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‘Get off your bike and walk’: Female cyclist “petrified” after man grabs bike and refuses to let go

“There's no way he would have done that if I wasn’t a woman,” said climate activist Clare James, who was riding on a cycle lane at the time of the terrifying incident ...

A female cyclist was left “petrified” and “visibly shaking” after a man confronted her while she was riding on a cycle lane. The man, who appears to have attended a nearby concert, grabbed the woman’s bike and told her to ‘get off and walk’. After a steward at the event intervened to fend off the attacker, another man “aggressively” jumped into the bike lane in front of the cyclist.

Climate activist Clare James was cycling through Cardiff city centre on Thursday night as concertgoers were leaving singer Lewis Capaldi’s gig in Cardiff Castle, WalesOnline reports.

To allow the crowds to exit the venue safely, Castle Street had been closed to traffic, though the cycle lane remained open.

> Lone female cyclists are “being targeted”, says former Scottish champion 

49-year-old James, who works for campaign group Climate Cymru, was riding through the crowds “at a snail’s pace”, when a man grabbed her bike by the handlebars.

“I said: ‘What are you doing?’ and he said: ‘Get off your bike now and walk’,” she told WalesOnline.

The man, believed to be in his 20s, then told her that she shouldn’t be cycling on the road, to which James replied that she was cycling in an open bike lane.

“But he was really aggressive and within a very short space of time I was really feeling very intimidated,” James said.

The cyclist also noted that the attacker ignored other people riding bikes in the lane, who she says were mostly male delivery riders.

She continued: “People started to come over and people were saying: ‘Let her go’. I think because they could see that I was in quite a bad state they were saying: ‘Are you okay?’”

> Female cyclist held down and bike stolen during frightening attack 

After failing to attract the attention of nearby police officers, eventually a steward working at the concert intervened and removed the man from the scene, allowing Clare to leave.

However, as she continued on the cycle lane, “shaking” after the encounter, another man – who was walking along the footpath – spotted her and “aggressively” and “determinedly” jumped in front of Clare. Fortunately, the traffic lights soon changed, which enabled the 49-year-old to flee.

Following the two back-to-back incidents, Clare says she was targeted because she “stood out as a woman on a bike”.

She said: “It was so obvious [the first man] was just going to pick on me because I was an easy target… there’s no way he would have done that if I wasn’t a woman.”

“There were two men, as far as I'm concerned last night, that really just wanted to be intimidating. They plucked me off, because I was on a bike and because I’m a woman.”

While Clare’s husband suggested closing streets to cyclists after concerts as a potential solution to the problem of harassment, she believes that “men’s attitudes towards women” were the root cause of the incidents, and that active travel to and from events should still be encouraged.

“I said [to my husband]: ‘No, no - maybe men shouldn't be like that’. That’s the issue. It doesn't matter whether you close the cycle lane, whether there’s drinking involved, whether there are crowds," she added.

While Clare says that she feels “reasonably safe” while cycling in Cardiff, and that the shocking incidents won’t prevent her from riding her bike, she says that Thursday’s night ordeal has caused her to reflect on her safety as a female cyclist.

“But I have to say that it's definitely made me far more aware that I'm not as safe on my bike as I think from people who are on foot, from pedestrians,” she concluded.

> "Deeply concerned" British Cycling steps in following spate of violent bikejackings across south London 

There have been a number of attacks on lone female cyclists in recent months, though unlike Thursday’s incidents these have mostly involved targeted robberies by violent moped gangs.

In April we reported that a woman was held down and had her bike stolen by two men in Surrey. The cyclist was sat on Beddlestead Lane, near Warlingham in Surrey, when she was approached by two men on a scooter.

Surrey Police say the incident, which happened between 1.40pm and 2.15pm, saw the victim held to the ground while the offenders made off with her bike down Clarks Lane.

In response, cycling clubs across south London had warned members to only ride in groups, and more recently former Scottish champion Jennifer George — who finished eleventh in last month’s British time trial championships — repeated the warning having been attacked herself on two separate occasions since April.

After obtaining a PhD, lecturing, and hosting a history podcast at Queen’s University Belfast, Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

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chrisonabike replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
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I'm just working out what form of direct action the Bike Liberation Militia of the Evil Cycling Lobby should take.  Currently I'm going with "go for a ride".

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hawkinspeter replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
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chrisonatrike wrote:

I'm just working out what form of direct action the Bike Liberation Militia of the Evil Cycling Lobby should take.  Currently I'm going with "go for a ride".

I'm a fan of that. The more that motorists see cyclists happily pootling along whilst they are stuck in traffic, the better. In a lot of ways, cycling on public roads in the UK is a protest, but it's annoyingly anti-disruptive and every motorist that decides to cycle makes the traffic flow better.

