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1. WillDa+(OP)[view] [source] 2020-06-02 01:28:49
"Of course, as Gillham pointed out, negotiating and managing a protest can’t really work if the protest wasn’t organized ahead of time. That goes double, he said, if the topic of the protest is police brutality. It’s hard to negotiate with someone about the best way to demand they be fired."

This point is important. The police can't police themselves, and for a lasting solution to this problem to emerge there'll have to be major structural changes to the way police oversight and review is carried out.

I hope these protests are a turning point that'll lead to such reforms, but I suspect no significant changes will occur. Hopefully I'll be proven wrong.

replies(3): >>catssi+K >>m0zg+U >>hinkle+Qd
2. catssi+K[view] [source] 2020-06-02 01:34:48
>>WillDa+(OP)
“Do not wait to strike till the iron is hot; but make it hot by striking.”

If you want change, make lasting change.

3. m0zg+U[view] [source] 2020-06-02 01:36:53
>>WillDa+(OP)
> wasn’t organized ahead of time

Protests might have been unorganized, but riots most certainly are organized. Torching a police car carries a minimum 5 year sentence. It's not the protesters who are doing that.

Moreover, it is still being "organized". Someone keeps dropping off pallets with bricks. There are agitator leaflets all over twitter. People have been recorded on video handing out cash to "protesters" from a thick wad of bills. Someone is organizing and funding the riots.

replies(2): >>TheSpi+A4 >>drusep+N9
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4. TheSpi+A4[view] [source] [discussion] 2020-06-02 02:05:35
>>m0zg+U
> People have been recorded on video handing out cash to "protesters" from a thick wad of bills.

It would be trivial to contrive that exact scenario.

I’m not say that it was contrived, just that it would be trivial to do so.

replies(1): >>m0zg+9a
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5. drusep+N9[view] [source] [discussion] 2020-06-02 02:52:05
>>m0zg+U
We had a peaceful protest in Kansas City on Friday where some police joined in, listened to protestors, took a knee with the protestors, and the mayor joined the protest as well. It was peaceful and all over the news.

The very next day we had several trucks unloading beds of bricks and large rocks throughout the Plaza (where protests were and would be again that night) throughout the day and people were snapping videos of at least two buses full of protesters in the full black getup unloading on the edge of the Plaza a few hours before sundown. That night we had 85 arrests, multiple cars set on fire, multiple officers put in the hospital, and plenty of CS gas in the streets.

After seeing the peaceful protest on Friday, I find it a little bit suspicious that the crowds grew so quickly and things escalated so quickly (and intentionally, by the looks of people dropping of brick caches) just 24 hours later.

replies(3): >>Izkata+Qg >>vkou+OI >>qq11ww+GS
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6. m0zg+9a[view] [source] [discussion] 2020-06-02 02:54:49
>>TheSpi+A4
That I do agree with. A lot of other things would be trivial to contrive as well. I would not be surprised if the scenes of devastation we see in the media are far smaller in scale IRL, and we're just being shown the same smashed storefront from different angles to drive clicks.

But at the same time I think peaceful protesters would not burn police cars or loot, seeing how looting does absolutely nothing good whatsoever for their cause. They would especially not burn or loot minority businesses, churches, or low income housing complexes. Someone is very deliberately and efficiently pouring gasoline into this fire IMO, that much is pretty obvious by now.

7. hinkle+Qd[view] [source] 2020-06-02 03:26:25
>>WillDa+(OP)
Police brutality protestors should be meeting with the mayor’s office with representation from the police department and internal affairs, but the chief of police is not in charge. That’s the problem. When official channels fail to the point of Protesting in the streets, you can’t use the same channels to address the situation.

And I don’t mean “you are incapable” can’t. I mean, “You are not allowed” can’t.

replies(1): >>CydeWe+u31
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8. Izkata+Qg[view] [source] [discussion] 2020-06-02 03:57:39
>>drusep+N9
These brick drops are being noticed all over the country. It's definitely being intentionally escalated by some group.
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9. vkou+OI[view] [source] [discussion] 2020-06-02 08:43:09
>>drusep+N9
We had a peaceful protest in Cap Hill in Seattle, where the police knelt in solidarity earlier today. There was no violence, no looting, no broken glass, and everyone was being peaceful.

After the photo op was done, the police started macing and tear-gassing the crowd. The news then ran this video [1], but with the first 20 seconds cut out, and blamed the protesters on initiating violence.

[1] https://www.reddit.com/r/Seattle/comments/gv0ru3/this_is_the...

replies(1): >>m0zg+YO
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10. m0zg+YO[view] [source] [discussion] 2020-06-02 09:54:05
>>vkou+OI
Were you actually there and see it in person, though, or did you hear it from someone else? Because if it's the latter, it smells like horseshit from a mile away. That's why in a conflict you need to hear _both_ versions of what actually happened and try to be impartial.
replies(1): >>vkou+yN1
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11. qq11ww+GS[view] [source] [discussion] 2020-06-02 10:48:54
>>drusep+N9
> took a knee with the protestors,

It is more likely the police are doing this as a sign of their own solidarity with other police officers rather than with the protestors. After all, this entire thing started because of kneeling.

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12. CydeWe+u31[view] [source] [discussion] 2020-06-02 12:34:06
>>hinkle+Qd
These protests and riots are happening precisely because the alternative mechanisms such as the one you are suggesting have failed time and time again.

Here in NYC we have a spineless mayor who has completely given up even attempting to exert civilian oversight on the police since 2014. They have free rein to do whatever they want and to "self-police" themselves, and because of the union violent cops are never fired.

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13. vkou+yN1[view] [source] [discussion] 2020-06-02 16:52:32
>>m0zg+YO
1. If I was there, on the front line, you'd just dismiss me as either biased, or unable to see what was going on in other parts of the line. This video has the widest field of view of anyone present.

2. Which particular part of this smells like horseshit to you? The news cutting the clip before airing it? The SPD twitter claiming that the police retaliated to an attack by rocks and bottles? Do you see any rocks or bottles thrown in the first 20 seconds of this video? Who are you going to believe - a cop trying to defend his violent outburst, or your own two eyes? In what universe is what you are observing a defense to an attack? Did you even look at the video?

3. Do you deny the neighbourhood being in good shape prior to this? I can confirm this one in person, by the way. Nothing was looted, windows weren't broken, no cars were burning.

4. Here's a first person video account of that, too. https://twitter.com/izaacmellow/status/1267679820600668161?s...

replies(1): >>m0zg+Wf2
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14. m0zg+Wf2[view] [source] [discussion] 2020-06-02 19:09:55
>>vkou+yN1
> Which particular part of this smells like horseshit to you?

That the police would tear gas people unprovoked. That just doesn't happen in the United States in my experience, although if provoked, they do not hesitate.

replies(1): >>vkou+Fw2
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15. vkou+Fw2[view] [source] [discussion] 2020-06-02 20:29:14
>>m0zg+Wf2
> That the police would tear gas people unprovoked.

Did you look at either of the videos? Do you believe your anecdotal experience, or your eyes? What kind of evidence do you need at this point, to convince you that yes, the police do, in fact, gas people unprovoked?

Would you like another one from Seattle?

https://old.reddit.com/r/Seattle/comments/gu3qq1/cop_just_ca...

Did that sheriff look like was being attacked? Like anyone was throwing rocks or bottles at him? Like anyone was setting police cars on fire?

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