Disgusted and angry is how many Vancouverites are feeling right now. Not about the hockey game, but rather the behavior of thousands of Metro Vancouverites in the riot that followed.

If you weren’t paying attention to the Stanley Cup playoffs yesterday and are wondering why all the windows of the Bay (as well as dozens of other stores in the downtown core) are now broken or boarded up with plywood, here’s what happened:

First, the Canucks suffered a terrible defeat at the hands of a grittier, harder-working team with an amazing goaltender. Boston is now the absolutely the greatest sports city in North America, with every pro-sports team winning a championship in the last five years. Mark Atkinson and I spent two weeks ribbing each other about the rivalry between the Bruins and Canucks and our two cities. We took shots at fans – I mentioned over and over the classless and prejudice behaviour of Boston fans more than a few times. I even suggested that it would be unruly Bostonians who rioted after they lost, not Vancouverites. But in the end, Boston – and their fans – won in every way last night.

Brock Anton – one of many assholes to stupid to understand his actions.

Vancouver, this riot wasn’t all of us – but it was many of us – and not enough people from our community did enough – or anything – to stop what happened and never needed to. Newscasters, our mayor and about 1.7 million people in the Twitterverse proclaimed deep into the night that “this was the work of a small number of people intent on starting trouble regardless of how the game ended.” Bullcrap. Thousands of drunken idiots hurled anything they could hurl, trashed buildings and got in fights. Many more stood as silent witnesses to the destruction, ignoring pleas from officials to vacate the downtown core. It’s always easier to act for an audience and thanks to the rioters’ traveling cheering section, there was always someone close-by to document their acts of vandalism and illegality and share it on Twitter and Facebook.

Post apocalyptic world or Downtown Vancouver after a Canucks game? You decide. – Photo courtesy of the National Post

Ultimately, the tens of thousands of other people from our community who hung out downtown well after the melee had begun, snapping pictures as if they were part of some adventure tourism experience, helped add a little more fuel to the fire. These people kept the mob mentality intact, gave looters and rioters places to hide from police, and – most importantly – occupied the Vancouver Police Department’s time.

Unbelievable. Disgusting. Embarrassing.

Second, there is the rest of the world. On behalf of this blog’s editorial team – one of whom was tear gassed last night – we apologize to you for this reprehensible behaviour and we ask you to please believe that this kind of thing is not an accurate reflection of our city or the people in it. But every community is not without its alcohol-influenced-misguided-troublemakers, and a few of these people made their mark last night. The thousands of people who will show up today and volunteer their time to clean up this mess, let these people speak for the culture and spirit of Vancouver.

Finally, a friend of mine from high school posted the following line on Facebook last night; it’s something that Canadians should take to heart: “Useless violence and destruction. No one in this country takes action for things that matter, yet will destroy a downtown when a hockey team loses.” I’m one of the most positive and hopeful people that you’ll ever meet, but even I’m searching my soul right now. So must Vancouver.