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US Politics Mega-thread - Page 2409

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Now that we have a new thread, in order to ensure that this thread continues to meet TL standards and follows the proper guidelines, we will be enforcing the rules in the OP more strictly. Be sure to give them a complete and thorough read before posting!

NOTE: When providing a source, please provide a very brief summary on what it's about and what purpose it adds to the discussion. The supporting statement should clearly explain why the subject is relevant and needs to be discussed. Please follow this rule especially for tweets.

Your supporting statement should always come BEFORE you provide the source.


If you have any questions, comments, concern, or feedback regarding the USPMT, then please use this thread: http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/website-feedback/510156-us-politics-thread
Falling
Profile Blog Joined June 2009
Canada11363 Posts
June 10 2020 15:14 GMT
#48161
If you shoot for the stars and miss, you at least hit the moon or something.

Or you get dismissed out of hand because it looks like the trajectory is straight into the ground, rather than some sort of upward direction, stars or otherwise.
Moderator"In Trump We Trust," says the Golden Goat of Mars Lago. Have faith and believe! Trump moves in mysterious ways. Like the wind he blows where he pleases...
GreenHorizons
Profile Blog Joined April 2011
United States23295 Posts
June 10 2020 15:15 GMT
#48162
On June 11 2020 00:01 DarkPlasmaBall wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +
On June 10 2020 23:19 GreenHorizons wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 10 2020 23:12 DarkPlasmaBall wrote:
On June 10 2020 22:42 GreenHorizons wrote:
On June 10 2020 22:26 DarkPlasmaBall wrote:
On June 10 2020 11:20 JimmiC wrote:
There is so much to unpack when it comes to the US and the issues around the police and crime. You have the rampant systemic racism. You have civic governments often looking for arrest "stats" to help in the next election instead of actual results. You have a massive amount of poor people considering the countries wealth. You have prohibition and a unwinnable "war on drugs" You have the mass, mostly unregulated gun ownership making being police a much more dangerous job than most countries. You have a for profit healthcare system which means prevention is not a priority since they want more customers and their customers to stay for longer, which is the opposite of what your society should want. You have a for profit prison system which means to succeed they need more customers who stay longer, which is exactly the opposite of what your society should want. You don't tackle the mental health issues of the poor or of the police. You have a police forces and unions who operate like gangs protecting their own regardless if they should and massive amounts of PSTD since there is so many shootings (both at them and others) where the police are first on the scene or involved.

Simply defunding the police is not going to accomplish anything without understanding that none of these issues work independently of each other.

The first and easiest step would be to tackle all the gun issues, by regulating it FAR FAR more and making them so much less accessible. Your police are armed to their teeth because so is the populous. Can you imagine the stress of every traffic stop even being a possible interaction with some one with a gun? You can make a great case for why police forces need to make a report for each time they uuholster their gun in other countries, not so much in the US. You could vastly disarm the police if you disarm the populous as well. It is very strange for me to that people on the left even are against this when it works EVERY where else. It is clear why it does not happen, gun and weapons companies are big business and make big donations to all politician's, and the more they can sell to people the more they can sell to the police. It is a vicious circle that everyone on the outside knows the solution for but some how the NRA's amazing marketing campaign has convinced people that guns some how equal freedom, hell they even took some of the wording out of the second amendment to the point where many Americans believe it says their slogan to help them sell more guns rather than what was actually written. (The actual "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/second_amendment

What the NRA doesn’t like to admit is that guns were regulated in early America. People deemed untrustworthy — such as British loyalists unwilling to swear an oath to the new nation — were disarmed. The sale of guns to Native Americans was outlawed. Boston made it illegal to store a loaded firearm in any home or warehouse. Some states conducted door-to-door registration surveys so the militia could “impress” those weapons if necessary. Men had to attend musters where their guns would be inspected by the government.

https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/10/12/16418524/nra-second-amendment-guns-violence

If American's do not end their gun issues, they will likely never fix their police. This has become so accepted that the satirical news site the Onion has been able to regularly repromote its article “‘No Way To Prevent This,’ Says Only Nation Where This Regularly Happens.”



But if that is a unwinable battle the next best place to start is dealing with the nations mental health issues.


