Forum - View topicActions Speak Louder than Words #BlackLivesMatter
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zaphdash
Posts: 620 Location: Brooklyn |
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The police are a gang. Here is a Minneapolis city councilor describing their protection racket. It's easy to cynically try to tug at people's heartstrings with tales of innocent victims of gang shootouts, but arresting the gang members doesn't bring the dead back to life. What we need instead is a society in which gang shootouts don't occur in the first place. This requires, as a very first step, acknowledging that crime has identifiable and remediable causes. The police, as a strictly reactionary institution, are not capable of addressing root causes. A gang shootout doesn't just flit into existence like Hawking radiation. Why do people even join gangs in the first place? Is that a question you've ever asked?
This is what is called a strawman. It's actually quite a good example of one. I don't think anybody even said "It should just be like Japan" (although I have only skimmed some of the posts in this thread and could have missed it, but in any case, I certainly didn't say it), yet you quote it as if those are verbatim the words that were used. Then you set about attempting to refute this argument that wasn't made in the first place. There is a lot of literature out there about what abolition could look like. It's not my job to distill it all for you -- if you are genuinely interested, feel free to read up. Just Google "alternatives to policing" for a start. But to very briefly summarize, it would necessarily be a multifaceted approach, in contrast to the one-size-fits-all, to-a-hammer-all-problems-are-a-nail approach of the police. It would include access to adequate health care services to address mental illness, drug addiction, etc, rather than calling cops on people with these problems. It would include harm reduction strategies, such as needle exchanges. It would include decriminalizing or legalizing low-level offenses, like marijuana possession, and no longer treating vulnerable populations like the homeless as criminals. It would include providing communities with adequate resources to help themselves as needed (one example would be social workers, as have already been raised earlier in the thread) and to address conflicts in the ways that they feel are most appropriate, invoking principles of transformative and/or restorative justice instead of relying on violence and prisons. And -- I've been hesitant to bring this up because I don't want to hijack the thread in another direction, but it bears mentioning -- it would include lifting up poor communities and dismantling the modes of socioeconomic oppression, including capitalism itself, that disadvantaged them in the first place.
I'm sure this will make the families of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and so many others feel much better.
Yes, the public should definitely reserve judgment until the police department has an opportunity to settle on the narrative they want to present, which, as we have seen, is always a fair and accurate recounting of events.
I don't cut off my hand when I scrape it because a scrape can be healed. The police cannot be fixed. Here is a brief article that does a solid job of explaining the problem. When a bad doctor kills or abuses patients, that doctor gets prosecuted. If other doctors want to close ranks around that doctor to protect him, they can also be prosecuted. Police are unique in this regard because they control the investigation and the evidence. You can throw out however many examples of other professions as you want, but every comparison will fail for this same reason. Police are the the only group in our society that consistently gets away with murder.
Cops are well down the list of most dangerous professions. BLS data shows that, e.g., sanitation workers (that is, the garbage man) are about 3x as likely to die on the job as cops, and sanitation is not even remotely the most dangerous profession (fishing is nearly 10x as dangerous as policing). And fewer than half of police deaths are a result of homicide -- car accidents are responsible for about the same number of police deaths, and other causes (e.g. suicide) round out the rest. Obviously, police do sometimes face dangerous situations, but overall the job is actually not notably dangerous. And any cop who can't handle the danger without going right for their gun should probably not be a cop. If you believe your job will involve risking your life, then you shouldn't take that job if you aren't prepared to risk your life.
That would be a fine explanation if a cop escaping prosecution were an isolated incident, but it's the norm. Few cops are prosecuted and fewer still are convicted. Do all of these cops have dirt on the rest of the department or on the prosecutor? If, unbelievably, the answer is yes, all that really indicates is a completely different set of systemic problems affecting police departments throughout the country, so still not a great answer!
