Apologize for what? This was never an argument about whether someone would be charged with a crime over those torches.
People made the link between the Calgary protestors and the Charlottesville riot due to the tiki torches, to the point where it made national news and the police even investigated.
That proves that those dumbasses in Calgary evoked inferences of white nationalism with their decision to use tiki torches. Which means it was a stupid decision.
Or do you still believe making people think (whether intentionally or unintentionally) you're a white nationalist is good PR for your anti-lockdown cause?
Could it not be torches symbolizing the classic peasants coming against the aristocracy with pitchforks and torches?
Who knows what they intended to put across with those torches. It doesn't really matter. All that matters is how it was perceived. They evoked the Charlottesville rally (the only other rally people have seen with those tiki torches) which is an extremely bad look.
That's my point. These dummies shot themselves in the foot by not thinking this tiki torch thing through. Now they look like those Charlottesville white nationalists. Good luck getting your anti-lockdown point across to people who now think you're white nationalists. Making people think you're crazy isn't really a good first step in persuading them to see things your way. I don't know why this is such a controversial idea.
By this same logic, not wearing a mask essentially makes someone look like a nazi to these people. Refusing to put your pronouns on your social media makes you a bigoted racist to these people.
If they showed up protesting in Nikes, the media would spin that as racist acts of Nazis, too. But maybe these were intentional provocateurs out there to make the whole crowd look like White Supremists, or maybe they really were. All I know is the optics are less and less important because it is all ran through the dishonest lens of the dishonest media.
Apologize for what? This was never an argument about whether someone would be charged with a crime over those torches.
People made the link between the Calgary protestors and the Charlottesville riot due to the tiki torches, to the point where it made national news and the police even investigated.
That proves that those dumbasses in Calgary evoked inferences of white nationalism with their decision to use tiki torches. Which means it was a stupid decision.
Or do you still believe making people think (whether intentionally or unintentionally) you're a white nationalist is good PR for your anti-lockdown cause?
Could it not be torches symbolizing the classic peasants coming against the aristocracy with pitchforks and torches?
Who knows what they intended to put across with those torches. It doesn't really matter. All that matters is how it was perceived. They evoked the Charlottesville rally (the only other rally people have seen with those tiki torches) which is an extremely bad look.
That's my point. These dummies shot themselves in the foot by not thinking this tiki torch thing through. Now they look like those Charlottesville white nationalists. Good luck getting your anti-lockdown point across to people who now think you're white nationalists. Making people think you're crazy isn't really a good first step in persuading them to see things your way. I don't know why this is such a controversial idea.
By this same logic, not wearing a mask essentially makes someone look like a nazi to these people. Refusing to put your pronouns on your social media makes you a bigoted racist to these people.
If they showed up protesting in Nikes, the media would spin that as racist acts of Nazis, too. But maybe these were intentional provocateurs out there to make the whole crowd look like White Supremists, or maybe they really were. All I know is the optics are less and less important because it is all ran through the dishonest lens of the dishonest media.