I really doubt that all the people who want to be police are psychopath's as has been suggested, heck I don't think there would even be enough psycopaths. But I don't doubt that given the massive stress, horrible events they both witness as first responders (not just murders, rapes, assaults and so on but also gruesome car accidents and so on), that they become very desensitized to violence and gain more and more prejudices both because of the culture they are surrounded with, but also because of the horrible things they see and experience. If you blame the people in the police for the problems instead of the system, you are no different than the people who blame the people committing the crimes instead of the system. On a case by case basis either can be true, but when it is this widespread it becomes clear that the conditions of the system are what is broken, and what breaks the people.

So this means making sure that everybody poor, rich, everyone in between has medical care, that includes mental health. It means moving the system from treating the symptoms (all stages criminally, policing and incarceration, and healthcare for that matter) to treating the causes. There is actually a huge savings in doing this for the overall system the problem is because of how everything is structured "for profit" the people who could are incentivized not too. The easiest way to do this is make it government funded. That way the government and the people are better off if the system works better and therefore costs less. Right now hospitals want you to be sick (it is not surprising that the US has some of the worst overall health) and the prisons want you to get jailed, stay jailed and come back to jail once you get out. (In fact judges have gotten in trouble for taking kick backs from prisons for sentencing people longer and to their facilities). So for socialist's the government oversight is likely a positive and for capitalists, all the money being wasted in that system can now be spent on various other goods. And all the criminals in jail can now because customers and positive members of the economy.

The people who are against the "defund the police" movement are right to be questing it, because no system in the world operates without some sort of policing. You can't stop paying the police, and make the job even more stressful and worse for mental health, while you are doing it and expect all the violence to magically go away.

What you need is a full system overhaul where all the various stages are pulling together for the same goal. No one has found the perfect system yet. But there are many that are functioning a lot better than the US.

The Netherlands would be a great place to start since they are actually closing prisons because they don't have enough "customers" instead of bursting at the seems.

https://johnhoward.ca/blog/dutch-closing-prisons/

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/dec/12/why-are-there-so-few-prisoners-in-the-netherlands

And there are a bunch of other countries that you could also look at that have actual well (MUCH MUCH better than the US) functioning systems and take the best aspects from all of them.

It is actually more drastic societal changes that are needed to improve the situation than defunding the police. And it means spending a lot more money up front to end up saving even a bunch more at the end.

It does not take much analysis to see that taking the police completely out of the picture when you see how well armed the Boogaloo boys, Proud boys (strange how they all call themselves boys, I guess they also know they are not mature enough to be men, but I digress), gangs and various other well armed and bad intentioned groups that left to their own idea of justice will not end as a benefit to society. You don't even have to get into the criminal gangs in the US and beyond, because you have so many "legal" or legal adjacent gun owners who are not the people you want in control of justice.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boogaloo_movement#:~:text=The boogaloo movement, members of,they call the "boogaloo".

This seems like another case of American exceptionalism where you can easily look at other countries and see what they are doing and copy them, hell talk to them and see how you can do what they do and do it better. Otherwise if the answer is more of the same you are going to keep getting the same results. Defunding the police is just going to make people buy more guns, I bet it already has. Sure "guns don't kill people, people kill people" but you are not putting any effort or money into fixing the people, you are just creating more messed up people who kill people with more guns. You need to attack the root issues which is way to many mental health issues and culture that creates more. Then you mix in a fetishist attitude about guns and gun violence and you get what you have now.

The answer is not some confusing message and something that has never worked anywhere. The answer is in finding out what has worked in other places the best and customize it to work for your unique setting.


I've slowly learned that the "Defund The Police" movement and related sets of ideas are extremely diverse, and everything falling under that three-word catchphrase can end up hiding some of the more constructive, comprehensive solutions. For example, I've seen many clarifying posts and messages that the "Defund The Police" movement actually means something like this:+ Show Spoiler +


[image loading]

Now, a lot of these exploratory ideas are things I can easily get behind. I think these potential options would actually help those who want to protect and serve communities, because it would put less pressure on cops. They're currently asked to do wayyy more than they're trained to do (or that any one person should be expected to do, for that matter). The proponents of these ideas are intending to alleviate that burden and allocate a significant amount of resources towards additional, necessary professionals who can work parallel to the police, and often resolve conflicts without the required intervention of law enforcement.

