Aaarrrgh wrote:
First, I want to say that I too am horrified that this has happened, and I don't believe anyone deserves what happened to him, and I hope he'll recover.
That said, blaming the police for trying to stop an illegal street racing event seems a bit odd to me. If you want to have bike races, you keep to deserted roads, or you get city council permission. You can't say that the police acted wrongly in preventing the race when the race in itself is a careless, illegal action. No matter what spin you put on it, it was the bikers who caused the problem.
It is not about spinning it. It is about how if the NYPD did not bar them from Times Square, they would not have been on the highway, and this incident would not have happened. This is a simple causal relationship.
According to what rstnme said, it is just a gathering of people in public spaces and you have the right to assembly. You can contest whether or not you think it moral or ethical to require people to have permits to assemble.
If the system is purposely trying to harm you, why would you go through the system's rules?
Aaarrrgh wrote:
But the only reason they were deterred from going there was that they would disrupt traffic in an illegal way if they were allowed to what they wanted to do. The police were doing their job. And if these bikers were just friendly hobbyists, why were they carrying knives in the first place?
This is not an argument. People are legally allowed to possess weapons. If your argument is that they should follow the rules and regulations of the system why are you saying what they are doing is morally wrong when they are acting within the rules of the system?
Would the biker group gathering in Times Square caused traffic problems? Are the negative connotations attached to biker groups a reason why they wanted to keep them out of Times Square, a known tourist destination?
This situation is more complex than "bikers bad".