The BART shooting and the subsequent violent protest was far from the first time police brutality provoked a riot. What is about police brutality that provokes the inner city poor to react by destroying property and causing chaos?
When police, the government agents who are supposed to protect and serve the community, assault, kill, harass and discriminate members of a disenfranchised community all ideas of law, order and justice are thrown out the widow.
Usually police brutality is not the primary cause for a riot but it is often the straw that breaks the camel’s back. Usually poverty, discrimination, disenfranchisement and neglect combined with a symbolic incident of oppression lead to the anger, chaos and lawlessness that provoke riots.
While the USA’s police brutality infused riots of the 60’s and even the 90’s have been well documented, similar incidents have been occurring all over the world, from Greece to France to Canada. In most of these cases, class, religion or race and discrimination created an atmosphere of anger and resentment against the government that explodes when members of their community are unfairly brutalized or killed.
In 1965 in Los Angeles, three members of a black family were arrested for protesting the arrest of their brother. Animosity in the community, already fueled by racial discrimination, unemployment, poor schools and housing discrimination erupted and people began to loot, vandalize and clash with police and white motorists. The Riot lasted for six days and 34 people were killed, 1,032 injured, and 3,952 arrested. Police commissioner, William Parker, helped escalate the situation by saying that the rioters acted "like monkeys in a zoo"
A gubernatorial commission found the causes of the riot to as high unemployment, poor schools, and other inferior living conditions.
In 1967, police raided a after hours party in Detroit and wound up trying to 82 people who were celebrating the homecoming of two soldiers from Vietnam. This resulted in a neighborhood protest that lead to looting, vandalism and arson. Once again the national guard was called in and after five days of rioting. At the end of the riot, 43 people were dead, 1189 injured and over 7000 were arrested.
The Detroit Free Press cited the causes of the Detroit riot as racism, economic inequality, and poor housing.
Riots with roots in racism and police brutality are not unique to the USA. In 1976 during the West Indian carnival in Notting Hill, London. West Indian youths revolted against arbitrary mass arrests and began clashing with the police, throwing bottles and other objects at police and their vehicles. The causes for the riot are cited as an occupational police presence and unemployment among the West Indian youths.
One of the most prominent riots of the 20th Century was the 1992 riots sparked by the acquittal of four officers in the videotaped beating of Rodney King. AFter the officers were acquitted, African Americans in LA began to protest at the LA County courthouse and LAPD headquarters. A large group convened at the corner of Florence and Normandie confronted a group of officers who retreated because they were outnumbered. By the evening people began on Florence and Normandie began looting and attacking white motorists, including Reginald Denny.
Looting, arson and violence continued and eventually the National Guard was called in and later the Army and the Marines. The Riots wound up killing 53 people and causing more the one billion dollars worth of damage.
The Christopher commission sited the causes of the LA Riots as high unemployment, racial profiling and police brutality.
The recent riots in France also were caused by police brutality, racism, unemployment and economic inequality. In October of 2005, two teenagers were chased by police into a power station where they were electrocuted. Protests and unrest subsequently ensued. Civil unrest spread to poor housing projects in other parts of France including violence, arson and clashes with police.
Almost 9,000 cars were burned and 3,000 people were arrested and 126 policemen and firefighters were injured. The BBC listed the causes of the riot as unemployment and discrimination against immigrants.
So we see that the causes of riots are often discrimination, poverty, and police brutality. Rather than blaming the poor and disenfranchised who riot, countries should attempt to eliminate the poverty, discrimination and police brutality that cause them. If not the cycle of the poor and discriminated succumbing to violence and chaos will continue and expand.
Check Out A Gallery of Police Brutality Riots
Watch Footage of the Watts Riot
Watch a History Project on The Detroit Riots
Watch a Program on The Notting Hill Riot
Watch Footage From The LA Riots
Watch a Report on the 2005 Riots in France





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wow, what a comprehensive presentation, thanks Casey.
I can’t begin to imagine how the family feels. Thank goodness for the videos of this unconscionable act, but the riots only add to the tragedy.
The victim’s mother was pleading, yesterday, for the rioters to stop.
One cause of riots is the one that all peaceful demonstrators must vigilantly watch for; agent provocateurs. As your government continues to attempt to suppress peaceful demonstrations, expect more of the same. Riots are used to control and suppress the message that demonstrators are attempting to bring to the publics attention. You know..the truth that MSM refuses to tell. When asshole Bush was meeting with his polyp,aka Harper..an attempt was made to initiate a riot.
SUMMIT SKULDUGGERY
Police to review tactics used at leaders’ summit
Scrambling to stem a growing controversy, Sûreté du Québec officials have vowed to review their operational tactics after three undercover officers were caught on tape during a protest outside the international summit in Montebello, Que.