A "knee-jerk reaction" to "appease the protesters" is fine. It is in fact better than a carefully considered proposal to drop the crumbs of fake "reform" that appears to do something but actually does nothing, as you (accurately) suggest that police would prefer to do. Your point about waiting for jobs to return is not quite accurate (after all, protests occur even when we are not experiencing mass unemployment), but I appreciate your making it anyway because it is actually achingly close to understanding how class is used to perpetuate existing power structures and resist meaningful change. But that might be a tangent inappropriate to this thread.
Protestors are made to foot the bill for our entire decrepit society. That's why they are protesting. This is not new.
This is all true (except the part about officers providing "protection"). This is why the police should be defunded instead.
This is also true. This is why the police should be defunded instead.
Sure. |
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SailorTralfamadore
Posts: 499 Location: Keep Austin Weeb |
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zaphdash, you're doing the Lord's work in this thread, truly.
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xyz
Posts: 243 |
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Americans don't realize they're spoiled. At least they're allowed to protest. Where I come from we behave and we don't protest or else we may disappear. So I don't get this protesting business.
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encrypted12345
Posts: 728 |
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I know, right? In my parent's home country, pissing off a mayor of a small city can be a death sentence. That said, those with the right to peaceably protest should if they genuinely believe in it, but the problem is that not everyone involved is peaceably doing so. |
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Jeff Bauersfeld
Posts: 110 |
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My intention was to include most philosophers, those on both sides," as white and privileged. Sorry if that wasn't clear.I think we'll just have to agree to disagree on the extent to which cultural and privilege bias influence the principles we philosophize about. |
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BadNewsBlues
Posts: 6378 |
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So the solution was “let’s give citizens who of course are not trained in the same techniques as police officers and even worse instances not trained on how to handle a firearm cartel Blanche to shoot people they think are a threat to them. If the people they shoot are unarmed and if it’s the gun owners who agitated the situation who cares”. These laws were not even at a partial level designed to benefit people who live in high crime areas or those where it takes the police time to get to a destination. The were specifically designed further expand Second Amendment rights at the state level with blatant disregard to the consequences let’s call it what it is. |
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zaphdash
Posts: 620 Location: Brooklyn |
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We are protesting against people who were arbitrarily killed for minor "misbehavior," or even when they did "behave," which is not so different from the situation as you are describing it in these other two countries. You talk about protesting like it is some nice thing that our government benevolently permits us to do, but it is a right that was fought for and secured over centuries of often violent struggle, which we could easily lose if we fail to exercise it. Power is the same in all countries; the only difference is how it is divided up. It is only shared with the people when they have taken it, it is never freely given. In the US and other Western countries, we may be spoiled in any number of other ways, but the ability to protest injustice is not one of them. (I don't want to go down a tangent that is too far off-topic for this thread, but I do think it is 100% worth acknowledging that at the same time Westerners were struggling to secure rights for ourselves, we were sending our militaries abroad to subjugate other people and deprive them of those same rights, and the oppressive regimes that persist around the world today -- probably including in the countries the two of you are referring to -- are a lasting effect of the colonial project. So I don't mean to come across as if I'm saying "we fought for these rights and you should too," because I am cognizant of the risks you would face in doing so and the fact that we are to blame for the fact that you face them. Nonetheless, I think that there is more value in oppressed people around the world expressing solidarity with each other than in regarding one group as being "spoiled" because you don't believe their struggle is as tough as someone else's.) |
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ranran-001
Posts: 546 |
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Whoever killed David Dorn, will be caught and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.
The same cannot be said of police officers when they commit similar criminal acts. Civil forfeiture, allows cops to just brazenly steal money and property from civilians. Qualified immunity allows cops to kill, mutilate, and brutally injure civilians with no criminal repercussions. And when a cop does make it to trial, the entire process is altered so that the cop gets as much leeway as possible in ways no civilian defendant would get. Dorn's death was sad, but its very possible justice will be met once the suspects are apprehended. George Floyd's death, is likely to never get justice even when there is a video as plain as day. |
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Tempest
I Run this place.
