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This weekly thread will focus on Protests, both effective and ineffective.

Over the past 15 years, we’ve seen more protesting since the 1960’s in North America. Some feel they are needed, and some feel they are wasteful and silly.

Some Starters (and don’t feel you have to speak on all or any of them if you don’t care to):

  • Have you ever taken part? What was it and why?
  • What protests have you felt have been effective or ineffective?
  • If you feel they are not effective in general, what would you rather people do?
  • Have you ever had your opinion swayed by any form of protest? Please note that this could be either to the side of the protesters or away from their cause.
  • How would you try to ensure a successful protest?
  • Do you feel that violent protest is mostly uncalled for? If not, how do you know when you need to escalate things?
  • Just for fun, what is the absolute worst protest you’ve ever heard of?
  • Ace T'Ken@lemmy.caOPM
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    7 months ago

    I’ve done some some protesting in high school, but it was mostly dumb school decisions and most of the seniors joined in. It’s easy to protest when that basically means a ditch day. Hell, people that didn’t care at all joined in just to bail on class, so I don’t really think it counts.

    Other than that, I’ve just done some for local politics which are often more effective than business or federal protests because the local people need to live near you and pissing off your neighbours is a lot more stupid than pissing off a nebulous “them” located elsewhere.

    That being said, I feel most modern protesting is done poorly and doesn’t do much currently beyond being a 30-second blip on the 24 / 7 media machine.

    I’ve spoken about it before, but the currently popular street- or bridge-blocking protests I feel are among some of the most misguided - mostly because they don’t target. Please note that I’m not talking about things like French protests where they happen to organize and there’s so many people present that they have to block off streets in front of government buildings. Not at all. Those people know how to fucking protest.

    For example, if you’re protesting a war (like several recent ones), why wouldn’t you, say, protest the factories where the weapons are made or buildings where executives meet? I don’t mean they should just hold up some signs outside, but blockade those businesses in. Stop the parkades from functioning.

    Maybe find out who their major shareholders are and publicly shame them. Dig up dirt on them. Harangue them online. Hacktivism. Do anything you can to stop them. Hell, find the neighbourhoods that those shareholders live in and blockade those. If it’s a war protest, protest at the schools that their children go to letting them know their rich parents are murdering people overseas.

    You have to stay pissed off, and not let them wear you out because protesting like this is fucking hard and isn’t just a fun afternoon outside with friends like some of these other ones.

    And, again, the targets are wrong because there is no target.

    A street- or bridge-blocking protest is like protesting the food in a prison cafeteria by beating the shit out of your cellmate, and then calling them complicit because they ate food yesterday. What the hell are they supposed to do about it? And do you think a recently beaten cellmate will be more or less receptive to your cause after?

    Bridge / street blocks are not creative, don’t get people present on your side (quite literally the opposite), presents safety risks, may delay emergency vehicles, wastes natural resources, and don’t change minds of those who hear about it on the news. Same with the stupid “pour soup / oil on a piece of art” shit I saw repeatedly. A throw-away headline seems to be the goal, but it accomplishes next to nothing.

    … which just means you have to get creative. Target. Those. In. Power. Make life fucking hard for them.

    Protest threads on Lemmy often reek of this attitude I see frequently of “It’s a deeply stupid and astoundingly flawed thing to do, but I’ll defend it to the death because it agrees with my politics!” Great. You support them. In some cases, I do too.

    But how about we actually do something?

  • Have you ever taken part? What was it and why?

    In high school I was a solitary non-conformist. (I didn’t feel like conforming in my non-conformance, so I couldn’t join the various “non-conformist” cliques.) I had a punkette stage, but while I admired the DIY attitude of the punk movement (and really liked the music), I found it was basically “sound and fury, signifying nothing”. So aside from a period of questionable hair coloration (which my mother just FLIPPED THE FUCK OUT over!) I didn’t really get into anything protesty.

    This changed when I hit university. In university I campaigned for an NDP candidate I believed in (until he got outed making a deal by a hot mic and I realized he was just as much a scumball as any other politician), I participated in “Take Back the Night” marches, and with my little flare for drama I partook of things that today would be called “flash mobs” where we enacted scenarios that illustrated injustices near and dear to our hearts.

    There was also a HUGE protest when there was a strike mid-semester that threatened to fuck up a lot of people’s educations since for safety reasons the university had to be closed.

    What protests have you felt have been effective or ineffective?

    Of these, the “Take Back the Night” ones were the only ones that had any measurable impact, in that the ideals (“Hey, guys? How 'bout you don’t rape or assault women, pls K thx?”) seemed to catch on and take root to the point that the normalization of (mostly engineering students’) “No means she hasn’t had enough to drink yet!” (an actual slogan used in the engineering paper!) fell by the wayside and most people decided that “no” did actually mean “no” by the end of my stay there.

