Yes you should but it isn't a requirement. It's no different with soldiers, they can fight without knowing everything about their enemy and so can angry people.StarCecil said:That's different. A soldier doesn't have to understand the politics. It's detrimental if they have to take into consideration the political decisions. I certainly don't.Crono1973 said:Let me ask you something. Do you think every soldier understands the politics of the war they are fighting?StarCecil said:I have to agree with this. I think a good chunk of these protesters are doing so irrationally because they're angry. They don't understand the real politics and don't know what they are really talking about, but lashing out against the wealthy for being "corrupt" is a handy recourse, used every time the economy gets shaky.emeraldrafael said:has the revolution begun? No, no it has not. there is no revolution. This is people pissed off at the wealthy cause they got screwed even though in the end its many of their own fault. Though I get a particular laugh when a devout conservative republican protests, acting like a political party change is going to magically turn the US's financial crisis into a surplus of unknown and unprecedented magnitude.
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TL;DR its pissed off people using their right to free speech. Good to see in the US, but its not exactly earth shaking.
I'm sure there are people with real issues and who understand the situation, but most of these people are just left-wing nuts.
There was some news footage shown locally in which a Congressman of some sort was trying to talk to the people, telling them there needed to be a change in how the country was run - only for a man in the crowd to shout that he was part of the problem and shouldn't have been there.
Now tell me, does it matter?
However, if you're going to protest a perceived injustice... shouldn't you understand it?
If a revolution begins, those protestors will become soldiers anyway. Has there ever been a revolution where all the participants were 100% informed? I doubt it.