Hopefully the normal decent citizens will do the complete opposite..This is the type of organisation going into the criminality that the police are dealing with.
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I agree RoD, the issue I have is with them being banned. IMO we should all use restraint until it is over, but to ban them is dangerous, it would be interesting to know what your parents views are.Coming from my mum and dad who set up CND in Chepstow we were brought up on protest. I agree that peaceful protest are good for the country.
I just think that during the pandemic the organisers ought to postpone them until it’s over. We are really close to this lockdown ending and unless we’re lucky we may see another spike pushing us back into lockdowns.
I agree RoD, the issue I have is with them being banned. IMO we should all use restraint until it is over, but to ban them is dangerous, it would be interesting to know what your parents views are.
I'm sure they will be.And the ****tards that set alight to the police van with police officers in it must be charged with attempted murder.
In other words ban them by default, then anyone against the particular cause would just have to ensure they send their own trouble makers along.My issue is the organisers should be held fully responsible.
They should be made to fully risk assess the dangers to protesters reference social distancing and provide adequate stewards to ensure this, they should also fully risk assess the chances of violence and damage caused by a minority attaching themselves to such protests and if they cannot satisfy those points, either cancel or if they go ahead face huge consequences.
Why not just have a rally somewhere out of the way?, why the need to march?
The police stated that around 400-500 of the aggressors appeared in late afternoon? bearing in mind this protest was started [ nationwide ] to be "organised" about a week before? this group of criminal minded individuals must have waited closer to the day before they picked the destination? Bearing in mind demo's took part all over the country on Sat and Sun Bristols previous passiveness must have been a big incentive.And with Police officers being injured you can bet that they will want to hunt down and bring the idiots causing the mayhem to justice and fair play too.
In other words ban them by default, then anyone against the particular cause would just have to ensure they send their own trouble makers along.
I’ve no issue with demonstrations adhering to rules and planned routes etc, but if you deliberately make them so difficult to organise that you affectively ban them then you are defeating the whole principle of the right to protest, which I believe would suit you anyway.Why absolve organisers from all responsibility? They have a public duty to ensure what they organise does not impact upon the vast majority of law abiding citizens and descend into violence and damage.
PS:- There is a similar 'kill the bill' demo planned for Nottingham on Saturday, if that once more turns violent (which it will), are you advocating that these demos be allowed to continue?
I’ve no issue with demonstrations adhering to rules and planned routes etc, but if you deliberately make them so difficult to organise that you affectively ban them then you are defeating the whole principle of the right to protest, which I believe would suit you anyway.
As I repeatedly say I wouldn’t attend, I think people should refrain from attending and of course I completely condemn violence of any kind. But to ban protests IMO is wrong and counterproductive
The point you seem to be either missing or avoiding is banning them won’t make them go away, it will escalate them.It wouldn't suit me as I would never go within a mile of a protest march.
My point is (and one you are evading) organisers should be held far more responsible for the outcome of said protests.
And you seem to be advocating that when inevitably the Nottingham protest descends into violence aimed specifically at the police that they should still be allowed? perhaps you think a police officer potentially being killed at one of these protests would be a sacrifice towards democracy?
The point you seem to be either missing or avoiding is banning them won’t make them go away, it will escalate them.
I’m for peaceful demonstrations, I believe they are, and will be legal within any civilised democracy, it’s only dictatorships that ban them. That’s no coincidence, would you advocate we live in a dictatorship? One that only agrees with your views , because you wouldn’t be able to voice your views if they varied from the official line.
The point you seem to be either missing or avoiding is banning them won’t make them go away, it will escalate them.
I’m for peaceful demonstrations, I believe they are, and will be legal within any civilised democracy, it’s only dictatorships that ban them. That’s no coincidence, would you advocate we live in a dictatorship? One that only agrees with your views , because you wouldn’t be able to voice your views if they varied from the official line.
The point you seem to miss is I agree with you that in the pandemic protests shouldn’t go ahead , but only on the principle that it almost impossible to social distance.It wouldn't suit me as I would never go within a mile of a protest march.
My point is (and one you are evading) organisers should be held far more responsible for the outcome of said protests.
And you seem to be advocating that when inevitably the Nottingham protest descends into violence aimed specifically at the police that they should still be allowed? perhaps you think a police officer potentially being killed at one of these protests would be a sacrifice towards democracy?
Name one civilised society where these rules apply , and why should we have to just because Jiffie on not606 Bristol City thinks we should.No what I advocate is people take responsibility for their actions.
As in if you organise a protest you should have within a 'civilised society' a duty of care to everybody involved in the protest including the police and innocent people going about their lawful business and if you fail in that duty of care, there has to be consequences.
Completely agree , a balance, both left and right and any shade in between , hopefully it keeps us somewhere in the middle.The Tories bill can be viewed as an attempt to censure those they dislike. Perversely views frequently who would like to censure others via their identity politics.
Protest is freedom of expression and speech no matter how ludicrous for both left and right. Push back should be to maintain everybody's freedom v becoming ever more authoritarian.
The point you seem to miss is I agree with you that in the pandemic protests shouldn’t go ahead , but only on the principle that it almost impossible to social distance.
others disagree, who am I to impose my will on others? , who’s to say I’m right and they’re wrong. Sometimes the greater good overrides, there are many instances throughout the centuries where unrest has achieved many of the rights we cherish today.
why should we have to just because Jiffie on not606 Bristol City thinks we should.
Any action we take has unseen consequences, I’ve been involved in accidents that have held the traffic up, I may have even caused some, are you seriously suggesting I should be held responsible for any unintended consequences the delay may have caused people.,And who are 'they' to impose their will on the vast majority of people and suffer no consequences.
You might remember 18 months or so ago extinction rebellion had been in discussions with the police about what they would be allowed to do without police intervention and then went to arbitarily closed down the M32. The result was a son not being able to be at his dying fathers bedside and worse than that a seriously brain injured young man was held up in an ambulance and had to be rescued by helicopter and ended up brain dead. Surely the organisers should have been held responsible for their incredibly selfish ignoring of what was agreed for their protest.
Or again are those 2 people and potentially dead police officers casualties of war?