The Boyertown Area Times

Protests powered by freedoms

- Gene Policinski Columnist

Two of our least-known freedoms, petition and assembly, are at the heart of our nation’s most profound changes.

Today, those two freedoms are powering a deep national conversati­on both in person and online involving millions of us about how we should deal with racism, bigotry and criminal justice in the wake of George Floyd’s death while in police custody in Minneapoli­s.

Some of those conversati­ons have been marred by the violence inflicted by a relative few. As the final words of the First Amendment’s 45 words provide, we have the constituti­onal right “peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”

Nothing in those 45 words instructs how assembly and petition are supposed to work. But we’ve often taken to the streets when facing our nation’s most profound times to let our voices be heard. And #walkwithus shows signs of being a long-running rallying point, much like #blacklives­matter and #metoo

Protest has served as both a release and a megaphone for views that range from “Occupy Wall Street” to the Tea Party movement to those protesting COVID-19 stay-at-home orders.

From women marching in the 19th and early 20th centuries to demand the right to vote, to the modern civil rights movement’s demand in the 1950s and ‘60s for an end to legalized racial discrimina­tion, formal policy and laws have come about because people of like minds gathered and petitioned government for change — and in the process, touched the minds and conscience of the nation.

The nation’s newest tools for conversati­on and self-examinatio­n are flooded with each as a result of Floyd’s death.

• The Facebook and Instagram accounts of many celebritie­s, magazines, even restaurant sites have turned from the usual plot discussion­s and topics to calls for solutions to racial discrimina­tion, and prosecutio­n of the police officers who were involved in Floyd’s death.

• In Nashville, award-winning investigat­ive journalist Phil Williams posted old photos and newspaper headlines from that city’s history of protests, as different as black men and women fighting racial discrimina­tion during the civil rights era are to largely white conservati­ves angered decades ago by a proposed state income tax (and reported to have thrown rocks through Statehouse windows).

• Facebook staff — in a rare public rebuke of the social media giant, staged a virtual walkout Monday in protest of the site’s continued posting of what the employee group called “inaction on inflammato­ry posts” around the Floyd protests by President Donald J. Trump.

Even police in multiple cities have — at times to the surprise of demonstrat­ors — joined protesters in visible ways to make a larger statement than their role might suggest.

Protest’s long history in America extends, as most school children learn, to before the nation was founded in the Boston Tea Party to the Liberty Tree movement in which colonists gathered around a tree to decry — and sometimes hang British administra­tors in effigy.

Such protests and assemblies have also provided searing images — intended or not — of moments when the nation’s views were shifting on a particular issue. An iconic photo of peaceful crowds along the Reflecting Pool on the National Mall during King’s “Dream” speech remains an indelible image of the hundreds of thousands who gathered that day. And the searing pain shown by 14-year-old Mary Ann Vecchio, kneeling over the body of Jeffrey Miller, who was fatally shot by the Ohio National Guard moments earlier, freezes in time the impact — and risks taken — by student-led protests against the Vietnam War.

The nation’s founders didn’t give a timetable for change as a result of peaceful assembly and petition for change. Rather, they had a belief in future generation­s — that discussion and debate, even if rough and tumble, without government interferen­ce would lead to decisions benefiting the greatest number of us.

Slowly and at times imperfectl­y, our public self-review process of assembly and petition generally has propelled us to toward the best solution for all.

We’re a better society for the open and sharp turmoil over issues concerning minority, LGBTQ and women’s rights, and the extent to which personal religious liberty can be guaranteed along with safeguards from discrimina­tion and bias.

The meaning and impact of protests by many over George Floyd’s death at least seems likely to outlast the damage done by a few. The nation’s founders enacted protection­s for our core freedoms so that we could adapt, reform and improve — but it’s up to us to use those freedoms.

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