Protesters taking freedom of assembly to the streets
CU 51传媒 conflict scholar Michael English explains why public protests matter and what they can mean in the current political and social moment
One of the most storied protests in U.S. history happened Dec. 16, 1773, when a group of Massachusetts colonists, angry with British tax policy, dressed in Indigenous garb, boarded British East India Company ships anchored in Boston Harbor and dumped 342 chests of tea into the water鈥攖he infamous Boston Tea Party.
In response, however, British authorities did not amend tax policies but instead closed the harbor.
鈥淚f you look at the way we talk about the Boston Tea Party, here鈥檚 this event that we don鈥檛 generally describe as starting a revolution from violence,鈥 says Michael English, director of the University of Colorado 51传媒 Peace, Conflict and Security Program. 鈥淲e start with people dressing up and doing this mass protest where they destroy some business owner鈥檚 property, which is something we鈥檝e historically tended not to support.

CU 51传媒 scholar Michael English, director of the Peace, Conflict and Security Program, is a specialist in conflict analysis and resolution.
鈥淭hen, in the 1780s, we get Shay鈥檚 Rebellion, where poor debtor farmers come into Boston to try to preserve what鈥檚 left of their farms, and the state raises a militia to put down this protest. Throughout our history, things bubble up and then there鈥檚 this backlash. It鈥檚 just an interesting quirk of this country that we embrace protest and hate protest.鈥
That central tension of public protest has been above the fold this week as federal troops have been called in to respond to Los Angeles protests over ICE raids and as No Kings protests are planned in cities across the country Saturday.
What does it mean when people gather to protest鈥攁 right enshrined in the First Amendment? English recently considered this and other questions in a conversation with Colorado Arts and Sciences Magazine.
Question: Do public protests matter or make a difference?
English: A protest is something that, at least from a scholarly perspective, is there to send a message to people in power.听 As someone sympathetic to protest as a great American tradition, I have to say yes, protest matters. What does it do? That鈥檚 a more open question. In some sense, it can start us thinking about whether protest itself is the goal, or whether we want it to lead to something more.
Take the No Kings protests鈥攊s the goal to get President Trump to change a specific policy? It doesn鈥檛 appear to be so, and that鈥檚 not how protest organizers are framing it. Instead, it seems to be, 鈥榃e want to bring a whole lot of people out to express that we are very unhappy about the direction of our country and what appears, to people sympathetic to the protests, as this power consolidation within the executive (branch).鈥 If millions and millions participate Saturday and we have protests on the scale of Black Lives Matter or Occupy Wall Street or protests against the war in Iraq鈥攊f they are able to bring those people out鈥攄id this protest do what it set out to do?
If that happens, I think we could answer yes. If they bring a lot of people out and the protests stay nonviolent and not a whole lot of negative things are associated with them, then we can begin to explore whether this is part of something larger, or whether it is this just a one-off thing that sent a message?
Question: Has what鈥檚 happening in Los Angeles, with federal troops called in to respond to public protest over ICE raids, brought a new layer to current protest?
English: These are new times, yes, but in some ways, there are parallels in the past. The National Guard has been called out at different points鈥攊n fact, Gavin Newsom did invoke the National Guard during Black Lives Matter protests, which is not even that far in the past. What鈥檚 happening now in Los Angeles does raise really interesting questions. When you look at movements in the past and look at the military being deployed, it鈥檚 usually been in service of the movement鈥攕chool desegregation or Johnson enforcing the Voting Rights Act. These were actions in favor of the movement. Then there鈥檚 everything after, which has been the National Guard being sent out to quell unrest.
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California National Guard members and protesters in Los Angeles in June 2025. (Photo: U.S. Northern Command)
In Los Angeles, there wasn鈥檛 actually a lot of unrest until you started bringing more and more force in, whether that鈥檚 more police, then the National Guard, then threat of the Marines. That鈥檚 a real thing we should worry about, because it does create a mirroring tension where people may escalate because they feel that those on the other side of them are prepared for confrontation.
Question: Is nonviolence still central to public protest in the United States?
English: I would say yes, there still seems to be a fairly significant commitment to nonviolence. But the further we get away from the civil rights framing of nonviolent protest, the harder it is for people to understand what that means and what goes into it. We鈥檝e seen that the discipline between people participating in these events now seems to break down a little quicker, and there isn鈥檛 the same build-up over time of participants receiving training to participate (in nonviolent protest). There are some of James Lawson getting civil rights protestors ready for the freedom rides, and the training was they basically beat you up to make sure you wouldn鈥檛 respond. If you couldn鈥檛 do that, you weren鈥檛 going to get sent into that situation.