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hawkinspeter replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
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chrisonatrike wrote:

Can you think of any cause that "won" where you can show that disruptive protest appears to have been the key?  Unfortunately the ones I can think of all had several different types of pressure at once - making a single "cause" hard to point at.  So disruptive protest (or an "armed" / "violent" wing or at least credible threats from same), political movements, "ground-up" action - and possibly "other change in circumstances" too.

Thinking of Northern Ireland, changes in status for black people in the US, women's suffrage in the UK, gay rights, reversal of apartheid laws in South Africa...

It's tricky to know how to define non-disruptive protests as surely any protest has to disrupt everyday behaviour or else it will simply be ignored.

Ghandi's salt march is a good example where non-violent disruption was pivotal in changing British colonialism.

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chrisonabike replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
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It's a good example!  It certainly sticks in the mind, inspired people at the time, shocked some of the British and likely changed opinions (worldwide) over the longer term.  However it did not achieve either its immediate goals nor rapidly change the situation with the British.  Overall the change (independence) appears to have taken a long time and come about through a mix of lots of factors (there were certainly economic changes and even terrorist campaigns for example).

So maybe it's "necessary but not sufficient"?

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hawkinspeter replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
3 likes

chrisonatrike wrote:

It's a good example!  It certainly sticks in the mind, inspired people at the time, shocked some of the British and likely changed opinions (worldwide) over the longer term.  However it did not achieve either its immediate goals nor rapidly change the situation with the British.  Overall the change (independence) appears to have taken a long time and come about through a mix of lots of factors (there were certainly economic changes and even terrorist campaigns for example).

So maybe it's "necessary but not sufficient"?

Found this short read by Kevin A. Young that makes the case for sustained, disruptive protests: https://www.yesmagazine.org/opinion/2020/07/08/history-protests-social-change

Also found this open letter: https://www.lawgazette.co.uk/commentary-and-opinion/in-defence-of-the-non-violent-disruptive-protest-an-open-letter/5104551.article

Quote:

The factors which open the floodgates to waves of protestors, which cause them to abandon social norms and speak out, emanate from the perception that the status quo is in some way broken. That the way things have been is oppressive and must change. So protestors seek to disrupt; not with wanton abandon, nor with glee, but out of desperation to have voices heard which have for too long been passively forgotten or actively silenced.

And yes that sometimes spills over into disruption, into social unrest.

This is unfortunate, but often inevitable, and is the essence of taking to the streets to effect change. Keyboard warriors (this one included) can be ignored out of hand; marching masses cannot.

To paraphrase the stand-up comedian Kae Kurd (because dark humour gets us through dark times): 'If the person you’re protesting against is happy with your means of protest…then that’s not really a protest, is it?'. An idea echoed by another comedian/political commentator, Trevor Noah, host of the Daily Show: 'There is no "right way" [for the Have Nots] to protest because that’s what protest is'.

Such is the nature of every truly seismic act of civil disobedience, of every successful movement for the advancement of the underprivileged that there ever has been or ever will be.

From the 14th century English Peasants’ Revolt, to the Suffragettes sticking it to the patriarchy in the early 20th, to Martin Luther King proclaiming 'I have a Dream' in 1963, the story is the same. The Haves disregard the Have Nots until the downtrodden cause a sufficient nuisance that they can no longer be ignored.

So when a vocal minority of Haves chastise the Have Nots by saying 'you’re being far too disruptive', the response from protestors should simply be 'thank you…that’s the point'.

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Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
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So non violent but disruptive protests are ok directly outside abortion clinics?

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hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 2 years ago
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Rich_cb wrote:

So non violent but disruptive protests are ok directly outside abortion clinics?

I'm not sure that I agree with people protesting so that they gain control over other people's bodies and reduce healthcare outcomes. I think there's something pernicious about trying to enforce misguided ideas onto people that are in a vulnerable place. It strikes me as a pinnacle of victim blaming.

I think there's also a nasty political under-current with the U.S.'s current obsession with abortion. One of the political aims of criminalising abortion is to reduce the number of women who are able to vote (and especially those from disadvantaged backgrounds) as they do not allow criminals to vote.

Protesting to equalise people's rights is totally different to protesting so that you can oppress others. I'd say that protests outside abortion clinics may well be within their rights, it also smacks of bullying.

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Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
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The problem is that as soon as you start defining what is an acceptable form of non violent protest you are automatically restricting the right to protest.

Personally, as long as your protest doesn't damage property or endanger people I'm happy for it to go ahead.

