In the Poll Tax Riot example I used earlier, it was public opinion at the time that only 2% of the population supported the Poll Tax, yet only a few thousand protested, most people are too affraid to go up against the government (who do have the monopoly of violence).Rum wrote:OK, this is the first time the term 'mass civil disobedience' has been used and I agree. It isn't the same thing. But the key word is 'mass'. Who is to say when a movement is truly a 'mass' one? We take a view - we take sides using our own perspective as the one in the right. Most people here assume for example, that the protests in Iran are 'right' and reflect mass opinion. The reality is so mixed I doubt if anyone knows. There are millions who probably support and Islamic republic in more or less its present form.RuleBritannia wrote:Please, mass civil disobedience is democracy in action, it's the rule of the people. A bunch of twats from the BNP is not the same thing.Rum wrote:OK, so every time there are enough people who don't like something the government is doing gets mad enough they have a riot and storm buildings? Who chooses what issues to riot and storm buildings about? Suppose the BNP feel unrepresented and get enough louts together to burn down a communist office. That OK too? FFS.born-again-atheist wrote:Imagine how much more effective those protests would have been if they were done illegally, if they flooded the roads of the CBDs before opening hours, if they'd stormed Government Houses, Parliaments.
In other words, if they'd risked something simply by protesting.
You don't know you have been born.
And yet if the protesters won (which seems unlikely) people would say it was a 'victory'.
In a country like Iran it's even more dangerous to go up against the government, a death sentence without trial is a likely punishment.