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#1 Jun 01 2020 at 8:04 AM Rating: Good
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Will this batch of riots, in conjunction with the now obvious disproportionate burden of illness and death among racial and ethnic minority groups from covid-19 (and likely any other communicable disease) finally move the needle of racial injustice toward equity?

Will this degree of civil unrest impact the election in Nov? How?

Do you think their was widespread agitation - rioting and damaging property, from groups that are anti-BLM?

Trump blames the far left Antifa for the violence of the last week. Who/what do you blame?
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#2 Jun 01 2020 at 9:49 AM Rating: Good
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Protesting: good.

Looting: bad.

Thank you for coming to my TED Talk.
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#3 Jun 01 2020 at 12:12 PM Rating: Good
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I feel like people don't understand the cause of the rioting and looting. They are confused because they think it's because one man died. What they don't understand is that the one man died because our entire system is broken. Because the people sworn to protect us murder us at will instead. Because no one seems to care as they thoughtlessly go about their lives.

People are fed up. Stores are being looted and burned because Americans care more about their precious shop windows and businesses than they do about human life, safety and freedom. The cities burn because they really ought to. Otherwise, people in pain will continue to be unseen and unheard, tread upon day after day.

Of course, the stupids still scratch their heads and say people are looting to get "free stuff" and that the answer is to oppress them further, not knowing they are exactly the reason this is happening. I was hopeful when I saw the riots extend to the white house, but disappointed when Trump ran and hid in his bunker. What we need now is a guillotine revolution. We need the people to push further.
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#4 Jun 01 2020 at 1:40 PM Rating: Good
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Kuwoobie wrote:
Stores are being looted and burned because Americans care more about their precious shop windows and businesses than they do about human life, safety and freedom.

Somehow, I don't think the folks smashing the windows of liquor stores and shoe shops are doing it to make a point about the relative value of human life and material goods in a consumer society. I also don't see how it's supposed to meaningfully change the underlying problem of systemic racism in anyway.

But then I'm probably one of "the stupids". See you up against the wall, comrade!
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#5 Jun 01 2020 at 1:50 PM Rating: Good
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Demea wrote:
Somehow, I don't think the folks smashing the windows of liquor stores and shoe shops are doing it to make a point about the relative value of human life and material goods in a consumer society.


Well, aren't you just the ivory tower intellectual that knows better than the riff raff
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#6 Jun 01 2020 at 3:08 PM Rating: Good
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Demea wrote:
I also don't see how it's supposed to meaningfully change the underlying problem of systemic racism in anyway.


If the problem were only about racism, I'd have nothing to say. What is the underlying cause of all this racism? Why do so many people believe it's OK for a person who represents authority to kill someone in cold blood? They believe the person who was killed is not a contributor to their needs. They think the police are killing "worthless" people, and have done no wrong, and should continue doing it. They want to kill, or at least imprison, everyone who isn't like them. It's what they mean when they say "Make America Great Again." I don't know how I can break it down any further than that.

The oppression doesn't begin and end with senseless murder, either. Citizens who aren't willingly aligned with American Sucker Culture, or just perceived as such (hence the racism in most cases), are subject to torment and harassment from authorities- because the laws are designed for that purpose in particular. The laws are designed to create this atmosphere of misery and death for the undesirables. Then when the oppressed try to fight back, they are made out to be the bad guys because look at all the damage they're doing to all our precious objects.

It's probably true that destroying random things doesn't help anything. I'm just trying to explain why it's happening. Now this is where you quote me and ignore the next part completely: There is a definite need to destroy something. Nobody really seems to know what that something is. There is no clear enemy. People are angry and out of control and there is no one to direct that anger towards. It sickens me when people try to downplay that anger and the reasons for it. So I say let them burn all the things, then maybe we will think twice before blatantly murdering someone then letting them off the hook like we have so many other times.
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#7 Jun 01 2020 at 3:58 PM Rating: Good
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Kuwoobie wrote:
Demea wrote:
I also don't see how it's supposed to meaningfully change the underlying problem of systemic racism in anyway.