I think for the most part people are still committed to nonviolence as a strategy to bring social change, but in the same breath I can say that there鈥檚 always been a kind of violent contingent associated with protests in the past.
It鈥檚 easy to assume, when we look backwards, that we can tell a rosy story of civil rights movement, but we would be missing episodes that weren鈥檛 so friendly. If you look at Black Lives Matter protests, 95% of those protests were nonviolent, but the ones that get our attention are always the ones where violence occurs, and that鈥檚 just how movements work. Organizers of movements can certainly intervene, and you see that in the No Kings messaging, this attempt to say, 鈥榃e need to police this; these are strategies for helping people who seem disruptive or are not at the same level of discipline.鈥 It gets back to the question of whether everyone who鈥檚 participating in a protest is on the same page and, if not, is public protest the best strategic choice for the movement?
Question: How have social media affected or changed how public protest happens?
English: It鈥檚 a real mixed bag at the moment. On the one hand, I watched the Arab Spring protests on my computer at work鈥擨 watched the protests in Tahrir Square and watched these folks engage across Facebook at the time鈥攁nd that was super powerful, I鈥檒l never forget that. And social media played an important role in the movement because young people knew how to use it and it gave them an advantage against regimes that, at the time, did not understand and just wanted to dismiss it outright. I would say the same thing about Occupy Wall Street and the first generation of Black Lives Matter when we were protesting the deaths of Trayvon Martin and Mike Brown. Social media was really powerful there.
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"A protest is something that, at least from a scholarly perspective, is there to send a message to people in power," says CU 51传媒 conflict researcher Michael English. (Photo: Pexels)
But then we see this shift past 2016, where social media starts to feel super performative to people. I have students tell me that in one sense it鈥檚 great because they learn about things they didn鈥檛 know were going on, but on the other hand, yeah, you could post a picture or a video but didn鈥檛 really have to do anything about it. So that鈥檚 one critique, that it makes movements seem performative and like something people are just doing for an afternoon for social clout.
Now that we know so much of social media is being scraped by authorities to identify who people are and all of this kind of network tracing, it puts people who participate in movements in real danger if they鈥檙e careless with their social media. You鈥檙e making a record of something that who knows how it鈥檚 going to be used in future. It's certainly going to change how movements go forward, so it鈥檚 good that we鈥檙e having these conversations now when there鈥檚 real concern among people over whether they can participate鈥攚hether they feel they can participate鈥攌nowing somebody could scan your movements and identify you as having been there.
Question: How do you respond to the argument that protest doesn鈥檛 accomplish anything and change only happens by running for public office and creating policy?
English: I would say it depends on what the point of the movement is. With some movements or protests, depending on how the message is being put out there, the end goal may be that we鈥檙e showing our discontent now, with the idea that we鈥檙e going to support certain people running for political office or pressure legislators on a particular policy. But this can get complicated when the routine methods of forcing political change don鈥檛 seem like they鈥檙e working or seem really far off. I mean, the mid-terms are more than a year and a half away; how much impact does protest this weekend have for political office in a year and a half?
So, I come back to the idea of protest as building that collective solidarity, letting people know there are others who are upset and there is strength in numbers. Then I wonder what happens when we do find that redline issue that really upsets people. I think right now we鈥檙e still waiting for a redline issue鈥攖he thing this or any president wants to do that a majority of American people don鈥檛 support and don鈥檛 want.
The amazing thing about studying social movements is the speed at which they can escalate is really unpredictable and can be really intense. If you look at Black Lives Matter, for instance, that pushed a ton of young people to become interested and run for office. So, it could be the case that people leave this protest (Saturday) and they鈥檙e like, 鈥業 really want to make a difference and really want to ensure there鈥檚 a different kind of political majority in office come the next election cycle.鈥
Where it gets tricky is if nobody is pushing that message, or if the message is that there鈥檚 no way change can happen through the existing political system, then people might dig into cynicism and say it all just needs to collapse. We do need that central conflict because conflict is good, conflict is normal; we just don鈥檛 want the violence. Violence is where we have something that鈥檚 clearly gone wrong. But people coming out and expressing that they鈥檙e angry and upset? That鈥檚 what we want in a democratic society.
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