The left is comfortable with tyranny as long as they're in charge. No room for debate, "if it fails to win them over" then what? We club them into submission. Makes you feel all nice and fuzzy doesn't it. It's not enough to be left alone you must dance to their tune.
Isn't it curious that the media who can identify a conservative to the day of their birth is incurious about these rioters. Well, they speculate from a distance but real facts are missing.
Homeland Security publicly warns of the dangers from the returning veterans while the left loons repeatedly perpetrate more violence and destruction since anybody since Timothy McVeigh. How much did Ferguson riots wind up costing society?
Remember the judge who berated a small girl about her fear of black people after being a victim of a home invasion by a group of blacks? Well, judge, people live based on experiences and not through a politically correct lens.
The Democrat Party has become home to malcontents. Every micro grievance must accommodated.
From: Salon.com
Baltimore’s violent protesters are right: Smashing police cars is a legitimate political strategy
It's crucial to see non-violence as a tactic, not a philosophy. If it fails to win people over it's a futile tactic
A Baltimore Metropolitan Police transport vehicle burns during clashes in Baltimore, Maryland April 27, 2015. (Credit: Reuters/Shannon Stapleton)
As a nation, we fail to comprehend Black political strategy in much the same way we fail to recognize the value of Black life.
We see ghettos and crime and absent parents where we should see communities actively struggling against mental health crises and premeditated economic exploitation. And when we see police cars being smashed and corporate property being destroyed, we should see reasonable responses to generations of extreme state violence, and logical decisions about what kind of actions yield the desired political results.
I’m overwhelmed by the pervasive slandering of protesters in Baltimore this weekend for not remaining peaceful. The bad-apple rhetoric would have us believe that most Baltimore protesters are demonstrating the right way—as is their constitutional right—and only a few are disrupting the peace, giving the movement a bad name.
This spin should be disregarded, first because of the virtual media blackout of any of the action happening on the ground, particularly over the weekend. Equally, it makes no sense to cite the Constitution in any demonstration for Black civil rights (that document was not written about us, remember?), but certainly not one organized specifically to call attention to the fact that the state breaks its own laws with regard to the oppressed on a nearly constant basis.
But there is an even bigger problem. Referring to Black Lives Matter protests, as well as organic responses to police and state violence as “non-violent” or “peaceful” erases the actual climate in which these movements are acting, the militant strategies that have rendered them effective, and the long history of riots and direct action on which they are built.
I do not advocate non-violence—particularly in a moment like the one we currently face. In the spirit and words of militant Black and Brown feminist movements from around the globe, I believe it is crucial that we see non-violence as a tactic, not a philosophy.
Non-violence is a type of political performance designed to raise awareness and win over sympathy of those with privilege. When those on the outside of struggle—the white, the wealthy, the straight, the able-bodied, the masculine—have demonstrated repeatedly that they do not care, are not invested, are not going to step in the line of fire to defend the oppressed, this is a futile political strategy. It not only fails to meet the needs of the community, but actually puts oppressed people in further danger of violence.
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