The biggest problem, I think, is that the phrase "Defund The Police" does a poor, unclear job of getting these points across. We have to keep in mind that a large percentage of Americans couldn't even manage to comprehend a three-word catchphrase that was literally and semantically crystal clear ("Black Lives Matter") without throwing in absurd extrapolations about other lives not mattering... if we're starting off with another three-word message that already isn't equally clear because of the word "Defund" and has a negative connotation attached to it, then the DTP message is already dead on arrival. I'm sure that there are other catchphrases that can be used that could have a better chance of resonating with people, like "Alleviate Blue Burden" or something else that's equally loaded and contrived. People can look at that and actually ask what that means (or, if they recognize Blue = Police, probably infer that the movement is to help the police in some way... which might not be the worst context in the world, especially if we're trying to persuade more people to join the cause).


All this being said, if you're an advocate of completely defunding and completely abolishing law enforcement, then the phrase "Defund The Police" does a pretty good job of laying out your central thesis. If, instead, you're looking for a broader financial reform that includes law enforcement and a variety of other entities, then I think you need a better, broader catchphrase.


It's important to note that "defund the police" comes specifically out of the abolitionist movement. Work that goes back decades. Work that included dialectically moving past reformist strategies like you see there. The stuff you're seeing there DPB is the centrist reactionary cooption of that phrase and is at the core of the discordance between the tepid reforms listed and the phrase "defund the police".

Now reformists are free to do what they wish, but it's important to know this distinction and not try to tell people that do want to abolish the police (because reformism has categorically failed them) that they actually want to go back to fruitless reformist strategies.


That's definitely fair, and it sounds like those who don't want to literally defund and abolish the police should probably run a parallel movement and message.

On June 10 2020 23:03 PhoenixVoid wrote:
Hashtag slogan-making is a tricky thing. Defund The Police is an excellent bundle of firewood to throw on the flames and are not the words worth dying on. You can play semantics all you want over, "Well, we don't literally mean defund or abolish the police and instead here's a 10-point proposal list of reforms you aren't looking at", but the public has a tendency to latch on simple phrasing that skirts around nuance. I'd think "Rebuild the Police", "Rethink Policing" or "Rebuild Justice" strikes me as the tone that would satisfy most. We're talking an enormously complicated problem spanning policing, criminal justice, the legal system, the medical industry, prisons, institutional racism, hospitals, education and economic fairness that cannot be captured by three words that imply on face value that slashing police budgets will correct the problem that the Floyd protests exposed.


Agreed. A different and distinct message would probably help, for both movements' sakes.


Appreciated. Also important to note that what you're talking about is a counterrevolutionary movement and stands in opposition of defunding and abolishing the police, despite the superficially overlapping goals.


Sure; I think it's very clear that many people who want police reform and other progress are more interested in working within the system and making more measured changes, which would definitely be different than abolishing the police (and vice-versa).

On June 10 2020 23:33 NewSunshine wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 10 2020 23:15 Mohdoo wrote:
I think starting the goal post super far away is great for these types of movements. Yell at centrists you want to destroy the entire institution of policing and they'll actually give a shit and listen to you.

If you shoot for the stars and miss, you at least hit the moon or something.

I tend to agree. If the messaging is on the far end, the compromise just comes when it's time for implementation. If you start compromising before that point, then the compromise goes too far and you don't end up getting almost anything you needed. If messaging about defunding and abolition results in a more level approach involving rebuilding what exists in a more accountable way by the time it comes to action, that's still valuable progress. If you start your message with the compromise built-in, you end up selling the cause short.

It's easy to forget that there is a constant disconnect that exists between an ideology and the messaging it uses. Trumpers were and probably still are happy with their "Build the Wall" messaging even though it never resulted in a wall. It's just how it works.


I generally appreciate the strategy of trying to start as close to your ideal side as possible, so that any ground you give through compromise still nets you a greater win than if you started exactly in the middle and conceded more. That being said, there's also the risk that starting off at too extreme of a position may deter the other side from even coming to the table to talk with you (i.e., "they're not serious in making an equitable deal if we need to start at such an extreme position").
It seems to be all about a careful balancing act between getting as much of your side as possible while still convincing the other side that you're willing to negotiate with them in good faith.


I respect you and your efforts to better navigate this issue by getting informed from where you can. I implore you and anyone else that wants to seriously understand the abolitionist perspective (and get a sense of the robustness behind the work) ignore me and the particular platform (for people with bias against them), and give this person a listen.

While many people, including myself are relatively new to the abolitionist movement Ruth Wilson Gilmore has a deep and personal understanding of the work, a personal and generational history in the liberation movement in the US, and a lifetime of experience in this particular struggle between reform and radical changes to police and prison.

