AtrocityExhibition wrote:
What are they rioting about then?
They might not couch it in such fancy language, but fundamentally, that's what it comes down it isn't it?
Some will be rioting out of a sense of entitlement, some for free stuff, some because it is funny, some because they're too backward to understand the wider implications of their actions, some because they are sociopaths, some because they are drunk/stoned and some because of the reasons the likes of Rev. Stu have gone into. As I was trying to go into yersterday on twitter before work lost internet, there's people, thousands in every community, who think the world owes them anything at all. The rich ones don't create much of a problem because what they expect they generally get, but the poor?
The trouble with getting decent insight into this sort of thing is you need to take each person involved and work through one by one, getting not just their account but a good objective view of them, and look at trends across these numbers. Which is impossible.
This is an interesting article:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/aug/0 ... ul-protestQuote:
Stafford Scott, a community organiser, said police were "absolutely" culpable for not responding to their requests for dialogue.
"I told the chief inspector personally that we wanted to leave before nightfall," Scott said. "If he kept us hanging around after nightfall, it was going to be on his head. We couldn't guarantee it wouldn't get out of control."
First of all, what's a 'community organiser'? Is this a or something more informal, and organise for what? Secondly, do people not realise that once the IPCC come in, the police can't say shit? Or that the 'answers' they want are best arrived at when thoroughly investigated and that takes more than a day?
The following paragraph is even more revealing - if you want to leave before nightfall, you are free to do so. No-one was keeping them hanging around anywhere. Such passive-aggressive behaviour isn't helping their case at all in my eyes. When you lose a relative and the police are involved, the IPCC liaison comes in and you are given an explanation of timescales and expectations, you would certainly be aware that doorstepping the local cop shop on a busy Saturday night is not going to achieve anything at all.
Quote:
Duggan's relatives are said to have left the area when the rioting began. His brother, Shaun Hall, distanced the family from the Saturday night disturbances.
He said there may have been a "domino effect" from the unanswered questions surrounding his brother's death, but said the family "don't condone at all" violence perpetrated in his name.
I don't buy it. Not for one second. If they'd made a statement saying "we were naive" I'd have a shred of respect.
Quote:
Others present said the spark for the rioting was a specific incident involving a 16-year-old woman, who stepped forward to confront police around 8.30pm, demanding answers, but was attacked with shields and batons.
"They beat her with a baton, and then the crowd started shouting 'run, run', and there was a hail of missiles," said Anthony Johnson, 39. "She had been saying: 'We want answers, come and speak to us.'"
Laurence Bailey, who was in a nearby church, described seeing the girl throw a leaflet and what may have been a stone at police.
Bailey said the girl was then "pounded by 15 riot shields". "She went down on the floor but once she managed to get up she was hit again before being half-dragged away by her friend," he said.
This I can believe. Protesters are now savvy to the fact that once you do anything 'aggressive' towards a line of suited up coppers you get pounded. I've managed to avoid this happening to me by not chucking a stone at suited up coppers. It really works! ...and could have worked for her, too. Fault on both sides here. No justification for that sort of police brutality and no justification for being stupid enough to goad them into it.