Re: Politics
3911Also, to be clear, I have no qualms with those who don’t want to engage in violence. But there is a difference between that and disparaging those who do choose to use it against powerful oppressors, and there is a huge double standard where people tend to laud the violence of those in the past against oppressors while always condemning it in the present. There is also a huge amount of ignorance of the power of violence (see: people solely crediting MLK for civil rights gains in the 60s while ignoring that he was very much seem as a compromise by the government compared to the more militant movements that were threatening to storm the capitol, or the fact that the modern queer rights movements started with multiple riots against the police) and not considering that the defining feature of a state is holding a monopoly on it. Part of why I’m posting this stuff is to try to get people to understand (and hopefully get them to get others to understand) that.