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hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 2 years ago
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Rich_cb wrote:

The problem is that as soon as you start defining what is an acceptable form of non violent protest you are automatically restricting the right to protest. Personally, as long as your protest doesn't damage property or endanger people I'm happy for it to go ahead.

It's not the form of the non violent protest, but what they are protesting for.

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Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
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Would you allow said protests to go ahead unencumbered by restrictions?

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hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 2 years ago
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Rich_cb wrote:

Would you allow said protests to go ahead unencumbered by restrictions?

People should have a right to protest and there's often various lines drawn over the level of disruption and whether or not certain behaviour is acceptable or not, so there obviously should be some restrictions e.g. setting fire to abortion clinics should be considered arson. However, if a significant number of people are committing arson and are prepared to stand up for their position and willingly go to jail for their anti-abortion beliefs, then I'd consider that it's a topic that deserves more communication.

What worries me more though, is when an over-represented group of people (rich, white, christians) are using their right of protest to deny the voices of the under-represented.

A similar question could be posed about the January 6th protests and whether they should face justice for their beliefs. And again, I am not sympathetic to them as they were looking to deny the rights of many voters. To be fair, though, that was not really an organised protest, but a failed coup.

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Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
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Clearly arson would fall outside the realms of non violent protest as would January 6th.

We do have restrictions on the rights of people to protest outside abortion clinics and there are frequent calls for these to be strengthened.

Meanwhile we have protests in which property is deliberately damaged, Colston Statue and various XR related shenanigans spring to mind and these are deemed to not be criminal offences.

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hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 2 years ago
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Rich_cb wrote:

Clearly arson would fall outside the realms of non violent protest as would January 6th. We do have restrictions on the rights of people to protest outside abortion clinics and there are frequent calls for these to be strengthened. Meanwhile we have protests in which property is deliberately damaged, Colston Statue and various XR related shenanigans spring to mind and these are deemed to not be criminal offences.

Damaging the Colston Statue was deemed to be a criminal offence (criminal damage) and there most certainly was a court trial. However, the jury were specifically asked if they believed a conviction for criminal damage was a “proportionate interference” with the defendants’ rights to freedom of expression, thought and conscience. You may also note that the defendants did not try to hide what they did in an attempt to escape justice.

You'll also note that there was plenty of debate about the statue, but despite being an insulting testament to the proceeds of slavery, the Merchant Venturers managed to disrupt all the attempts to get the statue removed (i.e. follow the will of the people).

Again, there's a huge difference between protest giving a voice to the unheard or conversely, protest being used to oppress a minority.

As for XR related shenanigans, they most certainly have been deemed criminal offences: https://extinctionrebellion.uk/category/trials/

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Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
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The people who carried out the damage to the statue were found 'not guilty' of criminal damage.

Given that they freely admitted their role it stands to reason that the court found that the damage did not constitute a criminal offence.

Similarly Extinction Rebellion protesters were found not guilty of criminal damage (smashing windows at a bank) despite admitting the offence and providing "no defence in law".

Once 'the right sort' of violent protest becomes tolerated we leave ourselves open to a Jan 6th type event when the 'wrong sort' of protestors decide that they will also resort to violence.

On a less apocalyptic scale we also embolden those who vandalise LTNs.

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hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 2 years ago
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Rich_cb wrote:

The people who carried out the damage to the statue were found 'not guilty' of criminal damage. Given that they freely admitted their role it stands to reason that the court found that the damage did not constitute a criminal offence. Similarly Extinction Rebellion protesters were found not guilty of criminal damage despite admitting the offence and providing "no defence in law". Once 'the right sort' of violent protest becomes tolerated we leave ourselves open to a Jan 6th type event when the 'wrong sort' of protestors decide that they will also resort to violence. On a less apocalyptic scale we also embolden those who vandalise LTNs.

I think you're arguing in bad faith there.

The Colston Statue and XR protesters have systematically had their voices not heard for decades, so there was only really one way for them to proceed.

LTN "protestors" meanwhile have had plenty of opportunities for their overly loud voices to be heard and even then, they don't stand up for what they believe in and be prepared to face the consequences of their actions. Similarly, the Jan 6th protestors have been trying almost any tactic to elude justice.

There's also an important difference - The Colston Statue was private property damaged for the public benefit whereas anti-LTN protestors are damaging public property for typically their own private benefit.

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Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
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I think you're the one arguing in bad faith.

There is absolutely no distinction between somebody who damages a statue that they don't like but that has remained standing due to local politics and someone who damages a planter or bollard that exists for similar reasons.

Once violence is tolerated our entire democracy is at risk. January 6th should be a wake up call to that.

