Blame on both sides

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The vast majority were there to protest against Nazism and white supremacy.

No, they were not. They attended a protest that was explicitly for the purpose of suppressing freedom of speech. The target was freedom of speech. They chose to take part in suppression of freedom of speech. They were not protesting against Nazism (which wasn't there) or white supremacy (which wasn't there). They were protesting against freedom of speech. More than that, they were actively suppressing freedom of speech through intimidation and plausible threat. Also, you're just assuming that the vast majority were useful idiots who didn't know what they were doing. You have no idea how many were true believers and how many were useful idiots.

You have people rallying with violent paramilitaries who are extremely authoritarian (with themselves as the authority they want, of course), who believe in the idea of thoughtcrime and who enjoy using violence and intimidation. Some of them are literally brownshirts. All of them are about as clearly fascist as it is possible to be. It's possible that some of the people who choose to rally with them in order to suppress support for freedom of speech are just useful idiots supporting something they don't really support. It's also possible that some of the people who rally with Nazis and white supremacists are just useful idiots supporting something they don't really support. The existence of useful idiots doesn't change what an ideology is or what followers of that ideology (and the useful idiots they use) do.

All 30,000 were there to protest against freedom of speech because that was the purpose and result of the protest.

Some of them might have thought that by protesting against freedom of speech they were doing something else, but that's irrelevant. They did what they did.

Admittedly that could arguably be a protest against free speech, but I doubt many would agree that thats the sort of free speech people should be protecting.

None of their target was Nazism or white supremacy. They were not targeting Nazism or white supremacy. They were targetting freedom of speech. Deliberately, knowingly, explicitly, specifically. That was the purpose of the protest against freedom of speech.

Although it's irrelevant since the whole point of this is to suppress dissent and compel obedience by force, to end all free speech, it's also the case that there is no such thing as the right sort of free speech. The idea that there is such a thing is itself opposition to free speech. If the only permitted speech is that which is approved by whoever has enough power and the will to use it that way, there is no freedom of speech.

If your counter protest is so big that it drowns out the actual protest itself then that in itself is a form of free speech.

Using intimidation to suppress dissent is not a form of free speech.

Also it turns out that that guy that was apparently stabbed for looking like an Neo Nazi was lying. He cut himself accidentally...

http://www.denverpost.com/2017/08/28/denver-area-arrest-neo-nazi-stabbing/

A useless idiot unless he's on the fashionable fascism side, the fascists who call themselves anti-fascists, because it's good propaganda material for them. But I think it's more likely he was just seeking attention and was too dumb to realise he'd get caught lying.
 
The only spectrum that really exists is:

Big government/Authoritarianism/Collectivism-----------------------Centre-----------------------------No government/Anarchy/Individualism

I don't really agree with that because it's possible to hold several positions on different matters that fall on different points of that spectrum. I've heard it referred to as more of a horse-shoe on occasion as well.

Unless I'm just schizophrenic or something by having views that are a bit scattergun.. :D
 
I don't really agree with that because it's possible to hold several positions on different matters that fall on different points of that spectrum. I've heard it referred to as more of a horse-shoe on occasion as well.

Unless I'm just schizophrenic or something by having views that are a bit scattergun.. :D

I think that in many things even the spectrum idea is an over-simplification. I think a better analogy would be a row of pendulums at different positions. Or a row of spectrums (a spectrum of spectrums?), but I think the row of pendulums is a clearer analogy.

But a spectrum is a far better idea than the sadly common idea of only two discrete (usually opposing, often only the extremes) things. Horseshoe is often a better fit than a line spectrum, since the extreme ends often end up being quite close in practice.
 
(though Britain abhors revolution, so it's been rather stale in result of a single referendum),

I don't know about this, the Barons rebellion leading to Magna Carta, the Civil War, the Restoration, The Glorious Revolution, The American War of Independence (English Civil War 2). We're just precocious we got it all out of the way early and have been on a steady progression since then.
 
I don't know about this, the Barons rebellion leading to Magna Carta, the Civil War, the Restoration, The Glorious Revolution, The American War of Independence (English Civil War 2). We're just precocious we got it all out of the way early and have been on a steady progression since then.

Literally all of those are wars of rich white men being angry at other rich white men, with perhaps a mild exclusion of the American one... still somewhat marred by the rich folk though.

I mean serious workers revolution, the closest the country's ever been was in the middle of the 20th century and nothing really happened.
 
Literally all of those are wars of rich white men being angry at other rich white men, with perhaps a mild exclusion of the American one... still somewhat marred by the rich folk though.

I mean serious workers revolution, the closest the country's ever been was in the middle of the 20th century and nothing really happened.

Peasant's Revolt? The Anarchy? The massive civil unrest of the early 19th century? A great deal really happened in those. Or does the phrase "worker's revolution" mean you're thinking only of Marxism/communism?

Besides, you referred to "revolution". The examples you dismiss by associating them with the "wrong" class, race and sex were revolutions. They also involved many people on both sides who weren't rich. So why don't they count?
 
