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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think there shouldn't be a right to *protest*

185 replies

Bathingnow · 13/01/2026 13:24

People constantly repeat that the right to protest is some kind of sacred democratic principle that must be protected at all costs. I genuinely do not understand why this is taken as an unquestionable truth. What about the rights of everyone else? What about the right to go to work, get children to school, attend hospital appointments, or simply go about daily life without being obstructed, shouted at, or intimidated?

I fully support the right to dissent. People should be able to express views that challenge the government, corporations, or any other powerful body. That is a basic part of a free society. Free expression means being allowed to say unpopular things without fear of punishment. It does not mean having a free pass to disrupt other people’s lives or hold them hostage to your cause.

If you believe for example climate change is an emergency and the government should “just stop oil”, fine. Argue your case. Write letters to newspapers. Lobby MPs. Stand in Speaker’s Corner and shout yourself hoarse. Post endlessly on social media. Organise debates, whatever. All of that is legitimate and entirely compatible with democracy. None of it requires blocking roads, gluing yourself to infrastructure, or preventing ordinary people from getting where they need to be.

The idea that making life miserable for strangers somehow advances your cause is absurd. Blocking an ambulance, stopping a parent getting to work, or preventing someone from attending a funeral does not win hearts and minds. It just creates resentment. You are not enlightening people. You are inconveniencing them and expecting applause for it.

This applies to every issue, whether it is climate change, Gaza, housing, or anything else. A cause does not become morally superior simply because the people shouting about it feel very strongly. Once a protest crosses the line into infringing on other people’s civil liberties, it stops being a protest and starts being coercion.

Democracy should protect free speech and peaceful expression. It should also protect the public from disruption imposed by self appointed activists who believe their views trump everyone else’s rights. If exercising a so called right to protest requires trampling over the freedoms of others, then that right needs serious limits. I see no reason why the ability to disrupt daily life should be treated as some untouchable democratic virtue.

OP posts:
beefthief · 13/01/2026 13:25

No, you are wrong.

Moonlightfrog · 13/01/2026 13:25

beefthief · 13/01/2026 13:25

No, you are wrong.

This

BlueJuniper94 · 13/01/2026 13:27

You'll find people are happy with protest if it is in favour of something they broadly support.

LVhandbagsatdawn · 13/01/2026 13:29

The right to protest is enshrined in law (freedom of expression, freedom of thought, freedom of assembly).

Your wish to take a particular route to work or school is not. Go around.

Rights trump convenience.

BlueJuniper94 · 13/01/2026 13:29

Moonlightfrog · 13/01/2026 13:25

This

What's the point in posts like these? Either contribute/argue substantively or why are you bothering. It looks like you can't justify what you're saying, which isn't helpful to the side you claim to represent

MeganM3 · 13/01/2026 13:29

Because writing letters to your MP or posting on twitter doesn’t lead to any actual change.
The government often only takes action, or reverses their plans when people start taking physical action and making life difficult.

Most protesters don’t want to interrupt the average person, it’s an unfortunate side effect of getting seen and heard. If we look back in history, god what an inconvenience the suffragettes must have been. But where would we be now without all the havoc they reeked.

cramptramp · 13/01/2026 13:30

I agree with the right to protest. But I don’t think the protest should inconvenience or stop other people going about their daily lives.

PumpkinSparkleFairy · 13/01/2026 13:31

This is a very tedious argument OP, sorry.

How do you think you got the vote?? I mean really.

AndMilesToGo · 13/01/2026 13:31

Yes, those bloody suffragettes, chaining themselves to railings, inconveniencing golfers and getting in the way of horse racing. 🙄

PumpkinSparkleFairy · 13/01/2026 13:32

cramptramp · 13/01/2026 13:30

I agree with the right to protest. But I don’t think the protest should inconvenience or stop other people going about their daily lives.

Heaven forbid somebody suffer … some inconvenience 🙈 How horrifying!

tryingtobesogood · 13/01/2026 13:33

Hmmm, right wing agenda much? What is next, unions, strikes, labour laws?

Scottishlassie01 · 13/01/2026 13:33

Of course people should have the right to protest providing it’s done peacefully and does not prevent others from going about their lives, or damages property, violence, inciting hatred etc.

CraftyMintHedgehog · 13/01/2026 13:34

@Bathingnow it depends HOW someone is protesting so YABU and YANBU!

Protesting is about making yourself heard and seen and getting your message across.

What it's NOT about is violence, and putting lives at risk.

The example of stopping an ambulance is how NOT to protest as this has a huge impact on a human life.

Anyone who carries out an act of protest and puts lives at risk should be charged and jailed, as this isn't protesting, it's a criminal act.

Everyone should have the right to protest in the correct way.

HotFlashHeroine · 13/01/2026 13:34

Ever heard of Emmeline Pankhurst, Emily Davison, or my personal favourite suffragette, Mary Molony, who followed Churchill around for a week and rang a loud bell every time he tried to speak?

ginasevern · 13/01/2026 13:35

Everyone should have the right to peacefully protest. It's a basic tenet of any democracy and losing that right will have far wider consequences that you've even considered OP.

tryingtobesogood · 13/01/2026 13:35

All of that is legitimate and entirely compatible with democracy.

The right to protest is legitimate and compatible with democracy as laid out in the law of this country.

This is right wing chat bot bullshit designed to push an anti democracy agenda

Seagullstopitnow · 13/01/2026 13:36

cramptramp · 13/01/2026 13:30

I agree with the right to protest. But I don’t think the protest should inconvenience or stop other people going about their daily lives.

I agree with this.
Inconvenience MPs, CEOs, Head offices etc.
Sitting in a road whilst ordinary minimum wage people beg you to move so they can get to work and get paid isn't ever going to endear folks to your latest bandwagon cause.

ObliviousCoalmine · 13/01/2026 13:37

cramptramp · 13/01/2026 13:30

I agree with the right to protest. But I don’t think the protest should inconvenience or stop other people going about their daily lives.

Then you are missing the point of protesting.

OonaStubbs · 13/01/2026 13:38

I think protesting nowadays is counterproductive. It's always the same people that protest everything, there's always people with socialist worker placards at every protest, and it just gets peoples backs up and doesn't achieve anything except annoying people.

ObliviousCoalmine · 13/01/2026 13:38

The irony that you’re annoyed about being inconvenienced by people protesting the loss or threat of losing rights..do you know what’s REALLY inconvenient? Losing your sodding rights, that’s what.

Put down the Daily Mail, good lord.

BoredZelda · 13/01/2026 13:38

BlueJuniper94 · 13/01/2026 13:29

What's the point in posts like these? Either contribute/argue substantively or why are you bothering. It looks like you can't justify what you're saying, which isn't helpful to the side you claim to represent

Not this.

OonaStubbs · 13/01/2026 13:39

People should not be allowed to break the law just because they are "protesting".

AndMilesToGo · 13/01/2026 13:39

BoredZelda · 13/01/2026 13:38

Not this.

😀😀

crackofdoom · 13/01/2026 13:40

I dunno....I suppose it depends whether you value being able to vote, having a weekend and an 8 hour work day, the existence of gay and disabled rights and being paid as much as men.

None of which came about without protest.