She discusses and makes a case of sorts in favor of abolition.

It's an hour+ of interview I've only partially gotten through at this point, but going forward would love to discuss the content with anyone that might consider themselves curious about abolition but drawn to more traditional channels of reform.
"People like to look at history and think 'If that was me back then, I would have...' We're living through history, and the truth is, whatever you are doing now is probably what you would have done then" "Scratch a Liberal..."
DarkPlasmaBall
Profile Blog Joined March 2010
United States44599 Posts
June 10 2020 15:34 GMT
#48163
On June 11 2020 00:15 GreenHorizons wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 11 2020 00:01 DarkPlasmaBall wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +
On June 10 2020 23:19 GreenHorizons wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 10 2020 23:12 DarkPlasmaBall wrote:
On June 10 2020 22:42 GreenHorizons wrote:
On June 10 2020 22:26 DarkPlasmaBall wrote:
On June 10 2020 11:20 JimmiC wrote:
There is so much to unpack when it comes to the US and the issues around the police and crime. You have the rampant systemic racism. You have civic governments often looking for arrest "stats" to help in the next election instead of actual results. You have a massive amount of poor people considering the countries wealth. You have prohibition and a unwinnable "war on drugs" You have the mass, mostly unregulated gun ownership making being police a much more dangerous job than most countries. You have a for profit healthcare system which means prevention is not a priority since they want more customers and their customers to stay for longer, which is the opposite of what your society should want. You have a for profit prison system which means to succeed they need more customers who stay longer, which is exactly the opposite of what your society should want. You don't tackle the mental health issues of the poor or of the police. You have a police forces and unions who operate like gangs protecting their own regardless if they should and massive amounts of PSTD since there is so many shootings (both at them and others) where the police are first on the scene or involved.

Simply defunding the police is not going to accomplish anything without understanding that none of these issues work independently of each other.

The first and easiest step would be to tackle all the gun issues, by regulating it FAR FAR more and making them so much less accessible. Your police are armed to their teeth because so is the populous. Can you imagine the stress of every traffic stop even being a possible interaction with some one with a gun? You can make a great case for why police forces need to make a report for each time they uuholster their gun in other countries, not so much in the US. You could vastly disarm the police if you disarm the populous as well. It is very strange for me to that people on the left even are against this when it works EVERY where else. It is clear why it does not happen, gun and weapons companies are big business and make big donations to all politician's, and the more they can sell to people the more they can sell to the police. It is a vicious circle that everyone on the outside knows the solution for but some how the NRA's amazing marketing campaign has convinced people that guns some how equal freedom, hell they even took some of the wording out of the second amendment to the point where many Americans believe it says their slogan to help them sell more guns rather than what was actually written. (The actual "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/second_amendment

What the NRA doesn’t like to admit is that guns were regulated in early America. People deemed untrustworthy — such as British loyalists unwilling to swear an oath to the new nation — were disarmed. The sale of guns to Native Americans was outlawed. Boston made it illegal to store a loaded firearm in any home or warehouse. Some states conducted door-to-door registration surveys so the militia could “impress” those weapons if necessary. Men had to attend musters where their guns would be inspected by the government.

https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/10/12/16418524/nra-second-amendment-guns-violence

If American's do not end their gun issues, they will likely never fix their police. This has become so accepted that the satirical news site the Onion has been able to regularly repromote its article “‘No Way To Prevent This,’ Says Only Nation Where This Regularly Happens.”



But if that is a unwinable battle the next best place to start is dealing with the nations mental health issues.


I really doubt that all the people who want to be police are psychopath's as has been suggested, heck I don't think there would even be enough psycopaths. But I don't doubt that given the massive stress, horrible events they both witness as first responders (not just murders, rapes, assaults and so on but also gruesome car accidents and so on), that they become very desensitized to violence and gain more and more prejudices both because of the culture they are surrounded with, but also because of the horrible things they see and experience. If you blame the people in the police for the problems instead of the system, you are no different than the people who blame the people committing the crimes instead of the system. On a case by case basis either can be true, but when it is this widespread it becomes clear that the conditions of the system are what is broken, and what breaks the people.

