In any community, limits are placed on how people can express their opinions. You can protest, and you must be allowed to protest in a way that will be visible to the public, but government can legitimately impose limits to prevent grave disturbance of public life. If you don't abide by those limits, you can get arrested.Warren Dew wrote:Being arrested doesn't count as a reprisal, then? Or does Canada not count as a democracy?JOZeldenrust wrote:No, anyone can speak out. That doesn't make it a certainty you'll accomplish anything. That requires that the change you're trying to achieve is something that's supported by a significant power base, eighter by sheer weight of numbers or by some other way of exerting political influence.That's actually pretty consistent with my definition of "democracy", too. It also shows how different "democracy" is from "freedom".
Noone is stopping radical left-wingers like anti-globalists from speaking out - though they are kept from throwing stones trough the windows of the nearest McDonalds - there are just too many people who disagree with them for them to accomplish anything.
If the latter, I'm pretty sure your definition is different from JimC's definition.
If your protest includes throwing rocks through windows, you can get arrested.
The amount of violence protesters can legitimately use varies with the amount of repression dissidents face from the government. As long as peaceful protest in view of the public is allowed, violence by protesters isn't justified, and if they do you violence, or otherwise violate reasonable limitations imposed by the government, the government is justified in using proportional force against them.