Aike Wrote:And by "force" I don't necessarily mean physical violence (although I do not hypocritically judge those who resort to it in the face of injustice).
And we return to the theme of the OP: a riot is not a protest, but an exploitation in and of itself. Burning the neighborhood Walgreen's isn't striking out against "the man." It is depriving your neighbors of access to a local and needed business. The crime has the further and more long-lasting effect of reducing business investment where it is most needed in a poor neighborhood. When I lived in Anchorage, there was a Safeway store with an armed private guard at the checkout because there were so many druggies in the neighborhood. It was locally known as "Drug Carr's." In most cases, the businesses just pull out and the honest and working class are simply put to more hardship.
Your use of "hypocritically" isn't an accurate one unless you have resorted to looting, burning, and mayhem in your pursuit of material wealth. Almost everyone I know works for a living, in jobs high and low, and does not advocate violence. Abstracted policies that encourage the status quo or disparity are not violence. They are oppressive, but they are not necessarily motivated by racism.
To be very clear, these riots are not an uprising by the poor. They are not the bread riots of yore. They are race riots. The lootings and burnings are against neighbors and not even along racial lines. The clerk whom Michael Brown robbed wasn't white either. The missing dots that do not connect are exactly how the legacy of slavery and racism create a scenario in which a black man is justified in stealing by strongarm robbery a luxury item, Cigarellos. He wasn't stealing bread to eat, nor money to buy medicine or pay rent. He was just stealing because he could. Some culture hero.
And the big hitter in the secondary debate of poverty and oppression as justification is still silent to the existence of many impoverished towns and regions that do not resort to this sort of widespread and endemic crime and violence. Where are the statistics that reveal it at similar levels in West Virginia and Appalachia? Where are the equivalent murder rates in those impoverished enclaves? Poverty is not the explanation.
Accepting by excusing this sort of aggression is a recipe for anarchy. Many public schools have given up on expecting better, and have become breeding grounds, creating this sort of citizen by the tacet agreement that the individual cannot be any better. That is a false and self-fulfilling prophecy, just like the parent who believes his child will be unruly and unmoldable. Voila! The child is allowed to be exactly that.