Khross wrote:
There's no presentation of force or commission of trespass in their behavior; but, as I said, that matters not one whit. The First Amendment is fundamentally empty at this point.
The protestors that had the tents erected were engaged in trespass, or some other similar violation by doing so on University property in violation of the law. They were the ones arrested.
The ones actually engaged in, you know, protesting, as opposed to having a camp-out, the police expressed no intention of arresting. There is, however, a presentation of force in their behavior. They surround the police and prevent them from leaving with the arrestees.
Surrounding a person, or preventing them from proceeding on their way, is a use of force. The protestors had
absolutely no right whatsoever to prevent the police from arresting those refusing to remove the tents. Their surrounding of the police is a highly aggressive action in and of itself. It is fortunate that they did not actually engage in anything like rock-throwing or something like that; it is obvious from the video they're mostly a bunch of nincompoops interested in taking video to edit for YouTube, giggling, and laughing, and generally pretending as if the police are actually doing anything to them. The police expressed no intention whatsoever of dispersing the protest or doing anything to the people that were just protesting until they were surrounded, and
then they spent considerable time just standing there in a cordon while one officer, presumably a sergeant or something,
talked to individual protestors and tried to get them to move so the police
could leave.
Then, after they get sprayed, the protestors
admit they aren't being peaceful; they tell the police "we'll give you a moment of peace" to leave.
Preventing anyone from going about their business is a serious crime in and of itself. Just because you're doing it while giggling, laughing, chanting, and linking arms means nothing. In this case, the police were going about their business of arresting someone, and if they shouldn't have arrested those people, that's what we have courts for. We do not allow emotion-driven mobs to decide who is and is not to be arrested in this country.
It has nothing to do with the First Amendment either. The first Amendment is just fine. All that's happened is that we as a society do not allow people to simply take over any property they want for any purpose they want simply because they aren't throwing firebombs.