There are six clauses to the First Amendment, three of which were being exercised lawfully by peaceful protestors before federal agents dispersed them using chemical "pepper balls," batons, shields, fists, and feet, on the orders of the current occupant of the first-ever-fenced-and-walled-in People's (White) House, and its underground bunker. The conservative Brookings Institution has dubbed the incident the "Battle of Lafayette Square," a misnomer since a battle implies acts of violence on both sides of the conflict. However, even more conservative people have taken up the term "Lafayette Square" as the bunker occupant's "Waterloo," a common idiom Webster's Dictionary says "has given its name to the very notion of final defeat," and which Napoleon himself said would "erase the memory of so many victories." At least Bonaparte had some success to point to.