Tools
Change country:

The Problem With America’s Protest Feedback Loop

The country is stuck in a protest feedback loop. In recent months, students opposed to the Israel-Gaza war have occupied lawns and buildings at college campuses across the country. Emulating climate activists who have stopped traffic on crucial roadways, pro-Palestine demonstrators have blocked access to major airports. For months, the protests intensified as university, U.S., and Israeli policies seemed unmoved. Frustrated by their inefficacy, the protesters redoubled their efforts and escalated their tactics.

[Read: Can protest be too peaceful?]

The lack of immediate outcomes from the Gaza protests is not at all unusual. In a new working paper at the National Bureau of Economic Research, Amory Gethin of the Paris School of Economics and Vincent Pons of Harvard Business School analyzed the effect of 14 social movements in the United States from 2017 to 2022. They varied in size: About 12,000 people marched against a potential war with Iran in January 2020; 4.2 million turned out for the first Women’s March. Pons told me that these large social movements succeeded in raising the general public’s awareness of their issues, something that he and Gethin measured through Google Trends and data from X.

Yet in nearly every case that the researchers examined in detail—including the Women’s March and the pro–gun control March for Our Lives, which brought out more than 3 million demonstrators—they could find no evidence that protesters changed minds or affected electoral behavior.

As the marginal cost of reaching hundreds of thousands, even millions, of potential protesters drops to zero, organizers have mastered the art of gaining attention through public demonstrations. Mass actions no longer require organized groups with members who pay dues, professional staffers who plan targeted actions, and designated leaders who can negotiate with public officials. They just need someone who can make a good Instagram graphic. But notwithstanding the clear benefits of social media for protest participants, the lure of racking up views on TikTok or X and getting on the homepage of major news sites can overwhelm other strategic goals. Protests are crowding out the array of other organizing tools that social movements need in order to be successful—and that has consequences for our entire political system.

The contours of mass protest have evolved over time. Researchers have found that since roughly 2010—perhaps not coincidentally, when smartphone adoption spiked—political protests have become more frequent around the world, particularly in middle- and high-income countries. The “size and frequency of recent protests,” one analysis claims, “eclipse historical examples of eras of mass protest, such as the late-1960s, late-1980s, and early-1990s.”

Movements learn. Over the years, social movements have internalized the strategic superiority of nonviolence: More people are willing to join a peaceful march than are willing to join one that includes violent confrontations. The UC Berkeley professor Omar Wasow’s research bolsters the argument for strategic adoption of nonviolence by looking at Black-led protests from 1960 to 1972. Wasow found that violent protests increased Republican support in the electorate and may have even tipped the 1968 presidential election toward Richard Nixon and against Hubert Humphrey, the lead author of the Civil Rights Act.

Much of the academic literature on mass protest focuses on movements, in countries around the globe, seeking to topple a government or win independence. According to the Harvard political scientist Erica Chenoweth, violent insurgencies against state power have declined, while nonviolent movements have become more common. (Chenoweth defines violent resistance as including not just “bombings, shootings [and] kidnappings” but also “physical sabotage such as the destruction of infrastructure, and other types of physical harm of people and property.”)

Yet seeking change through peaceful persuasion has also become less effective. Since 2010, Chenoweth wrote in a 2020 essay in the Journal of Democracy, fewer than a third of nonviolent campaigns, and just 8 percent of violent ones, have been successful—down from about two-thirds of nonviolent insurgencies and one-quarter of violent ones in the 1990s.

Mass struggles have come to rely too much on street protests, Chenoweth observes, and to neglect the “quiet, behind-the-scenes planning and organizing that enable movements to mobilize in force over the long term, and to coordinate and sequence tactics in a way that builds participation, leverage, and power.” Past research by the sociologist Kenneth Andrews on the Mississippi civil-rights movement and the War on Poverty found that counties with “strong movement infrastructures” yielded greater funding for anti-poverty programs; activists in these areas had better access to decision-making bodies and more influence over how social programs worked. “Movements were most influential,” Andrews explained, “when they built local organizations that allowed for an oscillation between mass-based tactics and routine negotiation with agency officials.”

Even under the most favorable circumstances, public protest will never be perfectly orderly. As the prominent sociologist Charles Tilly once wrote, a social movement is not unitary. It’s a “cluster of performances,” a “loosely-choreographed dance,” or even a “jam session with changing players”—all of which, he says, “have well-defined structures and histories, but not one of them is ipso facto a group, or even the actions of a single group.”

