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Title: Why Riots Are Actually Good Author: Nemskii Date: October 28, 2020 Language: en Topics: police, violence, riots, protests, cultural resistance
A crowd of protestors marches in the street, a diverse group; a lot of
black, indigenous, and people of color leading things, a decent amount
of white-passing people, there are men, women, and nonbinary folk of all
ages, you even spot an Imam, Rabbi, and Priest walking together, every
kind of person can be seen in this crowd. Most people clad in black,
faces covered, some are carrying signs, most are chanting, all are
pissed off. You’re walking with the protestors in the middle of the
street, you’re one of them, you want your voice to be heard, you’re
pissed off too, you have a right to be; another innocent black man
executed by a white police officer.
The people ahead of you stop walking, you stop as well. No one really
knows what’s going on. There is some nervous chatter in the crowd when
yelling starts towards the front of the group, you catch a glimpse of
what looks like Darth Vader. It’s a riot cop, dressed head to toe in
thick body armour, wearing a black helmet and a huge gas mask, equipped
with a telescoping baton in one hand and a clear shield marked “POLICE”
in the other. You can’t see their face, you can hardly tell there’s a
human under there.
Multiple lines of these militarized cops block the entire street, backed
up by armored trucks, enormous horses ridden by similarly dressed cops,
and squad cars with flashing red and blue lights. The protestors aren’t
budging either, more people move up to confront the police, some are
standing on top of nearby cars, residents are peering out of their
windows. At the confrontation line there’s some more yelling, some more
pushing, there’s a few people failing to calm everyone down,
everything’s getting more tense. A dystopian voice cracks out of a
loudspeaker, it drowns out the yelling and chants coming from the crowd;
“This is the police department, this event has been declared an unlawful
assembly. You are ordered to disperse to the east immediately. If you do
not comply with this order you may be subject to citation or arrest, you
also may be subject to tear gas and impact weapons. Officers are taking
lawful action. Disperse now.”
You’re shocked. You think “how is this an unlawful gathering? We’re
literally just marching in the street!” The crowd seems defiant. More
yelling. More pushing. The stand off lasts for what feels like forever.
Then, almost out of nowhere, you hear a shriek, you look over to your
left, you see a cloud of pepper spray and a few protestors recoil, when
a surge of officers runs towards the same area, batons cocked and in the
ready. A brick soars over your head towards the cops, you hear it crack
against one of their helmets as the officer drops to the ground in a
heap. The crowd erupts into what can only be described as a primal,
passionate war cry. You hear glass shatter near the convenience store on
the corner and see tear gas canisters being fired from behind the police
line as everyone raises their fists and leaps to action. The peace has
ended, but the protest has just begun.
.
.
.
If this scenario upset you, think about which part upset you the most.
Was it the police murder of another black person? The property damage?
The police confronting the protestors and instigating the violence? Or
the fact that any of this has to happen at all?
When people criticize rioters and looters, they usually provide this
perfect peaceful protest as the ideal model. Which is unrealistic,
utopian, and historically dishonest. Why is it left to the oppressed to
uphold this image of civility and peacefulness? Why do you not hold
police officers to this level of accountability? Why are we just
supposed to accept the police officers’ authority without question? Why
are police officers allowed to enact whatever violence they wish? Do you
actually think any big, societal goal has been accomplished without any
violence whatsoever? What does violence even mean to you?
This is perfectly exemplified by Democratic Presidential and
Vice-Presidential candidates Joe Biden and Kamala Harris when they said
the following in the wake of the murder of Walter Wallace Jr.,
“No amount of anger at the very real injustices in our society excuses
violence. Attacking police officers and vandalizing small businesses,
which are already struggling during this pandemic, does not bend the
moral arc of the universe closer to justice. It hurts our fellow
citizens. Looting is not a protest, it’s a crime.”
It goes on to talk about how only voting for them will fix this issue.
Let me translate that for you.
“It doesn’t matter how many minorities the cops kill, it doesn’t matter
how many women receive forced sterilizations in concentration camps, it
doesn’t matter how many people we throw into solitary confinement you
can NEVER damage property or attack our law enforcement. We value
capitalist business interests over human lives, especially if those
lives are a racial minority. Our police officers not only enforce our
laws with whatever violence they deem necessary, they are also the ones
protecting the business owners who fund our political campaigns, so we
have to stand by our cops, because they’re the ones actually doing the
beating! Er, I mean they’re the ones doing the enforcement! Also,
rioting doesn’t even make a difference, it doesn’t change anything. So
stop. Same with looting, you’re just stealing from your neighbor, which
is a crime. And may I remind you that doing crime means we have to sic
our cops on you. Ok thanks, vote for us.”
Damaging property is not violence. Burning a car is not violence.
Looting is not violence. Vandalism is not violence. Protesting is not
violence.
Beating protestors is violence. Killing citizens (regardless of guilt)
is violence. Imprisoning people is violence. Poverty is violence. Hunger
is violence. Evicting people is violence. Killing dogs is violence.
Separating families is violence. Tear gassing neighborhoods is violence.
Stopping mutual aid projects is violence. Committing war crimes is
violence.
So when people say that riots are violent and protestors shouldn’t do
it, they are accepting and excusing the police state’s monopoly on
violence. What’s a broken storefront window compared to an innocent
human life lost at the hands of a cop?
Most of the time, the property that’s damaged in these uprisings is not
owned by a neighbor or a member of the community. So much of property is
held by the few richest people in the US, or it’s held by the state
itself, that very little actually belongs to the working class residents
of the cities where these uprisings occur. So when they vandalize or
loot, they’re not hurting their neighbor, they might scratch the surface
of some trust fund manager living 3 states away, but they probably have
insurance to cover these kinds of costs anyway. The state, bosses,
capitalists, and cops have stolen far more than we could ever loot.
Imagine you lived in a community plagued by unemployment, poverty, drug
addiction, food insecurity, and harassment by police officers on a daily
basis. For a lot of you, you don’t have to imagine this, it’s a reality.
At the intersection of all these different kinds of oppression, events
like the killing of someone in your community, it is understandable and
even admirable for people to go out into the streets, sacrificing their
freedom to resist that oppression by any means necessary.
.
.
.
.
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Rest in Power Walter Wallace Jr.
No Gods. No Masters. All Cops Are Bastards.
by Nemskii
International Praxidus Collective