Chicago Sun-Times

Stoking fears about DNC protests gets in the way of right to peacefully protest

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Chicago will be hosting the Democratic National Convention next week. Many media outlets are already predicting major disruption­s and unrest. Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling says CPD is training roughly 2,500 officers to respond to potential protests and projected civil unrest. And in a warning to protesters, the top cop also recently said, “We’re not going to allow you to riot.”

Casting the convention as a looming threat with potential danger assumes the worst of our residents and those visiting the city. Raising fear and focusing on a possibilit­y of violent disruption diminishes the right to peacefully assemble and breeds suspicion of citizens organizing lawfully to support their beliefs.

Logistical preparatio­n is the business of city management; stoking fear hinders those efforts. It diminishes both the intent of protest organizers and seeds mistrust of protesters and city services.

The foundation of democracy is citizens’ participat­ion in its processes. Peaceful protest has been and remains a meaningful means of participat­ion. Peaceful protest manifests dissent and concentrat­es the voices of those without direct political power. It motivates policy change in a way voting alone cannot.

The city and its residents must approach the coming convention with support for the peaceful public expression of dissent, not with fear.

Our democracy and free elections are experienci­ng a moment of unique vulnerabil­ity. We must embrace and support the right of peaceful assembly and participat­ion in the political process through organized protest. Now, more than ever, we must renew our collective commitment to amplifying voices outside institutio­ns of power.

The Chicago Council of Lawyers was born during a similarly fraught moment, emerging from the violence that accompanie­d the 1968 Democratic National Convention. The council’s values remain rooted in support for dissent and the role of lawyers in enabling people to enjoy this fruit of our democracy — without fear of violence or retributio­n. Our membership has close ties to the legal aid, public interest law and civil rights communitie­s in Chicago’s legal profession, and we are committed to seeking and obtaining reforms in the public interest to ensure necessary participat­ion by all.

We are not naïve about the fraught reality of our times. But the media ought not focus so overwhelmi­ngly on stoking fear of what might be and instead devote time to what exists— the cherished rights of Americans to peacefully express dissent and organize to do so.

Ellyn S. Rosen and David Schrodt, Board of Governors of the Chicago Council of Lawyers

Send letters to letters@suntimes.com.

 ?? MANUEL MARTINEZ/WBEZ ?? Members of the Chicago Coalition for Justice in Palestine gather for a protest in front of the Chicago Hilton during the National Associatio­n of Black Journalist­s convention. The group also plans to protest at the DNC.
MANUEL MARTINEZ/WBEZ Members of the Chicago Coalition for Justice in Palestine gather for a protest in front of the Chicago Hilton during the National Associatio­n of Black Journalist­s convention. The group also plans to protest at the DNC.

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