Peasant's Revolt? The Anarchy? The massive civil unrest of the early 19th century? A great deal really happened in those. Or does the phrase "worker's revolution" mean you're thinking only of Marxism/communism?

Besides, you referred to "revolution". The examples you dismiss by associating them with the "wrong" class, race and sex were revolutions. They also involved many people on both sides who weren't rich. So why don't they count?

Because ultimately the poor go home and the rich mold the future.
 
Except most of those form fundamental steps in the route to democracy. Right to trial, requirement for evidence, limit on the power of the absolute monarch and supremacy of parliament. They laid the foundations by which workers could exercise the power without chopping off the heads of everyone you disagree with.

Almost all the peoples revolutions, France, Russia, China et al were hugely destructive. And only France could be said to have in anyway prospered but that's more in spite rather than because of.
 
Because ultimately the poor go home and the rich mold the future.

Of the examples I gave, that happened only in the Peasant's Revolt and even then there was rapid enormous change, i.e. a revolution. The end of serfdom, massive social and legal changes. Arguably the most important revolution in this country was the voting reform campaigning of the early 1800s, which was almost entirely without violence from the reformer's side. The authorities tried to suppress it with force, threat and violence (notably the Peterloo Massacre), but it succeeded because it had enough people behind it. Most of whom, of course, were not rich. There was a possibility of violent uprising and the collapse of the country, but it didn't happen. It was so successful in such a civilised manner that it's largely forgotten now, but it radically changed the country (notably the Great Reform Act of 1832, which laid the foundations for modern democracy).

If by "revolution" you mean "reign of terror and death", you're right. That's what usually happens with "successful" violent uprisings. And then the most politically astute and brutal people mould the future...and become rich.

The three revolutions of that type that come to mind are the French Revolution (which was followed by a period so bad it's known as "The Terror"), the Bolshevik revolution (which was followed by the collapse of two successive governments, a civil war, purges, then the horrors of Stalin's rule) and the Nazi revolution (which was followed by Nazism).

There was sort of an attempt at the "worker's revolution" you refer to in England - the most famous series of civil wars. Which resulted in a raving zealot riding that revolution to become dictator of England and turning it into a horror show while ravaging Ireland and laying the foundations of centuries of conflict there. Then he died and things went back to how they had been before it started and, thankfully, everyone in England agreed to pretty much pretend it never happened. Otherwise the conflict could have dragged on for generations and at least weakened the country if not ruined it entirely.
 
Except most of those form fundamental steps in the route to democracy. Right to trial, requirement for evidence, limit on the power of the absolute monarch and supremacy of parliament. They laid the foundations by which workers could exercise the power without chopping off the heads of everyone you disagree with.

Almost all the peoples revolutions, France, Russia, China et al were hugely destructive. And only France could be said to have in anyway prospered but that's more in spite rather than because of.

There was no people's revolution in china or russia or cuba for that matter. It was communist coup which relentless leftist propaganda tried to portray as a peoples revolution. France was a bloodbath that managed to execute every single member of those who started their so called revolution leaving a power vacuum that lead to the rise of the biggest imperialist of them all, Napoleon Bonaparte.
 
This is the reason Black Lives Matter exist in America

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-41274065

A white former Missouri policeman has been found not guilty of murdering a black man by shooting him five times after a car chase.

A judge acquitted Jason Stockley of first-degree murder over the 2011 shooting of 24-year-old Anthony Lamar Smith in the city of St Louis.

Mr Stockley, 36, was recorded during the pursuit saying: "Gonna kill this mother-******, don't you know it."

Mr Stockley and his partner said they believed they had observed Mr Smith engaged in a drug deal outside a fried chicken restaurant near central St Louis.

Police dashcam video and surveillance footage shows Mr Smith reversed his car into the police vehicle twice during his attempt to drive off.

After a three-minute high-speed car chase, Mr Stockley told his partner, who was in the driver's seat, to ram Mr Smith's car.

Mr Stockley then ran to Mr Smith's window and fired five shots, hitting him each time.

Prosecutors also accused Mr Stockley of planting a gun in Mr Smith's car after shooting him.

The .38 calibre revolver recovered from the Buick had Mr Stockley's DNA on it, but not Mr Smith's.

Prosecutors questioned why Mr Stockley had rummaged through the boot of his police patrol car immediately after the shooting, before returning to Mr Smith's car.

Mr Stockley said he was retrieving some equipment to administer first aid.

Defence lawyers said Mr Stockley had acted "reasonably" in self-defence by killing a drug suspect he believed was reaching for a hidden handgun.

Only Mr Smith's DNA was traced on a plastic bag of heroin that was also found in the car.

Mr Smith's fiancée has urged the community to avoid violence.

"However it goes, I ask for peace," Christina Wilson told a news conference this week alongside the governor.
 
Explain why black lives matter more then other lives.

Why not rally under all lives matter banner?

Because right now in the US a lot of black people feel like their lives matter less...and seeing another cop get away with murdering a black guy...well you'd have to agree no?
 
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