If the problem were only about racism, I'd have nothing to say. What is the underlying cause of all this racism? Why do so many people believe it's OK for a person who represents authority to kill someone in cold blood? They believe the person who was killed is not a contributor to their needs. They think the police are killing "worthless" people, and have done no wrong, and should continue doing it. They want to kill, or at least imprison, everyone who isn't like them. It's what they mean when they say "Make America Great Again." I don't know how I can break it down any further than that.

All you've really done here is attributed several vaguely-worded strawmen to a political party you oppose and concluded "it's their fault!" You could have pointed to specific things like the "code of silence" culture within police communities, or the political power of police unions and the judicially-created doctrine of Qualified Immunity to shield police from legal repercussions, or the decades-long trend of militarization within police departments, or the decades-long push (by both parties!) to get Tough On Crime, etc. I'm not really sure why you would even choose to look at this through a political "Red vs. Blue" lens other than out of habit.

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The oppression doesn't begin and end with senseless murder, either. Citizens who aren't willingly aligned with American Sucker Culture, or just perceived as such (hence the racism in most cases), are subject to torment and harassment from authorities- because the laws are designed for that purpose in particular. The laws are designed to create this atmosphere of misery and death for the undesirables. Then when the oppressed try to fight back, they are made out to be the bad guys because look at all the damage they're doing to all our precious objects.

Again, how does smashing up the liquor store down the street from me in any way meaningfully advance reform for unjust laws? I'd argue that it probably encourages the opposite result, further reinforcing the underlying prejudices that result in unjust laws in the first place.

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It's probably true that destroying random things doesn't help anything. I'm just trying to explain why it's happening. Now this is where you quote me and ignore the next part completely: There is a definite need to destroy something. Nobody really seems to know what that something is. There is no clear enemy. People are angry and out of control and there is no one to direct that anger towards. It sickens me when people try to downplay that anger and the reasons for it. So I say let them burn all the things, then maybe we will think twice before blatantly murdering someone then letting them off the hook like we have so many other times.

If you absolutely have to destroy something, destroy your own shit and leave other people's stuff alone. Or at the absolute minimum, try to destroy the stuff of the people who are responsible for whatever problems you are fighting against. Storm and destroy the Minneapolis precinct building? Not a fan, but I can at least see the connection. Burning down a Family Dollar store and looting a minority-owned salon in the Chicago suburbs? You've lost me. I guess it's easy to say "burn all the things" when they're not your things being burned, but try looking at it from the perspective of the small business owners who are financially ruined and have absolutely nothing to do with the legal system writ large.

The anger is real, and it is justified. The response so far has been dangerous, (ironically) indiscriminate, and ultimately counterproductive.

ETA: sorry for going full gbaji with the post length. I just want to be clear that I'm not condemning or even disagreeing with the underlying desire for equitable treatment (duh). I am condemning the choice by some people to express that desire (or maybe using that as a pretense) by committing violent crimes that likely hamper the cause they are ostensibly fighting for.

Edited, Jun 1st 2020 4:03pm by Demea

Edited, Jun 1st 2020 4:23pm by Demea
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#8 Jun 01 2020 at 4:32 PM Rating: Excellent
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Demea wrote:
Or at the absolute minimum, try to destroy the stuff of the people who are responsible for whatever problems you are fighting against. Storm and destroy the Minneapolis precinct building? Not a fan, but I can at least see the connection. Burning down a Family Dollar store and looting a minority-owned salon in the Chicago suburbs? You've lost me.

Yeah, I feel much the same. Hell, I'm not even crazy about people spray painting slogans on a Starbucks or something but at least it's not emptied out or on fire. People tried to burn down a Mexican-owned fruit store last night. Why? Because first generation immigrant Mexicans are responsible for police brutality? Because his fruit store had a golden insurance insurance policy that covers civil unrest so it "wouldn't hurt" him anyway? I'm guessing "no" on both of those. It was just assholes being assholes because they figured they could get away with it.

Which, I assume, is 80% of the violent looting, arson and vandalism going on. Another 15% people trying to stir shit up (White nationalists, anarchists, etc) and 5% people thinking it's going to somehow meaningfully fix the issues.