Many critics of modern protests are fixated on a picturesque, Tocquevillian vision of democracy—an imaginary world where interest groups always argue respectfully and compromise amiably. This vision isn’t aspirational; it’s fundamentally at odds with how human beings normally behave. Real-life democracy is a marketplace of ideas and emotions and arguments bouncing off one another, scrabbling for purchase in the hearts of voters, the minds of the cultural elite, and the press clippings skimmed by harried politicians.

[Read: Do protests even work?]

The Gethin and Pons study about the inefficacy of modern American mass movements identified one glaring exception: the protests over George Floyd’s murder. In the summer of 2020, nearly 2 million people participated in more than 5,000 separate racial-justice protests in the United States. Gethin and Pons found that after the protests, Americans expressed “more liberal answers on racial issues.” They also appeared more likely to vote in the upcoming presidential election and less likely to vote for then-President Donald Trump. This finding about the effectiveness of the 2020 anti-racism protests on the American public is supported by other research.

Policy change did occur in the aftermath of these protests. The Brennan Center for Justice found that, in the year following Floyd’s death, half of American states enacted legislation regarding use-of-force standards, police-misconduct policies, or both.

The Black Lives Matter protests during that period were different in part because they defied the caricature of protesters as radical college students with nothing but time. According to a study led by the Johns Hopkins economist Nick Papageorge, on factors such as gender and race, the demographics of the protests were actually more representative of the American public than the 2020 presidential electorate was.

What’s more striking is that a full third of protest participants identified as Republicans. Underscoring the ideological diversity of the movement, 30 percent of summer 2020 protesters in the researchers’ survey sample had attended BLM rallies as well as demonstrations seeking less stringent pandemic precautions—even though the two causes were widely characterized as coming from opposite sides of the political spectrum.

Another reason the BLM protests succeeded is that they were overwhelmingly peaceful—despite some high-profile outbreaks of violence in cities such as Minneapolis, Seattle, and Portland, Oregon. According to research by Chenoweth and the political scientist Jeremy Pressman, more than 96 percent of the 2020 racial-justice protests resulted in no property damage or police injury, while nearly 98 percent resulted in zero reports of injuries among participants, bystanders, and police.

The Floyd protests did not materialize out of nowhere. The intellectual foundation had been laid by years of previous protests that created some organizational infrastructure and steadily increased the public’s support for the BLM movement until it surged upward in June 2020. Perhaps the other movements in the Gethin and Pons sample will prepare the way for future actions when the circumstances are ripe.

Still, many movements seeking to capitalize on public attention find themselves trampled underneath its power. Media attention flocks to the most radical and provocative elements and emboldens the voices on the fringes. Movement leaders have lost their ability to promote an overall message. Not surprisingly, despite the full slate of potential reforms that could have gained traction after Floyd’s murder, the slogan that everyone remembers is “Defund the police”—a policy demand that represented just a minority of voters’ views even as the majority of Americans were calling for far-reaching reforms of police departments. Who can credibly claim to speak for the campus protesters who oppose the war in Gaza?

Even though nobody knows who the leaders are, some of the protesters’ positions do seem to resonate off campus: Morning Consult polling from late last month suggests that 60 percent of Americans support a cease-fire, 58 percent support humanitarian aid to Palestinians, and fewer than half of voters support military aid to Israel.

Still, other stances taken by protesters—such as pushing universities to divest from companies with ties to Israel or, in some cases, calling for an end to Israeli statehood—have scant support among the general public. And the college protests themselves are widely frowned upon: In another poll from May 2, when asked whether college administrators had responded too harshly to college protesters, just 16 percent of respondents said administrators had responded too harshly; 33 percent thought they weren’t harsh enough.

While even entirely nonviolent protests cannot count on public support, escalatory actions such as trespassing, vandalism, and property destruction undermine and distract from broadly shared goals. People in left-leaning movements know full well that some of their own supporters are undermining message discipline and strategic imperatives. Groups critical of Israel have tried to organize boycotts of a handful of companies that, in their view, have been complicit in harming Palestinians. But among sympathizers on social media, perhaps the most prominent boycott target has been Starbucks, which is not on the list.

[Tyler Austin Harper: America’s colleges are reaping what they sowed]

Yet even as the burden is on protest organizers to articulate clear, feasible policy and persuade their fellow citizens to go along, everyone should be concerned if protesters whose demands have substantial support fail time and again to register gains in Washington. Civil unrest is inherently delegitimizing to a government. Protests are in part a rejection of traditional methods of registering opinion. Their increasing regularity indicates that people believe voting and calling their representatives are insufficient. In fact, many people who participated in the 2020 protests—both the Floyd ones and the anti-lockdown ones—did not end up voting in the presidential election that year.

