I've repeatedly pointed out that it is a senior police officer who makes 'reasonable belief' decisions and you say that you have read the bill. Despite that, you repeatedly refer to the Home Secretrary... No you are not 'understanding the bill correctly' and may wish to read it again.
So your argument is that rerouting traffic etc., causes serious annoyance to the local community and in the next breath say that people in London are used to it? Whilst the two aren't necessarily mutually exclusive, you are getting very close to that.
You have exposed a further deficiency in your reading of the bill, I think. 'Annoyance' only appears within the proposed statutory offence of public nuisance and not the protest provisions. As I have explained, public nuisance is already a common law offence, which means that its definition has been determined by judges over the last few centuries. In proposing to make it a statutory offence, the government is merely giving it a fixed definition that gives more certainty about what it involves. They are also simply giving effect to the recommendations of the Law Commision (an indepenedent body), which reported on the subject in 2015:
https://www.gov.uk/government/public...public-decency
I know that it is a matter of trust. That has been clear from the outset given your repeated references to the Home Secretary and your mistaken belief that the bill gives her powers to ban marches. If the people of this country had decided that Johnson was the less palatable of the two PMs that were on offer in 2019 and it was a Labour government that was bringing this bill forward to 'protect immigrant communties from harassment and London colleges from being disrupted from teaching critical race theory by the EDL', or similar, you would be cooing away about how wonderful it was that the government were protecting communities.
I won't respond to your straw manning point as it is based upon your incorrect reading of the bill and consequential belief that the word 'annoyance' appears in the protest provsions.
I think that bringing in an offence of damaging public monuments is populist nonsense and an uneccessary complication of the law. the Criminal Damage Act 1971 covers that behaviour.