How criminalisation is being used to silence climate activists across the world
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/oct/12/how-criminalisation-is-being-used-to-silence-climate-activists-across-the-worldOpen linkView original on slrpnk.net179
Comments8
Depends a lot on what you do and in which country.
Protests can serve as social proof that there is widespread support for climate action. This is important, and helps bring more people on board and tell politicians that it's worth their while.
I assume this is an evidence-based argument and you can share the research proving this?
It very much depends. Holding up signs and shouting loud really does depend on the MSM, but blockades and other more disruptive forms of protests are a great tool to actually hurt fossil fuels were it hurts the most, in the wallet.
The thing is we need to do two things at the same time. One is to shut down fossil fuels as quickly as possible and for that protests are great solution. The other part is to build up an alternative and for that protests are really not the way to go, as quite frankly the people in power want to stay in power and changing the system, which brought them power is a bad move by them, unless they are absolutly forced to. Much easier to destroy them and replace them, just like fossil fuels.
Authoritarian tactics to suppress protest typically intend to have a chain of effects like this:
The solutions?
All of that won't be doable in every country, and in some countries, something else might be doable instead.
It's remarkable that China, Russia, and Iran aren't the "baddies" in this article. What's the common thread here?
It seems you already know the answer. Care to elaborate?
i really don't know, first thing that comes to mind is they don't already have these laws on the books... but that's just a guess.
not an expert on these things
Why do they care so much? We all die someday anyway /s