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JoanP's avatar

"It has worked for thousands of years. Especially during the civil rights movement. "

Is that true, though? The civil rights movement engaged in tactics directly related to attacking segregation. The Freedom Rides, the sit-ins at lunch counters, the Montgomery bus boycott, bear no resemblance whatsoever to blocking access to airports. Others were not prevented from riding buses or eating at lunch counters, no one was prevented from traveling or going to school or shopping, etc. Nick says the blockade was "meant to infuriate". That is not what the civil rights movement aimed to do. It may have been a consequence, as people faced their own racism, but it was not the goal.

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Steve T's avatar

I was one of those “prisoners” in the mess at O’Hare, just trying to get my daughter back to school, then make an hour’s drive to help make arrangements for my Dad’s funeral. Look, I love living in a country that cherishes freedom to protest, but please don’t compare these performative, disruptive sideshows to the Civil Rights movement of the 60s. Heck, don’t even compare them to good-faith labor actions. If I can’t make a flight because unfairly treated airport employees are picketing for fair treatment, I’d grumble but honk my horn in solidarity because they are putting the pressure on the folks who deserve it — the airport bosses themselves. Monday struck me as brave laziness—a low-stakes risky but easy way to get attention. I, too, want peace in the Middle East. Give us a way to help that happen, not a made-for-the-cameras event, whose only lasting effect will be grumbling and derision from people who lack the power to change the system.

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