Vol wrote:She was unarmed, she was not engaged in immediate violence, and whomever shot her did not know about any IEDs. It was wrongful.
She was part of a mob storming the Capitol. How is a cop supposed to know that those people are not violent? Especially since one of them died of his injuries later on. From what I know of the situation, it is almost guaranteed that warning were issues, because she was killed while trying to breach a door or window or something. I am pretty sure that any normal human being would scream "do not enter", and would not issue warning shots because, y'know, they were inside, so a ricocheting bullet would be likely to cause harm.
Unlike a man lying on the floor and screaming "I can't breathe!", it is impossible to know whether an angry mob will be violent or murderous or not. Especially when you consider that the mob proved to be violent - a cop died.
Also when did that happen during the many left-wing protests last year? I honestly don't remember cops dying in those occasions. Property damage, sure. But law enforcement dying?
Vol wrote:That would make sense if the USA had ever had that happen. I would wager that the average American probably could name 2 right-wing coups, tops.
Well, first, I hope the average elected official in the US knows more than that, and knows what kind of message it carries when a right-wing politician pushes a mob to attack the institutions of a country. The fact that it never happened in the USA is irrelevant - it never happened in the same country twice, so by that measurement, no country should ever be careful about right-wing coups because none of them experienced them beforehand.
Also, problem with the "most Americans don't know" is that among those 2 coups, one was literally orchestrated by the nazis in Germany. It's hard to claim ignorance. I assume most also know about Mussolini in Italy, or Franco in Spain, and can name at least one South-American coup (like Pinochet in Chile).
Vol wrote:(The Kuomintang were a proto-republic. The circumstances of unifying China from a bunch of warlord states into a nation required more time than they had before Mao came along.)
The Kuomintang were allied with the Communists against the warlords. In 1928, they seized power and outlawed all other political parties. Sure, right now Taiwan looks way better a political system than mainland China, but at the time it was closed to a case than two allied enemies turning on each other, and one eventually winning. It wasn't dirty commies toppling a legally-estalished democratic/republican regime.
Vol wrote:But if we distill the point down to a gut feeling a laymen would have, it makes more sense. Perhaps not articulate it. Which then raises the question if the belief has any validity given the reality of the political situation. I would expect leftist violence to be organized, sanctioned by power, and somewhat effective in goals. I would expect reactionary violence to be semi-organized, very small in numbers, and more directly destructive, but fundamentally unable to achieve non-material goals.
Except the only violence sanctioned by power so far has been reactionary, incited by a speech in which Trump talked about marching on the Capital and Giuliani mentioned "Trial by Combat". It is much harder to argue that it was a joke when basically everyone took it literally.
The BLM riots last year were not organized for a variety of reasons, chiefly because the Democratic Party is pretty centrist overall, and that even the more leftist elements (AOC, Sanders...) are very far on the right of historical left-wing revolutionaries. They don't call for armed insurrection for a start, and they don't have a fetish about military power. People were more numerous, but they chiefly asked that the government take action about a perceived injustice, they did not want to kick them out or hang them for their perceived treason.
One thing however I am very much not happy with in retrospect is Trump being banned from all those media platforms. I think the only one that could have a case to act is Twitter, because it is the one he directly used, and the one whose reputation has been affected the most by his ramblings - but since Twitter was not the first to act, it places them in the "bandwagoners" category, which makes the whole thing pointless.
All those social media networks are trying to buy themselves a virginity 12 days before he leaves office, which is about as turncoat a move as you can imagine - even collaborateurs in France during WW2 were a bit more proactive in sensing the winds shift. It is totally unprincipled, because Trump's rhetoric has not changed on those platforms in four years. He is no more vulgar or insulting or inflaming debates now than he was in 2016. Many have pointed out how convenient it was for that to happen the day where democrats officially took back both chambers of Congress - meaning they were now the ones able to control the laws regarding such companies.
The problem is of course that Twitter, FB et al are absolutely essential for politicians all over the globe (except China), and them arbitrarily deciding who speaks or not is dangerous. When one obviously breaches the terms of service by directly calling for someone's death, denying the holocaust or whatnot, it's fair play to remove them because the laws have been established beforehand. But here, again, Trump has not done anything last week that he hadn't done before. The laws have not changed. So either what Trump has said has always been illegal and Twitter just chickened out over angering someone who had power over them, or it has always been legal and Twitter has made itself a kingmaker. The second one is super-worrying, especially since it would work basically all over the world, but sadly I think the first one is way more likely: they know that Trump can't touch them now and are just cozying up with the new overlords.
There is no healthy solution here. Except of course to burn Twitter to the ground and spread salt on the ruins, but something identical would just instantly replace it. The people from all sides are now used to social media being the only way to interact with politicians, cutting themselves from their base would be suicidal.
I really think social media is the cancer of the XXIst century. There is just no way for it not to be toxic. I honestly don't know if I would rather Xi or Zuckerberg be the one deciding what can and cannot be said, and those are the only options we get.





