If you want to propose something extreme such as that the destruction of resources will likely produce a better future for humanity than refraining from such destruction, then of course the onus would be on you to make a convincing argument for that. — Janus
Fair enough. I really don't think a couple of storefronts are that important that their destruction has to accompanied by a detailed and watertight argument. Although I'm probably at the extreme end of advocating property damage, I think what seems to get everybody on this side of the debate frustrated is the disparity in concern. Even if we just take the US right now. 2000 (mostly) young black men are being killed by their police forces every year, thousands more are being criminalised by stress-policing methods and live in conditions we should find appalling given the wealth of the nation as a whole. A group, frustrated by the continuation of this situation, despite several decades of so-called progressive attitudes, come up with a plan to tell the country just how angry they are. And Instead of think "my God, these people have been seriously mistreated", commentary is deflected into criticism of their tactics. I'm not suggesting that such discussion should be off-limits, but I do want to put questions of onus into perspective. Given the deplorable situation that's being protested, no-one is under any particular obligation to submit a full justification for their protest methods so long as they fall within the very broadest parameters - show people that there's some human beings they share a country with who have been made really angry by these unjust circumstances. Anything that might achieve that goal is
de facto a reasonable course of action, given the deplorable situation they're trying to resolve.
None of the rest of what you say constitutes any argument to support the notion that destruction of resources is likely to lead to better outcomes. It just looks like a "I've read more than you have, so there". Give an argument in your own words for a plausible mechanism for how violence or destruction of resources could lead to positive social change, and I'll give it due consideration and critique. — Janus
I have given an argument in my own words. I've just supported it with evidence from social science. I'm trying to avoid the 'just so' storytelling that seems to pervade many of the posts here. "X leads to Y which leads to Z", presented as if it were just a fact of the world. We're not the first people to give this any thought. There are people out there who have investigated, analysed, sought out controls, and then gathered all that work together and compared each to he other to identify common themes. I realise it's not physics or chemistry, but it's a damn sight better than just 'reckoning' some stuff, so I'll make no apology for trying source my arguments in the literature.
Help me out and outline one, even if it is merely hypothetical (which of course it would be anyway) if you can.
So, it's obvious how peaceful protest and rational discussion and agreement (however difficult it might be to achieve them) could work, just outline some ways in which you think violence, looting and destructive behavior might help. — Janus
Since my last attempt obviously failed, I'll have another go.
Trying to persuade people of a position held by a minority which goes against the majority interest is not the same as trying to persuade people of a position which is (or could
look like it is) held by a majority and coincides with (or could
look like it coincides with) majority interests. The peaceful protests or rational debates you see having successes in policy terms are of that second nature. The issue with victims of stress policing is of the first nature. People have a strong tendency to be influenced by the apparent behaviour of the majority of people in the social group to which they aspire to belong, so persuading them to behave in some way where it can be made to appear that their social group all behave this way is fairly easy (even if their social group do not in fact all behave that way - it can easily be made to appear that they do). People are very rarely convinced of anything by rational arguments. Again, literally hundreds of studies have been done on this, dozens of textbooks written about it. You don't have to believe it (there are a few radical theorists who disagree), but it's not a matter of plausibility.
So, given that there's a task of persuading people about this minority issue, and given that presenting a rational argument isn't going to cut it, and neither is presenting a new model behaviour for the social group (very few people aspire to belong to the social group represented by those affect by this issue). There has to be a third tactic. One thing which does encourage rational consideration of the arguments is dissent from social norms, it's like the shock of a cold shower waking you up, it shakes the mind out of it's routine and forces the consideration of a new norm. A very large protest might do it, a riot definitely does. Yes there's a backlash without doubt (and studies have shown that when the message coincides with majority interests, the backlash is worse than the attention it gained - the plan backfires), but at least people are talking about the issue, and doing so outside of the scripted cliches they're used to using - because something dramatic has happened outside of the experience those scripts were designed to deal with. Basically, once everyone has stopped being faux-offended at the property damage, they'll still be an issue to answer.
So having established the action needs to be visceral and dissenting, why McDonalds and Target...
This is why the systemic nature of the oppression matters. McDonalds are not innocent bystanders, Target are not innocent bystanders. They're part of a system which, by it's very nature, creates and oppresses the class of people protesting, it creates the very conditions responsible for all those deaths. It's not that all the protestors are dedicated Marxist theorists, but that they see wealth and privilege on one side of the street, and none on theirs, in a united nation, that's just default wrong. The privileged have automatically dome something wrong, just by still being privileged.
One thing people don't like is being identified as the 'bad guys'. One of the problems with protest on a purely party political scale is it maintains the illusion (seen here writ large on this very thread) that the only bad guys are the politicians, that they're entirely responsible for everything being the way it is and everyone else are just meat puppets doing their jobs. Protests without threat of violence or property damage become just a part of the system. The wealthy oppress, the poor protest about it, nothing happens, it becomes like the wallpaper, the normal backdrop of daily life. Something has to present a real threat to even make it to the discussion table.
Presenting strong emotional behaviour encourages empathy (not in the sense the term is usually used - often confused with sympathy) we literally feel their anger just because we see how angry they are. It's conflicting to feel the subject of that anger as well as the anger itself. It's why it's necessary to dehumanise the enemy in times of war, and dehumanisation is definitely one of the responses violent riots risk, but it's only a risk, not a certainty. If it is done right, there will be the dissonance sufficient to stimulate re-evaluation, but not sufficient to encourage dehumanisation. This is why I mentioned commitment and consistency. They both not only encourage rational consideration, but they work against any attempt to dehumanise.
To summarise, with messages affecting only minority interests it is necessary to perform some dissenting threatening action to stimulate rational consideration of the argument. This dissenting action often has a backlash, but in many cases the backlash is less harmful than the subsequent consideration of the position. The targets of this dissenting action need to be within the community of people who need to consider the arguments, not some distant authority, otherwise they remain irrelevant issues. Defacing statues is ideal, putting the odd brick through a window, a bit of fisticuffs...burning down a whole store is bordeline...any more than that and you'll end up being too easy to dehumanise, or face a backlash bigger than the value of the issue being discussed, but to draw the line at any property damage whatsoever, has no net value.