It's because I'm not a commie. These people who rioted were scum. I don't think looting is an excuse if what you're looting is luxury goods. If they were poor and looting food, I could get into that.
But this is just people brought up with zero boundaries.
Yeah, totally. You know, those people during Hurricane Katrina? The obese ones? Oh, they were totally faking it! Look at how fat they were!
Look mate, this has been coming for such a long long time. When an entire section of society is shat upon constantly and consistently, it's entirely understandable for them to lash back.
It starts with fears and suspicions. 'The government doesn't care', 'we, the poor, don't matter', 'the rich have all the power' and 'the police are merely a tool to oppress us'. These are all things that most people who suffer them don't vocalize. Maybe they aren't willing to or maybe they simply can't.
But then, when say, an innocent man is shot to death by the police during a protest, all these fears are suddenly realised, all these suspicions are brought bubbling to the surface.
No one there is choosing to riot. The very thought that you
can choose to riot is incredibly condescending. It's an uncontrollable act of rage, and in a situation like this, where the country had it coming for such a long time, since Thatcher really, it's not going to stop. Sure, there'll be repression, depression and/or oppression, but it's shown the poor, working-class youth just how much power we wield. Suddenly, we can do something. We've been brought up, hell, even trained to believe that we're worthless, that we'll never amount to anything, that we have no purpose and that we're basically born as criminals. We've been trained to believe that we have no power at all, and now we've seen this? Now we'eve done this?
There really is no going back. Britain has to either become even more fascist, or embrace the 'revolution'.
I realise I sound like I'm supporting/condoning the riots, which I'm not. However, I feel for them, and I feel the same frustration, and I believe that if this anger was directed somewhere useful - at the state, for example, rather than the neighbours - it'd inevitably be an act of good.