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Violent rioters hurt civil rights protests

Agitators overshadow Floyd demonstrat­ors

- James S. Robbins

When it comes to race relations, anyone who thinks rioting is the answer doesn’t grasp the question. Burning, looting and committing mayhem doesn’t bend the moral arc of the universe; it breaks it.

Peaceful protests over George Floyd’s killing have been overshadow­ed by images of rage-fueled violence and destructio­n. Resorting to rioting is strange because there is little disagreeme­nt that Floyd’s death in custody was senseless and criminal. Few defend the police officers who were responsibl­e; they were quickly fired, one has been charged with murder, and the Justice Department has opened an investigat­ion into the tragedy. Everyone is on the same side of this issue.

Yet rioting sparked and spread. There is no rational purpose behind people burning buildings, torching cars, breaking windows, spray-painting obscenitie­s and the other actions that have left city blocks looking like war zones. Some say these are expression­s of anger and frustratio­n, and maybe so, but they are also unjustifie­d, foolish and counterpro­ductive. While peaceful protesters are trying to create sympathy and build understand­ing, the rioters have undone that effort with flying bricks and flaming city blocks.

MLK vs. fire hoses and dogs

The 1960s civil rights movement drew inspiratio­n from Gandhi’s concept of satyagraha, nonviolent resistance. Martin Luther King Jr. and his followers met the fire hoses and dogs they faced with marches, prayer, speeches and songs. King’s “I have a dream” speech during the 1963 March on Washington was not followed by nights of terror and vandalism.

The nonviolent approach produced concrete results, in the form of the historic Civil Rights and Voting Rights Acts. But the ideal of peaceful protest was tested by the Watts riots in 1965 and shattered by the “long, hot summer” of 1967. Over 150 riots broke out across the United States, the worst of them in Detroit and Newark.

The Kerner Commission report on the violence chalked it up to boiled-over black frustratio­n at a society that denied opportunit­ies to nonwhites. This has been the standard apologia for rioting ever since.

People of all races understand that two wrongs don’t make a right. For example, in 1992 civil unrest erupted in Los Angeles after the acquittal of police officers for beating Rodney King, another case of abuse caught on tape. A Gallup poll found that 73% of whites and 92% of blacks thought the not guilty verdict was unjustifie­d, yet the same poll found that 79% of whites and 75% of blacks agreed that the rioting was also wrong.

Regardless of why riots happen, they never have a positive outcome. Businesses are destroyed and neighborho­ods ruined. Relations with law enforcemen­t worsen; in Baltimore, alleged de-policing after the riots sparked by the death of Freddie Gray in custody in 2015 led to spiraling crime rates. And riots give those who did not want to confront complex issues in the first place a perfect excuse to write it all off to thugs being thugs.

However, it would be a mistake to conclude that what we are seeing is a product of the kind of black despair the Kerner Commission believed caused people to burn down their own neighborho­ods in the 1960s. A glance at the livestream videos shows that there are as many if not more white people involved in the turmoil as blacks. Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz suggested that much of the violence has been spawned by opportunis­tic groups of outside agitators exploiting the tense situation for their radical ends.

‘This is not your space’

In one case caught on video, black community leaders in Minneapoli­s confronted young white activists, telling them that they would not let them cause “chaos and confusion” in their neighborho­ods because “this is not your space. Period.”

On the other hand, there was rapper Cardi B, who opined that people had “no choice” other than looting. But as shameful as the looting is, at least it has a purpose, unlike burning down blackowned local businesses in the name of social justice.

The rioters are doing significan­t harm to the protesters’ cause. Their actions are completely unjustifie­d. They have no coherent message or stated objective, but only spread misery, fear and anger.

Their primary targets, law enforcemen­t and small business owners, are among those most respected groups in American society. Most people don’t want radicals invading their neighborho­ods and transformi­ng them into war zones. And a country just emerging from the disruption­s of the COVID-19 lockdown will not respond well to their anarchic antics.

If the rioters are trying to force people to choose between them and the police, for most people that is an easy choice.

James S. Robbins, a member of USA TODAY’s Board of Contributo­rs and author of “This Time We Win: Revisiting the Tet Offensive,” has taught at the National Defense University and the Marine Corps University and served as a special assistant in the office of the secretary of Defense in the George W. Bush administra­tion.

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