On 2014-01-01, 00:00, James A. Donald wrote:
On 2014-01-01 07:52, Juan Garofalo wrote:
What is a sincere practitioner of civil disobedience?
Someone who expects to suffer for his beliefs, and is willing to do so is a sincere practitioner of civil disobedience.
[...]
In practice, 99% of civil disobedience is Pussy Riot tearing down someone else's crucifix on someone else's property. The message is "You have to obey our laws, but we do not have to obey even our own laws".
I know what you want to say (I think), but I believe that you are incorrectly referring to such people as "Pussy Riot". The three incarcerated Pussy Riot members have had immensely harsh sentences. They called the Putin amnesty that set them free a "PR gag" and convinced at least me that they were serious when they said that they would have preferred to serve their sentences until the last day. Sounds like people "who expect to suffer for their beliefs, and are willing to do so" to me. Fun, Stephan PS: If I recall (but I haven't checked), the incident in question was singing an anti-Putin song in a church, not "tearing down someone else's crucifix on someone else's property", for which they were convicted of "rowdyism".