Edited, Jun 1st 2020 4:33pm by Jophiel
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#9 Jun 03 2020 at 1:58 AM Rating: Excellent
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I guess it's easy to say "burn all the things" when they're not your things being burned, but try looking at it from the perspective of the small business owners who are financially ruined and have absolutely nothing to do with the legal system writ large.


It's both very unfair and, yeah, pretty easy.

Calling it counterproductive is nonsense, though. Riots get things done. Note how the same people who blackballed athletes for taking a knee are begging for it to come back? That's a huge amount of ground that's been seized by just a few days of rioting. The US police are now an international embarassment, having reacted by locking up journalists from around the world.

Peaceful protests are worthless. If you want something, you have to riot for it. The biggest protests ever in the UK were simply ignored - if even 1% of that demonstration had rioted, we'd have avoided a very stupid war.
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#10 Jun 03 2020 at 7:26 AM Rating: Excellent
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Kavekkk wrote:
Note how the same people who blackballed athletes for taking a knee are begging for it to come back?

That's entirely due to the fact that there have been no live sports since mid-March rather than any burning and looting.
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#11 Jun 04 2020 at 6:14 AM Rating: Excellent
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Those are just pretty words. Burn down a couple of shops and loot a pair of nikes and then maybe you'll convince me.
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#12 Jun 04 2020 at 7:17 AM Rating: Good
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I'm fully in support of the protests. Looting and property damage will happen. After the initial torching of the mpls police precinct, much of the destruction is probably just the actions of opportunists and anti-BLM instigators. If leadership wants the looting/rioting to stop they need to start negotiating with the protesters.

But today trump is building his wall - around the whitehouse. He's the biggest American mistake ever. (<-no swears)





Edited, Jun 4th 2020 2:18pm by Elinda
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#13 Jun 04 2020 at 9:01 AM Rating: Good
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Elinda wrote:
If leadership wants the looting/rioting to stop they need to start negotiating with the protesters.

Negotiating with looters/rioters only encourages the looting and rioting to continue.
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#14 Jun 04 2020 at 10:02 AM Rating: Good
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Demea wrote:
Elinda wrote:
If leadership wants the looting/rioting to stop they need to start negotiating with the protesters.

Negotiating with looters/rioters only encourages the looting and rioting to continue.


Minor recent anecdote. I had an argument with a person, whose position was that me supporting status quo ( in that particular case defined as not being cool with people being fired for unpopular opinions - not the park chick ) amounts to racism and should in itself be grounds for going after me.

It is hard to negotiate with zealots.
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#15 Jun 04 2020 at 2:57 PM Rating: Good
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Demea wrote:
Elinda wrote:
If leadership wants the looting/rioting to stop they need to start negotiating with the protesters.

Negotiating with looters/rioters only encourages the looting and rioting to continue.

you're not negotiating with the looters and rioters, you're negotiating with the protesters.
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#16 Jun 04 2020 at 3:24 PM Rating: Good
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Elinda wrote:
Demea wrote:
Elinda wrote:
If leadership wants the looting/rioting to stop they need to start negotiating with the protesters.

Negotiating with looters/rioters only encourages the looting and rioting to continue.

you're not negotiating with the looters and rioters, you're negotiating with the protesters.

If they're mutually exclusive groups, how will negotiating with one do anything to deter the other?
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#17 Jun 04 2020 at 4:46 PM Rating: Excellent
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Not that I'm all on board Elinda's theory but the rioters/looters are only able to riot & loot under the cover of the protests. Both to lend legitimacy but also for the simple fact that if you have 500 cops watching a bunch of people kneel in a park, that's 500 cops who can't respond to a Target being robbed by a hundred looters. If the protestors go home, people don't feel as emboldened to break the law.
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#18 Jun 05 2020 at 6:42 AM Rating: Decent
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You have to appreciate that kids raised on internet trying to make everything funny. Even second civil war was apparently being concocted as a part of Bogaloo movement.

I could not help chuckling at the Calypse drink being used molotov cocktail. I am almost worried that it is some sort of viral marketing campaign.

