Actress Jennifer Lawrence seems to be a supporter...
http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/08/...hite-supremacists-at-charlottesville-rallies/
I actually dont have a problem with vigilantism, well, if the guilty are brought to justice I dont much care who delivers them. But I'm not a fan of modern technology being used to attack privacy and expose protesters' identities. Its terrorism... It reminds me of these 'pro-lifers' who publish personal information about abortion providers. They are trying to intimidate people into silence...
Anonymous speech is important... Much of the pre-Revolution literature was related that way and apparently so were parts of the New Testament, criticism of authority often is. I'd like to see how the ACLU responds to both the trouble in Virginia and the hunt for Nazis. What do you think of exposing the protesters? Maybe next time they'll just wear something to cover their heads.
I've heard different versions of whether or not the protest was legal. If it was, then they had the right to be there. If not, they broke the law and should be identified.
I went on a couple of protests, one back in 1979 and the other in the early '80s. I was seen on TV in the first one (my grandmother said she couldn't miss my winter coat, since it was completely unlike anyone else's) and was interviewed by a reporter at the other.
The first one was not a legal protest, but the second was. In neither case did anyone get violent or commit vandalism. The second protest led to a petition, which gained enough signatures to present to the City Council... and it was granted. There is now a plaque in City Hall Park commemorating this.
So my only personal experience of protests have been peaceful ones - apt, since the second one
was a peace protest (remember, this was during the Cold War, and Ronald Reagan kept shooting his mouth off about using nukes).
The internet is a valuable tool when it yields accurate information. That's one reason why, when I log off tonight, I'm going to be writing out a statement so the property management company can evict the soon-to-be-ex-tenant who tried to push his way into my suite a few weeks ago (those who regularly participate in the Random Rants threads will have read about this). The manager here happened to be browsing Facebook and discovered that I'm not the first woman he did this with... he did actually get into the first one's suite, and trying to get into mine is going to land him in deeper legal trouble since it was a breach of the conditions imposed by the judge the last time.
I have no idea how this is all going to end - his eviction will be a great relief, since I haven't felt safe here for nearly a month. What his legal consequences will be, I don't care, as long as there are some.
Does that make me a "vigilante"? I don't think so. I want to feel safe in my own home and to leave it when I want without fear of being accosted in the hallway or lobby or any other place I might legitimately wish to be - and I want the same for other women, as well.