So this means making sure that everybody poor, rich, everyone in between has medical care, that includes mental health. It means moving the system from treating the symptoms (all stages criminally, policing and incarceration, and healthcare for that matter) to treating the causes. There is actually a huge savings in doing this for the overall system the problem is because of how everything is structured "for profit" the people who could are incentivized not too. The easiest way to do this is make it government funded. That way the government and the people are better off if the system works better and therefore costs less. Right now hospitals want you to be sick (it is not surprising that the US has some of the worst overall health) and the prisons want you to get jailed, stay jailed and come back to jail once you get out. (In fact judges have gotten in trouble for taking kick backs from prisons for sentencing people longer and to their facilities). So for socialist's the government oversight is likely a positive and for capitalists, all the money being wasted in that system can now be spent on various other goods. And all the criminals in jail can now because customers and positive members of the economy.

The people who are against the "defund the police" movement are right to be questing it, because no system in the world operates without some sort of policing. You can't stop paying the police, and make the job even more stressful and worse for mental health, while you are doing it and expect all the violence to magically go away.

What you need is a full system overhaul where all the various stages are pulling together for the same goal. No one has found the perfect system yet. But there are many that are functioning a lot better than the US.

The Netherlands would be a great place to start since they are actually closing prisons because they don't have enough "customers" instead of bursting at the seems.

https://johnhoward.ca/blog/dutch-closing-prisons/

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/dec/12/why-are-there-so-few-prisoners-in-the-netherlands

And there are a bunch of other countries that you could also look at that have actual well (MUCH MUCH better than the US) functioning systems and take the best aspects from all of them.

It is actually more drastic societal changes that are needed to improve the situation than defunding the police. And it means spending a lot more money up front to end up saving even a bunch more at the end.

It does not take much analysis to see that taking the police completely out of the picture when you see how well armed the Boogaloo boys, Proud boys (strange how they all call themselves boys, I guess they also know they are not mature enough to be men, but I digress), gangs and various other well armed and bad intentioned groups that left to their own idea of justice will not end as a benefit to society. You don't even have to get into the criminal gangs in the US and beyond, because you have so many "legal" or legal adjacent gun owners who are not the people you want in control of justice.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boogaloo_movement#:~:text=The boogaloo movement, members of,they call the "boogaloo".

This seems like another case of American exceptionalism where you can easily look at other countries and see what they are doing and copy them, hell talk to them and see how you can do what they do and do it better. Otherwise if the answer is more of the same you are going to keep getting the same results. Defunding the police is just going to make people buy more guns, I bet it already has. Sure "guns don't kill people, people kill people" but you are not putting any effort or money into fixing the people, you are just creating more messed up people who kill people with more guns. You need to attack the root issues which is way to many mental health issues and culture that creates more. Then you mix in a fetishist attitude about guns and gun violence and you get what you have now.

The answer is not some confusing message and something that has never worked anywhere. The answer is in finding out what has worked in other places the best and customize it to work for your unique setting.


I've slowly learned that the "Defund The Police" movement and related sets of ideas are extremely diverse, and everything falling under that three-word catchphrase can end up hiding some of the more constructive, comprehensive solutions. For example, I've seen many clarifying posts and messages that the "Defund The Police" movement actually means something like this:+ Show Spoiler +


[image loading]

Now, a lot of these exploratory ideas are things I can easily get behind. I think these potential options would actually help those who want to protect and serve communities, because it would put less pressure on cops. They're currently asked to do wayyy more than they're trained to do (or that any one person should be expected to do, for that matter). The proponents of these ideas are intending to alleviate that burden and allocate a significant amount of resources towards additional, necessary professionals who can work parallel to the police, and often resolve conflicts without the required intervention of law enforcement.

The biggest problem, I think, is that the phrase "Defund The Police" does a poor, unclear job of getting these points across. We have to keep in mind that a large percentage of Americans couldn't even manage to comprehend a three-word catchphrase that was literally and semantically crystal clear ("Black Lives Matter") without throwing in absurd extrapolations about other lives not mattering... if we're starting off with another three-word message that already isn't equally clear because of the word "Defund" and has a negative connotation attached to it, then the DTP message is already dead on arrival. I'm sure that there are other catchphrases that can be used that could have a better chance of resonating with people, like "Alleviate Blue Burden" or something else that's equally loaded and contrived. People can look at that and actually ask what that means (or, if they recognize Blue = Police, probably infer that the movement is to help the police in some way... which might not be the worst context in the world, especially if we're trying to persuade more people to join the cause).