ANN Publisher Posts: 10468 Location: Do not message me for support. |
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I think we're just going back and forth now. Everyone is picking apart everyone else's point, but no one is really trying to understand.
We're at the point where everyone can say, "I'm aware of and understand your points, and I still disagree." I'm thinking it's time to lock this. |
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Puniyo
Posts: 271 |
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I'm largely in the same boat. I know and am not denying these things happen in my country too, but I've been in a small town where we're a bit disconnected from the outside world. Everyone else in my town is pretty confused about what's going on. It's a poor town with big drug busts every other week, yet people like the police enough to stop and talk to them. If anything, people here think the police are a bit toothless. That said, the police in my town police operates a bit different from the city where I'm originally from, in a way I think would fix a lot of America's immediate problems.
We have a system a little similar to this in my town. Real cops are reserved for really serious situations only, whereas we have 'community support officers' to respond to everything else. They have less powers (they can't make proper arrests or carry guns), and their main purpose is to diffuse or de-escalate situations so that arrests won't have to be made. They're officers in name, but what they actually do is social work with a side of filing reports. They also have a ton of extra rules to follow and mandatory visits with a psych/therapist. However it's important they're able to delegate serious incidents to real cops though - are social workers gonna be able to do detective work? Walk into active shooter situations? Diffuse physical fights? Of course not. A lot of people who propose these plans seem to lack a fundamental understanding of how many different kinds of cops and how many divisions and different specialisations are within the police force. Another common suggestion is community-lead organisations - this is terrifying! All you need is the majority opinion of the community to be racist, homophobic, xenophobic, etc... 90% of my interactions with cops have been them responding to me being the subject of xenophobic attacks. I know for sure I don't trust my xenophobic neighbours to protect me. I'd be asking the perpetrator for protection, plus personal bias would run riot.
Surely the answer is accountability laws and an outside, non-police regulatory body to conduct investiagtions. Something like Inquest. If they didn't know they can get away with it, I'm sure the number of incidents would drop harshly. Last edited by Puniyo on Tue Jun 09, 2020 4:51 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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ATastySub
Past ANN Contributor
Posts: 703 |
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American cops are the racist/homophobic/xenophobic force. |
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Puniyo
Posts: 271 |
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Are the black, gay and immigrant cops racist, homophobic and sexist too? It's almost as if... generalising whole groups of people is bad and illogical? This aside though, I don't deny the US has more complicated issues (in my country a racist or homophobic remark can land you a fine or get you fired from any job) but that doesn't make any of these suggestions less insane. I am all for a reform, but if idiotic changes are made in the US, the rest of the world will likely follow even if it isn't working. |
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ATastySub
Past ANN Contributor
Posts: 703 |
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Yes. Turns out that as long as there has been oppressed people there are those among them that are happy to sell out their communities for their own gain. They can claim whatever they want, but at the end of the day they work for an institution that is all those things, and which continues to show their disregard and barbarism at this very moment, and willfully do so. Good try on that gotcha though, but you probably shouldn’t be trying to do tokenism for the police. They do it far more often than you and with similar levels of success. |
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Puniyo
Posts: 271 |
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Again, as someone from a place where that isn't the case, I find it hard to wrap my head around how it's possible for an institution to be all these things, when it (is supposed to) enforce laws that are against the oppression of these people. Plus no institution is inherently anything, they're just groups of people and generally a reflection of those in charge. Not being an asshole, genuinely asking. A lot of people keep coming out with these statements but can never qualify them. You can't expect to every non-American to understand all the nuances of what goes on in your country. Last edited by Puniyo on Wed Jun 10, 2020 12:54 pm; edited 3 times in total |
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Gina Szanboti
Posts: 11642 |
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This might help you get a handle on it. He does a good job of breaking down how it all broke down. https://youtu.be/Wf4cea5oObY |
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