The next age of protests is upon us. A new initiative has made its way online today, called Demonstrate for Peace, which calls on an online gathering on September 21st in order to protest for peace. It will be the first of its kind. It is orchestrated by the United Nations.
You can join the movement by following this link. This demonstration, despite the website listing Martyr’s Square, will not take place in any physical locations in Lebanon but is simply Lebanon playing its part in International Peace Day.
I have to ask: what effect could such a rally truly have? Is an online protest as efficient as a real life one that requires people to go down to Martyr’s Square and ask for peace using their voices, not their keyboards? Or does the UN know that such protests may not be as effective or as enticing to people?
I’m not really sure what a protest such as Demonstrate For Peace could do, especially that real life protests – complete with bloody faces – in this country have failed to do much as a general rule of thumb. But I guess there’s no harm in logging in with any social account and expressing the simple and extremely important need to live in peace, especially in a country like ours. I assume we’ve all come to appreciate the beauty in the quietness of these past few days, which have been oddly calmer than their predecessors.
Let’s hope that those who actually dictate peace log in as well?
http://www.un.org/en/events/peaceday/
It is more for awareness and education than anything else, as I understand. And you are already doing so by sharing, so thanks; And it has an impact, but probably not an overnight one.
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Reblogged this on The Magic Mug.
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Reblogged this on Ned Hamson Second Line View of the News and commented:
I hope that the leaders sign on as well but do not expect much in terms of results – too general – how will leaders know – “How many from this and that city support me or are against my policies”
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