The 1964 Harlem Riot was one of a number of race-based uprisings/ protests that took place in multiple cities across the United States during the 1960s. As elsewhere Harlem blacks reacted to racial discrimination, segregation, police brutality and social injustices that dominated their lives. They resorted to violence to express their disgust with the system.
Ironically the Harlem Riot occurred just two weeks after the 1964 Civil Rights Act was signed into law by President Lyndon Johnson. The act, which outlawing discrimination based on race, color, sex, religion, and nationality, was the most sweeping measure ever adopted by the nation to guarantee racial justice. The irony lies in the fact that while the Civil Rights Act made it illegal to discriminate against a U.S. citizen based on race or color, the discriminatory socioeconomic systems and structures long in place in the nation did not change with this new law.
The Harlem uprising began on July 16, 1964 when 15-year-old James Powell was shot and killed by white off-duty police Lieutenant Thomas Gilligan. The Harlem community was infuriated by the murder which it viewed as an unnecessary example of police brutality. Many Harlemites were convinced that Officer Gilligan, a war veteran and experienced police officer, could have found a way to arrest and subdue Powell without using deadly force.
The first two days following the shooting saw peaceful protesting in Harlem and other areas of New York City, New York. However, on July 18, some of the protesters went to the Harlem Police Station, calling for the resignation or termination of Officer Gilligan. Police officers were on guard outside the building, and as tensions grew, some in the crowd began throwing bricks, bottles, and rocks at the officers who waded into the crowd using their nightsticks. When word of the confrontation spread rioting ensued first in Harlem and then spread into Bedford-Stuyvesant, the black and Puerto Rican section of Brooklyn.
The race riot in the two boroughs of New York City lasted six days. It included breaking windows, looting, vandalism, and setting a variety of local businesses on fire. When the rebellion ended on July 22, one black resident was killed. There were more than 100 injuries, 450 arrests, and around $1 million in property damage.
The Harlem uprising was the beginning of a series of violent confrontations with police in more than a dozen cities throughout the North including Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; the New Jersey cities of Jersey City, Paterson, and Elizabeth; as well as Chicago (Dixmoor) Illinois, making it the most violent in terms of urban rioting since 1919. These rebellions as well as civil rights protests mainly in the South, helped designate the summer of 1964 as the Long, Hot Summer.
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Moshing = karate kicks, windmills, two stepping, crowd killing (intentionally running into the people on the pit border, kicking and punching people). Usually seen at hardcore/slam shows, but seen more at death metal type shows since theres been heavy crossover between death metal and hardcore
Slam Dancing = push moshing, shoving people, circle pitting. Usually metal shows
At least I'm p sure thats the difference I am old it used to be hardcore dancing and moshing when I grew up. I am a hardcore dancing hater personally
two stepping is cool and acceptable
interesting. I don't know much about that musical scene but I was at a King Gizzard show and it was really fun up front.
I'd say the mose intense it got was light Slam Dancing and that was fine by me lol. First time doing that kinda thing. I thought it was called moshing but would actually not be interested in moshing as you define it XD
Oh yeah, there will inevitably be some kinda slam dancing/pogoing going on at a lot of shows within the rock genre, can totally see that at a gizz show for some of their heavier songs, it would just vary in intensity like you're saying
Yeah I am not a fan of moshing/hardcore dancing. Too macho, and I think there are a lot of people who use it as an excuse to intentionally hurt people. And it seems like a lot of the younger people who do it now just see that violent part modeled so theres like way more crowd killing these days, I think it's dumb as hell
This is a pretty ridiculous/extreme example of crowd killing tw -lots of kicking and punching people. Ive never seen it that bad at shows Ive been to but.... Yeah, there ya have it
I found a YouTube link in your comment. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy: