In West Baltimore, some residents see rioting as a rational response to daily despair

When a few dozen members of the 300 Men March movement paraded somberly past William Stewart's West Baltimore stoop Tuesday afternoon, spreading their organization's message of peace and calm in matching black T-shirts, the 27-year-old rolled his eyes.
He begrudgingly returned their "Peace, brother" and "How y'all doing?" greetings. But he doesn't really agree with the stance the men who've dubbed themselves "Baltimore's anti-violence movement" — pleading for a stop to the violence and even physically separating protesters