Edited, Jun 5th 2020 7:47am by angrymnk
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#19 Jun 05 2020 at 12:17 PM Rating: Decent
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The current police culture screwed this up from the start. If they'd just publicly and loudly went after those 4 cops right from the start people would be cheering them right now, instead they delayed and downplayed so people protested. Then the cops doubled down and went full riot gear and aggressive with the protesters which bolstered the protesters ranks creating cover for the opportunists to loot and riot.

The police needed to back down. Instead they went full ****** and now they have an actual problem to deal with and can't back down.
#20 Jun 05 2020 at 2:16 PM Rating: Decent
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Demea wrote:
If they're mutually exclusive groups, how will negotiating with one do anything to deter the other?
Are you suggesting they are not mutually exclusive? Thieves are not killers until they kill.

Like what Joseph said, the looters are exploiting the protests as avenues for riots. Just like when people use crowds to pickpocket.
#21 Jun 06 2020 at 5:17 AM Rating: Good
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Demea wrote:
Elinda wrote:
Demea wrote:
Elinda wrote:
If leadership wants the looting/rioting to stop they need to start negotiating with the protesters.

Negotiating with looters/rioters only encourages the looting and rioting to continue.

you're not negotiating with the looters and rioters, you're negotiating with the protesters.

If they're mutually exclusive groups, how will negotiating with one do anything to deter the other?

The protests create the opportunity for the looters.

These protests will move the needle. Perhaps not profoundly, but already you're seeing states and cities willing to make some change. Hell, there is a serious conversation happening about the role and necessity of police. Also, the protests, hopefully, will bring out more voters.

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#22 Jun 06 2020 at 10:06 AM Rating: Good
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The biggest issue I'm seeing right now are people getting punched, beaten and kicked by the police. They are smashing the heads of elderly and children.

Today I read that there are plans to bring more than 1 million people to protest in DC as part of the BLM movement. One million. With that many people, there should be no reason at all not to fight back- even in the absence of weapons. With one million people we can zerg rush any authority. I want to see people react to police violence the way they did when the guy charged at them with the sword.
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#23 Jun 12 2020 at 8:27 AM Rating: Good
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Kawoobie wrote:
With one million people we can zerg rush any authority
I think you meant 'they' can zerg rush any authority, as I'm pretty sure you had no intention of attending this protest.

Also zerging is a video game thing, not to be confused with a real life thing.

Edited, Jun 12th 2020 3:27pm by Elinda
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#24 Jun 12 2020 at 11:49 AM Rating: Good
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Turns out maybe life without police in the Liberated Peoples' Neighborhood of Seattle isn't going as swell as everyone assumed it would. Then again, bands of roving armed vigilantes might be an improvement over the police here in the Windy City.

At least it's good for some hilariously ironic symbolism.
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#25 Jun 12 2020 at 7:51 PM Rating: Decent
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Gonna reply to Elinda's original question, since it actually raises several good points instead of just spewing rhetoric or scattering blame in one political direction.

Elinda wrote:
Will this batch of riots, in conjunction with the now obvious disproportionate burden of illness and death among racial and ethnic minority groups from covid-19 (and likely any other communicable disease) finally move the needle of racial injustice toward equity?


I think racial equality will only be achieved when more people realize that the underlying cause of that inequality is economic. Over obsessing at the tail end of a fairly long series of cause and effect relationships is never going to solve the problem. No amount of more police training and reform will allow us to reach 0% death in custody rates, much less anywhere near that in terms of injuries. Accidents happen. Bad cops slip through the cracks. And sometimes, a good cop can have a very bad day and do something horrific. I have no clue what was going on with that officers mind when he did what he did. It was clearly wrong. He was clearly wrong. But, events like that are actually extremely rare. It's why there is so much outrage when they happen.

Fewer black people die in police custody each year than die from gang violence in an average week in some of our major cities. Do some black lives matter more than others? And yes, I get that police are supposed to serve and protect and not cause pain and suffering, so we obviously should hold them to a higher standard. But ignoring one source of loss of life and focusing almost entirely on another is silly. If you were to rank all the causes of death of black people, per year, in order of most to least, "death by cop" would be very very near the bottom. It's just the easiest to get outraged over. And I totally get that. But that anger isn't going to solve the actual problems. You might reform a bit and save one or two lives every year. Maybe.

