Martin Luther King, Jr existed alongside Stokely Carmichael and Malcolm X. Not disagreeing with you just saying both paths are correct depending on your viewpoint and your lived experiences.
I’m Indigenous Canadian … full blooded Cree/Ojibway from northern Ontario. My family has had a long history of being under the thumb of government.
And as an Indigenous person, I’ve seen recent examples of what my government would do to me if I violently resisted … in 1990 the Canadian government called in our national armed forces to contain Mohawk land protesters in Oka, Quebec … in Stoney Creek in Ontario in Sept 1995, our Ontario government allowed our provincial police to use violent force and kill an Indigenous protester Dudley George who was protesting against illegal land title … in 2020 the Canadian government used the national RCMP police in military tactical gear to raid at gunpoint unarmed Wetʼsuwetʼen First Nation land protesters who were blockading oil pipeline projects.
It’s a fine line that both sides play in the debate for equal rights, tolerance and justice … the right want to push the debate far enough to make an excuse to want to start killing people and use death as an instrument of control … the left want to push the debate far enough to not have to cause bloodshed … both sides accuse the other of leading everyone down a bloody path.
But in all that I agree … use love and peace and resistance first … but if all else fails and everyone is left with nothing to lose, then there is nothing to lose.
What you described has me worried because for the last couple years the right has riled up their side to the point of weaponized patriotism that would make McCarthy cringe. And the hard push towards deification of military and veterans to the point that they’ll blindly support the military being deployed against US citizens.
Martin Luther King, Jr existed alongside Stokely Carmichael and Malcolm X. Not disagreeing with you just saying both paths are correct depending on your viewpoint and your lived experiences.
I’m Indigenous Canadian … full blooded Cree/Ojibway from northern Ontario. My family has had a long history of being under the thumb of government.
And as an Indigenous person, I’ve seen recent examples of what my government would do to me if I violently resisted … in 1990 the Canadian government called in our national armed forces to contain Mohawk land protesters in Oka, Quebec … in Stoney Creek in Ontario in Sept 1995, our Ontario government allowed our provincial police to use violent force and kill an Indigenous protester Dudley George who was protesting against illegal land title … in 2020 the Canadian government used the national RCMP police in military tactical gear to raid at gunpoint unarmed Wetʼsuwetʼen First Nation land protesters who were blockading oil pipeline projects.
It’s a fine line that both sides play in the debate for equal rights, tolerance and justice … the right want to push the debate far enough to make an excuse to want to start killing people and use death as an instrument of control … the left want to push the debate far enough to not have to cause bloodshed … both sides accuse the other of leading everyone down a bloody path.
But in all that I agree … use love and peace and resistance first … but if all else fails and everyone is left with nothing to lose, then there is nothing to lose.
Tin foil hat time.
What you described has me worried because for the last couple years the right has riled up their side to the point of weaponized patriotism that would make McCarthy cringe. And the hard push towards deification of military and veterans to the point that they’ll blindly support the military being deployed against US citizens.