In our lecture on the French revolution, one of the questions was why should we care about the history of revolutionary violence? This really resonated with me, as a white woman from South Africa and as a watcher of the protests in America. There has been no generation of my family that has not seen racial segregation until me, and now I am watching as Americans desperately fight for their right to be treated as humans.

The history of revolutionary violence is not just something we should study to understand why people did what they did. We are living through a revolution right now, instead of condemning the actions of violence people are being forced to commit, we should be looking in the past for methods to create a better future.

Black lives matter protests and riots have been going on for centuries but today, the day I am writing this is the seventh straight day of BLM protests in America after the murder of George Floyd on the 25th of May in Minneapolis. Of course, they are not just protesting the murder, they are protesting the centuries of systematic oppression people of colour face in the US. These acts of police brutality – which has surpassed that title, to murder – are faced by every country but, I want to focus on America and its modern-day French Revolution.

Reading any article or book on the French revolution can show you that there were countless ways people protested the feudal system in France. From underground salt and tobacco trades to the Storming of the Bastille. Understanding that there is no correct way to protest is the first step in allies helping the BLM movement. It should be the main takeaway from the question of historical revolutionary violence.

Take away the details and the French revolution and the BLM protests sound the same. A group of people attempting to overthrow a detrimental regime, taking advantage of them. So why we do not condemn the actions of the French, yet focus on the small percentage of looting in the protests in America, which are largely peaceful until police arrived.

America was built on the backs of slaves and changes are only brought about when destruction begins to affect the economy. The US places the value of products above the lives of black men and women, and if you think I am overreacting you need only look at the thousands of people spamming social media with comments like “looting isn’t the way to do this”. They are calling people thugs because of the vandalism of property, during a protest in which police are brutally gassing and shooting men, women and children. But, yes, the looting is clearly the problem here. The worst part is that the protesters are often not the ones looting, it is others taking advantage of the situation or seeking to cause police retaliation.

But imagine it was only protestors looting.

Target can survive a week of vandalism. Black people cannot survive in America.