I went to a protest today outside of the Capitol Building in my state. The protests are spreading. Occupy Together
easyrider said:I can't help but notice a major difference in the relationship between dissenter and authority in southern Europe and the U.S. The dissenters of southern Europe do not fear the police, for they go as far as to physically resist and violently clash en masse. The dissenters of the U.S. seem terrified of the police, not laying a hand against them. You'll see dissenters chase off the police in southern Europe, while in the U.S., it's the other way around. Perhaps this is a consequence of a hardened police state, but a police state can only form and exist if its citizens do not resist.
endlessness said:easyrider said:I can't help but notice a major difference in the relationship between dissenter and authority in southern Europe and the U.S. The dissenters of southern Europe do not fear the police, for they go as far as to physically resist and violently clash en masse. The dissenters of the U.S. seem terrified of the police, not laying a hand against them. You'll see dissenters chase off the police in southern Europe, while in the U.S., it's the other way around. Perhaps this is a consequence of a hardened police state, but a police state can only form and exist if its citizens do not resist.
Where did you get this from. This is certainly not whats been happening in Spain and this is exactly why the movement here has gained so much power, because of peaceful protesting. If there was violent protesting, it wouldnt have gained the support it did and already influence politics in a significant way.
When police came, we wouldnt run away but just sit down and lock arms and resist peacefully, and if we got thrown away, we would come back, with even more people. You can read more about it here
endlessness said:easyrider said:I can't help but notice a major difference in the relationship between dissenter and authority in southern Europe and the U.S. The dissenters of southern Europe do not fear the police, for they go as far as to physically resist and violently clash en masse. The dissenters of the U.S. seem terrified of the police, not laying a hand against them. You'll see dissenters chase off the police in southern Europe, while in the U.S., it's the other way around. Perhaps this is a consequence of a hardened police state, but a police state can only form and exist if its citizens do not resist.
Where did you get this from. This is certainly not whats been happening in Spain and this is exactly why the movement here has gained so much power, because of peaceful protesting. If there was violent protesting, it wouldnt have gained the support it did and already influence politics in a significant way.
When police came, we wouldnt run away but just sit down and lock arms and resist peacefully, and if we got thrown away, we would come back, with even more people. You can read more about it here
SnozzleBerry said:The Americans involved in this clearly do not fear the pigs, otherwise they wouldn't be out there getting corralled by a presence of 1 pig per 2-3 protesters. No one is running from the pigs, they are trying to maintain a non-violent protest. Thus, when things start to get violent from the pigs, you clear out of the area of the fracas and regroup. This is a rather basic strategy of non-violent protests.
elru said:I went to a protest today outside of the Capitol Building in my state. The protests are spreading. Occupy Together
SnozzleBerry said:[YOUTUBE]mace @ 00:50