[I originally posted this in chapotraphouse, but it was deleted for being “pro-cop” even though that very much wasn’t the case. (I believe PSL was actually involved in organizing the protest if I’m not mistaken.) The mod that deleted it openly broke the sectarian rule too.]

Been seeing a lot of people hating on what the protest marshals did during the pro-Gaza protests at the DNC and I feel they definitely did the right thing. Instigating stuff like going up against the cops under the guise of “revolutionary” action just gets a lot of people arrested and doesn’t accomplish anything.

EDIT: Users who were present at the protests have said, counter to what is claimed in the screenshot, that the protest marshals did NOT call for the police. Thank you for clearing this up, comrades!

    • Sulvor [he/him, undecided]@hexbear.netM
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      3 months ago

      I feel like both your positions are valid and this discourse is as old as time, but this person on twitter is making the optics argument.

      The optics are there’s a fucking ongoing genocide and we’re causing it. People have the right to do whatever they think will stop it. There’s no right way to protest.

          • invalidusernamelol [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            3 months ago

            Effectiveness of protest can only really be judged after the protest. One constant is that the less disruptive a protest is, the less effective it is though.

            Non-violent protest isn’t necessarily undisruptive, but “peaceful” protest where you avoid disrupting anything is fruitless. It’s only really effective when your sole goal is to build awareness and your organization can’t take the hit of a large portion of it’s membership being arrested or detained.

            Once a movement has grown past the need for awareness, it needs to begin engaging in only disruptive forms of protest. A combination of violent and non-violent depending on the circumstance.

    • TheKanzler [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      3 months ago

      If getting too close to the DNC’s fence is “wrecker activity” and “adventurism” now, then what’s it going to be in a few years?

      “Protesting in public is adventurism! Don’t you know a quiet inside protest is the respectable thing to do now?”

      • Walk_On [he/him]@hexbear.netOP
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        3 months ago

        I mean, they wanted to confront the police head-on and implicate a bunch of people in the process. It isn’t just “going up to the fence” lol

        • TheKanzler [she/her]@hexbear.net
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          3 months ago

          The issue is that in the US it’s gotten to the point where being too close to a cop is “confrontation,” and protestors in the US keep ceding more ground each time. You’re going to end up in a situation where any form of civil disobedience is considered “too confrontational”

        • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]@hexbear.net
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          @[email protected] is the kind of person who would have taken down the tents and moved them off the quad in compliance with campus police, for the sake of “keeping activists safe”.

          Fighting the police in a position they’ve got extremely well-fortified is silly, but turning on anyone who wants to do that is ten times worse.

          • MarxMadness@lemmygrad.ml
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            3 months ago

            Fighting the police in a position they’ve got extremely well-fortified is silly, but turning on anyone who wants to do that is ten times worse.

            Just… what?

            Thousands showed up for what they intended as a peaceful march. A few wanted to make it violent – something you agree is not a good idea – and were deescalated without any injuries or arrests.

            This is supposed to be “ten times worse” than letting a few people get thousands (who did not sign up to get attacked by cops) attacked by cops? When you yourself said fighting the cops here would be silly?

            • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]@hexbear.net
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              3 months ago

              If you don’t want to throw bricks and fight cops, no one is interfering to force you to. If the cops attack everyone, that is the fault of the cops, not of the small agitating minority of protestors. You are ceding all ethical judgment to the police.

              The stance here is against people who would split their own movement into “good protestors” and “bad protestors” for the sake of optics that will be promptly ignored or discarded. The subtext of what you are saying is that there was a tacit agreement with the authorities not to escalate- an admission and commitment to impotence. What’s the point of protesting the DNC at all if you’re just going to follow a script that you know will just be ignored because it’s played out a thousand times already?

              Throwing burning things into the Third Precinct was inadvisable too, but it worked. Leaving room for people to protest in their own way is how you sustain the life of a protest movement, instead of strangling it.

              We celebrate Palestinians who throw rocks at Israeli tanks, for not accepting the premise that disproportionate revenge is “the adversary’s hand being forced (by the less powerful)”. We shouldn’t conceptually exclude this attitude from the imperial core.

              • MarxMadness@lemmygrad.ml
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                3 months ago

                Leaving room for people to protest in their own way is how you sustain the life of a protest movement, instead of strangling it.

                At some point an org can’t just let people do whatever they want. The whole point of organizing is to plan what you are doing and then follow the plan. Party/movement discipline is necessary.

                • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]@hexbear.net
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                  3 months ago

                  Leaving aside how no plan survives first contact, the whole point of organizing is to be transformative. If you are trying to change the world, you leave room for adaptation and change in your own movement. The majority of what becomes possible is not something you can rigidly or linearly plan for beforehand.

                  The Left in America has largely been “following the plan” for 100 years; the FBI reads their plan and runs circles around them.

                  When the plan is obviously going nowhere, what do you do? More of the same?

                  • MarxMadness@lemmygrad.ml
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                    3 months ago

                    no plan survives first contact

                    The response to this isn’t to abandon planning and say “everyone do whatever they want when we arrive.” The response is to make simpler plans, figure out how to communicate during the action, establish contingencies, etc. You do want to have a plan and stick to it – “no plan survives” is a statement about how difficult that is, no more.

                    The majority of what becomes possible is not something you can rigidly or linearly plan for beforehand.

                    What do you think was possible here that fighting cops would have accomplished?

          • Walk_On [he/him]@hexbear.netOP
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            3 months ago

            I mean they actually went to the encampments, posted about what they saw and supported them, so your analogy doesn’t work lol

    • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]@hexbear.net
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      3 months ago

      “Nooooooo you’re ruining my designated pressure outlet where I get a feeling of catharsis from doing something purely performative! How dare you give people a practical introduction to escalation, that wasn’t in the plan!”