Diversify the tactics
We can first do away with the dichotomy of violence and non-violence, there are degrees of violence which escalate and deescalate depending on the situation. These authors can only speak as a part of a larger movement, and by consensus with affinites we can find what is appropriate to work towards that ultimate goal or common vision. It is up to each of us to find the comfortable point of challenge with the risks we are willing to take in order to get what we want.
As the classic saying goes, „united we stand, divided we fall“ and so it is our wish to have each others' tactics respected in that which leads to the ending of ecocide here and everywhere.
It comes down to willingness and ability to do what feels right to us, what our minds, bodies and emotions say a clear yes to. For some that might be sitting in a tree, as to be evicted and thus slowing down the cutting, decisions to safeguard nature possibly culminate in the meantime, for others appropriacy may be telling stories of the wonders of this forest and thus inspiring others to defend it, for those taking more risks, up against a highly violent punishment and reward based system, it could be throwing objects. We define this state as violent because by using the fear of punishment it quite obviously seeks to control us for its own benefit, instead of leading our lives the way we wish. It is also important to mention that these police people are so geared up with helmets and protective clothing that a stone hit is very unlikely to do any physical damage.
Yes we hate the police, we want to materially and imaterially annihilate policing, as they have hurt us and our loved ones with their violations; but our common intention is not revenge, it is rather to wake them the *#!< up, killing wildlife for monetary profit is NOT ok. If police officers experience flat tyres, or forest workers, destroyed machinery, and subsequently bring their lives more into question, what are they here for? Are they really on the path to happiness? And could perhaps choose to find a more fulfilling job, or even stand in solidarity with us protesters as they did in Thailand in 2013, we are creating the change we wish to see in the world. This insidious system that degrades us can be seen as a Jenga tower, the more of us that pull ourselves out, the more likely it is to collapse, and like the ugly cowshed that was dismantled to build treehouses here, we can build our world anew.
The history books they gave us in school do not talk about the riots that brought about decolonisation with Gandhi´s protests in India, or the Black Panthers actions in the civil rights movement, or the Zapatistas that autonomously keep their land, or how in Rojava they fight their oppressors, the state does not want us to know it is not invincible. But the more we take apart a capitalist system that does not care for the earth and it´s people, the more we realise that this is a violence that liberates.
It is up to us to keep each other safe, blaming and shaming of actions that we all don´t agree with is what those that work against us want us to do in order to more easily defeat us. The antidote to this is to bring each other closer, know ours and other´s reasons for why we do what we do. Take each other´s best interests as a part of our own, think, speak and act in ways that support a victorious forest occupation.
Further reading which may be of interest:
https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/peter-gelderloos-how-nonviolence...
https://de.crimethinc.com/zines/why-we-break-windows
https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/narcissa-black-kcbg-and-annonymo...