I think a lot of people would at least be willing to listen, if there was any coherent message to listen to.
What do you not understand about the 99%/1% meme?
Do your confused "lot of people" think it refers to combine harvester production in the Soviet Union in the 1970s?
Perhaps this will help:
Why do I doubt police are regularly punched in the face and kicked in the groin with a diver's boot as part of their training?
Irrelevant. "Special Forces" training includes being given repeated electric shocks. This doesn't magically make torturing people with electricity non-violent.
Others have described the incident using terms such as "blasted with pepper-spray." I view it as being "misted with eye irritant."
Speaking charitably, your misperception that may be explained by ignorance.
Given the amount of time the protesters had to avoid the confrontation, their ability to prepare for the misting by covering their faces, and the calm manner in which police administered the irritant, I think my description is more accurate.
You're wrong. It is inaccurate. Several protestors was hospitalized by the attacks. They did not end up there due to eye irritation.
Perhaps you'd also describe waterboarding torture as "pouring water on someone's face".
Following your own link, Merriam-Webster online offers the following definition of violence:
No mention of extreme force, which you dishonestly added to it.
Following the embedded link, "violent" in turn is defined as:
and nowhere any mention of violence being "normally applied to situations involving extreme physical force"
There was nothing dishonest about my definition. But thanks for the link to prove it.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/violence
Adding "normally applied to situations involving extreme physical force" to the definition of violence was dishonest (see link).
However, notwithstanding this possibly unconscious deceit, attacking someone in a way that can put them in hospital, cause them permanent injury or death certainly falls under the umbrella of "extreme physical force".