Erica Chenoweth initially thought that only violent protests were effective. However after analyzing 323 movements the results were opposite of what Erica thought:
For the next two years, Chenoweth and Stephan collected data on all violent and nonviolent campaigns from 1900 to 2006 that resulted in the overthrow of a government or in territorial liberation. They created a data set of 323 mass actions. Chenoweth analyzed nearly 160 variables related to success criteria, participant categories, state capacity, and more. The results turned her earlier paradigm on its head — in the aggregate, nonviolent civil resistance was far more effective in producing change.
If campaigns allow their repression to throw the movement into total disarray or they use it as a pretext to militarize their campaign, then they’re essentially co-signing what the regime wants — for the resisters to play on its own playing field. And they’re probably going to get totally crushed.
A) prove it
B) violence against bad people is good actually
A) https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S2452292924000365
B) violence against bad people is sometimes necessary to stop them from hurting others. But it’s not “good”. If you could put all fascists in jail in a single moment with no violence, that act isn’t made better by adding violence. Therefore it’s not a good.
Lol you clearly posted the first study you could find that sounded like it agreed with you without bothering to read it, this does fuck all to support your claim.
Stopping bad people from causing harm is good. Harming them stops them from causing harm. Harming them is good. The only reason you are this committed to pretending otherwise is because you are hopelessly propagandized and far too stupid to critically examine your own beliefs.
And lol @ “If you could put all fascists in jail in a single moment with no violence”, you couldn’t ever do that, the only solution to fascism that has ever worked is violence and unless you’re completely historically illiterate you already know it.