As protests roll on, some are asking what have these protests accomplished? While some protests have been marred by some isolated acts of violence, at least some at the hands of right-wing operatives, most have been peaceful. Now we are seeing that they are already proving to be a catalyst for positive change.

The following is a list of much of what the protests have accomplished so far both in the United States, and all over the world.

??Within 10 days of sustained protests: Minneapolis bans use of chokeholds.

??Charges are upgraded against Officer Chauvin, and his accomplices are arrested and charged.

??Dallas adopts a “duty to intervene” rule that requires officers to stop other cops who are engaging in inappropriate use of force.

??New Jersey’s attorney general said the state will update its use-of-force guidelines for the first time in two decades.

??In Maryland, a bipartisan workgroup of state lawmakers announced a police reform workgroup.

??Los Angeles City Council introduces motion to reduce LAPD’s $1.8 billion operating budget.

??MBTA in Boston agrees to stop using public buses to transport police officers to protests.

??Police brutality captured on cameras leads to near-immediate suspensions and firings of officers in several cities (i.e., Buffalo, Ft. Lauderdale).

??Monuments celebrating confederates are removed in cities in Virginia, Alabama, and other states.

??Street in front of the White House is renamed “Black Lives Matter Plaza.”
Military forces begin to withdraw from D.C.

Then, there’s all the other stuff that’s hard to measure:

?The really difficult public and private conversations that are happening about race and privilege.

?The realizations some white people are coming to about racism and the role of policing in this country.

?The self-reflection.

?The internal battles exploding within organizations over issues that have been simmering or ignored for a long time. Some organizations will end as a result, others will be forever changed or replaced with something stronger and fairer.

Globally:

? Protests against racial inequality sparked by the police killing of George Floyd are taking place all over the world.

? Rallies and memorials have been held in cities across Europe, as well as in Mexico, Canada, Brazil, Australia, and New Zealand.

? As the US contends with its second week of protests, issues of racism, police brutality, and oppression have been brought to light across the globe.

? People all over the world understand that their own fights for human rights, for equality and fairness, will become so much more difficult to win if we are going to lose America as the place where ‘I have a dream’ is a real and universal political program,” Wolfgang Ischinger, a former German ambassador to the US, told the New Yorker.

? In France, protesters marched holding signs that said “I can’t breathe” to signify both the words of Floyd, and the last words of Adama Traoré, a 24-year-old black man who was subdued by police officers and gasped the sentence before he died outside Paris in 2016.

? Cities across Europe have come together after the death of George Floyd:

✊? In Amsterdam, an estimated 10,000 people filled the Dam square on Monday, holding signs and shouting popular chants like “Black lives matter,” and “No justice, no peace.”

✊? In Germany, people gathered in multiple locations throughout Berlin to demand justice for Floyd and fight against police brutality.

✊? A mural dedicated to Floyd was also spray-painted on a stretch of wall in Berlin that once divided the German capital during the Cold War.

✊? In Ireland, protesters held a peaceful demonstration outside of Belfast City Hall, and others gathered outside of the US embassy in Dublin.

✊?In Italy, protesters gathered and marched with signs that said “Stop killing black people,” “Say his name,” and “We will not be silent.”

✊? In Spain, people gathered to march and hold up signs throughout Barcelona and Madrid.

✊? In Athens, Greece, protesters took to the streets to collectively hold up a sign that read “I can’t breathe.”

✊? In Brussels, protesters were seen sitting in a peaceful demonstration in front of an opera house in the center of the city.

✊?In Denmark, protesters were heard chanting “No justice, no peace!” throughout the streets of Copenhagen, while others gathered outside the US embassy.

✊? In Canada, protesters were also grieving for Regis Korchinski-Paquet, a 29-year-old black woman who died on Wednesday after falling from her balcony during a police investigation at her building.

✊? And in New Zealand, roughly 2,000 people marched to the US embassy in Auckland, chanting and carrying signs demanding justice.

? Memorials have been built for Floyd around the world, too. In Mexico City, portraits of him were hung outside the US embassy with roses, candles, and signs.

? In Poland, candles and flowers were laid out next to photos of Floyd outside the US consulate.

? And in Syria, two artists created a mural depicting Floyd in the northwestern town of Binnish, “on a wall destroyed by military planes.”

This has all been accomplished after just a couple of weeks of protesting police brutality and the senseless death (some say murder) of George Floyd along with the countless list of names of others who have needlessly died at the hands of the police. It is clear at this point that the protests have accomplished way more than the naysayers said they would.

Whether one is a protester or supporter, it is good to know that the protests have accomplished much — though there is still more work to do.

And for the naysayers, perhaps it is time to stop insulting and dismissing the protests and get on the right side of history before it is too late.

 

Featured image via Wikimedia commons