386 Comments

User's avatar
radicaledward's avatar

As someone who would define their politics as antifascist (or at least anti-capitalist and anti-authoritarian) and lives in the Minneapolis neighborhood that was burned down last year, I can say that it was not fun or exciting. It was not fun to watch people from the suburbs drive 60mph down my street to join the riots. It was especially not fun to go online and see all the people celebrating the fact that my neighborhood was on fire.

It was not fun seeing people with no connection to the area describe property damage as unimportant. Never mind that most of these buildings were populated by immigrant owned businesses employing people in the community. Never mind that those buildings won't be rebuilt for at least another year, which means the people who owned those businesses need to either find a new building or new career, the people who worked there have had to find new places to work during a pandemic.

They may have just been buildings, but sometimes buildings mean a lot to people. They're places for the community to congregate and gather. This is especially true for the sizeable East African and Native American population of people who live here, who watched their community spaces get burned down with glee by people who had never even heard of Longfellow until they rolled up at midnight to smash shit.

It's easy to be pro-riot when it's happening far away to people who may as well be imaginary. We all love to see a Target get smashed, yeah?

Of course, the fallout from that Target and other big chain stores being smashed is that a lot of people in the community suddenly no longer had employment during a pandemic. Not to mention that of the 6 grocery stores that served the 30k people who live in Longfellow, only two remained standing after the first night, which means a lot of people lost their easy access to food, toiletries, etc.

I am not a fan of the guy who lives opposite me on my street who has had a Trump sign in his window since the summer of 2015. But that dude was out there every night protecting our neighborhood grocery store. Yeah, he probably was living out some deranged cowboy fantasy where he'd get to shoot some looters, but he was doing the work to protect people and build community during a pretty alarming and sometimes terrifying time.

But, yeah: not very fun! And the result of all that chaos after this most recent election is a much more moderate City Council, a Mayor with increased executive power, and a police force that feels like they won their war against the city.

Expand full comment
Sarah's avatar

Someday I want somebody smarter than me to do a deep-dive into how pandemic quarantine affected who was at street protests in 2020. So much of my social circle, liberals who were 2016-radicalized but (I assumed) never true radicals, shocked me by going out night after night into a liberal west-coast city and getting into cop chases, getting arrested, being in the crowds that threatened to burn cars and courthouses. They posted unceasingly on social media about their solemn duty to do this, on the same feeds that a week ago had been nothing but frantic finger-pointing at conservatives who were selfishly killing innocents by attending weddings and protesting lockdown restrictions. These were people who were simultaneously losing their minds in lockdown (as I was, as so many were), who were depressed and often newly unemployed, but who had wedded themselves to a political performance that required competing to see who could lock down hardest and publicly bear it best.

…Then, suddenly, a politically-sanctioned excuse - no, an imperative - arose for leaving your house, being among people, meeting your friends, and doing something that felt necessary and productive and brave, following weeks of feeling scared, helpless, claustrophobic, and unmoored. Suddenly it was ok to be outside in a massive crowd because you were allowed to believe the virus was less important than this, when you weren’t allowed to believe that about anything else. I can’t believe that’s coincidence, at least not in my (very far from Minneapolis) city.

It has shades of the Nazi-punching craze of 2017-2018, when many young academics with anxiety in my acquaintance circle started taking self-defense classes and posturing as “neighborhood protectors.” You’re a pacifist until a politically-sanctioned imperative to hurt people comes along and gives you the excuse. The difference is, none of them ever actually punched a Nazi; and pandemic lockdown was an event of mass psychological upheaval in the U.S. that I can’t think of a parallel for.

Expand full comment
384 more comments...

No posts