So the fact that you use this phrase again suggests that we need to talk about it.
Earlier in the thread you wrote that you understood that the people wanting these statues gone are not the same people as the looters. Did you change your mind? Are you now deciding to conflate the looters with the statue topplers? Painting all with a broad brush and saying that they are one and the same now? Is that how you see this, or is this deliberate hyperbole? Do we need to step back the argument about whether it is appropriate to do this to discuss WHO is doing this (all over again) or are you bring this up to distract from the points of whether it is appropriate?
Earlier in the thread, I argued that the tearing down of these statues (in almost all cases) was not at all indiscriminate. It is targeted and historically protested. Are you claiming that these people suddenly don’t know what they are doing and why? Why do you think “indiscriminate destruction” perpetrators would have pull straps with them? Pull straps are not normally a tool of indiscrimnate destruction, now are they. That would be hammers and batons. But the presence of pull straps sort of proves that it is not, in fact, indiscriminate, now doesn’t it?
Earlier in the thread many people pointed out to you that toppling these statues is not violence, it is destruction. Are you choosing to use these words in your effort to conflate the person-on-person violence in protests to the people pulling down statues? Even though they are clearly not the same people?
Once again, lose your straw-man. We are not talking about “violence, looting and indiscriminate destruction as a means to an end.” The people with a greivance about the statues are not the looters and they are not violent and they are mostly not indiscriminate.
I used the phrase again and again because that is the distinction between my position and whatever the opposition is arguing.
The crowds pulling down or damaging monuments were not peacefully dismantling statues, they were fighting, people were killed, rioting, looting happened. Statues that had nothing to do with the issue were damaged or pulled down.....the mob was on a roll, out of control.
That is the point, not reasonable protest or civil disobedience, not removing inappropriate monuments through due process, but rioting and indiscriminate destruction of property.
That is what separates the two positions.