Why would you think that they feel a need to be the "good guys"? They are doing their part in perpetuating a power structure that benefits them personally.
To be frank, I do not think they feel such a need, I was just trying to get the conversation in the comments started because I feel the need to attract as much attention to this as I personally can.
Yeah, the police are probably corrupt (random URL to back up my hypothesis: [0]), I remember reading a great book about corruption, Thieves of State, discussed here [1], it talks why the police would be defending the system:
> Any highly corrupt society is bound together by a series of interlocking reciprocities: the local policeman who shakes down a passing civilian must in turn pay tribute to his police supervisor, who must pay his supervisor, and so forth; favors or spoils may be distributed in the other direction.
My guess is the cops justify their work like in Stanford prison experiment, and they accept without further thinking what Putin says that the protesters are "foreign agents".
> they accept without further thinking what Putin says that the protesters are "foreign agents".
No, many Russian police are well aware that protests in Russian are often driven by honest local frustration with the Russian government, and these frustrated people do not need pushing from abroad. (I speak from personal acquaintance with several.) Some police officers might even sympathize with the protesters’ lack of opportunities. However, modern Russia is a country where people affiliated with the force structures live much better than the average citizen, and so naturally they want to hang on to their own families’ prosperity at all costs.
If Russia ever liberalizes, then somehow appeasing the force structures for their loss of privilege and stability is something the new regime will have to ensure, distasteful as it might seem. During the overthrow of Saddam Hussein’s regime the US insisted on completely disenfranchising the old Baathist functionaries, for example, and this was a major driver of the civil war and instability that ensued.
I'm not exactly a bootlicker, and I'm not informed on the situation, but do we have any proof this isn't the same kind of peaceful protests we had in the USA?
We are walking peacefully without looting and riots. Authorities decline any attempt to get permission for peaceful demonstration which allows them to justify police violence. Situation is pretty grim.
First protest this year was at Jan 23rd. Lots of people, lots of, as we're calling them, cosmonauts. Lots of violence towards unarmed people, zero looting. Singular acts of someone hitting or fighting policemen that were wearing full body armor and a helmet with lovered visor and often without badge. (hence cosmonauts)
If you were to tune to any government-controlled news channel (pretty much all of them), you'd only see three-minute compilation of "violent protesters" whereas numerous internet media outlets were showing the full picture, all day, live, from all angles.
Oh yeah, the only occasion when the crowd was actually attacking policemen (and/or national guard, makes no difference) was this time [1], go watch, it's hilarious
If 10000 people walk down the street, and 10 of them light a building on fire, is it correct to refer to it as a violent protest? There has never been a large demonstration, anywhere, that didn't attract some bad actors and opportunists. I won't say this is bootlicking, but it does seem like a position that never leaves you on the side of popular demonstrations.
15-26 million people participated in the protests in the US last summer. The 1-2 billion in damage[1] is a shocking number taken on it's face, but if 20 million people poured into the street with the intention of causing damage, they would cause orders of magnitude more damage than that. Adjusted for inflation, the 1992 Rodney King riots in LA caused 1.4 billion in damage[2].
The main demonstration in my city last year, which I attended and attracted thousands of people, were totally peaceful in vibe. A group of people burned a bank down in the evening, but it was a totally different group that formed hours after the main BLM march and was 20 miles away.
Yes but people tend to play this statistics game very selectively in order to bolster whatever point they want to make. For example, I could also point out that there are ~800,000 sworn law enforcement officers in the U.S. and about 60 million people have an interaction with them each year. Only a tiny, tiny percentage of these interactions end with an innocent person dying. However it's insensitive to just shrug that off because the number "could be a lot bigger". It's also insensitive to brush off 2 billion in property damages from riots and looting even though the protests were "largely peaceful".
Hmm, really good point, but I still stand by my thinking. I think the expectations should be higher for an organization that is empowered by the state to do violence than for a gathering of citizens. There shouldn't be any expectation that bad actors are just a part of law enforcement in the way that there should be when there is just a group of thousands of people.
And moreover I think that police killings are kind of the top line item because that is punchy, but most activists would say their problem is with the entrenched structures that allow police to behave badly with impunity. It's impossible to sue an officer as an individual for even the most egregious offenses, police unions have fought really hard to protect bad officers and policy, even when people do "win" legal action against the police the bill is footed by the taxpayers, and in general the thousands of bad interactions people have and film that never even get attention. I'm biased, but I think that the system of policing in the country is more corrupted by bad actors than the protests were.
No, not really, and your link shows that. It is certainly too high of a rate and more needs to be done but it's not "the leading cause of death for certain groups". According to the study you cite, for young Black men, police violence accounts for 1.6% of total deaths. For all young men 25-29, here are the rates.
