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  4. I am very proud of the UC Berkley protesters

I am very proud of the UC Berkley protesters

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  • M Majerus

    Then give me the hypothetical that would justify pepper spraying a dozen kids sitting on the ground, completely passive. The video is right there in the OP. Take a look at it and justify the pepper spray.

    The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

    T Offline
    T Offline
    TheGreatAndPowerfulOz
    wrote on last edited by
    #90

    First let me say that I completely agree that the use of the pepper spray was ill advised and even unjustified. If the cops were ordered to have the students removed or otherwise dispersed from the Quad, then it follows that the cops ordered the students to disperse. The Law requires you to follow the lawful orders of Police. Ordering someone to disperse is a lawful order. The Police are within their rights to use reasonable force to effect compliance with a lawful police order. Are there reasonable means, more reasonable that Pepper Spray, to effect compliance? No doubt. Could they have been used without causing injury to Police and students? Maybe. We'll never know. It depends on how determined the students were to resist. I have no doubt though that the police were in a no-win situation. No matter what they did, it would have turned into a fracas. And they would have been vilified no matter what means they used to effect the dispersal. It would have been better to simply let things be and make sure things didn't get out of hand or grow too large. Personally, I don't see why the students "occupying" UC Davis would be such a problem. So long as it doesn't interfere with the mission of the university and other student's rights to get the education for which they paid. [Edit] changed "UC Berkley" to "UC Davis" [/Edit]

    If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader." - John Quincy Adams
    You must accept one of two basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe, or we are not alone in the universe. And either way, the implications are staggering” - Wernher von Braun

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    • M Majerus

      It maybe because the protest was at UC-Davis, not Berkley. The subject line is incorrect. Sorry about the confusion. When students covered their eyes with their clothing, police forced open their mouths and pepper-sprayed down their throats. [^]

      The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

      T Offline
      T Offline
      TheGreatAndPowerfulOz
      wrote on last edited by
      #91

      Thanks, that is horrible, and completely despicable. Unreasonable use of force. If the students were covering their faces, then their arms were likely no longer linked and could be easily arrested or removed. Shameful.

      If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader." - John Quincy Adams
      You must accept one of two basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe, or we are not alone in the universe. And either way, the implications are staggering” - Wernher von Braun

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      • M Majerus

        It maybe because the protest was at UC-Davis, not Berkley. The subject line is incorrect. Sorry about the confusion. When students covered their eyes with their clothing, police forced open their mouths and pepper-sprayed down their throats. [^]

        The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

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        TheGreatAndPowerfulOz
        wrote on last edited by
        #92

        I think in light of this that the practice of hiring former military members as police officers should be stopped. It is causing the militarization of the police. It is especially a concern where military members served in Iraq and Afghanistan. In those places the military is trained to see the native population as the enemy. Hence the natural reaction of a former military member in a stressful situation is to react with violence and attack.

        If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader." - John Quincy Adams
        You must accept one of two basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe, or we are not alone in the universe. And either way, the implications are staggering” - Wernher von Braun

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        • T TheGreatAndPowerfulOz

          I think in light of this that the practice of hiring former military members as police officers should be stopped. It is causing the militarization of the police. It is especially a concern where military members served in Iraq and Afghanistan. In those places the military is trained to see the native population as the enemy. Hence the natural reaction of a former military member in a stressful situation is to react with violence and attack.

          If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader." - John Quincy Adams
          You must accept one of two basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe, or we are not alone in the universe. And either way, the implications are staggering” - Wernher von Braun

          M Offline
          M Offline
          Majerus
          wrote on last edited by
          #93

          ahmed zahmed wrote:

          It is causing the militarization of the police.

