Spyke
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Peaceful protests were meant to be a compromise to warn that something worse was coming. Black Panthers. Weather Underground. IRA and Sinn Fein.

Effective peaceful movements had potentially violent components. The more radical elements disappeared and peaceful protests became useless.

Unions were a compromise. Before unions, you’d drag the factory owner into his front lawn and exact justice.

205

I think this guy hit the nail in the head.

Peaceful protest only works if politicians and financial elite has fear and/or respect towards the commond man/woman. Too much elitisms strips away the respect, too many years of peaceful protests takes away the fear. Sometimes ivory towers need to come down, but violence has a tendency to spread and spiral out of control. It's a balance trick.

67
JayDeereply
lemmy.world

Nelson Mandela was released on the terms that he would preach peaceful protest, as the movement he had formerly been leading was a serious threat to the South African Government.

Reverend Martin Luther King Jr was a proponent of peaceful protest, though it could be argued he was losing faith in it near the end when he was assassinated. right after his death, the Holy Week Uprisings occurred, which saw immediate action from the federal government to pass the Civil Rights Act.

At the same time, acts of violence lie on a spectrum, and I think there is a fair amount of conversation to be had about what degree of violence and what type of violence are most effective.

32
skulblakareply
sh.itjust.works

Martin Luther King Jr was able to succeed with his peaceful protests because the threat of Malcolm X was looming directly over his shoulder. One requires the other. Either of them alone would not have made nearly the progress they did.

17

I would say that both Malcolm X and MLK ultimately failed at their end goals, personally.

My bigger point was that the holy week uprising was able to progress things forward more in one week than either movement could do in the many years they were active. To be fair, I do not think the level of vigour and organization shown in the holy week uprising could have happened without the many liberation groups' prior work.

Ultimately, the use of violence is complex and how to effectively use it is just as complex. We should be discussing how to use all tactics and methods available, and not view violence as the only important component.

1

Ghandi was partly successful because of the British governments violence towards thier peaceful protests.

1
lemmy.world

Yea only under the threat of violence has power ever changed hands. You need both peaceful and violent components to any movement to make any change last though.

24

Also: we've got where we are under threat of violence. Charlottesville and Jan 6 in the USA, the recent gammon riots in the UK, everything Putin does, etc, etc. The Authoritarians have weaponised both peace and violence against us.

10
lemmy.ml

The people saying "Violence isn't the answer" are the people who don't want to see anything change

116

You can use words, but when does it end, and what makes you think you are going to end up better off?

30

Violence ends when non-violent reforms are able to succeed. The real value of violence is that it makes the non-violent option palatable to the political center.

20

The doctor was against violence as a principle but he famously uses tons of violence (I guess in the form of trickery) but as a last resort.

House: “fear me, I’ve killed hundreds of time lords”

The Doctor: “fear me, I’ve killed all of them”

9

The problem here is that the war already started but just one side is really fighting it.

I would be in favour of not starting it too, but it's too late now.

5
lemmy.world

"Violence is not the answer" says country that won its place in the world through violence.

109
lemm.ee

The USA would still be a colony of Britain if it wasn't for a violent revolution.

44
sh.itjust.works

The USA would still be a native american land if millions of people had not been wiped out by Europeans

38
lemmy.world

The Native Americans would have been much better off if they had simply strangled Columbus and all his crew the moment they made landfall..

21
reddthat.com

I get the humor in what you say, but it's worth noting that the Native American civilizations were collapsing due to disease brought by earlier European visitors by the time Columbus set sail.

Granted, history probably would've been largely the same if Columbus' expeditions were unsuccessful, given the English, French, Dutch and Spanish appetites for empire building

9
bufalo1973reply
lemmy.ml

There's a saga that is about "what if Columbus arrived to America but never got back to Europe?". It's "the tale of the feathered serpent".

5
reddthat.com

That sounds super neat. When I google it I find these books amongst other more confused seeming results. Is that the right ones or is it something else?

4
lemmy.world

There are PLENTY of examples where violence wasn't the answer. Those moments made gradual changes that didn't have epic struggles with heroic figureheads, so they're boring, they're not obvious, and nobody talks about them.

There are a lot more examples in history where violence was used as a tool to oppress, threaten, conquer, destroy, or completely wipe out, by great and powerful entities.

