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In Short

Beyond the “Peaceful” Protest

Baton Rouge Black Lives Matter Protest
Flickr Creative Commons

The largest march in United
States history brought聽joy, catharsis, and civic pride to the streets
after聽a sharply contested election shaped by widely recognized misogyny.
聽The mere act of acknowledging gender-based oppression鈥攁nd celebrating
solidarity with the women who shoulder it鈥攚as intensely gratifying for the
swelling crowd. Millions of people seemed to be saying to and with women, 鈥淲e
see you. We hear you. And you are important.鈥 The march was lauded as a symbol
of the rights our nation was founded on.

But did you notice something?

For protesters and media alike,
the clearest marker of the march鈥檚 success was that it proceeded peacefully and
its supporters seemed to hope that it would set a standard for the next four
years. The new administration has already been rocked by nationwide and
international protests, not once but twice, in its first ten days. It seems all
too likely that the trend will continue. But should that be the way we
categorize protesters? Into easy groups鈥攑eaceful and not, worthy of our respect
and not?

noting that not a single protester was
arrested at the Women鈥檚 March on Washington received close to ten thousand
retweets. Portland police , 鈥淭hank you to everyone who came for #womensmarchpdx today in
what was easily one of the largest marches ever in Portland. 100% peaceful.鈥 A
post on the TwoXChromosomes subreddit,
has surpassed 44,000 upvotes, coming in at for the top posts of 2017. wearing the iconic pink beanies,
high-fiving protestors spread like wildfires, signaling a solidarity that marks
a sharp about face from other images of the police that we鈥檝e seen in recent
years. Barely implicit in these and the thousands of other self-congratulatory
posts was a message, loud and clear: Unlike those other protests, we
were peaceful.

That鈥檚 all fine, and probably,
in the moment, a tactical attempt to get ahead of the likely pushback narrative
from conservative-friendly media outlets and social media, that they were
鈥渞iots.鈥 聽But, pay attention to the strategic risk of that tactical move.

Given our justice system, an
institution built on institutionalized racism, a peaceful protest is not
typically about the actions of the protestors, but about what they鈥檙e
protesting, how much the system feels it has to lose. 聽

Recent experience has taught us
this lesson again and again. We learned it in Ferguson, when, for the first
time, Amnesty International was deployed within the United States to observe
police response to protestors ( of human rights concerns in the process). We learned it in
Baton Rouge, when in the aftermath of the shooting of Alton Sterling, a 28-year-old Ieshia Evans being swarmed by police in riot
gear took the country by storm. We learned it when and organized against President 国产视频 visa restriction face-offed
against police. And we should have learned it decades ago in Selma, when
protestors were met with the force of Alabama state troopers and an officer
fractured Rep. John Lewis鈥 skull with a baton.

Lewis鈥 story is an important
one, not least of all because we still seem unable to conceptualize what
exactly Lewis meant when he coined the mischievous phrase, 鈥済ood trouble,鈥 even
50 years later. Good trouble entails civil disobedience鈥攁nd civil disobedience
entails disobeying the laws. It means and , because the general public and policymakers refuse to pay
attention until they are inconvenienced. It means because they have yet to include you in
their platform, but will overwhelmingly rely on your vote to win. Sometimes it
even means getting arrested because apartheid was legal and the Holocaust was
legal and segregation was legal.

Legal does not mean just. Unsurprisingly, then, struggling for
justice isn鈥檛 always peaceful. Take, for example the recent protests
mobilized against President 国产视频 immigrant ban from seven Muslim-majority
countries. As they had the weekend before at the Women鈥檚 March demonstrations
most of the demonstrators carried only colorful handmade signs and flags鈥攁nd
yet in Seattle, and in forced to face-off against police.

Civil disobedience is too often
met with police officers in riot gear, officers armed with weapons of war
because those in power have something to lose. And as history has shown us,
civil disobedience is also met with widespread disapproval from the majority of
Americans, from the segregationists to the good-hearted liberal who just wants
to get to work. A few months before the first March on Washington Martin Luther
King Jr., who is so often quoted around this time of the year, had almost that the great stumbling block in the
road towards freedom was not the Ku Klux Klan or George Wallace but the white
moderate, 鈥渨ho is more devoted to 鈥榦rder鈥 than to justice; who prefers a
negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the
presence of justice; who constantly says: 鈥業 agree with you in the goal you
seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action鈥; who
paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man’s freedom;
who lives by a mythical concept of time and who constantly advises the Negro to
wait for a 鈥榤ore convenient season.鈥欌

In an almost universal amnesia,
America seems to have forgotten that majority of the country did not support
or even approve of the tactics employed by its activists. In fact, most of
America seemed to think that shutting down highways, inconveniencing civilians
and other demonstrations (including marches) would hurt black American鈥檚
chances of integration into the South. It would be funny if it wasn鈥檛 so
disturbing how similar that sounds to the mass disapproval the United States
holds for the tactics employed by Black Lives Matter activists. And in a
terrifying indictment of our education system, also seem to believe and that our country was founded rather than a long and bloody revolution.

Over the next four years, we
should be attuned to this history. As Vann R. Newkirk II for The Atlantic, 鈥渃ivility is not
the highest moral imperative.鈥 When celebrities like Kristen Bell to their millions of followers 鈥渁ngry & violent protestors
accomplish nothing,鈥 we should ask ourselves who really profits from narratives
of peaceful protests and who is vilified for their anger. Calm and reasoned
arguments alone aren鈥檛 going to sway those in power, especially if our
situation really is as perilous as it seems to be.

We know this much: Civil
disobedience works. Decades of history prove that truth. The attempting to criminalize protest prove
that. The Black Lives Matter protests that produced Department of Justice
investigations鈥攚hich in turn provided evidence of systematic police misconduct
in Chicago, Ferguson, Cleveland and Baltimore鈥攑roved that. To use peacefulness
and respectability as measures of a demonstration鈥檚 validity creates a mismatch
when the demonstrator is met with a pointed gun and felony charges.聽

More 国产视频 the Authors

Rachelle Hampton
Beyond the “Peaceful” Protest