He discussed this and other concerns in his interview with Jamila Raqib. As for Jamila, she is a very sharp and astute scholar of strategic nonviolent resistance, having studied under both Gene Sharp and Marshall Ganz. In her responses to Baratunde's questions, she explained how strategic nonviolent resistance is much more than mass protest marches, how violence weakens a liberation struggle, and how vital it is for those involved in a liberation struggle to develop an effective strategy for their struggle. She also touched on Gene Sharp's catalog of 198 methods of nonviolent action, and she described how and why she first became involved in the study of strategic nonviolent resistance.
Wednesday, February 17, 2021
Link - Baratunde Thurston Inteview of Jamila Raqib
Here is a link to another resource that readers can enjoy while waiting for the next installment of my series on strategic nonviolent resistance based on Gene Sharp's book From Dictatorship to Democracy. The link at the beginning of this post points the reader to an interview which Baratunde Thurston conducted with Jamila Raqib of the Albert Einstein Institution in August of last year. Although the immediate motivation for that interview seems to have receded into the background, the interview contains some very sharp and penetrating insights. The interview took place during some of the largest Black Lives Matter protests of last year in response to the police murder of George Floyd. Like myself, Baratunde is an African-American who understands the necessity and requirements of active citizenship for self-liberation. Like myself, Baratunde was concerned and alarmed by the increasing violence that accompanied some of the protests of last year. And like myself, Baratunde was concerned by the words of various white "liberals" who were calling for political violence. Like myself, he became suspicious that these so-called "liberals" might actually be agents provocateurs.
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