          Even more I think the militarization of the police is the result of our "war" on drugs and now terrorism. I came across this piece this morning - an interesting read. http://www.ginandtacos.com/2011/11/28/scenario-fulfillment/[^]

          The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

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          • T TheGreatAndPowerfulOz

            First let me say that I completely agree that the use of the pepper spray was ill advised and even unjustified. If the cops were ordered to have the students removed or otherwise dispersed from the Quad, then it follows that the cops ordered the students to disperse. The Law requires you to follow the lawful orders of Police. Ordering someone to disperse is a lawful order. The Police are within their rights to use reasonable force to effect compliance with a lawful police order. Are there reasonable means, more reasonable that Pepper Spray, to effect compliance? No doubt. Could they have been used without causing injury to Police and students? Maybe. We'll never know. It depends on how determined the students were to resist. I have no doubt though that the police were in a no-win situation. No matter what they did, it would have turned into a fracas. And they would have been vilified no matter what means they used to effect the dispersal. It would have been better to simply let things be and make sure things didn't get out of hand or grow too large. Personally, I don't see why the students "occupying" UC Davis would be such a problem. So long as it doesn't interfere with the mission of the university and other student's rights to get the education for which they paid. [Edit] changed "UC Berkley" to "UC Davis" [/Edit]

            If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader." - John Quincy Adams
            You must accept one of two basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe, or we are not alone in the universe. And either way, the implications are staggering” - Wernher von Braun

            M Offline
            M Offline
            Majerus
            wrote on last edited by
            #94

            I agree with you that the school should have left the students in the quad. I disagree with you on the lawful order part. A policeman ordering a peaceful, constitutionally protected assembly to disperse is not a lawful order. Obviously the school administration disagreed with that assessment.

            The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

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            • T TheGreatAndPowerfulOz

              First let me say that I completely agree that the use of the pepper spray was ill advised and even unjustified. If the cops were ordered to have the students removed or otherwise dispersed from the Quad, then it follows that the cops ordered the students to disperse. The Law requires you to follow the lawful orders of Police. Ordering someone to disperse is a lawful order. The Police are within their rights to use reasonable force to effect compliance with a lawful police order. Are there reasonable means, more reasonable that Pepper Spray, to effect compliance? No doubt. Could they have been used without causing injury to Police and students? Maybe. We'll never know. It depends on how determined the students were to resist. I have no doubt though that the police were in a no-win situation. No matter what they did, it would have turned into a fracas. And they would have been vilified no matter what means they used to effect the dispersal. It would have been better to simply let things be and make sure things didn't get out of hand or grow too large. Personally, I don't see why the students "occupying" UC Davis would be such a problem. So long as it doesn't interfere with the mission of the university and other student's rights to get the education for which they paid. [Edit] changed "UC Berkley" to "UC Davis" [/Edit]

              If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader." - John Quincy Adams
              You must accept one of two basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe, or we are not alone in the universe. And either way, the implications are staggering” - Wernher von Braun

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              J Offline
              jschell
              wrote on last edited by
              #95

              ahmed zahmed wrote:

              The Police are within their rights to use reasonable force to effect compliance with a lawful police order. Are there reasonable means, more reasonable that Pepper Spray, to effect compliance? No doubt. Could they have been used without causing injury to Police and students? Maybe. We'll never know. It depends on how determined the students were to resist. I have no doubt though that the police were in a no-win situation.

              It is obvious from the video, based on how the protesters were arrayed that they intended to be arrested and that they intended to make it difficult for the police to remove them. If a single protester became agressive during that process then other protesters would likely sustain injuries. Officers might sustain injuries as well. Even low level agressive behavior in that array can lead to injuries such as strains.

              ahmed zahmed wrote:

              So long as it doesn't interfere with the mission of the university and other student's rights to get the education for which they paid.

              If I walk into your house and sit in the middle of your living room floor does it interfer with your use of your couch and your access to the tv and kitchen? I suspect that I can find some spot in your living room which would not in fact interfer with your usage of it. However I suspect that you would not in fact want me there and would want the police to remove me. Noting again that the video demonstrates that the protesters intended to get arrested. It wasn't a random collection of protesters just standing/sitting. They knew that the police would need to try to remove them and the specifically, with intent, set themselves up to make that as difficult (there are ways to make it even more difficult.)