In remarks about the campus demonstrations last week, President Joe Biden offered a tepid defense of nonviolent protest, saying, “Peaceful protest is in the best tradition of how Americans respond to consequential issues.” Later on, he added that “dissent must never lead to disorder.”

But the disorder that Biden warned against is not just a matter of college students getting graduation canceled this year; it’s also a matter of some Americans deciding over time that voting may not be worthwhile. Polls suggest that the public is deeply dissatisfied with how the U.S. political system is working. A feedback loop in which demonstrations proliferate to little effect, while radicalized protesters become ever more disillusioned with democracy, is a dangerous one. If you’re worried about the disorder on college campuses now, imagine if Americans lose faith in the power of democratic voice altogether.


Read full article on: theatlantic.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Birth/Rebirth’ on Hulu, a Frankensteiny Horror-Thriller Rooted in Feminine Dread
This is a well-thought-out, smartly executed debut from director Laura Moss.
nypost.com
In dinging Cohen for stealing, Trump’s lawyers undercut their own premise
Trump’s lawyers landed a significant credibility blow when Michael Cohen admitted he “stole” from the Trump Organization. But at what cost?
washingtonpost.com
Michael Cohen could have faced 7 years in prison for stealing $60K from Trump: experts
Michael Cohen could have faced prison time if he'd been convicted of stealing from Donald Trump -- as he admitted to doing in court, according to experts.
nypost.com
Drake Bell unveils one reason behind his 'Quiet on Set' revelation: His toddler son
Drake Bell says processing and coming forward about sexual abuse he endured from Nickelodeon dialogue coach Brian Peck will make him 'stronger' for his son.
latimes.com
Panera's Charged Lemonade cited in lawsuit over teen's cardiac arrest
Panera faces another lawsuit over a highly caffeinated beverage that the restaurant chain said it would phase out.
cbsnews.com
Mayor Eric Adams May Rescind Diddy’s Key To New York City
Raymond Hall/GC ImagesThe fallout from the video showing Sean “Diddy” Combs assaulting his ex Cassie Ventura continues, as New York City Mayor Eric Adams is potentially reconsidering Diddy’s key to the city award, per PIX11.Adams presented the Harlem native the award in Times Square in 2023, for “his contributions to music, business, and philanthropy,” according to mayor’s office. The mayor was giddy to hand over the key, telling Diddy on stage, “The bad boy of entertainment is getting the key to the city from the bad boy of politics!” But the newly released video of Diddy violently attacking his ex-girlfriend at a Los Angeles hotel in 2016 has raised questions about whether the rapper should still be in possession of that award—particularly as Adams has staked his political platform on combating domestic violence in the city.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
FDIC chair Martin Gruenberg says he will resign after hostile workplace claims
An outside report had found evidence of a “mysoginistic” and “patriarchal” culture at the banking regulator
washingtonpost.com
Nasdaq composite ticks higher to a record after a quiet day on Wall Street
U.S. stock indexes drifted to a mixed finish after a quiet day of trading, and the Nasdaq composite rose to another record
latimes.com
Vietnam arrested a trade reformer. Why this is worrisome.
Vietnam is pressing the United States to overturn its designation as a nonmarket economy, but its record on labor rights should give pause.
washingtonpost.com
FDIC chair Martin Gruenberg to resign after sex-harassment, misconduct at agency
Earlier in the day a top Democrat had called for the FDIC chair to be replaced after an external review found sweeping reports of employee mistreatment and sexual harassment.
nypost.com
New York Squatters to Get Help Under New Plan
New York City Council member Kamillah Hanks wants to create a task force to deal with squatting.
newsweek.com
How Ivan Boesky, Infamous 1980s Wall Street Trader, Inspired Gordon Gekko
Michael Douglas' famous 'Greed is good' line came from Boesky, who died on Monday at 87.
newsweek.com
Kevin Costner Makes Rare Red Carpet Appearance With 5 of His Children
The actor walked the red carpet for his new project with some of his family by his side.
newsweek.com
The White House's Title IX Bait-and-Switch | Opinion
Earlier this month, President Joe Biden, in a post on X, called on the nation to "support women's sports."
newsweek.com
‘Mean Girls’ Party Barred Server Due to Weight, Suit Alleges