Violence is sometimes the answer, if used by cool heads on specific targets with plans on what to do afterwards.

68
lemmy.world

The problem with the fetishization of non-violence is that it ignores that most transformative non-violent social movements have occurred concurrently with violent co-movements. Ghandi preached non-violence, but at the same time, violent Hindu radicals were running around slitting the throats of every British official they could get their hands on. MLK preached non-violence, but the Black Panthers were waiting in the wings, offering a much more unpleasant option if MLK failed.

Violent social movements have very real tangible value, but their value isn't in the violence itself. We're not going to change the health insurance system through pure violence, no matter how many CEOs lay dead on the streets of Manhattan.

On the other hand, non-violent social movements rarely succeed either. Even the most modest, centrist, and conciliatory of reforms are derided as extreme or "Communist." Look at Obamacare, a reform designed from the ground up to NOT disrupt the profits of the insurance or healthcare industries. This was a modest market-based reform that was originally a Republican reform plan. The right spent a decade going nuts calling it the second coming of Mao. And they still oppose it to this day. In the end it tinkered around the edges, but it was hardly transformative change.

The real value of violence is that it makes modest peaceful reforms much more palatable. The civil rights amendments and acts passed in the 1960s and 1970s would have never passed if there were only peaceful movements behind them. They amended the damn constitution! That took people on both sides of the aisle saying, "damn, we really need to change some things. This is getting out of hand."

And that kind of broad bipartisan consensus that reform was needed was only possible because of the threat of violence. Violent radicals like the Black Panthers made MLK palatable to middle America. Without them, MLK would have just been another radical socialist to be demonized. And even then, they still killed him anyway.

The real value of violent social movements is that they make non-violent social movements possible. In fact, without violence, non-violent social movements rarely succeed. You need BOTH violence and non-violence if you want to make substantial change to the system. The violence puts the fear of God into the placid middle classes and wealthy corporate interests. This allows the non-violent reformers to show up with a solution to the problem that allows these centrist factions to feel that they're not giving in to the violent radicals. Violence and non-violence are two sides of the same coin. And they are both essential.

47
lemmy.ml

It seems the technique you're describing is a kind of societal "good cop, bad cop". Similar scenario to an interrogation too (trying to get information from someone who does not want to share the information) because in this case the challenge is "how to get people to share the capacity for self-determination, quality of living, and dignity when they clearly prefer to hoard it, even to the detriment of others".

7

Exactly. No group has ever won rights by asking nicely. The truth is that it doesn't actually take too large a portion of a population, acting together, to cause a society to come screeching to a halt. Law, order, and the right to private property can only be maintained if the vast, vast majority of the populace is willing to peacefully go along with the status quo. If tomorrow 10% of the population wakes up crazy and decides to just start setting everything they can on fire, we'll be back in the Stone Age within a month. Most meaningful reform has come down to forcing those with power to choose between modest, but potentially painful reform on one hand and "watch as we burn it all down" on the other.

The black population would not have been able to credibly win against the white population if an all-out eliminationist race war had been sparked in 1950s America. But ultimately, they didn't have to be able to win such a war to create a credible threat of intolerable violence. The black population alone couldn't win a total war against the white population, but any kind of wide-scale race war would have completely collapsed the American economy and society. And such a war likely would have had factions receiving military support from US adversaries such as the Soviet Union. The threat of the Black Panthers was essentially, "we may not be able to win an all out war against our oppressors, but if push comes to shove, we can turn the US into another Vietnam." Compared to that potential nightmare, the modest and quite understandable reforms that MLK demanded seemed quite reasonable.

Same thing with workers' rights. "Give us an 8 hour workday" seemed extreme in isolation. But if the choice was, "give us an 8 hour workday, or we burn this factory to ashes" or "give us the right to unionize, or we can start listening to those literal Communists over there promising to bring out the guillotines..." well suddenly an 8 hour workday or a right to unionize doesn't seem so extreme.

It is very much a good cop bad cop dynamic. It's no coincidence that unionization, workers rights, and redistributive economic programs peaked when the Soviet Union was at the height of its power. Literal Communism is a philosophy that can appeal to downtrodden groups anywhere. And when the Soviet Union was ascendant and actively fomenting socialist revolutions and violent uprisings across the globe, they were able to serve as the "bad cop" that allowed modest reformers in the US to be the "good cop" pushing for various reforms and social programs.