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              • M Majerus

                Then give me the hypothetical that would justify pepper spraying a dozen kids sitting on the ground, completely passive. The video is right there in the OP. Take a look at it and justify the pepper spray.

                The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

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                J Offline
                jschell
                wrote on last edited by
                #96

                Majerus wrote:

                Then give me the hypothetical that would justify pepper spraying a dozen kids sitting on the ground, completely passive.

                You do realize that they way they were sitting means that they knew that they were going to be arrested? And they intentionally set themselves up to make it difficult to do just that? To me that doesn't fit the definition of "passive". As for the hypothetical situation...where the alternative is to use clubs, tasers and/or water hoses.

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                • M Majerus

                  So in the end, you are basically saying that the police brutality was completely pointless. It accomplished nothing and was bad PR. No laws were enforced. That may be a tactic that gets used, but it doesn't appear to be the point of this protest. The students didn't gather to break a law, they gathered to protest inequality.

                  The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

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                  jschell
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #97

                  Majerus wrote:

                  It accomplished nothing and was bad PR.

                  Probably.

                  Majerus wrote:

                  No laws were enforced.

                  I couldn't say.

                  Majerus wrote:

                  That may be a tactic that gets used, but it doesn't appear to be the point of this protest. The students didn't gather to break a law, they gathered to protest inequality.

                  The protesters in the video were specifically arrayed in a configuration that was intended to make it difficult to arrest them. I don't know what their intent was that lead them to that piece of ground up to the minutes before they took that stance but I know exactly what they intended and what they knew was going to happen once they did array themselves that way. So yes they did in fact "gather to break a law".

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                  • J jschell

                    Majerus wrote:

                    Then give me the hypothetical that would justify pepper spraying a dozen kids sitting on the ground, completely passive.

                    You do realize that they way they were sitting means that they knew that they were going to be arrested? And they intentionally set themselves up to make it difficult to do just that? To me that doesn't fit the definition of "passive". As for the hypothetical situation...where the alternative is to use clubs, tasers and/or water hoses.

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                    Majerus
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #98

                    jschell wrote:

                    You do realize that they way they were sitting means that they knew that they were going to be arrested?
                     
                    And they intentionally set themselves up to make it difficult to do just that?

                    Of course. So what? It doesn't justify pepper spray, tasers, batons or water hoses.

                    jschell wrote:

                    To me that doesn't fit the definition of "passive".

                    Sitting are the ground with linked arms, sounds passive to me. Case directly on point: http://blogs.findlaw.com/ninth_circuit/2011/11/did-uc-davis-pepper-spray-cop-use-excessive-force.html[^] In this case the protesters did not simply link arms they used "black bears". "A “black bear” is a cylinder with a rod or post welded into the center. The protestors placed their arms into the steel cylinders and attached steel bracelets worn around their wrists to the center rods or posts in the “black bears” by using mountain climbers' carabiners.   When in place, the devices immobilized their arms and prevented their separation, although the protestors could disengage themselves from the devices by unclipping the carabiners from inside the cylinders.   From 1990 until the fall of 1997, defendants had forcibly, but safely, removed hundreds of “black bears” from protestors' arms by cutting the cylinders with a hand-held electric grinder."

                    The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

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                    • J jschell

                      Majerus wrote:

                      It accomplished nothing and was bad PR.

                      Probably.

                      Majerus wrote:

                      No laws were enforced.

                      I couldn't say.

                      Majerus wrote:

                      That may be a tactic that gets used, but it doesn't appear to be the point of this protest. The students didn't gather to break a law, they gathered to protest inequality.

                      The protesters in the video were specifically arrayed in a configuration that was intended to make it difficult to arrest them. I don't know what their intent was that lead them to that piece of ground up to the minutes before they took that stance but I know exactly what they intended and what they knew was going to happen once they did array themselves that way. So yes they did in fact "gather to break a law".

