- cross-posted to:
- news@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- news@lemmy.world
I don’t even know what else to add to this headline. This is so fucked up and tragic scary and infuriating and it will in no way slow the resistance.
I don’t even know what else to add to this headline. This is so fucked up and tragic scary and infuriating and it will in no way slow the resistance.
I have been noticing the increased anger with people’s posts online, myself included. I just said yesterday that it feels like a tipping point and it’s not gonna take much to start the riots. This event feels like a heavy hand on the scale pushing everyone over the edge. I hope it’s not and we can continue the peaceful protests. But I don’t blame anyone for taking a stand.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again.
If I’m the jury for someone accused of doing anything to an ICE agent, you will not be found guilty.
Okay now stop saying it so you can actually make it through jury selection.
Don’t forget to tell your fellow jurists about jury nullification, but definitely don’t say anything about it when they’re interviewing you for a juror position.
I’ve come to the same realization, and I applaud you.
Protests can be peaceful and armed, FWIW. That’s what started the Black Panthers. People realized that unarmed peaceful protests got violently broken up… But heavily armed peaceful protests had cops politely watching from across the street.
Cops were more than happy to fire into crowds when everyone was unarmed. But the cost/benefit ratio suddenly changed when the entire crowd could return fire. A cop may be able to hit three or four protestors, and in an unarmed protest, the rest would quickly scatter and disperse. But when everyone was armed, the rest of the crowd could immediately return fire instead.
It’s also what started modern gun control laws. When lawmakers saw a bunch of heavily armed black people on their front porch, and saw cops unwilling to break it up, they got really fucking sweaty. So Ronald Reagan (yes, the same Reagan that conservatives put on a pedestal) and the NRA (yes, the same NRA that lobbies for looser gun control after school shootings) co-sponsored the Mullford Act, which was the most restrictive gun control bill the country had ever seen. It was literally the start of modern gun control laws.
This is what drove the Black Panthers underground, as the lawmakers and police worked to criminalize and track them, so they could kick down doors during dinner time, instead of busting up the peaceful protests directly. And we still see that tactic being used today, with police setting up cell phone trackers and facial recognition cameras at protests, and raiding suspected attendees’ homes days or weeks after the protest.
This wasn’t just the Panthers, there were plenty of armed volunteers during the Civil Rights movement. I highly recommend “This Nonviolent Stuff Will Get You Killed”.