2020-05-31nytimes.com

So many things make America combustible right now: mass unemployment, a pandemic that's laid bare murderous health and economic inequalities, teenagers with little to do, police violence, right-wingers itching for a second civil war and a president eager to pour gasoline on every fire. "I think we're indeed in a moment where things are going to get a lot more tense before they get more peaceful," said the University of Michigan historian Heather Ann Thompson, who won the Pulitzer Prize for her 2016 book "Blood in the Water: The Attica Prison Uprising of 1971 and Its Legacy."

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These demonstrations were sparked by specific instances of police violence, but they also take place in a context of widespread health and economic devastation that's been disproportionately borne by people of color, especially those who are poor. "Sociologists have studied collective behavior, urban unrest for decades, and I think it's safe to say that the consensus view is that it's never just about a precipitating incident that resulted in the unrest," Darnell Hunt, dean of social sciences at U.C.L.A., told me. "It's always a collection of factors that make the situation ripe for collective behavior, unrest and mobilization."



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