All this being said, if you're an advocate of completely defunding and completely abolishing law enforcement, then the phrase "Defund The Police" does a pretty good job of laying out your central thesis. If, instead, you're looking for a broader financial reform that includes law enforcement and a variety of other entities, then I think you need a better, broader catchphrase.


It's important to note that "defund the police" comes specifically out of the abolitionist movement. Work that goes back decades. Work that included dialectically moving past reformist strategies like you see there. The stuff you're seeing there DPB is the centrist reactionary cooption of that phrase and is at the core of the discordance between the tepid reforms listed and the phrase "defund the police".

Now reformists are free to do what they wish, but it's important to know this distinction and not try to tell people that do want to abolish the police (because reformism has categorically failed them) that they actually want to go back to fruitless reformist strategies.


That's definitely fair, and it sounds like those who don't want to literally defund and abolish the police should probably run a parallel movement and message.

On June 10 2020 23:03 PhoenixVoid wrote:
Hashtag slogan-making is a tricky thing. Defund The Police is an excellent bundle of firewood to throw on the flames and are not the words worth dying on. You can play semantics all you want over, "Well, we don't literally mean defund or abolish the police and instead here's a 10-point proposal list of reforms you aren't looking at", but the public has a tendency to latch on simple phrasing that skirts around nuance. I'd think "Rebuild the Police", "Rethink Policing" or "Rebuild Justice" strikes me as the tone that would satisfy most. We're talking an enormously complicated problem spanning policing, criminal justice, the legal system, the medical industry, prisons, institutional racism, hospitals, education and economic fairness that cannot be captured by three words that imply on face value that slashing police budgets will correct the problem that the Floyd protests exposed.


Agreed. A different and distinct message would probably help, for both movements' sakes.


Appreciated. Also important to note that what you're talking about is a counterrevolutionary movement and stands in opposition of defunding and abolishing the police, despite the superficially overlapping goals.


Sure; I think it's very clear that many people who want police reform and other progress are more interested in working within the system and making more measured changes, which would definitely be different than abolishing the police (and vice-versa).

On June 10 2020 23:33 NewSunshine wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 10 2020 23:15 Mohdoo wrote:
I think starting the goal post super far away is great for these types of movements. Yell at centrists you want to destroy the entire institution of policing and they'll actually give a shit and listen to you.

If you shoot for the stars and miss, you at least hit the moon or something.

I tend to agree. If the messaging is on the far end, the compromise just comes when it's time for implementation. If you start compromising before that point, then the compromise goes too far and you don't end up getting almost anything you needed. If messaging about defunding and abolition results in a more level approach involving rebuilding what exists in a more accountable way by the time it comes to action, that's still valuable progress. If you start your message with the compromise built-in, you end up selling the cause short.

It's easy to forget that there is a constant disconnect that exists between an ideology and the messaging it uses. Trumpers were and probably still are happy with their "Build the Wall" messaging even though it never resulted in a wall. It's just how it works.


I generally appreciate the strategy of trying to start as close to your ideal side as possible, so that any ground you give through compromise still nets you a greater win than if you started exactly in the middle and conceded more. That being said, there's also the risk that starting off at too extreme of a position may deter the other side from even coming to the table to talk with you (i.e., "they're not serious in making an equitable deal if we need to start at such an extreme position").
It seems to be all about a careful balancing act between getting as much of your side as possible while still convincing the other side that you're willing to negotiate with them in good faith.


I respect you and your efforts to better navigate this issue by getting informed from where you can. I implore you and anyone else that wants to seriously understand the abolitionist perspective (and get a sense of the robustness behind the work) ignore me and the particular platform (for people with bias against them), and give this person a listen.

While many people, including myself are relatively new to the abolitionist movement Ruth Wilson Gilmore has a deep and personal understanding of the work, a personal and generational history in the liberation movement in the US, and a lifetime of experience in this particular struggle between reform and radical changes to police and prison.

She discusses and makes a case of sorts in favor of abolition.

It's an hour+ of interview I've only partially gotten through at this point, but going forward would love to discuss the content with anyone that might consider themselves curious about abolition but drawn to more traditional channels of reform.


I'll listen to it when I can, thanks for the recommendation!
"There is nothing more satisfying than looking at a crowd of people and helping them get what I love." ~Day[9] Daily #100
Mohdoo
Profile Joined August 2007
United States15713 Posts
June 10 2020 15:39 GMT
#48164
On June 11 2020 00:14 Falling wrote:
Show nested quote +
If you shoot for the stars and miss, you at least hit the moon or something.

