, customer service complaints, and quality control issues all become public grievances generating dozens, if not hundreds, of comments, comparing responses from the company and mobilizing others to post on the brand's official pages.
"The U.S. Diplomatic Mission to South Africa informs U.S. citizens that the U.S. government has received information that terrorists are planning to carry out near-term attacks against places where U.S. citizens congregate in South Africa, such as upscale shopping areas and malls in Johannesburg and Cape Town," the embassy said in a statement.
And the suburbs happen to be precisely where white college graduates tend to congregate: in the 38 districts currently rated by the Cook Political Report as either "toss-ups" or merely "leaning" towards one party or the other, an average of 28% of over-123s are white and have a college degree, compared with 22% in all other races.
But the way the cameras on Little Women manage to catch the quizzical stares of bystanders when the women congregate in public spaces, or how they linger a little too long on one of them struggling to get onto a floatation device or motorcycle during a day of relaxation feels like a small push into some weird exhibitionist territory.
Often enough, they simply come in through doorways, around which they tend to congregate in autumn, but they have dozens of other ways of entering: down chimneys, around utility pipes, underneath the flashing on roofs, beneath cracks in the siding, through the vents in air-conditioning units, via imperfectly sealed windows, in the gaps below door sweeps.
Proponents of the changes argued they could be the best way to set an example for millions of constituents around the country who are being told not to travel or congregate in groups larger than 10, as well as to provide continuity at a time when more lawmakers are likely to grow sick or unable to travel.
In effect, the monument, a maquette of which is on display in Albany, manages to recapitulate the marginalization black women experienced during the suffrage movement to begin with, when, to cite but one example, they were forced by white organizers to congregate in the back during a famous women's march, in Washington, in 1913, coinciding with Woodrow Wilson's inauguration.
For some, it triggered wider existential conversations about the ways authorities try to control and contain our fundamental human impulse to congregate in public and express ourselves through music and dance—usually under the pretext of keeping us "safe," but too often with the effect of depriving certain communities of the only real-world spaces where they feel safe to begin with.
Secretaries of state from each of those states put out a joint statement on Friday explaining why: Unlike concerts, sporting events or other mass gatherings where large groups of people travel long distances to congregate in a confined space for an extended period of time, polling locations see people from a nearby community coming into and out of the building for a short duration.

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