https://twitter.com/harmonylion1/status/1219291414653104130?s=19

  • threshold [he/him]
    ·
    4 years ago

    Martin Luther King Jnr's civil rights protests is maybe the only example within modern history, but even then I imagine civil rights 1968 may have been a trade off for the Vietnam War to continue.

    But I also think the graph doesn't discuss whether property damage counts as non-violent protest.

    • rolly6cast [none/use name]
      ·
      4 years ago

      They also weren't just individual protests, but series of sustained actions stemming from organized SCLC and SNCC stuff. Organizing doesn't exist, it's only spontaneous actions or individual violence. There's no threat of escalation from organizing, organizing to display an alternative system of community defense or structures, collective withholding of labor, there's just people doing murder or doing provocative protests that get big media attention-that's how power works.

      But yea, property damage and different types of violence too.

      • threshold [he/him]
        ·
        4 years ago

        I would like to reassert my position that property damage is not only ethical, but also necessary. Positions of power don't give a shit if the cop dies- it's a PR win for the establishment.

        The structures will freak out about paying for broken glass and insurance companies trying to squeeze their way out of not paying.