A lot of recent protests have been done for the express purpose of causing economic damage. If you deliberately do that, that goes beyond freedom of speech and freedom of assembly and the organizers should be held liable.
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I do not think tactics like these are legitimate protests.
I think the AZ law goes too far in some ways, but I do not think we should keep giving a pass to people that deliberately cause economic harm to others under cover of "protesting".
I understand your concerns over protests that do result in economic damage. However, you have to look at the issue from a long-range perspective. For example, in the recent case of Berkley wherein Milo had been set to speak (an event which was subsequently cancelled), the students were peacefully protesting. However, a group known as antifascists then broke in between the lines and started things like the fire and breaking of windows and (from what I understand) getting physical with a few protesters. That's unacceptable, but that's not the fault of the Berkley students who'd been peacefully protesting. To the best of my knowledge, perpetrators pulled a hit and run essentially and no arrests were able to be made.
Think about this from the perspective of this bill's pitfalls. Let's imagine for a moment that there's a man who opposes the taking down of a building that has had historical roots in the community which some corporation has decided should be torn down to outfit a multistory apartment building and the council is voting on this proposal. So, the man rallies the town's people to protest, and they do so outside of the council meeting place. However, what happens is suddenly out of nowhere one or two individuals show up who start breaking things. This results in negative media coverage, and maybe the council feels pressure to not give into "violent protesters's demands" despite the fact that the rest of them had been peaceful and the council agrees to pass the proposal. However, what happens when it's been found out that the corporation hired the two additional protesters to create havoc? The mission has been accomplished and no rewind button will take anyone in history to the time the protesters had not been painted as the bad guys and the proposal had not been passed. So, do we really want to incentivize opponents of a group to commit acts that would result in a de facto shutting down of protests by penalizing the organizers of the protest who assembled the people without an investigation just because an unexpected something happened?
What happens at campaign rallies in which any disruptor can create the commotion which leads to some damage?
Do we want different organizations afraid to fund protests because they don't want to be monetarily penalized? And to what extent will they be monetarily penalized?
Look at what the article says:
This bill would put rioting under the state's Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization (RICO) statutes that are typically used to prosecute organized crime and allow police to take items acquired through criminal activity. The sentence for racketeering can include more than a year in prison. It would allow police to seize protesters' or organizers' assets and make them financially responsible for any property damage.
Seizure of assets of an organizer can mean a freeze on being able to do any work for some time and chill the possibility of being able to accomplish any delineated goals the office. It can also serve to chill the momentum on a movement.
I feel that the women who marched in the
Women's March to protest did so because they wanted to have their power and voice acknowledged and also show resistance to the ugly rhetoric that had shaped President Donald's campaign trail. That's not only their right but a fundamental freedom enshrined in the constitution.
Reports say no arrests were made during the Women's March as it was a peaceful protest. But I do know that some people from sizable crowd can quickly turn somewhat unruly in places should the right conditions occur like provocation. So, I don't like the idea of holding organizers accountable in terms of nothing untoward happening. How can they possibly guarantee or predict a thing like that?
Or how about the
Not My President movement after the election? While I'd personally felt at the time of the election that we should give President Donald Trump a fair chance, others hadn't felt that way. Why should then group who'd thought to protest for what they felt was their just cause be penalized for the
actions of a few who did get physical at one point in time?
There are a lot of people who feel uncertain about President Donald Trump's presidency not because he's the quintessential villain but because he doesn't seem to be able to break away from his ego to reassure the people about his motivations and aims and doesn't seem to care about healing the fissure that he'd made more prominent with his rhetoric from the time he'd been in campaign mode. And he's still there, campaigning for plaudits (e.g. recent Florida rally), when most of the country just wants him to move forward and get on the business of being our (everyone's) President, even the ones who didn't vote for him. Since he seems unwilling or incapable of so doing, many people then feel they need to be able to form pockets of resistance whenever he or the GOP get out of line, including staging protests. That right shouldn't essentially be chilled because of the actions of an ignorant or belligerent few.
Peace.