9
lemmy.ca

apart of me still holds out that we don't need this type of system to push progress, taking america for example, this will not go well and many lives will be lost as there will be "both sides" and they will stay divided. The propaganda machine from Eurasia has worked. There plans are moving quite well, and i for one, will not play into that hand.

2
lemmy.world

Lives are already being lost. Today, approximately 186 people will be murdered by their insurance companies through the wrongful denial of life-saving, medically necessary care. By raw body count, Brian Robert Thompson killed far, far more people than Osama Bin Ladin ever did. The health insurance industry racks up a 9/11 worth of deaths every 16 days or so. That is how many people are currently being murdered by the private health insurance industry.

14
lemmy.ca

I understand that's a problem you guys are facing the US. But what will you achieve with violence? You know what trump will do. This is not going to play out like the movies. I can't sway what your choice will be, but i fear for everyones lives who participate in a civil war with US government, and russia will swoop in and support as Putins plans have intended.

-3
lemmy.world

This is a long term struggle that will take far longer than the next Trump term. And what can Trump really do? I'm expecting what violence to occur to be more acts like Luigi's. I'm not expecting some rebel army to form up and lay siege to Congress or to United Healthcare's corporate headquarters. Instead, the path will be similar to other periods of political violence that were contemporaneous with nonviolent social movements in US history.

There were people killed in the name of worker's rights. There were people killed in the name of women's suffrage. John Brown killed in the name of abolition. Black civil rights had acts of violence done its name, as did the women's and queers rights movements. Mostly these took the form of random small-scale acts of violence by individuals and small groups.

We're not talking about a civil war here. These are isolated acts of stochastic violence. We're talking one or two individuals occasionally taking out a CEO, assassinating a politician, setting a building on fire, planting a bomb, etc. That's the kind of violence we've had in similar historical settings. We're not going to have some American ISIS that you can wage a bombing campaign against.

Remember, America is absolutely awash in firearms. Someone doesn't need to join a formal terrorist group to commit an act of terror. They can just go buy a perfectly legal AR-15 and commit an act of terrorism with it. Giant acts of mass murder probably require a more organized group, but no one is going to try and commit a 9/11 scale attack in the name of health insurance reform. Giant attacks with huge collateral damage aren't really the kind of thing that appeals to people who are ultimately motivated by a desire to save lives. Expect more Luigis, not more Bin Ladins.

There is no organization for the US government to wage war on. Imagine every school shooting being substituted for a shooting against the health insurance or other industry. That's the kind of scenario that could happen if this anti-corporate violence became widespread. Sure, Trump can lock up a Luigi and throw away the key, but that was going to happen anyway. It's not like anyone commits one of these attacks thinking they're just going to be able to go back to their lives afterwards.

What can Trump really do? Is he going to start arresting people for posting pro-Luigi comments on social media? You going to try to prosecute half the country? There aren't enough jails to hold everyone. And any such crackdown would only create a bunch of sympathetic figures that would serve to radicalize the populace and swing public opinion even more in the direction of meaningful reform.

Look at what has already happened. One act of violence, and the national conversation has entirely changed. Each act of violence turns up the national temperature just a little bit, and makes peaceful reform that much more palatable. We've already seen several new reform bills introduced into Congress in the wake of the shooting. As things continue to degrade, as health insurance becomes ever crueler, as wealth inequality grows ever higher, the national temperature will continue to slowly rise, one act of random unpredictable and unpreventable violence at a time. Eventually some critical threshold will be reached, and the political center, which desires stability above all else, will be moved to finally embrace meaningful reform. This is the pattern that has happened with every major social movement in American history, and it is likely what we will see eventually in this case.

5
lemmy.ca

I understand your points, but if we are to believe trumps demeanor, what's to stop him going full authoritarian, and throwing political protestors into camps? he seems like he want's to do it with immigrants, what's stopping him from doing that? This where i enter the thought of civil war. The average person will be complacent, and trumps supporters will join in as a para-military group. YOU will be labelled a terrorist regardless of pulling a luigi. Its not up to you to make that up, its up to the media and the government.

