Which non-violent revolutions will succeed?

Peaceful protest was drowned in blood in China in 1989, but it kept notching up victories elsewhere.
Ghandian non-violence obliged the British to avoid massive violence in India (and Pakistan and what eventually became Bangladesh got a free ride out on the same ticket), writes columnist Gwynne Dyer.
The old calculation was simple and brutal: if you want to overthrow a tyrant, you must use violence. There was an occasional exception, like Gandhi’s use of non-violent protest to gain India’s independence, but people wrote that off as being due to the fact that t...

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