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Edited on Tue Jan-13-04 02:50 PM by sangh0
and a distortion of history. Most of those "symbolic acts" had immediate, and far-reaching effects. Shortly after Rosa Parks was arrested, the Montgomery Bus Boycott began.
In contrast, shortly after the "No" votes on IWR, the US invaded Iraq. There's a difference between symbolics acts that spur action and results, and symbolic acts that don't. I'll leave it to the readers to figure it out for themselves.
on edit:
- Gandhi weaving his own cloth didn't free India.
Gandhi also backed his symbolic act with a program to boycott English made fabric. It cost the British dearly.
- Wayne Morse voting against the Tonkin Resolution didn't stop the war.
Right, so how does this demonstrate the value of a symbolic act that has no effect?
- The Boston Tea Party didn't didn't liberate America.
The Boston Tea Party was not merely a "symbolic act". It was a revolutionary action.
- A single Chinese man standing in front of the tanks stop the Tienanmin massacre.
And this shows the value of symbolic acts....how?
- The crucifixion of Jesus of Nazereth didn't bring about the fall of the Roman Empire.
It wasn't supposed to bring about the fall of the Romans. Jesus died for YOUR sins, and not to bring down any governments.
- John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry didn't free the slaves.
And it also turned many against the abolitionists. Good work symbolic act!
- Thousands of people burning their draft cards during the Vietnam war didn't stop the draft.
Not a symbolic act. It's an act that had profound effects
- The suicide of Seneca didn't unseat Nero.
And again, how does this demonstrate the value of symbolic action?
- The storming of the Bastille didn't depose Louis XVI.
An attack on the Bastille is just a symbolic act?
- The peace marches against the invasion of Iraq didn't stop it.
That's right.
- The 23 senators who did vote NO to the IWR didn't stop the invasion.
That's right. And note how you can't come up with one example of a politicians voting as a symbolic act that backs up your argument
And, many more examples of "merely symbolic" acts of conscience that weren't "pragmatic", "politically expedient", or "consequential".
I guess they shouldn't have bothered.
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