Gethelred
Moderator
- May 1, 2016
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- 59,466
- AFL Club
- Carlton
- Moderator
- #351
I've certainly posted that protesters react to what the state brings to a situation and that escalation can be blamed more on the state than on protestors, as the protesters need to do enough - break the peace just enough - to get their point across. When that means violent repression and protest break up, protesters need to be prepared to deal with that. For some, that means googles to avoid being pepper or hose sprayed; for others, they're going to bring along means to try and push back, whether that's the marbles mentioned or otherwise.Did you post this hypothesis?
Just to be clear, I'm not advocating people do this in a protest. What I am saying is that this is the nature of governments at all times, democratic or otherwise. In its very foundation, organised government is built on the violent threat of repression; the phrase 'keep the peace' is enforced with violence. The end result of this is that the only real way to try and change the rules - if the system itself leaves no alternative, no recourse for change, no flexibility via back channel or too much insulation between the people and the levers of power - is to disrupt that control, to bring into question the government's ability to control its territory.
It's rather eye opening to me that so many people are supposedly so very individualist on one hand yet so willing to be pro force and government on the other.