                      M Offline
                      M Offline
                      Majerus
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #99

                      jschell wrote:

                      The protesters in the video were specifically arrayed in a configuration that was intended to make it difficult to arrest them.

                      Again, So what? You keep stating this like it is somehow significant. It isn't.

                      jschell wrote:

                      So yes they did in fact "gather to break a law".

                      No, the didn't. They gathered to protest inequality, among other things. Some did choose to accept arrest when the police warned them. But that was in no way the purpose of the protest or why they gathered on the Quad.

                      The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

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                      • J jschell

                        ahmed zahmed wrote:

                        The Police are within their rights to use reasonable force to effect compliance with a lawful police order. Are there reasonable means, more reasonable that Pepper Spray, to effect compliance? No doubt. Could they have been used without causing injury to Police and students? Maybe. We'll never know. It depends on how determined the students were to resist. I have no doubt though that the police were in a no-win situation.

                        It is obvious from the video, based on how the protesters were arrayed that they intended to be arrested and that they intended to make it difficult for the police to remove them. If a single protester became agressive during that process then other protesters would likely sustain injuries. Officers might sustain injuries as well. Even low level agressive behavior in that array can lead to injuries such as strains.

                        ahmed zahmed wrote:

                        So long as it doesn't interfere with the mission of the university and other student's rights to get the education for which they paid.

                        If I walk into your house and sit in the middle of your living room floor does it interfer with your use of your couch and your access to the tv and kitchen? I suspect that I can find some spot in your living room which would not in fact interfer with your usage of it. However I suspect that you would not in fact want me there and would want the police to remove me. Noting again that the video demonstrates that the protesters intended to get arrested. It wasn't a random collection of protesters just standing/sitting. They knew that the police would need to try to remove them and the specifically, with intent, set themselves up to make that as difficult (there are ways to make it even more difficult.)

                        M Offline
                        M Offline
                        Majerus
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #100

                        jschell wrote:

                        If I walk into your house and sit in the middle of your living room...

                        You can stop right there. The Quad is not private property. Full Stop.

                        The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

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                        • M Majerus

                          jschell wrote:

                          If I walk into your house and sit in the middle of your living room...

                          You can stop right there. The Quad is not private property. Full Stop.

                          The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

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                          J Offline
                          jschell
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #101

                          Majerus wrote:

                          You can stop right there. The Quad is not private property. Full Stop.

                          Can't say for sure how public institutions there work. But I know how they work where I am. And they are NOT the same as a public sidewalk downtown. No more so than a stadium, courthouse, state house or even a 'public' park.

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                          • M Majerus

                            jschell wrote:

                            You do realize that they way they were sitting means that they knew that they were going to be arrested?
                             
                            And they intentionally set themselves up to make it difficult to do just that?

                            Of course. So what? It doesn't justify pepper spray, tasers, batons or water hoses.

                            jschell wrote:

                            To me that doesn't fit the definition of "passive".

                            Sitting are the ground with linked arms, sounds passive to me. Case directly on point: http://blogs.findlaw.com/ninth_circuit/2011/11/did-uc-davis-pepper-spray-cop-use-excessive-force.html[^] In this case the protesters did not simply link arms they used "black bears". "A “black bear” is a cylinder with a rod or post welded into the center. The protestors placed their arms into the steel cylinders and attached steel bracelets worn around their wrists to the center rods or posts in the “black bears” by using mountain climbers' carabiners.   When in place, the devices immobilized their arms and prevented their separation, although the protestors could disengage themselves from the devices by unclipping the carabiners from inside the cylinders.   From 1990 until the fall of 1997, defendants had forcibly, but safely, removed hundreds of “black bears” from protestors' arms by cutting the cylinders with a hand-held electric grinder."

                            The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

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                            J Offline
                            jschell
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #102

                            Majerus wrote:

                            Sitting are the ground with linked arms, sounds passive to me.

