I didn't know it was 1789. — ssu
I'm not sure in any case if it makes sense to apply just war doctrine to a situation like this. A group of people is slowly murdered and looted with impunity, it's "enemy" is the society they live in and are supposed to be a part of. It's all rather academic since a majority of people in the US seem to be ready to embrace some of the changes necessary.
Even so, let's take the examples of the Jews in 1940. Your argument that it wouldn't be effective isn't an argument against the moral right of the Jews back then to bomb and burn buildings indiscriminately as they were murdered indiscriminately by the State apparatus supported by the German people; either actively or by doing nothing. — Benkei
And there's a parallel there with modern times in that it isn't enough to not be a racist but to be actively anti-racist. It wasn't enough not to be a Nazi but to be anti-Nazi. That's the only way to stop racism. — Benkei
Yet you might learn something from the past before thinking that this now everything is so totally different. For starters, perhaps you should ease with the bombastic righteous hubris of declaration like the following:Any honest grappling with what is going on now takes as it's starting point the recognition that the crisis is contemporary and the that crisis is current; not some hangover from the past. — StreetlightX
The ruling class is shitting their pants and if you can't see that you're either not looking or an idiot. Every one of them is scrambling to show some kind of solidarity with the protestors - faked or otherwise. — StreetlightX
And who are then negating anti-racism or equalising measures? Is there some negating anti-racism here?You will never get a socially conscious racist to defend racism. It will always always always be a reaction to negate any specific anti-racist thing. - You will never get a socially conscious politician to defend inequality. It will always always always be a reaction to negate any specific equalising measure. — fdrake
What exactly can we learn from the past to understand the meaning of the current protest?you might learn something from the past before thinking that this now everything is so totally different — ssu
It's not about the meaning of the protests, it's just what happens afterwards. When the media focus and our focus is turned somewhere else and when in a few years similar issues rise again.What exactly can we learn from the past to understand the meaning of the current protest? - Even the Occupy movement of 2011 was completely different. — Number2018
Few people handling the social media pages of politicians in their PR teams having to weigh in their tweets isn't equivalent of "the ruling class shitting their pants". Those making their livelyhoods out of the media circus will naturally be all hyped up, but that isn't everything. — ssu
When the media focus and our focus is turned somewhere else and when in a few years similar issues rise again. — ssu
Changing a whole legal system is a daunting task. Doing something about systemic inequality is another. — ssu
So what do you think of the current situation? Will be there the significant improvement of the systemic problems? What could make the current protest unique is the broad support of the mainstream media, the considerable part of the political elite, and big corporations. I do not remember any similar cases in the recent history. You can compare it with Hon-Kong. Or, the Yellow Vests Movement in France was brutally crushed by the government, completely backed by the media and the political establishment. The question is if the media and the elite intent to deal withIt's not about the meaning of the protests, it's just what happens afterwards. — ssu
Yes, the OWS was cleared away in the middle of the night in November without any media present in a coordinated operation and then it disappeared after 2012. You can argue that it was different. Well there were similarities... — ssu
The question is if the media and the elite intent to deal with the problems, or 'they will turn their focus somewhere else'. — Number2018
that group remains accountable for its actions. — BitconnectCarlos
Why. Why the hell does 'that group' become accountable for its actions and not the whole of society? Are you suggesting they're a completely causally isolated group, because that would be an absurd claim.
No, I simply don't believe you care an iota about 'humanity'.
At the end of the day I care about individuals getting what they deserve. — BitconnectCarlos
So far, it is too early to make any predictions. Some people noted that one of the tangible results of the ongoing protests is the intensification of political correctness. All in all, it could functiononly real threats to that system will prompt a real reaction. — ChatteringMonkey
I meant that group as individuals. — BitconnectCarlos
Responsibility primarily rests at the individual level. — BitconnectCarlos
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.