Video of looters in Philly
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In other parts of the country, the cops are getting in on the action.
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These guys spraypainted and smashed in their own squad car.
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This post is deleted!
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If you want to see where trouble starts, look to the cyclists.
It's a little known fact that Leon Trotsky and Vladimir Lenin both competed in the very first Tour de France in 1903, and it was the frustration of being beaten by drug cheats that finally led Lenin to split with those awful Mencheviks with their stupid drop handlebars and oh-so-clever bloody lightweight frames.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Video of looters in Philly:
If you want to see where trouble starts, look to the cyclists.
It's a little known fact that Leon Trotsky and Vladimir Lenin both competed in the very first Tour de France in 1903, and it was the frustration of being beaten by drug cheats that finally led Lenin to split with those awful Mencheviks with their stupid drop handlebars and oh-so-clever bloody lightweight frames.
It's been reported that the Kulaks are juicers. Just sayin'.
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I may be 100% wrong and I will admit I dont have a lot of experience, but why is looting kind of a US "thing".
Yes, it happens in other countries, and sometimes big protests result in broken buildings and looting (see burning of Central World Department Store in BKK in 2010), but seems much more common in the US. Why is that?
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From Frank Bruni's column:
"Over the past week, Louisville has been the scene of especially tense encounters between protesters and the police, and of harrowing violence . . . Pictures and videos from Louisville portray a militarized police force and streets that look like war zones.
But a video from Sunday night portrayed something else. Captured and shared by Roberto Ferdman of Vice News, it showed a protester and a police officer clutching each other. Hugging.
“She just went in for the hug, and the officer accepted,” Ferdman wrote in the tweet in which the video appears. “Lasted almost a minute. Incredible.” Indeed. And while it’s just one moment involving two people, it says something and it means something. There’s hope in that hug."
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Damn decent of that officer hugging that rioter.
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@Aqua-Letifer said in Video of looters in Philly:
that rioter.
Was she rioting? Was she throwing bricks, frozen bottles of water? Was she looting?
I'm sure that that video is available on social media.
Otherwise, you're just making shit up.
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@Horace said in Video of looters in Philly:
The two factors at play here are a large under-class with nothing to lose, and a larger enabling ruling class who consider it evil to hold the under-class accountable for their behavior.
Also insurance covers it and damage is justified, a satisfying fvck you.
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But the same things are present in many countries. It just seems that it has become "acceptable" to riot and loot and destroy buildings.
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@George-K said in Video of looters in Philly:
@Aqua-Letifer said in Video of looters in Philly:
that rioter.
Was she rioting? Was she throwing bricks, frozen bottles of water? Was she looting?
I'm sure that that video is available on social media.
Otherwise, you're just making shit up.
Helpful resource:
https://bit.ly/3gV5b14 -
@Aqua-Letifer said in Video of looters in Philly:
Helpful resource:
https://bit.ly/3gV5b14Thanks for the tip.
In another thread you commented that because something didn't appear on social media, it didn't happen. In fact, you said, you follow it closely, and since you didn't see it, the allegations about the "protestors" at St. John's were wrong, and it was all peaceful.
I'm simply turning your argument back at you. Since I didn't see that she didn't throw anything, there's a possibility that she did.
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@taiwan_girl said in Video of looters in Philly:
But the same things are present in many countries. It just seems that it has become "acceptable" to riot and loot and destroy buildings.
Try it!
It might be fun!!
Don't knock it until you've tried it.
Look at all the laughter while looting, you don't think this isn't a riot, er, fun? -
@taiwan_girl said in Video of looters in Philly:
But the same things are present in many countries. It just seems that it has become "acceptable" to riot and loot and destroy buildings.
I figured the cops were too busy or strategically protecting more important things to respond to ad-hoc animalistic looting of retail stores. Just simple math. The cops would stop them if they could.
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@George-K said in Video of looters in Philly:
@Aqua-Letifer said in Video of looters in Philly:
Helpful resource:
https://bit.ly/3gV5b14Thanks for the tip.
In another thread you commented that because something didn't appear on social media, it didn't happen. In fact, you said, you follow it closely, and since you didn't see it, the allegations about the "protestors" at St. John's were wrong, and it was all peaceful.
No, that's not what I'm saying. To clarify, my position is this:
(1) I believe I'm more informed than you about the events in DC. No, I'm not an expert and I have zero first-hand experience. None. (Although when I did, with the women's march right after the election, I was told here at TNCR that my being there made me biased and uninformed, so what the fuck ever.) But as you yourself admitted, you're not following it closely and you're reserving judgment. I've friends and coworkers downtown.
(2) I'm talking about the crowd overall, not 100% of everyone involved, including the comers and goers for that time period. Overall, yes, non-violent crowd on June 1 at 6:35 pm. It's wrong to say otherwise.
(3) The nights are a very different story. Hell hour by hour is often a different story. Yes there's a shitload of destruction and looting. There's nothing to argue about there because the news has made that very obvious. What it seldom makes as obvious are protests without incident, and people keeping it peaceful. Peaceful is boring and not worthy of report.
(4) Honestly I think what it is here is "I've never protested. So I don't identify with doing that. Therefore, bad people." It's the same thing for ACAB: no one with family members in the police would ever say that.