Black people are significantly more likely to grow up and live in high poverty high crime neighborhoods. That skews *everything* against them. Poorer schools means worse education, more likelihood of dropping out, higher gang membership rates, and obviously fewer opportunities in life to get out of those neighborhoods. High crime rates mean more policing. Police patrol the most where there is the most crime. That makes objective sense, right? Yet, "where the most crime is" also statistically means a higher percentage of the total black population will be in those areas of higher patrol rates. Which means more stops. And, everything else being equal more chances of something going wrong during the encounter with police. You can literally take a flat percentage of total police encounters that result in violence, injury, or death of the person stopped, adjust it for the increased rate of police encounters in high crime neighborhoods, then further adjust for percentage of each racial group who live in those neighborhoods and you'll find that the actual rates of violence, injury, and death is very close to identical across racial groups.

That still does not excuse when it's clearly the cops fault, but it is important to recognize that simply calculating the percentage of a total racial population who experience a violent encounter with police and compare straight across does not give an accurate reflection of things. I was reading a BBC article recently which calculate that white people were actually 25% more likely to die during an encounter with police than black people. Again, once you calculate for the fact that black people are going to have police encounters more often relative to the total population. Again, entirely because of socio-economic conditions.

How do we fix that high rate of black poverty? I don't have the perfect answer. Have some ideas, but this is way to long as it is. I'm just trying to get out that until we recognize that this is the actual root of the problem, and not spend all our time chasing symptoms, we're never going to fix this.

Oh. And that goes for the covid-19 issue to. Clearly a virus does not act out of racism or racial bias. But higher poverty tends to cause lower health as well, right? Same root cause once again.

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Will this degree of civil unrest impact the election in Nov? How?


Really depends on how well the Dems spin this (which they're definitely trying to do). Unless they can somehow drag out the protests and riots until November (which is pretty much zero chance), it'll come down to how the voters view the cause and reaction of the parties. The Dems can spin this in their standard "GOP are racists, therefore they are ok with black people dying" (as a certain poster suggested earlier in the thread). But the problem with that is that the areas where we see the most police on black violence, and where the people are the most angry, and the most fed up, are almost exclusively towns with Democrat Mayors, and states with Democrat Governors. In many cases, the Dems have controlled the cities for decades. The police forces and their policies are Democrat policies. The police unions which protect bad cops donate to Democrat politicians. It's kinda hard to blame Floyd's death on the GOP in this case, right? They didn't set the rules in that city or state. They have no influence or control over the police there, or their policies, nor do they get support from them in return.

Ironically, while the Dems do a great job of showing up at protests, giving speeches, appointing people of color to be police chiefs, and city managers, and elected officials, those things don't seem to have helped. And the funny thing, which ties into my earlier comments is that Trumps policies actually did take actual positive action on this front. His economic policies created (for a time) the lowest black unemployment in history. He was leading them towards economic opportunity in a way that all the chest bumping and campaign slogans of the Dems has not. He also pushed through actual reform, and got a lot of black folks out of prison who were there because of tighter sentencing passed back in the 90s. Sadly for the Dems, one of the folks who pushed for that back in the day was none other than Biden.

So if people look at actual actions over words and empty gestures, this might not go so well for the Dems. Trump's message to black voters last time around (what do you have to lose?) may just resonate this time, given that they've been voting Dem, had Dem leadership of their cities and states, and lived under Dem rule for generations in many cases, and things are how they are anyway, how many might just decide that a real revolution is in the works. And it's not about burning buildings and looting stores, but is about voting in different leadership.

If it goes that way, we could see a title wave of areas which have been Dem strongholds for decades shift to the right. I doubt it, but it's possible.

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Do you think their was widespread agitation - rioting and damaging property, from groups that are anti-BLM?

Trump blames the far left Antifa for the violence of the last week. Who/what do you blame?


I think it's a mix of radicals on all sides. There are folks who just want to create violence and chaos, and big protests are a great way to do that.

