No you retard. And if you continue to lie about my position I will push the report button, because I'm in no mood to suffer from any more mud-slinging attempts from retards with severe reading comprehension problems like you.Bakustra wrote:That's not my argument, and that's not Zinegata's argument.
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Bakustra lies for the first time. I have stated numerous times that Gandhi's non-violence system does not work in all occassions. Therefore "Zinegata's argument is that only peaceful protests work" is false. See here:Zinegata's argument is that only peaceful protests work and are inferior to voting anyways.
Outlining why Gandhi-style non-violent protest works in some instances does not mean I approve of it in all instances.Gandhi had a lot more supporters precisely because his non-violent approach appealed to a broader part of the population. Again, I'm not saying the Gandhi non-violence doctrine is perfect and applicable to all cases.
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Bakustra also lies for the second time when he says "Zinegata's argument is that peaceful protests are inferior to voting anyway". Check again:
What I actually said is that peaceful protests fail in democratic systems if they are NOT supported by the population. Which Bakustra has failed to refute in favor of lying.the main reason peaceful protests fail in democractic countries is because the mainstream population simply does not support the movement - either because they don't like what the movement is proposing, or it's too unclear for them to support it - and that the major decisions are ultimately decided by the ballot box.
I also did say that "major decisions are ultimately decided by the ballot box", but that is a seperate statement from the success/failure of peaceful protests. In fact, if you'd actually think about why I put the two sentences together, instead of playing bullshit games by cherry-picking statements out of context, you'd realize that what I'm actually saying is that for a peaceful protest to suceed in a democratic system, you need to have:
a) Popular support of the people (instead of just claiming to represent the "99%", when in reality the said 99% just look at you funny).
b) You transform that popular support into concrete political gains via election victories.
So again, debate properly and stop the fucking lies.
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Now, as for the Indian independence thing...
Your argument is that Gandhi gained political power because he was seen as a "more moderate" alternative to the violent revolutionaries. This is true because most people don't like to support violent groups.
However, that's an exceedingly silly counter-argument. Non-violent protests spring up in countries without armed resistance groups. Hell, assuming that OWS is "non-violent" (which it largely is), what "violent" group are they forming in response to? The Bernie Madoff Fan Club?
Again, when you look at the CURRENT context: Which is the United States of America in 2011 with Obama as president - any comparison to Indian independence, Nazi Germany, or even the Civil Rights movement goes down the drain.
A non-violent protest movement (Gandhi-style), can prosper so long as it is furthering goals that have actual popular support. However - and only Simon Jester has had the courage to admit this - the OWS is a mess with no clear goals.
That's the BIG reason why it's not getting much popular support. And when pockets of the OWS tries "resistance", all they're doing is to drive popular support away from them even further and into the non-violent alternatives: Which is the present political system, and the Democratic & Republican/Tea Party - because these guys are non-violent to begin with.
Also, one last thing: The numbers showing up in these rallies are pretty puny. Jon Stewart's rally (about 100-200K in size) was bigger than all of the OWS rallies. Possibly combined. So again, let's not pretend that the OWS is bigger than it really is.