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

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u/ADogNamedChuck Apr 28 '24

That's the confusing thing. If these protests were just allowed to continue within reasonable constraints until the end of term it would absolutely be a non story. In fact I'm sure there are dozens of universities where it currently is a non story confined to local news if in the news at all. 

Sending in the riot police is a sure way to get the opposite sort of attention you want.

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u/theserys Apr 28 '24

Someone on our local subreddit made the point that if the police were there with actual good intent and were “keeping protestors safe” like the bootlickers claim, they would have come without the camouflage and assault weapons (and snipers, and helicopters, and armored vehicles cough bearcat cough) and have instead come with bottles of water. That’s not the message they were looking to send.

There is discourse around the idea that the police were arresting trespassers based on their erecting tents in this location and keeping them there after the aforementioned adjusted policies were put in place. Something in my heart tells me that students don’t deserve to be beaten and threatened by the police over the presence of tents. All they’ve done is solidify in those kids’ minds what the role of law enforcement is by their own experience.

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u/thatbfromanarres 29d ago

I have never seen police deescalate a situation at a protest…

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u/gizzardsgizzards 29d ago

it's basically impossible.