Unfortunately people continue to justify violence that they agree with and ignore the inevitable consequences of violent protest becoming acceptable.

If it's ok for XR to smash up an office block because they 'havent had their voice heard for decades' then why can't anti abortion protestors smash up an abortion clinic? Abortion has been legal since 1968 so it's been plenty of decades since they were 'listened to'.

'There's only really one way for them to proceed' after all...

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hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 2 years ago
2 likes

Rich_cb wrote:

I think you're the one arguing in bad faith. There is absolutely no distinction between somebody who damages a statue that they don't like but that has remained standing due to local politics and someone who damages a planter or bollard that exists for similar reasons. Once violence is tolerated our entire democracy is at risk. January 6th should be a wake up call to that. Unfortunately people continue to justify violence that they agree with and ignore the inevitable consequences of violent protest becoming acceptable. If it's ok for XR to smash up an office block because they 'havent had their voice heard for decades' then why can't anti abortion protestors smash up an abortion clinic? Abortion has been legal since 1968 so it's been plenty of decades since they were 'listened to'. 'There's only really one way for them to proceed' after all...

This is getting tiresome.

The Colston statue wasn't just a case of "don't like it", but a clear endorsement of slavery. Availability of abortion has unequivocably improved people's health and welfare which is why the archaic laws were overturned. It's not just a case of "we haven't had our way for a few years", but a case of "we've always been oppressed".

This isn't going anywhere, so I doubt I'll continue responding to this discussion (other discussions welcome, though).

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Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
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A 'clear endorsement of Slavery' is one interpretation. Other people had different interpretations.

Likewise an LTN planter may represent a safe cycling route to one person and an increased amount of pollution to another.

Once we allow violence to be used by one set of people who feel alienated by the political process we open the door for a lot of other alienated groups to decide that violence is the only way forward.

XR can't even claim to be alienated, the UK has probably done more politically to achieve net zero than any other major economy. The result is one of the biggest reductions in CO2 of any major economy. The idea that the political process isn't working and XR have no choice but violence is laughable.

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chrisonabike replied to Rich_cb | 2 years ago
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Gosh - this seems to be an outbreak of relativism - wasn't expecting that!

If an LTN planter (or indeed statue) represented a cheesecake for me, and I ate it, would you say that was fair protest, criminal damage or would you call for urgent medical attention (for them to take me away)?

Would you be in favour of the Chinese government's approach to protest?  After all, I'm sure the protesters were breaking the law!  They could have damaged those tank tracks (or other state property e.g. the protesters themselves) ...

Leaving aside extremes I don't think anyone's here's "allowing violence".  As pointed out the Colston protesters had their day in court and I believe (not been following closely) the XR folks have / will.  As presumably would people vandalising planters - again not aware that anyone's been nicked for that yet.

As you know most humans have the tendency to minimise the (currently) illegal / socially unacceptable actions of those whose aims they broadly support.  This can be quite distasteful but I would be wary of "you didn't condemn it - so you're inciting it" or even "...so you as good as did it yourself".

Our figures on the CO2 by the way - broadly the same trend as Germay over the last 3 decades (World bank data).  Maybe this is largely us outsourcing our heavy / polluting industries and smoky heaters?  (Emit elsewhere.) Just look at Ukraine catching up though!  I've thrown Armenia and Rwanda in for scale - note both are going in the wrong direction.

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Rich_cb replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
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From your graph we've seen a 40% reduction over that timescale whereas Germany have seen approximately 33%.

A lot of the initial drop was from outsourcing our industry but over the last 10-15 years it's been predominantly driven by domestic improvements.

My point about protest was that violent protest cannot be normalised. If we start allowing violent protest against certain groups and for certain causes we set our society on a very dangerous path.

Non violent protest should be cherished and protected but violent protest should not and can not be tolerated.

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NOtotheEU replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
3 likes

chrisonatrike wrote:

Can you think of any cause that "won" where you can show that disruptive protest appears to have been the key?  Unfortunately the ones I can think of all had several different types of pressure at once - making a single "cause" hard to point at.  So disruptive protest (or an "armed" / "violent" wing or at least credible threats from same), political movements, "ground-up" action - and possibly "other change in circumstances" too.

Thinking of Northern Ireland, changes in status for black people in the US, women's suffrage in the UK, gay rights, reversal of apartheid laws in South Africa...

If you consider the Selma march in 1965 a disruptive protest then that could be one. The Civil Rights Act had already been passed in 1964 but little had changed in the Southern states. This was the first time a demonstration where the Police used extreme violence to deter a peaceful march had been nationally televised. It galvanised not only civil rights protesters but also politicians and a large part of the population who previously had not been confronted so directly with the reality of being black in 1960's America.

