Yesterday i posted something on Facebook about how cynical you have to be as an American politician to cheer Hong Kong protestors fighting back against police brutality in their city, but call for "peace" when black protestors do the same in the United States
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But they are to be expected after so many years of oppression at the hands of an elite, I suppose. It's just too bad that we can't use our energies to build better systems, ones that bypass those that oppress us, as opposed to destroying things.
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I think it's a bit extra to see these latest round of protests as the destruction of what little remains of law and order in western civilization. Western civilization on the whole is doing just fine. The vast majority of people in the western world, and in fact the vast majority of Americans, are not getting their police stations firebombed.
Honestly, i think if political leaders were a bit more humble and showed more understanding, if they stood the cops down when shit started escalating, there would be a lot less property destruction. Give people the confidence that they will actually have their grievances heard, show them that things are legit going to change, start to rebuild the trust, then the anger will subside.
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I did let up an internal cheer when the White House turned off external floodlights last night. The logical suggestion is that it made it easier for lookouts on the roof to see what was going on, and the symbolism is sad and all, but the inference of they/Trump scared appealed to my petty yet righteous fist-shaking soul.
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A bit complex to compare the two situations. HK is a small liberal democratic entity that is being dismantled by a giant one-party police state. America is a giant liberal democratic entity which has always accommodated contradictory corporate, religious and racial fascism.
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