Civil resistance vs. vigilantism: Has nonviolent protest lost its relevance?
“To do an extreme act of violence, a person must not have seen any hope. There are groups creating a pathway to positive change.”
From “Free Luigi” memes on social media to a national poll indicating that most Americans think insurance profits and coverage denials are partly to blame for Luigi Mangione allegedly gunning down UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in midtown Manhattan on Dec. 4, a chunk of public sentiment has favored the 26-year-old suspected killer.
Moral code in mind
Nonviolent response take cues from the reform movements of Baptist pastor and American civil rights champion the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Indian lawyer and political ethicist the Mahatma Gandhi and South African Anglican bishop and anti-apartheid leader Desmond Tutu.The latter is a tactic to break laws in a nonviolent way — for example seen locally as trespassing on a military base to deliver a message. Instead of fighting with police, activists passively resist arrest by making their bodies limp or remaining in a sitting, standing or prone position.
That’s one of the questions leaders of the Pikes Peak Justice and Peace Commission have, as the organization surveys its membership of 300 active participants and a mailing list of 1,000.
The governing board decided in the fall that the organization “only would initiate programs that members clearly had an interest in,” Wirbel said.
Because, Wirbel said, it’s one thing for people to express on a survey that they would support training and informative events focusing on nonviolence, but it’s another matter to see how many people embrace the approach and choose to become involved.