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david s. meyer
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David S. Meyer
I'm a professor of sociology and political science at the University of California, Irvine. I've been thinking, and writing about, protest politics for almost ever. This site offers comments on contemporary events, informed (I hope) by knowing something about history and about the academic study of social movements.
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Tag Archives: police violence
Persistence, part II: Kaepernick’s anthem protest and police violence
Most attempted campaigns stall out quickly, but sometimes… Almost no one noticed when San Francisco 49 back-up quarterback Colin Kaepernick started his protest of police violence. Conservative media and the professional football commentariat pilloried Kaepernick, suggesting that his protest was … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged athletes, basketball, Chapel Hill, Charlotte, cheerleaders, Colin Kaepernick, college, diffusion, football, Garfield High School, high school, Michigan, Michigan State, musicians, persistence, Philadelphia Eagles, police violence, Seattle, shooting, Southern Methodist University, sports, spread, Tulsa, University of North Carolina
5 Comments
Persistence, part I: Charlotte videos
The big story that activists always face is one in which authorities tell them that their efforts are inappropriate, ill-considered, and ineffective–or even counterproductive. (And, sometimes, they are.) It takes a certainty that comes from courage, social support, and stubborness to keep at … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged black lives matter, Charlotte, demonstration, Keith Scott, Kerr Putney, police, police violence, Rakeyia Scott, shooting, violence
1 Comment
The repressive power of tolerance
One way protest works is by provoking overreaction from opponents. Remember, Colin Kaepernick sat out the national anthem for three days before anyone noticed. It was the reaction from people who took offense that drew attention to the quarterback and–to … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Alexander Hamilton, Alien and Sedition Acts, athletes, Bill of Rights, Colin Kaepernick, Constitution, gun control, high school, John Adams, John Lewis, Lin-Manuel Miranda, national anthem, opponents, overreaction, Paul Ryan, police violence, reaction, Seattle Seahawks, sports, tolerance, volleyball
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The violent fringe and police violence
The killing of five police officers in Dallas last night isn’t going to do anything to help the ongoing problem of police violence. The horrific attacks and deaths are shocking: the organized killing of law enforcement officers just doesn’t happen … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Alton Stirling, black lives matter, Dallas, Philandro Castile, police violence, violence
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Mizzou, part II: Lead-up and legacies
Most of us tuned into the story about the ouster of University of Missouri president Timothy Wolfe last weekend, when the football team weighed in to support a hunger striker, and saw a sudden and conclusive end when Wolfe stepped … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Aristotle, Clay Travis, Concerned Student 1950, ethos, Ferguson, Jay Nixon, Jonathan Butler, logos, media, Missouri, Mizzou, organization, pathos, police violence, race, racism, Timothy Wolfe, University of Missouri
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Will the revolution be tweeted?
More than forty years ago, the talented and tragic poet/musician/activist Gil Scott-Heron rapped–before there was rap–that the Revolution would not be televised. Television was controlled by big corporations and commercial interests, and social change would come from the streets. But … Continue reading
Justice, peace, and indictments in Baltimore #Ferguson
When Maryland State’s attorney Marilyn Mosby decided to indict six police officers for the death of Freddie Gray, she may have been responding only to the evidence of criminal conduct by law enforcement. Her office found that police lacked probable … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged #blacklivesmatter, #protestmatters, Baltimore, courts, crime, Ferguson, Freddie Gray, Gregg Bernstein, justice, Marilyn Mosby, police, police violence, riots
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It’s never one thing: violence in Baltimore
A lot of things have to go wrong for protests to turn into sustained violent confrontations with the police–as in Baltimore today. The reports on the repeated protests against police violence last week emphasized that the overwhelming majority of the … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Baltimore, black lives matter, Freddie Gray, police violence, protest, rebellion, riot
2 Comments
The Ferguson report: How protest works
The Department of Justice has released its report on policing in Ferguson. It tells an extremely disturbing story, in which the killing of Michael Brown and the volatile protests that followed, the awful policing of those protests, and the subsequent … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Department of Justice, Ferguson, influence, Michael Brown, police violence, protest, revenue
1 Comment
Police violence and the special prosecutor
Twenty-five thousand people marched in New York City on Saturday because they were angry that police who kill unarmed, uh, suspects, aren’t prosecuted. But they’re angry about more than that: differential policing based on color, particularly the treatment of young … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged civil judgments, courts, Eric Garner, Ferguson, Michael Brown, New York City, police, police violence, prosecution, race, settlements, special prosecutors
1 Comment
