When did I say it was a hate crime? Nor have I suggested "stifling protest". I do however think if that protest ended in spray painting of ACAB on a synagogue of an African American church that the outrage in RF posts would be palpable. And if a protest ends in vandalism, that does break the law, the protestors should be arrested regardless of race creed or color. And IMO, you are still not stifling protest.
The protest ended shortly after the vandalism event without any incident and there were no arrestation since the cops don't know precisely who has done it. In other words, minimal damage, no (other) problem, no story. Calling this a hate crime like the OP is excessive and your idea that "if ACAB was painted on a African American church the outrage would be bigger" is pure conspiracy and speculative at best since it's almost certain an African American church has some kind of graffiti of that nature on it by pure statistical probability.
Ergo, I do see some graffiti as mundane, but not all, depending on what it is trying to convey
I agree with that general sentiment. Does ACAB written on a Catholic church is particularly damaging? I don't think so.
What about protests that smash store windows and damage businesses? Those do happen, and have happened in 2020.
If that happens, a protest needs to be stopped quickly and efficiently, but it's still only moderate damage since those buildings are insurred for such things. Something bad and dangerous definitely happened and the perpetrator, if the can be found should be procecuted, but then again. If it happens and the fallout is well managed (no injury or death when the protest was broken, no further damage, etc.) then the sytem works and we shouldn't be especially alarmed by such occurance.This is more news worthy story though since the damage is spectacular and far from being as common as a graffiti on a stone building.
So are you saying it is OK to deface public property but not private property? and you have not answered the question. Would it be OK to key your car, would that to be mundane, since it would only ost you $25 and about 10 minutes to fix? Is there a difference between jaywalking and keying a car.
And for the record, did not include cutting in traffic, or jumping stop signals because cutting in traffic is a generalization and rather subjective, depending on how it is done, it can be a violation in NYS. Jumping stop signals always is a violation, And both are justification for a police officer fo pull the car over.
Not exactly sure what you are referring to when you wrote "a **** in public". You may want to look into
Public Lewdness: NY Penal Law 245.00 which is a class B misdemeanor that could get you up to 90 days in jail
My point is that nobody would ever write an article about someone receiving a ticket for jaywalking unless a big problem happened in the arrest. In fact most people wouldn't even report such crime since they are so minor (half of all crimes aren't reported to the police). My entire point is, yes vandalism is crime, but it's not a big crime and making a whole story about it is clearly overblowing things and that type of behavior is a lot more dangerous and damageable than the vandalism itself.