2

Sure, that may be possible. But again, that would just serve to radicalize people further. If people are being labeled terrorists and put in camps just for venting on social media, expect the level of violence to multiply a hundred fold. People will avoid posting on social media out of fear, but people will be so enraged that the number of people actually willing to resort to violence will increase a hundred fold. Currently Luigi is the rare exception. Put someone's brother in a camp for posting a picture of Nintendo's Luigi, and they may pick up a gun.

And yet, there still wouldn't be a civil war. There won't be armies fighting each other on a field of combat. There won't be an ISIS to wage war on. There would be multiple Luigis per day, each one acting independently, utterly unpredictable and utterly unpreventable. This would make Trump look completely weak and powerless. And even if everyone was too afraid to say it, most of the population would be supporting the Luigis.

In a nation with widespread access to highly lethal firearms, the government simply cannot prevent single individuals from going on killing sprees. Sure, if a group of people plan an elaborate plot, that creates an opportunity to intervene. But in a case like Luigi's, it was planned entirely in one man's head. There's nothing the government can do to prevent such random lone gunman attacks.

And this is why I wouldn't expect Trump to start arresting people just for social media comments. Ultimately it would multiply violence a hundred fold, and it would make Trump look weak and ineffective. And that's the last thing someone like Trump wants. I would instead expect pressure to be applied to social media companies to wield the ban hammer more vigorously, but actually arresting people for venting on social media seems very unlikely.

4
RavingGrobreply
lemm.ee

You don't have to look to movies, to see what violence can achieve. And it's not violence alone that makes the change.

1

Exactly. It's the combination of peaceful movements and violent movements that make change possible.

1
uisreply

"If you will not listen to us, you will have to talk with THEM".

2

Non-violence is often and most effectively a direct threat of imminent violence.

Or as a promise for the cessation of ongoing violence.

10

Violence is always a valid answer. It's just not always the best answer. The problem with violence is it's been proven time and time again to be impossible to control and hold to a limited use since there are no cool heads at that point. Nor do specific targets exist-- just collateral damage.

And no successful revolutionary has ever had a sound plan for after the victory beyond "I want the power now." And they can either hold the power or not. But the idea of "for the good of the people" gets put to the side pretty quickly.

2
uisreply

with plans on what to do afterwards.

True. You always need a plan what to do after success.

1

There are entire Game Theory textbooks dedicated to grappling with the question of when and how one engages in violence. Because broadly speaking, violence is bad. The destructive social forces inhibit socio-economic development, degrade global quality of life, propagate disease, and cause catastrophic shortfalls of critical goods and services.

Whether you're working at the micro-scale of domestic abuse or the macro-scale of the bombing of Hiroshima, you're talking about a gross net negative for everyone involved.

But if a detente is one-sided, or a violent actor is free to act uninhibited, there are huge immediate rewards for looting and pillaging your neighbors, pressing ganging people into forced labor, and seizing neighboring property at gunpoint. It works great for perpetrators who engage in violence unchecked. Its only a problem when the perpetrator runs into a countervailing force.

But then over the long term, the violence takes an increasing toll. People don't build in neighborhoods that they think will be bombed. They don't invest in communities that are fracturing and falling apart. They don't befriend people they feel they can't trust or work alongside people they're terrified of.

Go look at Yugoslavia before and after the wars of the 1990s. Huge unified economy capable of operating on par with France or Italy, only to be splintered by violence and reduced to a near-pre-industrial state for over a decade. Who won the Yugoslav Wars? Who benefited from Bosnians and Serbians and Albanians and Croats pounding their plowshares into swords and slaughtering one another?

People talk about a "Peace Dividend" and you can see it in any country that's avoided a protracted military conflict for a generation or more. You can't be a successful country if you're always trying to hold one another at gunpoint.

67

I really like your comment. Gave me lots to think about. I don't have much to say in return, other than that, and that your comment is really well written. I don't find many comments on here that are a pleasure to read; most long ones are incoherent rambling, or canned talking points.

Thanks for providing something for my brain to chew on and making it palatable.

13
Omegareply
discuss.online

Very wise, you should reincarnate as a 2nd century Chinese warlord

8

China's a great example of the Peace Dividend in action. You get a generation or two of peace and the country explodes with riches - both physical infrastructure and flowering culture.