    The instant dramas tended to just bewilder people; the messages were lost in the odd delivery. Artistically they worked—people liked them—but the message was never quite catching on. Now, as I close in on the end of my life spent in a marketing career mostly, I can see a hundred ways that we could have done better, but … hindsight is 20/20.

    The counter-strike protest was very effective. The staff who were striking were likely very, very, very concerned with ten thousand angry students descending on their picket line and shouting so loudly from across the street that it drowned out all their noisemakers (air horns, etc.) put together. They were back at the bargaining table within 48 hours and the strike was over after only two weeks, causing only a bit of minor disruption (administratively handled) at the end of the term for some people who had jobs lined up already. It was a huge change from what seemed to be a strike that would end a term.

    If you feel they are not effective in general, what would you rather people do?

    I don’t feel protests are ineffective in general, but I think protests are largely ineffective because people making them don’t think. Activists tend to live in echo chambers and they lack, typically, the empathy it takes to put themselves in the shoes of those with whom they disagree so can’t see how their protests are really being taken. So you get frankly idiotic ideas like “let’s destroy works of art to protest oil!” Or “let’s hold 10-20,000 students hostage whose lives are about to be utterly fucked-up without meaningfully impacting people with comfortable six figure incomes they get whether the strike lasts a semester or not”. (If they’d chosen “work to rule” I’d have been right alongside them helping them along, but they chose instead “hold children hostage”, so fuck 'em.)

    So while I think protests are good, and often entirely valuable, the majority of them are ineffective not because the cause isn’t just, and not because it’s impossible to implement them, but rather because the messaging wasn’t properly planned and focused. (For an example of bad focus leading to ineffective protests: Occupy Wall Street had no coherent demands and, indeed, when one sub-group came up with a list, the list was all over the fucking place and it wasn’t agreed to by practically every other sub-group.)

    So what would I rather people do? Learn communications. Then based on that make useful, focused protests that actually effect change. Otherwise you’re wasting time and energy (and often damaging your cause … I still wince at “Pride Day” shenanigans, despite being in the community supposedly proud of it, because I think a lot of the displays are counter-productive and call the LGBTQ+ community into disrepute).

    Have you ever had your opinion swayed by any form of protest?

    In the '80s in Germany there were huge student housing protests. Often very violent ones. My opinion (as a late teen) was swayed by them big-time. I felt that universities had waaaaaaaaaaaaaaay too many students if they had the free time to go out and trash city blocks and steal things in orgies of violence. My solution to the student housing problem was to reduce the number of students. I’m pretty sure that’s not what they wanted…

    I used to have a very huge anti-native (Canadian indigenous peoples) bias because … well, let’s just say living in the high arctic among several indigenous groups in a majority, while I was in a minority smaller than even the white populace there, led to a lot of bullying that scarred me for decades. It was a protest at university organized by the Saskatchewan Indian Federated College that woke me up to perhaps why the natives in the arctic were lashing out and led me to investigate and … well, it took another decade, but now I am firmly on-side of the natives in most things where they get in conflict with companies and government.

    How would you try to ensure a successful protest?

    • Laser-sharp focus.
    • Bouncing the idea past people not in my activist echo chamber.
    • Policing the crazies harshly. (“Police your crazies or be judged by them.” If anybody commits acts of violence against civilians, opportunistically performs property crimes, etc. hand them over to the fucking police ideally with the press there taking photos!)
    • Keep an eye open for unintended impact that could negate any benefits from the protest, and mitigate upon appearance.

    Do you feel that violent protest is mostly uncalled for?

    Mostly, but not always. If the target of your protest commits violence against you, defensive violence is acceptable as long as you don’t turn into your enemy. And of course violence against the property of your target is sometimes necessary: breaking gates, sabotaging construction equipment that’s being used to tear down old-growth forest, etc. The key is to be very conservative in deciding when to use violence and how much, and to make sure that it’s done in a way that shows the real target. A good protest makes people afraid of the status quo, not of you. Violence is a thing that has a very strong tendency toward making people afraid of you so it must be used sparingly and with care.

    Just for fun, what is the absolute worst protest you’ve ever heard of?

    The aforementioned German student riots. They accomplished absolutely nothing but getting a bunch of students criminal records and making most of the populace think “you know, fuck those guys”.

    • Ace T'Ken@lemmy.caOPM
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      7 months ago

      I didn’t mention it in my post, but you mentioned it. I’m not quite settled on the violence aspect. For the most part, no, violence isn’t needed.

      But… what else do you do when the government won’t stop putting your future in danger? I truly don’t know how else to affect environmental policy because right now they’re backsliding on their goals and promises. I dunno. I’m definitely okay with any group who mass-sabotages big polluters.

      • We agree here. Violence is mostly uncalled for, but sometimes it is, in fact, truly called for. Though again it needs to be laser-focused and well-communicated what the targets are and why they’re the targets. And it is absolutely essential that the violence not strike the uninvolved or your protest will fuel the opposition, not you.