Another contender could be action by the trade union Solidarity in Poland. They bought down the Communist government and hastened the collapse of the entire Soviet Union.

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Bikeylikey replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
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[/quote]

Isn't it just the result of denying protests?

I don't mean to accuse you of being sexist or racist, but when a society has an entrenched power base that ignores the rights and voices of whole classes of people, then disruptive protest is about the only thing that works.

[/quote]

Depends what you mean by 'works'. The main function of disruptive protest is to allow people who feel powerless to air their objection, frustration or distress about an issue when nothing seems to be happening about it. The main effect, however, is to form antagonisms, entrench an 'us and them' mentality, and stiffen the resolve of governements not to submit to the protestors. Many would see that as 'weak' government. (And I speak as a former participant in many disruptive protests).

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hawkinspeter replied to Bikeylikey | 2 years ago
3 likes

Bikeylikey wrote:

Depends what you mean by 'works'. The main function of disruptive protest is to allow people who feel powerless to air their objection, frustration or distress about an issue when nothing seems to be happening about it. The main effect, however, is to form antagonisms, entrench an 'us and them' mentality, and stiffen the resolve of governements not to submit to the protestors. Many would see that as 'weak' government. (And I speak as a former participant in many disruptive protests).

Taking the Suffragette movement as an example, would women have got a vote if they just asked politely? Probably the key to getting results is to hold a sustained disruptive campaign (and possibly violent though that tends to spring from the protests being stopped with police violence) and then after people have gotten used to it, they can then graciously announce that they are stopping the disruption/violence to engage in talks. That way, the govt. can save face and declare that they are only negotiating due to the cessation of disruptive tactics although they (govt) would never have thought of negotiating without the disruptive protests.

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wtjs replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
1 like

Completely agree, except fpr the deplorable use of 'gotten'

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ktache replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
3 likes

In parliament Square there is a statue to convicted and jailed terrorist Nelson Mandela...

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Car Delenda Est replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
4 likes
hawkinspeter wrote:

Jenova20 wrote:

Act in an extreme way and you'll get an extreme reaction. When your protest becomes disruptive, violent or destructive it should be curbed. At that point you're pretty much just rioting.

If everyone thought like you then women still wouldn't have the vote and slavery would be a lot more common.

If everyone thought like them voting rights would still be linked to owning property and the House of Lords would still be the dominant house.

Radical change has always come through disruptive protest.

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Jenova20 replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
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hawkinspeter wrote:

Jenova20 wrote:

Act in an extreme way and you'll get an extreme reaction. When your protest becomes disruptive, violent or destructive it should be curbed. At that point you're pretty much just rioting.

If everyone thought like you then women still wouldn't have the vote and slavery would be a lot more common.

There's better ways to get what you want. The suffragettes in the UK were a terrorist movement. They mailed bombs and killed people. If you have to rely on violence for your cause then you can't reason or debate with logic and compassion.

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hawkinspeter replied to Jenova20 | 2 years ago
5 likes

Jenova20 wrote:

There's better ways to get what you want. The suffragettes in the UK were a terrorist movement. They mailed bombs and killed people. If you have to rely on violence for your cause then you can't reason or debate with logic and compassion.

...and when reasoning with logic and compassion leads to getting ridiculed and ignored, what avenues are left?

I can't think of any significant changes to human rights that have come from politely asking people in power to relinquish some of that power.

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nosferatu1001 replied to Jenova20 | 2 years ago
6 likes

Jenova20 wrote:

AlsoSomniloquism wrote:

Although I do like you think climate control activists are toxic to be around days after we had such extreme temperatures in Europe.

Act in an extreme way and you'll get an extreme reaction. When your protest becomes disruptive, violent or destructive it should be curbed. At that point you're pretty much just rioting.

if protest isn't disruptive, it isn't gonna be effective. History shows this to be true.  
 

"Pretty much just" is doing an awful lot of work there. 

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Rendel Harris replied to Jenova20 | 2 years ago
3 likes

Jenova20 wrote:

Act in an extreme way and you'll get an extreme reaction. When your protest becomes disruptive, violent or destructive it should be curbed. At that point you're pretty much just rioting.

Is there any form of public protest that could not be classed as "disruptive" to some degree? Even if two people meet to protest, say, outside the Russian embassy, they could be said to be disrupting the passage of people on the pavement. The logical conclusion of "curbing" any protest on the grounds that it was "disruptive" is that nobody would be allowed to protest except within the confines of their own home. Something I'm sure our current Home Secretary would be overjoyed to enforce if she thought she could get away with it.

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