Then warlords start poaching the wealth of the nation and the country plunges down into poverty, famine, and epidemic, immolating decades of social process.

After the burn out, you get a peaceful renaissance, and the country flowers again like a forest after a wildfire.

8
mander.xyz

The US is a successful country and has almost always been at war.

Britain at its peak was holding 10s of countries at gunpoint.

Violence works best if you are much much stronger than the other party.

4
lemmy.world

The US is a successful country and has almost always been at war.

The areas of the US that are most successful are those most insulated from social conflict. Areas that are subjected to state violence through overpolicing or are left to flounder in the face of industrial abuse, mafia violence, or unchecked domestic violence do much worse. Comparing Ferguson, MO to neighboring St. Louis illustrates this dynamic. One neighborhood is alternately brutalized by the city police and left exposed to domestic crime, dragging its socio-economic state into the gutter. The other is judiciously policed and socially supported by state and private largess, resulting in a far healthier and happier population.

Britain at its peak was holding 10s of countries at gunpoint.

And those countries suffered immensely. Meanwhile, Britain itself endured pockets of chronic crime and substance abuse specifically in areas that hosted military bases and other enclaves. The country saw an explosion in wealth inequality during its economic peak with the new wealth almost entirely accruing to the aristocracy. Victorian England was a hellhole for the Dickensian proletariat.

4
lemmy.blahaj.zone

Areas that are subjected to state violence through overpolicing

Chicken, egg

Both of those are just chicken, egg

1
lemmy.world

Chicken, egg

The police trace their roots to military officers, cattle rustlers, and plantation overseers.

The conception of police-as-civil-servant intent on discouraging violence rather than initiating it is a relatively new one.

2
lemmy.world

"Violence is bad" statements are in the same vein as "stove is hot". Both are told to children because they cannot properly gauge the consequeces of using it, but are naive and condescending when told to adults.

55
lemmy.world

A notable uptick in web queries for "guillotine for sale" is not a DDoS.

36

Anyone who believes that violence doesn't solve anything has clearly never paid attention.

29
lemmy.zip
  1. Whenever violence is involved, either both sides are violent, or violence wins.

  2. When neither side is violent, violence is not the answer.

  3. Now both sides look at #1 and ponder if the other side is ready to be violent.

23
KairuBytereply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

It’s murder for profit, don’t dilute the term genocide. The last thing we need is people calling everything genocide and making the literal genocide in Gaza seem more normal.

13

As many people say, the horror of the Nazis wasn't just that they killed so many people, but that they industrialized it, turned it into an inhuman factory process like they were mass-producing shoes.

In a similar way we have modern corporations that have brought neo liberal styles to the idea of murder. Instead of the industrial style of the Nazis, this style serves to alienate the murder from the murderer, putting a price tag on deaths and profiting from the lives they're destroying all veiled by the size of these companies and the corporate double-speak that places all the lives they have control over into their sterile profit-centered game they play.

3
lemmy.world

Non-violence != Pacifism

A person can be an advocate for non-violence and not be a pacifist. No need to conflate the two, particularly when people have so much hate and vitriol for any perceived pacifism.

10

The answer is obviously codifying the position of power that violence granted you in a set of laws, hoping they won't be challenged by further violence

16
lemmy.ml

non-violent resistance is more often effective

It's only ever effective when a credible violent alternative is present.

No oppressed person in history has ever gotten their rights by appealing to the better nature of their oppressor.

Civil rights weren't won when black people asked politely and just moving everyone's hearts at how unjustly they were being treated, when MLK died, he had a 75% disapproval rating. Civil rights were won through repeated demonstrations of power and showing what would happen if their demands weren't met.

28
lemmy.ml

I couldn't get past the 4th example of "non-violence" without laughing at how wildly revisionist they are. While each of these had non-violent components, none of them would have succeeded without violence. The housing rights act wasn't passed until literally every city was on fire.

Here's a great book detailing the experiences that lead civil rights leaders to understand the importance of a real, credible threat for any "non-violent" component to be effective..

The British gave up their occupation of India after a decades-long nonviolent struggle by the Indian population led by Mohandas Gandhi.