                            And again, that does not fit my definition. How exactly do you differentiate that "passive" behavior from that of an individual that was not in fact intending to get arrested? One who was not in fact deliberately taking action to make arresting them more difficult?

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                            • M Majerus

                              jschell wrote:

                              The protesters in the video were specifically arrayed in a configuration that was intended to make it difficult to arrest them.

                              Again, So what? You keep stating this like it is somehow significant. It isn't.

                              jschell wrote:

                              So yes they did in fact "gather to break a law".

                              No, the didn't. They gathered to protest inequality, among other things. Some did choose to accept arrest when the police warned them. But that was in no way the purpose of the protest or why they gathered on the Quad.

                              The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

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                              J Offline
                              jschell
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #103

                              Majerus wrote:

                              Again, So what? You keep stating this like it is somehow significant. It isn't.

                              Because they knew that they were breaking a law. They knew that they would be arrested for breaking that law - it had nothing to do with free speech.

                              Majerus wrote:

                              No, the didn't. They gathered to protest inequality, among other things. Some did choose to accept arrest when the police warned them. But that was in no way the purpose of the protest or why they gathered on the Quad.

                              Again the actions of those individuals and that specific time was specifically intended to knowingly break a law. Per your analogy if vegan stands outside a bank and demands that they stop accepting money from a meat packer then it is ok if they then blow up the bank.

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                              • J jschell

                                Majerus wrote:

                                You can stop right there. The Quad is not private property. Full Stop.

                                Can't say for sure how public institutions there work. But I know how they work where I am. And they are NOT the same as a public sidewalk downtown. No more so than a stadium, courthouse, state house or even a 'public' park.

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                                M Offline
                                Majerus
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #104

                                jschell wrote:

                                And they are NOT the same as a public sidewalk downtown.

                                How so? In what way are they different? In what way is the 1st amendment NOT applicable?

                                The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

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                                • J jschell

                                  Majerus wrote:

                                  Sitting are the ground with linked arms, sounds passive to me.

                                  And again, that does not fit my definition. How exactly do you differentiate that "passive" behavior from that of an individual that was not in fact intending to get arrested? One who was not in fact deliberately taking action to make arresting them more difficult?

                                  M Offline
                                  M Offline
                                  Majerus
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #105

                                  jschell wrote:

                                  And again, that does not fit my definition.

                                  It doesn't matter what your definition is. The only definition that matters in the legal definition.

                                  jschell wrote:

                                  How exactly do you differentiate that "passive" behavior from that of an individual that was not in fact intending to get arrested?

                                  passive is passive. Intend is really not relevent.

                                  The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

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                                  • J jschell

                                    Majerus wrote:

                                    Again, So what? You keep stating this like it is somehow significant. It isn't.

                                    Because they knew that they were breaking a law. They knew that they would be arrested for breaking that law - it had nothing to do with free speech.

                                    Majerus wrote:

                                    No, the didn't. They gathered to protest inequality, among other things. Some did choose to accept arrest when the police warned them. But that was in no way the purpose of the protest or why they gathered on the Quad.

                                    Again the actions of those individuals and that specific time was specifically intended to knowingly break a law. Per your analogy if vegan stands outside a bank and demands that they stop accepting money from a meat packer then it is ok if they then blow up the bank.

                                    M Offline
                                    M Offline
                                    Majerus
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #106

                                    jschell wrote:

                                    Because they knew that they were breaking a law.

                                    Only thing you can know for sure is that they were prepared to be arrested.

                                    jschell wrote:

                                    They knew that they would be arrested for breaking that law - it had nothing to do with free speech.

                                    It has everything to do with free speech. You seem to be so sure that they broke some law, and yet you have no idea what the law is.

                                    jschell wrote:

                                    Again the actions of those individuals and that specific time was specifically intended to knowingly break a law.

                                    No, only thing we know for sure is that they intended to be arrested. They were told to leave and they chose not to.

                                    jschell wrote:

                                    Per your analogy if vegan stands outside a bank and demands that they stop accepting money from a meat packer then it is ok if they then blow up the bank.

