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But it was never free speech that denied them their rights. The entire point of free speech is that it protects the rights of marginalized groups and enables them to advocate for changes in society.

Racists never needed the protections of free speech to argue for denying people their rights because those views already had widespread societal acceptance.

Now that explicit racism is no longer the norm, organisations like the Klan need to rely on free speech protections, but thats only evidence of how unacceptable their beliefs have become.

These earnest arguments that limiting speech will help protect people are terrifying.


> Now that explicit racism is no longer the norm

It remains the norm in many places IME, including on the Internet and in many private conversations with white people.

Which returns us to the problem: What do we do about the other civil rights of minorities? People keep focusing on free speech for the majority and never address the far more serious problem.


> > Now that explicit racism is no longer the norm

> It remains the norm in many places IME, including on the Internet and in many private conversations with white people.

If you insist on grouping and stereotyping people by their race then you are the one that is perpetuating racism.


Again, What do we do about the other civil rights of minorities?. Notice how people talk about everything else. Once you notice this pattern, you will see it everywhere and see it going back generations, which is how the racist status quo continues (whether or not that's the intent of the people talking).


Protesters should make a parabolic reflector with the focus about 50ft out. Pretty sure cops would stop using these things instantly


Parabolic reflectors require alignment and they bring incident energy to a focus no matter what.

Focusing the energy of an instrument that is designed to approach dangerous sound-intensity levels is certain to make the situation more dangerous. Non-violent action is predicated on the idea that hurting anyone, including an aggressor, is counterproductive. A corner-cube reflector won't hurt an LRAD operator any more than the LRAD operator is hurting others. A parabolic reflector could.

If the golden rule isn't sufficient motivation to avoid a focal instrument, perhaps friendly-fire will be: A parabolic reflector will always bring parallel waves/rays to a focus at the focus. If the reflector is more than a focal-length inside a crowd, it is going to destroy the ears of a protestor.

Like glass bottles that start fires in the Australian Outback by concentrating sunlight, anything that concentrates sound energy in an environment with an LRAD is a recipe for unintended consequence.


Once the police have used LRAD the protest has ceased being non-violent. Defending yourself is completely in-bounds unless you have a martyr complex.


A protest can remain non-violent in the face of violence. Modern non-violent protests have succeeded against well-armed and violent opposition. I'd argue the world is better for it.

When and where violence should be resisted with violence is a question for the ages, perhaps with an answer that varies with time and circumstance.

I suspect that for the protests in America today to succeed, taking the highest-possible road of non-violence will yield the greatest dividend. The real battle is playing out in the minds of a multitude of quiet observers. The city streets are just one stage.


Is having a parabolic reflector a violent action? The only way it could hurt someone is by reflecting the pain they were trying to put on you.

If I had armor that ricocheted bullets back at the shooter, I wouldn't consider myself culpable if someone who tried to shoot me shot themselves.


There is a difference between a parabolic reflector and any other reflector. Reflectors that concentrate energy make the damaging effects more intense.

It is difficult to find an analogy -- it is as if the LRAD operator has thrown a punch and the reflector turns that punch into the stab of a rapier. If and only if the reflector is properly aligned will the redirected-and-concentrated beam have the reflector-bearer's desired effect. If not, someone else may get harmed. The reflector-bearer must accept responsibility for the change in consequence between the punch and the rapier.

There is a third option -- one can readily design reflectors that disperse the energy or generically attempt to reflect it upward. Those are the tools of true pacifists.


> Is having a parabolic reflector a violent action? The only way it could hurt someone is by reflecting the pain they were trying to put on you.

Yes, violent retaliation is still violence.

Violence only in retaliation and/or self-defense may be a valid approach to protest in some circumstances, but it's not non-violent protest.


You have a strange definition of 'retaliation'. If you throw a ball at a brick wall and it bounces back and hits you, the wall didn't retaliate or act in self-defense. The entire impetus and result is 100% on you. The same applies here.


The first use of “retaliation” should be “retaliation and/or self-defense”, like the other. I was staying a broader principle which applies to but extends beyond the immediate case.

I will agree that the proposed device might (if targeted appropriately) be more defensive than retaliatory, though the fact that it only causes harm to the focussed-on target if someone attacks it doesn't make it purely defensive or non-retaliatory, in fact, if not carefully targeted it makes it quite indiscriminate retaliation.


This looks like self-defense to me. It literally doesn't do anything unless you are attacked.


"Non-violent protest" is not rooted in good will because you don't want to hurt your opponent. The idea is to let yourself be beat up in order to win the media war and gain more sympathy/supporters. The whole point of this device is to not be hurt, which defeats the principle behind non-violent protest, so you might as well hit back with force. God knows the cops don't care if they permanently blind you, destroy your hearing or kill you.


> The idea is to let yourself be beat up in order to win the media war and gain more sympathy/supporters.

It is not. The idea is not to provide political cover for violent escalation by the establishment. Now, if that escalation nevertheless occurs, one response is to make lemonade out of those lemons, but it's not the goal of nonviolent protest.


Two thoughts on the subject from Dr. King:

“Nonviolence is a powerful and just weapon, which cuts without wounding and ennobles the man who wields it. It is a sword that heals.”

“Nonviolence is absolute commitment to the way of love. Love is not emotional bash; it is not empty sentimentalism. It is the active outpouring of one’s whole being into the being of another.”

The point is to sway the very opponent who is harming you, to convince them that hurting you is wrong. It takes great strategy, tactics, and courage. The point is not to be a martyr, it is to create change that makes a difference.


>Pretty sure cops would stop using these things instantly

prepared to get shot and/or charged with "assaulting a police officer"


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