jimboston wrote:/ wrote:Absolutely not, if you need to throw a temper tantrum to get noticed, your cause is not worthy.
Public property is okay to a degree... roads are for cars, so blocking them is definitely illegal and unacceptable... you should have the right go down to city hall or the courthouse and protest, so long as you do it off to the side, away from any entrances, fire exits, or parking spots.
In a major city your restrictions are nearly impossible to meet for a protest of any size.
If you get 2500 people protesting in front of the Massachusetts State House, they are going to disrupt traffic. No matter how peaceful they are. They will block sidewalks, and parking spaces, and hinder other people working in the city trying to get from Point A to Point B. There's no area "off to the side" in an already congested city.
I see a difference between "blocking roads" and "causing some traffic disruptions".
Example... in Boston last year. Two separate protests for the BLM cause.
1) A small handful of individuals chained themselves to steel barrels filled with cement, and blocked Interstate 93... both on the North and South sides of Boston. They did this around 7:30am... perfectly timed to cause the most disruption. The aim of the protest was to cause a major traffic jam. 29 people were arrest for
2) A larger group of people walked down Mass. Ave. in Cambridge. They were moving, not stopping and blocking traffic. Their "parade" caused traffic problems, but not to the same extent that the blocking of Interstate 93 did. The protestors did stop a couple times and had "die-ins"... and other protestors traced their bodies with chaulk. This protest was peaceful, there were no arrests. No one bashed up the cars of commuters as they drove by.
The first protest was on an Interstate... the second was on a main road, but still a regular street in the city. The disruption cause by the first protest was significantly worse than that cause by the latter. In the first protest, the people formed a human barricade.. they weren't moving. The second protest was a "parade" of moving protestors.
There is a difference... you have to allow for some disruption.
Bah, you highfalutin big city folk. I live in one of the top 50 biggest cities in America, and I've never heard of a local protest with more than a few hundred people. Apathy FTW!

I don't see why a protest need be a solid mass. If 2,500 people cannot fit on the courthouse lawns, they shouldn't all be there. There are literally miles upon miles of public properties intended for the express purpose of pedestrian foot traffic everywhere; why not line up side by side along stretches of sidewalk, breaking formation to clear public entrances and crosswalks? (Think "hands across America" with breaks every few feet.) Even in a congested city, with backs to the wall it would only reduce passing sidewalk space by about a foot.
Why not have a fundraiser and legally book a park or a stadium for an event?
It is perfectly possible to make a statement without disrupting anything at all.
Even if you have a right to assembly, once you begin to endanger others it must be regulated. Even if you theoretically have the right to enter a building or an elevator, there are still occupancy load laws to prevent structural, fire, and other assorted safety hazards that must be followed, this isn't a Japanese subway where you can all just pile on top of each other while a gloved man pushes you from behind.
In this same vein, excessive public assembly not only disrupts traffic and business, it also may cause more serious issues such as increased risks of trampling, heat stroke, pick-pocketing, brawling, destruction of property, hit and run, and so on. It is far safer for everyone involved or uninvolved if everyone gives one other a wide berth of movement at all times.
Here is a site detailing exactly what constitutes a lawfully organized protest within the USA. Anything beyond this scope is technically unlawful.
http://occupypeace.blogspot.com/2011/11 ... ns-on.html Keep in mind, the First Amendment is between citizens and the government. Therefore, the right to peaceably assemble is on public property only.