Looking at Iran right now, I imagine there may come a point when violent revolution is appropriate. The Masha Amini protests (and the escalation to assassination, arson and sabotage) are the result of years of infrastructure failure and brutal retaliation by law enforcement and religious authorities. Pro-tip: If your side is the one bombing girls’ schools with poison gas, you might be the baddies.
I doubt the left in the US is going to start civil war, but the militant right is eager enough that I’m worried about lethal attacks on pride parades. But for now we still have alternatives to burning down police precincts.
I liken the right wing attacks on civil liberties akin to containing the dinosaurs on Isla Nublar. There’s enough integral complexity in the systems that pass and enforce execrable bills (and elect officials inclined to submit them) that they are prone to sabotage through malicious compliance with policy.
Still, according to retired CIA analysts interviewed on PBS, civil war in the US is inevitable (though they didn’t specify it was imminent) and the kind of election reforms and diffusion of political power back to the public that might prevent war is unpopular among state or federal officials. We’ll need to pressure them to pass such measures, probably with a level of extortion that equates to the threat of violence. Specifically what is well above my pay grade.
Looking at Iran right now, I imagine there may come a point when violent revolution is appropriate. The Masha Amini protests (and the escalation to assassination, arson and sabotage) are the result of years of infrastructure failure and brutal retaliation by law enforcement and religious authorities. Pro-tip: If your side is the one bombing girls’ schools with poison gas, you might be the baddies.
I doubt the left in the US is going to start civil war, but the militant right is eager enough that I’m worried about lethal attacks on pride parades. But for now we still have alternatives to burning down police precincts.
I liken the right wing attacks on civil liberties akin to containing the dinosaurs on Isla Nublar. There’s enough integral complexity in the systems that pass and enforce execrable bills (and elect officials inclined to submit them) that they are prone to sabotage through malicious compliance with policy.
Still, according to retired CIA analysts interviewed on PBS, civil war in the US is inevitable (though they didn’t specify it was imminent) and the kind of election reforms and diffusion of political power back to the public that might prevent war is unpopular among state or federal officials. We’ll need to pressure them to pass such measures, probably with a level of extortion that equates to the threat of violence. Specifically what is well above my pay grade.