Tons of protests going on everywhere against Israel, but not a single government has changed their stance

  • Masterblaster
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    -11 year ago

    i’m pretty sure you could crowdsource an assassination and get more results,.

  • @OttoVonNoob@lemmy.ca
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    171 year ago

    Yes, mobilization is a strong message to government in democracy. It says we do not like the direction, we are going and we will vote you out or cause more disruption. In my town we mobilized in front of our MP’s office due to the partial privatization of medcial aid. Our MP ended up changing his vote and siding against his party, as it was the will of the people. Participation in democracy is a powerful tool.

  • @ExLisper@linux.community
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    41 year ago

    Depends who’s protesting and what’s the support for the protests among general population. The problem with most of the protests you see is that the people that do the protesting are the same people that oppose the government. So yeah, no government is going to react to protests done by people that don’t vote for it, no matter how big. If the actual people that got the government elected protest or support the protest then they listen. Of course most of the time people know what they are voting and the government is doing exactly what it promised so they will not protest.

  • GodlessCommie
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    -11 year ago

    The only thing the state understands is violence, money and power. We can do nothing to threaten their power or violence, but we can threaten their money through general strikes. Bring capitalism to its knees and they too will bend.

  • @BeatTakeshi@lemmy.world
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    311 year ago

    Farmers protested all over Europe recently and got what they wanted, which is to get rid of latest environmental regulations (that would have enforced an end of subsidies on diesel, reduction of nitrates use in fertilisers etc).

    • @Sodis@feddit.de
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      41 year ago

      Yeah, but farmers have a powerful lobby and they produce our food. So they got some power behind their words.

  • @Mnemnosyne@sh.itjust.works
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    121 year ago

    I think the best way to put it is that protests can be effective only when they present a credible threat of some sort against the people who have the power to make changes to whatever the protest is about. That threat may be direct violence, it may be electoral change, or it may be something else, but a credible threat of some sort is absolutely required.

    Protesting against Israel, therefore, is of little use in most situations. The protesters pose no credible threat to Israel, so their decisions aren’t going to change. And the protesters generally are not representing much of a credible threat against their own governments either, so their own governments are also not moved to change.

  • @Pronell@lemmy.world
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    41 year ago

    There have been more criticisms from governments as time has gone on - Brazil in particular has been in the news today for it.

    South Africa has taken actions as well. And even if these two countries didn’t do this because of protests, they help to encourage protests in other places, to help to change more minds.

    You can never know exactly what a protest accomplishes, that’s one of the ways they are so easy to minimize.