                                    Actually that makes no sense at all. Free speech is protected, blowing up banks is not. For the sake of argument I will accept the hypothetical that the protesters knowingly broke a law that would withstand a 1st amendment constitutional challenge. That does not in any way minimize that the focus of the gathering was to protest the vast inequality in this country. It does not justify the use of pepper spray. My position is that the quad on the campus of UC-Davis is public property. The few exceptions that the courts have allowed do not apply, so what the students were doing was legal. In addition, irrespective of the legality of the protests, this was an unforced error by the school chancellor, the campus police chief and the police Lt. that lead the officers. It was a stupid and violent overreaction. The chancellor should be fired, and the there should be a criminal investigation of the police.

                                    The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

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                                    • J jschell

                                      ahmed zahmed wrote:

                                      The Police are within their rights to use reasonable force to effect compliance with a lawful police order. Are there reasonable means, more reasonable that Pepper Spray, to effect compliance? No doubt. Could they have been used without causing injury to Police and students? Maybe. We'll never know. It depends on how determined the students were to resist. I have no doubt though that the police were in a no-win situation.

                                      It is obvious from the video, based on how the protesters were arrayed that they intended to be arrested and that they intended to make it difficult for the police to remove them. If a single protester became agressive during that process then other protesters would likely sustain injuries. Officers might sustain injuries as well. Even low level agressive behavior in that array can lead to injuries such as strains.

                                      ahmed zahmed wrote:

                                      So long as it doesn't interfere with the mission of the university and other student's rights to get the education for which they paid.

                                      If I walk into your house and sit in the middle of your living room floor does it interfer with your use of your couch and your access to the tv and kitchen? I suspect that I can find some spot in your living room which would not in fact interfer with your usage of it. However I suspect that you would not in fact want me there and would want the police to remove me. Noting again that the video demonstrates that the protesters intended to get arrested. It wasn't a random collection of protesters just standing/sitting. They knew that the police would need to try to remove them and the specifically, with intent, set themselves up to make that as difficult (there are ways to make it even more difficult.)

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                                      T Offline
                                      TheGreatAndPowerfulOz
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #107

                                      There is a difference between public and private property. What you are describing is a private property situation. What occurred at UC Davis is a public property situation. Your argument fails.

                                      If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader." - John Quincy Adams
                                      You must accept one of two basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe, or we are not alone in the universe. And either way, the implications are staggering” - Wernher von Braun

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                                      • M Majerus

                                        I agree with you that the school should have left the students in the quad. I disagree with you on the lawful order part. A policeman ordering a peaceful, constitutionally protected assembly to disperse is not a lawful order. Obviously the school administration disagreed with that assessment.

                                        The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

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                                        T Offline
                                        TheGreatAndPowerfulOz
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #108

                                        I'm not sure that the order to disperse was lawful or not. I was speaking hypothetically. But, *if* the order was lawful, then the rest follows. Even so, the force used was excessive and unnecessary. There were other, safe means to effect removal of the students.

                                        If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader." - John Quincy Adams
                                        You must accept one of two basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe, or we are not alone in the universe. And either way, the implications are staggering” - Wernher von Braun

                                        1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • M Majerus

                                          jschell wrote:

                                          And they are NOT the same as a public sidewalk downtown.

                                          How so? In what way are they different? In what way is the 1st amendment NOT applicable?

                                          The Left - Taking shit for being right since before you were born. - driftglass

                                          J Offline
                                          J Offline
                                          jschell
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #109

                                          Majerus wrote:

                                          ow so? In what way are they different? In what way is the 1st amendment NOT applicable?

                                          Restricted use requirements. I do not not need a permit to stand on a sidewalk with a sign at 3 in the morning on a downtown sidewalk. I do need a permit for all of the other places I mentioned. And the above has NOTHING to do with what is on my sign. Could be "Jesus saves", could be "Socialism rules" could be "Big Sale at Barneys".

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