The Danes, Norwegians and other peoples in Europe used civil resistance against Nazi invasion during World War II, raising the costs to Germany of its occupation of these nations, helping to strengthen the spirit and cohesion of their people, and saving the lives of thousands of Jews in Berlin to Copenhagen to Paris and elsewhere.

Labor movements around the world have consistently used tactics of civil resistance to win concessions for workers throughout the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.

African Americans used civil resistance in their struggle to dissolve segregation in the United States in the 1950s and 1960s.

17

Civil resistance against Nazi invasion

I'm sure the 2.7 million tonnes of bombs being dropped on them didn't exactly tip that scale much...

4

I couldn't get past the 4th example of "non-violence" without laughing at how wildly revisionist they are. While each of these had non-violent components, none of them would have succeeded without violence.

I believe the violent aspects of these resistances are considered and included in the overall analysis in the book I linked.

I think you may be jumping to conclusions when you see something that doesn't immediately fall into your own views. Those examples are clearly a simplified and truncated set to quickly get the point across for the purpose of an "About Us" page while there is lots of in-depth information available throughout the site.

If you have qualms with their findings or data, you'd be better off taking it up with them instead of me. I don't purport to be an expert on this subject. I am only relaying that there is plenty of credible research, data, and analysis that shows that non-violent resistance is effective.

Edit

Here you can see how and why the book defines these. The book and its author is a major resource for the website.

https://www.ericachenoweth.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/WCRW-Appendix.pdf

-12
Lumisalreply
lemmy.world

Wait, are you using multiple accounts to support your argument? The OP comment is under a different username but you just responded to that person as if you made that initial content presenting the data.

And reminder that Lemmy shows edit history.

3

Yeah, sorry 'bout that; that was my bad. I didn't mention it since you figured out my intent. Looks like me moving my comment might have led to some confused lemmings, though.

3
Lumisalreply
lemmy.world

No, the op comment presenting the data. The username just changed right now to match yours.

-1

I'm very confused about what you're claiming. Are you saying I somehow edited a comment's user?

Regardless, I'm not using multiple accounts to... argue with myself?

If a comment author changed username, I would be dubious of the platform you're using to view this thread. Could be an issue with an app you're using.

3
Not_mikeyreply
slrpnk.net

A few questions for the study:

  1. What's the data source? If they're just doing news reports and traditional history that can hide a lot of failed non-violent protests. A non violent protest, especially one against the medias interests, is way less likely to show up in the historical record then a violent insurrection. Only the successful movements like the civil rights movement will get mentioned on the non-violent side whereas every insurrection or riot, successful or not, is captured in the historical record.

  2. What's the breakdown by method? It seems they're including strikes in this which has a very high success rate and high occurrence, so much so it could drown out all the failed protests.

13
Eheranreply
lemmy.world

Random, generalizing comment:

The people saying "Violence isn't the answer" are the people who don't want to see anything change

50 upvotes. Comment actually based on real data that happens to show that the original premise is actually wrong: 0 upvotes. Why is Lemmy exactly like Reddit? I thought people coming here were a bit more aware of ideologies etc.

4

The real data you like is arguing the Nazis were more effectively defeated through non violence.

23

There is a massive difference between someone who actively fights against their biases and doesn't let them dictate the conclusions they reach, and is always open to changing those conclusions and their way of thinking as new information comes to their attention, and someone who clings to those biases, and happily ignores anything that may challenge them.

I only define the latter category as "ideologues". Sure, technically everyone who is sapient has an ideology, but as the definition says:

an adherent of an ideology, especially one who is uncompromising and dogmatic.

I have a feeling you know very well that's the kind of person I was talking about. And no, not everyone is like that. On Reddit I was once called a "commie" and a "Nazi" on the same day by different people in different subs, lol, both in reaction to being told a fact that contradicted a bias of theirs. Those are the kind of people I'm talking about.

2
lemmy.world

This whole UHC/Luigi thing has really outlined how dangerously toxic Lemmy is. I mean "dangerous" very literally, too. It should not incite the amount of vitriol I have received because I dared to say "I don't like killing".

-25
lemmy.world

Apparently, no amount of complaining, begging, and letters to Congress are going to fix it so, here we are.

There are other stronger actions available before advocating for killing. Let's focus on those first, eh?