John Lamparski/WireImageA server at The Ribbon restaurant on the Upper West Side is suing his place of employment and Paramount Pictures, the distributor of the 2024 musical film Mean Girls, for discrimination, because, the server says, he was prevented from working at a release party for the movie because of his weight. In his lawsuit, which was filed on Monday and has been reviewed by The Daily Beast, plaintiff Joseph Sacchi—described as “a young, talented singer trained in classical opera [who] supplements his income by working as a server”—claims that his employer, The Ribbon, “excluded him from working at the reception because representatives from Paramount Pictures, the distributors of Mean Girls, specifically asked that he be excluded, solely based on his appearance.”Saachi is 6’2” and weighs 360 pounds, his suit notes. Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Manifestantes propalestinos ignoran llamado a disolverse; arrestos en EEUU superan los 3.000
Más de 3.000 personas han sido detenidas en los campus de Estados Unidos durante el último mes.
latimes.com
Ella Adler's Death: What is Happening to Boater Who Killed Florida Teen?
Newly released video shows Carlos Alonso calmly docking his boat on the day of Ella Adler's tragic death.
newsweek.com
Doomsday Dad Chad Daybell’s Kids Take Stand in Murder Trial
Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast/Getty/Rexburg Police DepartmentThe night before Tammy Daybell was found dead in her Idaho bedroom in October 2019, the doomsday novelist’s wife told her son that all she wanted was her favorite meal and some rest.“She said, ‘I don’t feel good today; I don't want to cook. Can you go get some McDonald’s for us?’” Garth Daybell testified on Monday at the trial of his father, Chad Daybell, who is accused of murdering Tammy and his lover’s two children.Garth Daybell said he made the McDonald’s run—making sure to get his mom a quarter-pounder with cheese—then left the house a few hours later for his night shift at a local haunted house.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Score! Ex-NBA player Royce White wins surprise backing of Minnesota GOP in race against Amy Klobuchar
While playing professional ball, White scribbled messages on his head such as "Trump won,” "Free the Uyghurs" and “Protect RFK Jr.”
nypost.com
‘Home Alone’ actor reveals fight to quintuple his salary for the sequel
Actor Daniel Stern reveals in his new memoir, "Home and Alone," that he wanted as least half as much as his movie partner in crime Joe Pesci — but didn't get it.
nypost.com
Indigenous tribe sues L.A. County, archdiocese over the 'desecration' of more than 100 graves
The Gabrieleno Band of Mission Indians is suing L.A. County and others, saying ancestral remains were mishandled when La Plaza de Cultura y Artes was built in downtown L.A.
latimes.com
New Yankees Book Exposes Source of Brian Cashman-Joe Torre Fallout
In one chapter of a forthcoming book about the New York Yankees, the source of the fallout between GM Brian Cashman and ex-manager Joe Torre is exposed.
newsweek.com
Rudy Giuliani Gets Quite the Birthday Present!
Arizona authorities caught up with the former Trump lawyer in the end.
slate.com
Daniel Jones already on field for Giants to start OTA in promising return sign
Giants quarterback Daniel Jones participated in 7-on-7 drills, a sign his recovery from a torn right ACL is on schedule.
nypost.com
Powerful animal sedative likely cause of overdose spike in Chicago
Chicago health officials said medetomidine has not previously been detected in Chicago.
cbsnews.com
RFK Jr. says he would give black farmers $5B in reparations — despite ruling that it’s unconstitutional
Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has said he will support giving black farmers $5 billion in reparations once in office — throwing his weight behind a provision in President Biden’s American Rescue Plan that was struck down by a court as unconstitutional. “When I’m in the White House… I’m going to get rid...
nypost.com
El musical trans mexicano 'Emilia Pérez' ilumina Cannes
En su bosquejo, la comentada película de Jacques Audiard en el Festival de Cine de Cannes, “Emilia Pérez”, no parecería una buena idea para un filme.
latimes.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘The Atypical Family’ on Netflix, A South Korean Drama About A Family Trying to Regain Their Superpowers
Instead of banding together to save the world, the Boks are just trying to get through each day,
nypost.com
Iran has lost its president. Its people need to regain their freedom.
A change of direction in the aftermath of Ebrahim Raisi’s death is unlikely, but change is what Iran needs.
washingtonpost.com
Kid Rock pulls out gun, repeatedly uses N-word during ‘drunk and belligerent’ Rolling Stone interview
The musician’s interview with a Rolling Stone journalist escalated after he had a few glasses of wine and "at least three or four" Jim Beam and Diet Coke cocktails.
nypost.com
OpenAI disables ChatGPT voice that sounds like Scarlett Johansson
ChatGPT disables AI voice after users say it sounds similar to Hollywood star Scarlett Johansson.
cbsnews.com
Chiefs’ kicker Butker’s college speech: Letters to the Editor — May 21, 2024
