(For context, I lived in Hong Kong from 2014 to late 2020)
I'm not sure why protestors would take tips from the HK protestors. After all, they were not at all successful.
I attribute this problem to two things:
1) Hong Kongers are culturally mostly British.
2) Modern British culture has no martial tradition whatsoever, and therefore no practical ability to mount a successful resistance to any kind of even moderately-equipped state actor that is willing to use force.
If you're dealing with a polite government that's strictly constrained by voter approval, then the HK strategy might work.
> and therefore no practical ability to mount a successful resistance to any kind of even moderately-equipped state actor that is willing to use force.
Culturally Ireland has more in common with Britain than differences and the IRA were at very least at it for a while.
I think Ireland's lack of a martial tradition from the British side was compensated for by the healthy martial tradition on the Catholic side. (No value judgement about the IRA intended.)
How is “martial tradition” related to protest effectiveness? You know there’s more to building long lived protest movements than street fighting, right? The doc itself lists many forms of effective action that had nothing to do with “martial tradition”.
This guide appears to be advocating poisoning people over prolonged periods of time. Wtf? I'm not sure how that is a 'protest guide' versus just ruminations on murder or general harm.
On page 68:
> There are classes we never tried but probably should have...
> Poisoner. Dictators and their troops need to eat. Chronic poison that takes weeks to take effect is an interesting option.