-8
lemmy.world

You got flak - rightfully - because you critiziced the claims adjustment while having no sympathy for the victims of legalized mass murder by denial of claims. So don't play the victim here.

10
enkersreply
sh.itjust.works

1900-2006? This past century has literally been humanity's most transformative ever, and this chart is just glomming all the data together. We'd need to see trends of how these have changed over time to get a realistic picture.

-3
enkersreply
sh.itjust.works

That's the exact same link I already read. Did you mean to send me something else? There was a link titled "award-winning research" to a $27 book. I wasn't able to find any further data sources beyond the provided anecdotes. Did I miss something?

(Minor edit for clarity.)

7
enkersreply
sh.itjust.works

I mean, you literally said:

the rest of the information and studies that accompany it,

(Emphasis mine.)

I only saw only one study referenced, which seems to be a book, not an academic paper.

In any case, I appreciate the data sources. I'll take a look.

5
lemmy.world

The book itself is based on multiple studies. Here is the first part of the second paragraph for the book's description:

Combining statistical analysis with case studies of specific countries and territories [...]

The website has some other studies referenced and such. It kinda seems that you barely opened either of the links.

-4

Ok, well I don't have the book, or links to the studies it's based on, so that's not particularly helpful.

I throughly scanned the page for data sources and scholarly papers, and also read some of the major concepts and provided examples. I did not see any further studies or data linked in either of the pages you linked to yourself, but if I did miss something, please feel free to point it out.

Once again, thank you for providing the source data you already did. It's a fairly complicated dataset, so it'll take some effort to grok.

7

It’s a double edged sword, because people who you don’t agree with will resort to violence as well. Like the Taliban.

12

Violence is not the answer. It is the question, and the answer is YES

11

Predictably, people are arguing if violence can be an answer. But the best rule of thumb is "speak softly, but carry a big stick". If peaceful demonstration and diplomacy ran its course, then violence is the only path forward. I mean, the abolition of slavery in the United States could never be done by peaceful means (unlike what UK had done) so war was the only way.

8
lemmy.world

If brute force doesn't work, you're not doing it enough

6

Maxim 6: If violence wasn't your last resort, you failed to resort to enough of it.

1

My Abeka Book history book says God destined America to succeed, so I think you guys might be overreacting.

5
derekreply
infosec.pub

Your statement is too vague to convey an actionable suggestion. I'm intrigued by the thought you seem to be hinting at. Would you expand on this, include a recommended method, and reason about why it's an alternative to violence?

9

I'm very tired and had a long day so I'll keep it short:

A lot of people (myself included) have difficulty listening to authorities. But if i can see the deeper meaning and benefit of a rule, it's easy for me to keep to it. That is what i mean by putting "meaning(ful rules) into the world".

On the other hand, if somebody gives out commands without explaining the reasoning behind them, i will often complain, revolt or otherwise try to undermine the authority. That is what i mean by "violence leads to counterviolence".

I hope that was clear enough.

2

For sane news, that covers important domestic and international news on a daily basis, look at PBS Newshour or Democracy Now on YouTube. Sane. Journalistic. Thoughtful.

Abandon the legacy billionaire media, but don't abandon journalism.

2
lemmy.world

It really isn't though. It's always two steps forward three steps back. Anything good that arises out of the destruction, always comes at an immense cost, and usually corrupts the revolutionary leaders who made it happen.

Is there any violent revolution in history for which genuine peace followed in the immediate aftermath?

I think violence is often necessary. But I wouldn't say it's ever the right answer.

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lemm.ee

Is there any violent revolution in history for which genuine peace followed in the immediate aftermath?

Most of them, depending on your definition of immediate.

8

A few weeks to months following the rebellion. Maybe a year at most.

It's different if the rebellion does not itself topple the structures of government. I'm talking about violent coups specifically I suppose, not a bit of violent protesting that motivates an existing government to act.

2
lemmy.world

Maybe look into how we ended up with 8-hour workdays and weekends… Hint: it was not through peaceful, polite negotiations with the ruling class…

7

Okay, but I'm talking about violent coups really. Not just not-so-peaceful protests.

Even so, it seems violence didn't help the Union movement all that much either. I'm no expert though of course.

1

We overthrown Pinochet with music and in the polls and since then most of our problems have been resolved in the polls too.

Democracy is the answer.

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