NY Post readers discuss Harrison Butker’s commencement speech at Benedictine College regarding his religious views.
nypost.com
Presidente y canciller de Irán mueren en choque de helicóptero
Irán no ha ofrecido ninguna causa de la caída del helicóptero ni ha sugerido que se deba a algún sabotaje.
latimes.com
Jen Psaki Reveals How She Really Felt About Fox’s Peter Doocy
Dia Dipasupil/Getty ImagesJen Psaki might not be President Joe Biden’s press secretary anymore, but there are some memories of the White House Press Briefing Room that you just can’t shake.Almost exactly two years after departing the position and taking up a gig at MSNBC, people are still asking her about her frostiest relationships with the room’s regulars. To this day, one name that constantly resurfaces is Peter Doocy, who proved one of the banes of Psaki’s tenure in his capacity as Fox News’ White House correspondent.His name was dropped once again at a recent forum hosted by The Ankler, where media executive Janice Min brought up the fact that Psaki discussed Doocy at length in her book, Say More: Lessons from Work, the White House, and the World, which hit shelves this month.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Pedigree dog food recalled because it may contain metal pieces: FDA
The governmental agency noted that there have been no reports of injury or illness to any pets thus far.
nypost.com
Out-of-this-world NYC skyscraper aims to hang from an asteroid
Clouds Architecture Office has drafted up an otherworldly plan for a skyscraper that, once more, has resurfaced online.
nypost.com
Netanyahu says ICC arrest warrant over Gaza War is result of ‘new antisemitism’
"What chutzpah do you dare compare the monsters of Hamas to the soldiers of the IDF, the most moral army in the world?" Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.
nypost.com
Germany’s past just might hold the keys to America’s future
Checking corporate power doesn’t have to make for a weak economy.
washingtonpost.com
The startling truth about teen caffeine consumption revealed: ‘It’s adding up’
These national poll results may give you a jolt. 
nypost.com
Pacers vs. Celtics series preview, prediction: Tyrese Haliburton is no match
The Boston Celtics are big favorites in the Eastern Conference Finals against the Indiana Pacers, but not quite as big as they were last round.
nypost.com
Scottie Scheffler’s arraignment postponed after PGA Championship arrest
Scheffler is facing charges of second-degree assault of a police officer, third-degree criminal mischief, reckless driving and disregarding signals from officer directing traffic.
nypost.com
Will Iran Sabotage South Caucasus Peace Through the Armenian Church? | Opinion
Armenia is facing a showdown between its church and state, and Iran and Russia are siding with the church.
newsweek.com
Alasia Franklin's Final Moments Before Her Murder on Georgia College Campus
Kennesaw State student Alasia Franklin was fatally shot in front of a university residential building.
newsweek.com
State-endorsed violence is triumphing over left-aligned protests
Particularly but not only in red states, state-endorsed violence is manifesting in extreme forms.
washingtonpost.com
Hecklers Drown Out Trump’s Bootlicking Brigade Outside Courthouse
TIMOTHY A. CLARY/GETTYA cadre of MAGA loyalists who had gathered to show their support for Donald Trump during his hush-money trial was shouted down by a bevy of cowbell-clanging anti-Trump protesters on Monday when they tried to speak outside of a lower Manhattan courthouse.In what has become a familiar scene, several of the former president’s allies appeared in New York City on Monday to rail against Trump's prosecution and demonstrate to the 2024 White House hopeful their utter devotion to him. In recent days, a number of wannabe vice-presidential candidates and MAGA lawmakers have made the trek to curry favor with Trump and help him circumvent the judge’s gag order.The group that flanked the twice-impeached ex-president this time around included South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson, former New York police commissioner Bernie Kerik, ex-Trump administration official Kash Patel, Trump senior advisor Jason Miller, and Rep. Andrew Clyde (R-GA). All but Patel, meanwhile, were customarily decked out in Trump’s standard red tie and navy suit combo.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Remembering Alice Stewart, a Political Pro Who Never Lost Her Sense of Decency
Alice Stewart was one of the most credible conservative communicators in this fraught political moment.
time.com
Rex Heuermann Update: 3 Key Developments in Gilgo Beach Serial Killer Case
Authorities returned to the Long Island home of the alleged Gilgo Beach serial killer on Monday as the investigation into Rex Heuermann continues.
newsweek.com
Squatters Paid $200 by Mother to Watch Kids in Abandoned Home: Police
A mother in Indiana is facing three felony charges after police say she left her kids with the squatters for multiple days.
newsweek.com