Quebec police were engaging in a centuries-old tradition by infiltrating protester groups this week
Aug 25, 2007 04:30 AM
In the face of damning evidence in the form of a YouTube video and police surveillance footage, Quebec provincial police admitted Thursday to planting undercover police officers amid protesters at this week’s North American leaders’ summit in Montebello, Que.
To other Canadians reading of the strange saga, however, the incident has likely taken us a little more by surprise. The notion of police masquerading as criminals – and then being caught on video as red-handed as Conrad Black – seems the stuff of big-time drug busts and international espionage. It’s more 24 or The Shield than la belle province.
In the US:
In the years since Sept. 11, 2001, New York City police have repeatedly been accused of planting undercover cops at various political protests. In 2005, The New York Times reported that police covertly took part in multiple anti-war rallies in the city, also citing extensive videotape footage as evidence.
Officers “going under” were largely accused of doing so to collect information. But in some cases, they were also accused by protesters of provoking violence.
At a 2004 demonstration at the Republican National Convention in New York, an “arrest” by officers of a man disguised as a protester, but who was actually working with police, incited an uproar as police in riot gear clashed with outraged onlookers.
The notion of agents provocateurs perhaps gained most of its notoriety in connection with controversial tactics used by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation over the course of 20th century. FBI agents have been accused in countless books of posing as radicals in various organizations – from the Ku Klux Klan and the American Nazi Party to the Communist Party and civil rights groups.
A 1976 report by a U.S. Senate committee on government operations found that “[u]nsavory and vicious tactics have been employed” in the drive to collect intelligence from Americans, “including anonymous attempts to break up marriages, disrupt meetings, ostracize persons from their professions, and provoke target groups into rivalries that might result in deaths.”
http://www.thestar.com/Article/249603
Don’t forget Stonewall in New York in June of 1969, the beginning of so much of the gay liberation movement.
There have been 3 black men shot in the back by police in recent weeks…that we know of..
http://www.prisonplanet.com/n-…..-back.html
Racism is alive and well amongst certain groups in this country without a doubt. One can only turn to the recent GOP campaigning when “kill him” was yelled out several times.
Riots occur when the oppressed begin to have the confidence to not put up with it anymore…that is when “examples” are made of victims or when the shooters are so full of hatred and fear and drunk on power that they react…rumors of a race war…rumors that the country will have a caucasian minority in some years…rumors that the entire world south of the border is ready to take everyone’s jobs and our country will speak another language…reliving Custer’s last stand in reverse and in forward…..blatant fear and hatred and greed and most of all…ignorance.
Who benefits?
One thing is for sure: Everything changes.
Dugg right here
Please join me!
Thanks, Casey — great diary. Our local media in the Bay Area are to be chastized as well, for showing the single police car rocked back and forth as well as the single civilian vehicle lit on fire, over and over and over again on the local news. It creates an impression of complete chaos, an incorrect impression.
How in the world has America grown so many stupid people? Just to look at my family (educated) and Aunt Marion’s family (uneducated), you see the divide. Cousins think Palin is brilliant, and Obama is a radical. How do you even discuss reality with these people? It’s like they go through life pissed off that they’re stupid, and just want to sound educated by parroting Limbaugh and Hannity.
It’s really revolting.
Dugg.
We just got a Federal report back on the Austin PD. They have this notorious tendency to shoot people in the back (usually twice) in self defense. The Austin American Statesman says of the Report:
h/t Grits for Breakfast
Pepper spray can kill.
updated 5:17 p.m. CT, Fri., Jan. 2, 2009
A Little Rock man has died following an altercation with North Little Rock police that involved an officer’s use of pepper spray.
A taser would be lethal to anyone with a pacemaker. A little 115Vac shock reset mine to default, it was quite a rush.
I got pepper-sprayed in an elevator in NYC going many flights down to the subway…it was released by some “punks” just as I entered the elevator…by the time we got to the bottom floor, where the subway was (168th ST. & B’Way)…none of us in the elevator could breathe at all…the elevatorman and one other person was taken to the ER (which was right upstairs at CPMC – Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center)…
The others, me included, collapsed on the benches in the station…gasping..
I remember thinking that I couldn’t believe that my life would end in a subway station 8 floors below the street..on a bench…in the stench…
But, it didn’t.
police in the inner cities function mostly as antagonists to the community, nearly indiscernible from the criminals. When they exceed they’re normal level of antagonism against the community and commit outrageous acts, the constant simmering rage of the everyday outrage and humiliation of the community explodes. Simple as that.
Seconded.
Thanks for opening the digg.
Excellent comment, thank you.