Accidents: 76.6 deaths per 100,000,
Suicide: 26.7 deaths per 100,000,
Non-police homicide: 22.0 deaths per 100,000,
Heart Disease: 7.0 deaths per 100,000,
Cancer: 6.3 deaths per 100,000,
Police violence: 1.8 deaths per 100,000
Law enforcement is a collection of cohesive bodies who train, take oaths to enforce the law, and follow orders. We are right to demand that every single one of them suffer consequences if they violate the trust they receive.
Protestors are not cohesive groups, and looters are even a step further removed. They're people who take advantage of the confusion of protests.
And anyway, property damage during a protest is older than the Constitution (see: Boston tea party).
That's actually a pretty interesting strategy. Just calculate the maximum number of human beings that the state can supervise and then try to get that many people in custody. More so than just holding space, it takes resources to watch, feed etc.
That sounds like a great way to get the most out of this pandemic. Detention maximizes closeness and spreading. They could conceivably make vaccinating the detained a priority, but that doesn't seem to fit the current narrative.
24 comments
[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 62.0 ms ] threadThis fact astounds me, I cannot believe that the Russian Government still somehow think they are the good guys here.
> Any highly corrupt society is bound together by a series of interlocking reciprocities: the local policeman who shakes down a passing civilian must in turn pay tribute to his police supervisor, who must pay his supervisor, and so forth; favors or spoils may be distributed in the other direction.
My guess is the cops justify their work like in Stanford prison experiment, and they accept without further thinking what Putin says that the protesters are "foreign agents".
[0] https://nationalpost.com/news/world/cost-of-corruption-in-ru... [1] https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/01/19/corruption-rev...
No, many Russian police are well aware that protests in Russian are often driven by honest local frustration with the Russian government, and these frustrated people do not need pushing from abroad. (I speak from personal acquaintance with several.) Some police officers might even sympathize with the protesters’ lack of opportunities. However, modern Russia is a country where people affiliated with the force structures live much better than the average citizen, and so naturally they want to hang on to their own families’ prosperity at all costs.
If Russia ever liberalizes, then somehow appeasing the force structures for their loss of privilege and stability is something the new regime will have to ensure, distasteful as it might seem. During the overthrow of Saddam Hussein’s regime the US insisted on completely disenfranchising the old Baathist functionaries, for example, and this was a major driver of the civil war and instability that ensued.
Big "if" right there.
It's a lot more likely that the US and the rest of the western world will continue to slide into oligarchical-drive corruption.
Lots more likely.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31380664/
https://www.gwern.net/docs/psychology/2019-letexier.pdf
It was much better done, even if it was part of a TV show.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/cnn-ridiculed-for-fi...
Any sane government would be arresting people involved with torching police buildings. If these people are innocent, I pray for their release.
If you were to tune to any government-controlled news channel (pretty much all of them), you'd only see three-minute compilation of "violent protesters" whereas numerous internet media outlets were showing the full picture, all day, live, from all angles.
Go figure.
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8zQpAxTq9CY
15-26 million people participated in the protests in the US last summer. The 1-2 billion in damage[1] is a shocking number taken on it's face, but if 20 million people poured into the street with the intention of causing damage, they would cause orders of magnitude more damage than that. Adjusted for inflation, the 1992 Rodney King riots in LA caused 1.4 billion in damage[2].
The main demonstration in my city last year, which I attended and attracted thousands of people, were totally peaceful in vibe. A group of people burned a bank down in the evening, but it was a totally different group that formed hours after the main BLM march and was 20 miles away.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Floyd_protests
[2] https://www.chicagotribune.com/chi-insurance-civil-unrest-ri...
And moreover I think that police killings are kind of the top line item because that is punchy, but most activists would say their problem is with the entrenched structures that allow police to behave badly with impunity. It's impossible to sue an officer as an individual for even the most egregious offenses, police unions have fought really hard to protect bad officers and policy, even when people do "win" legal action against the police the bill is footed by the taxpayers, and in general the thousands of bad interactions people have and film that never even get attention. I'm biased, but I think that the system of policing in the country is more corrupted by bad actors than the protests were.
source: https://www.pnas.org/content/116/34/16793
Accidents: 76.6 deaths per 100,000, Suicide: 26.7 deaths per 100,000, Non-police homicide: 22.0 deaths per 100,000, Heart Disease: 7.0 deaths per 100,000, Cancer: 6.3 deaths per 100,000, Police violence: 1.8 deaths per 100,000
Protestors are not cohesive groups, and looters are even a step further removed. They're people who take advantage of the confusion of protests.
And anyway, property damage during a protest is older than the Constitution (see: Boston tea party).