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Protest in the Time of COVID: A Brief Guide to Keeping Yourself and Your Comrades (Reasonably) Safe While Protesting Police Brutality During a Pandemic

by the Boston DSA Direct Action, De-escalation, and Security (DADS) Committee

Why Protest:  

Boston DSA stands in absolute solidarity with the mass protests that have broken out following the brutal police murder of George Floyd on May 25, 2020. Wiser people than us have written about the multitude of abuses the police have casually heaped upon Black and brown people since they were first founded as strikebreakers and runaway slave patrols, and wonkier people than us are digging deep into the Boston Police Department’s finances, a tumor on the city budget. But one area where we do have a certain degree of expertise is hitting the streets in this city.

There are a lot of ways that you can support a protest if you can’t be in the streets, and there are a lot of reasons you might not be able to be in the streets. At this time especially, if you are feeling at all ill, we strongly urge you to stay home–there are bound to be plenty more protests to go to once you have recovered.

But if you can be in the streets, it’s imperative to take some common-sense steps to keep yourself and your comrades safe–from the cops, from the weather, from the right-wing trolls who hang around these things trying to cause trouble, and this time around, from the pandemic. Here are some tips on protest preparation, health, and safety, updated for this most interesting of summers:

Every Person, Every Place:

Don’t Talk To Cops (Fascism Is Not to Be Debated)

Clothes and Gear

Snaxis Is Praxis

Securing Your Phone

Many protest safety guides will tell you not to bring your phone or to turn it on airplane mode to avoid your communications being scraped by Stingrays. Basically, Stingrays are fake cell phone towers law enforcement uses to capture texts and the location of your phone. They are real, and Boston police have them. It’s still good to bring a cell phone, though, so that you can keep in touch with your protest buddy and/or contingent. So here are some other tricks you should use – 

Buddies and Contingents

A Picture Is Worth a Thousand Words (Social Media Safety Practices)

Washing Off the Day

Other Tips

Manage your need to pee. Feller reported that, in fact, we can. “It is possible that increasing carbohydrates in combination with unsaturated fats in the short term may decrease the need to frequently urinate,” she said. Specific amounts need to be suited to the individual, Feller said, but she suggested “starting with adding a serving of carbohydrates of your choice along with an unsaturated fat [nuts, avocado, olive oil] of your choice to your daily routine. You never want to enter a protest dehydrated as you will be on your feet for hours using lots of energy, so prepare the day before and hydrate and nourish yourself to the best of your ability.” 

When Things Go Wrong:

What to Do if You Are Pepper Sprayed

What to Do if You Are Otherwise Injured or Need Medical Attention

What to Do if the Police Specifically Target You

What to Do if You Are Arrested

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