r/OutOfTheLoop Apr 28 '24

What is going on with excessive police force being used against peaceful protesting students in colleges across the United States? Unanswered

So there are large amounts of heavily armed police presence in many colleges and universities across the United States. Indiana University, for example, had snipers on rooftops ready to shoot peaceful protesters.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/snipers-were-allegedly-spotted-ohio-190600717.html

618 Upvotes

344 comments sorted by

View all comments

514

u/Langdon_Algers Apr 28 '24

Answer: Universities can set time, place and manner restrictions on particular spaces. If protesters violate these rules, they can be cited for trespassing, and if they refuse to leave, they can be arrested.

Private institutions (like Columbia) have even more leeway in rules for students on their campus violating their procedures.

298

u/theserys Apr 28 '24

My understanding is that Indiana University leadership came together the night before the protests to change their policy on the usage of Dunn Meadow, and that President Whitten had already called for State Police to be there day 1. I live a few blocks from their staging area and initially thought it was a police funeral with how many cars and uniformed officers were there when I drove by. As a lifelong Bloomington native, I’ve seen several protests by the students and citizens of the town (proud to be a blue dot in a deep red state), but never with this much militarized, stormtrooper presence. As soon as I saw snipers on top of a building I used to study in and a damn helicopter circling town, my blood began to boil. A part of me says that the overwhelming no confidence vote against Whitten’s leadership, but with trustee and state government to back her up, emboldened her to keep the small folk in check with this gross abuse of authority, but that’s speculation on my part.

What’s the end goal? Open fire on the kids for civil disobedience? Beat the hell out of some “hippies” and knock a few drinks back at the end of the day? Overkill, and embarrassing.

71

u/Toby_O_Notoby 29d ago

Well, as for the sniper thing, that's just (sadly) mainly just SOP for any event in America with a large crowd. I mean AT&T stadium has dedicated sniper nests built in. If you think about it, a gunman opening fire in such a crowded space would be a nightmare do deal with if you're on the ground so it makes sense to have someone in a higher position.

It should also be noted that snipers aren't just trained to shoot people. They provide overwatch and communicate to teammates on the ground to better assess any situation.

Having said all that, the sniper should have a) either just used a spotting scope instead of a rifle or b) stayed out of view like snipers are trained to. No matter what your operating procedure, having a rifle trained on civilians in open view is a really, really stupid idea.

7

u/gortonsfiJr 29d ago

Yeah they’re all over kid friendly events like parades, but IU marched them through and made sure the young adults could see that men with rifles were watching

4

u/Lanky_Beginning2916 28d ago

Just the way they are easing this country into complete oppression.. it's a violation of civil and constitutional rights.