I will do the same thing I always do when folks try to say "but we were just peacefully protesting and these other people came in an rioted": If your protest is providing cover for the folks who are throwing bricks and bottles, then you are part of the problem. I'm not saying don't protest, but that your response to someone throwing something from anywhere near you should *not* be to roar louder, and wave your sign more. It should be to move as rapidly as possible away from the folks throwing stuff. Just move away. If everyone does this, then the folks throwing rocks find themselves standing alone with rocks in their hands, and the police can just walk over and arrest them without incident.

I've seen too many videos of folks who crowd around the folks throwing stuff at the police, effectively making it impossible for the police to do anything to stop the rioters. And if the cops try? They often get mobbed by the "peaceful protesters" who will inevitably claim that the police attacked them (since they crossed the line so to speak). Again though, just standing there shielding the rock throwers is participating in my opinion. Don't do that. if you do, the police actually have no choice but to clear the area, which means that smoke bombs, flash bangs, and other means will be used to disperse the crowd. Of course, the whole crowd moves away, taking the rock throwers with them, and they just repeat the same thing in the next location.

It's your job as a protester, if you want to claim to be peaceful, to *not* allow violent folks to hide among you. The cops physically can't do this without clearing you out too. Only you can so without creating even more violence.

Someone really ought to write a "rules for peaceful protest" book or something.

Oh. I'll also point out the disconnect between "lawful" and "unlawful" protests, "peaceful" vs "violent" protests, and looting. Those are all different things done in different ways and for different reasons. You can have a peaceful protest that is still "unlawful", but your odds of it remaining peaceful are low. By "unlawful", I mean that the folks organizing the protest didn't coordinate with the city (or at least inform them), and include a well defined gathering location, march path and end location, including time for the whole thing. When done that way the police can cordon off the area, both the inner side where the folks walking will be, and the outer side to keep vehicles from driving through the protest. This is really about safety. Without this information, or if the protesters decide to wander off in random directions without warning, the police end up running around trying to set up blockades to prevent cars and people from occupying the same location (which tends not to go well for the people). Those police standing in a line blocking your ability to just go wherever you want? They're not there because they just hate free speech and want you to stop. They're there because most protests occur in downtown areas where traffic is already busy, and they can't magically redirect stuff away from you if you just roam around.

I saw what happened here in La Mesa when a protest did just that. Absolutely gruesome footage of what happens when a protester gets caught under a large truck, then other protesters rush the truck to try to warn the driver not to go, and to back up so they can free that person, only to have the driver panic at seen a couple dozen people charging his truck, banging on the sides of it and climbing up to his doors. He drove off, rapidly. It was not good.

Protesting is fine. But there's a cost to doing it "wrong" so to speak. Those who say that you must have violence and destruction to change things aren't the ones who's businesses are destroyed, or who have loved ones who get caught up in the middle of that destruction and get harmed or killed. Raising awareness is only the first part of a process like this. Unfortunately, all too often, no matter how loud or violent a protest becomes, once thing die down, the platitudes stop, the speeches stop, and things go right back to how they were. Spend less time protesting, and maybe more time at city council meetings, or hey, feeding people at a soup kitchen, or things that actually help. Heck. Run for office maybe.

Edited, Jun 12th 2020 6:14pm by gbaji
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#26 Jun 13 2020 at 8:11 AM Rating: Good
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You were kinda normal and reasonable for most of that post.

Having said that, this bit caught my eye.

gbaji wrote:
I will do the same thing I always do when folks try to say "but we were just peacefully protesting and these other people came in an rioted": If your protest is providing cover for the folks who are throwing bricks and bottles, then you are part of the problem. I'm not saying don't protest, but that your response to someone throwing something from anywhere near you should *not* be to roar louder, and wave your sign more. It should be to move as rapidly as possible away from the folks throwing stuff. Just move away. If everyone does this, then the folks throwing rocks find themselves standing alone with rocks in their hands, and the police can just walk over and arrest them without incident.
I recall saying something like this in regard to CLEARLY racist assholes attaching themselves to GOP/Tea party rallies. Funny how that never, ever, happened, right?

Edited, Jun 13th 2020 7:12am by Bijou
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