I’d love to think education is the answer, but teenagers are not the most stable or receptive audience…
There was also a piece on C4 news - where they found phone footage of bloke trying to cross the march on at least two other occasions and being asked not to by two different police officers. It appears that his behavior was being observed by a plain clothes officer and when G was challenged about this and denied it - said officer piped up to contradict him.
Quote from: stone on April 25, 2024, 09:33:17 amThe only thing that protects the whole world from descending into a Gaza type nightmare is the extent to which we stand up for neighbours who aren't like us.Just to point out: this is a completely specious statement. It actually makes exceptionally little sense in the Israel-Palestine (inc. Gaza) context.I presume you mean something more like “tolerance”. But that’s not what you wrote.
The only thing that protects the whole world from descending into a Gaza type nightmare is the extent to which we stand up for neighbours who aren't like us.
Perhaps your point is that is being intolerant of racist abusers and not respecting the validity of their racism or something.
What I mean is that it is not OK to turn a blind eye if we see someone being harassed, especially if we are part of eg a march and the abuse is being perpetrated by fellow marchers. We have to call it out and confront it.
Other footage included some pretty full on vitriol constantly being shouted at the official counter protest; someone mentioned the 'shame on you' more innocent end of it.
The episode was plainly a stunt. …Other footage included some pretty full on vitriol constantly being shouted at the official counter protest
Perhaps some counter-protestors want unwavering support for a military solution to Hamas... But it isn't so far from what our government (with support from the opposition) is standing behind.
Quote from: stone on April 25, 2024, 11:10:09 amWhat I mean is that it is not OK to turn a blind eye if we see someone being harassed, especially if we are part of eg a march and the abuse is being perpetrated by fellow marchers. We have to call it out and confront it. And my point was, in daily life this -sadly- happens all the time because: people don’t want to speak out or people feel unable to speak out (due to power imbalance or intimidation or wanting to belong, etc, etc) or people expect someone else to speak out.In that procession, I expect most people would not agree with insulting behaviour but they may not have felt able or willing to confront it. They may also have felt intimidated.
I'm sticking by saying they should be ashamed of themselves for not having the courage to confront it.
Maybe I’m reading this wrong, but Stone is calling for a zero tolerance approach to racism. Last time I checked that was a good thing.
For those of us who are ill informed, what do the counter protestors 'want' (notionally, within the confines of them being lots of people wanting different things etc.)? If the protesters notionally want ceasefire, do the counter protestors want IDF to keep smashing civilians or want anyone who supports ceasefire or thinks IDF and Netanyahu are c*nts to STFU? If they just want antisemites to STFU it seems like a pity that it ends up as "protest" and "counter protest" when lots of people probably agree with both
It does seem to me that in context of this discussion “abuse” is not just political but also strays into the religious and ethnic.
Was a labour MP back in the day, so probably quite a lot longer.