Or you get dismissed out of hand because it looks like the trajectory is straight into the ground, rather than some sort of upward direction, stars or otherwise.


Trump's entire campaign, the tea party and Obamacare disagree. People aren't invigorated by middle solutions, they want vision and confidence. Wishy washy bullshit about politely asking police to not choke people is nonsense. Fundamentally disarming the police's ability to operate with immunity is what we need. Every middle of the aisle solution I have seen still fundamentally relies on the idea that most cops are good people. They. Are. Not. We have seen way too many examples over the last 2 weeks of extreme solidarity with "bad apples".

It is time to stop respecting police and treat them like the deviants they are. Most middle ground solutions still pretend police are good people and I won't entertain that kind of nonsense.
farvacola
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
United States18832 Posts
Last Edited: 2020-06-10 16:00:30
June 10 2020 16:00 GMT
#48165
On June 11 2020 00:39 Mohdoo wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 11 2020 00:14 Falling wrote:
If you shoot for the stars and miss, you at least hit the moon or something.

Or you get dismissed out of hand because it looks like the trajectory is straight into the ground, rather than some sort of upward direction, stars or otherwise.


Trump's entire campaign, the tea party and Obamacare disagree. People aren't invigorated by middle solutions, they want vision and confidence. Wishy washy bullshit about politely asking police to not choke people is nonsense. Fundamentally disarming the police's ability to operate with immunity is what we need. Every middle of the aisle solution I have seen still fundamentally relies on the idea that most cops are good people. They. Are. Not. We have seen way too many examples over the last 2 weeks of extreme solidarity with "bad apples".

It is time to stop respecting police and treat them like the deviants they are. Most middle ground solutions still pretend police are good people and I won't entertain that kind of nonsense.

Remember when Trump promised to build a wall along the US-Mexico border and get Mexico to pay for it, and then everyone dismissed him and his campaign floundered? Yeah me neither.
"when the Dead Kennedys found out they had skinhead fans, they literally wrote a song titled 'Nazi Punks Fuck Off'"
Erasme
Profile Blog Joined February 2011
Bahamas15899 Posts
June 10 2020 16:06 GMT
#48166
Tucker Carlson blasted heavily Mitch yesterday for his speech. Seems like a bad move considering how shakey his seat is atm.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d7lxwFEB6FI “‘Drain the swamp’? Stupid saying, means nothing, but you guys loved it so I kept saying it.”
farvacola
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
United States18832 Posts
June 10 2020 16:11 GMT
#48167
There's an actual, if not still remote, chance that Mitch loses to Amy McGrath, so I'm keeping a close eye on what's going down in Kentucky.
"when the Dead Kennedys found out they had skinhead fans, they literally wrote a song titled 'Nazi Punks Fuck Off'"
Danglars
Profile Blog Joined August 2010
United States12133 Posts
June 10 2020 16:26 GMT
#48168
On June 11 2020 00:14 Falling wrote:
Show nested quote +
If you shoot for the stars and miss, you at least hit the moon or something.

Or you get dismissed out of hand because it looks like the trajectory is straight into the ground, rather than some sort of upward direction, stars or otherwise.

I think the second defund the police caught on, the chance for national change ended. Not dense inner cities with heavily leftist voting populations, but across the country.

It's just all nonsensical. Places like Minneapolis actually mean defund the police, since there are real city council members advocating for exactly that. Seattle is trending that way too. Activists took over some blocks after police bailed on East Precinct, declared it an autonomous zone, and published a list of demands:
  1. The Seattle Police Department and attached court system are beyond reform. We do not request reform, we demand abolition. We demand that the Seattle Council and the Mayor defund and abolish the Seattle Police Department and the attached Criminal Justice Apparatus. This means 100% of funding, including existing pensions for Seattle Police. At an equal level of priority we also demand that the city disallow the operations of ICE in the city of Seattle.
  2. In the transitionary period between now and the dismantlement of the Seattle Police Department, we demand that the use of armed force be banned entirely. No guns, no batons, no riot shields, no chemical weapons, especially against those exercising their First Amendment right as Americans to protest.
  3. We demand an end to the school-to-prison pipeline and the abolition of youth jails. Get kids out of prison, get cops out of schools. We also demand that the new youth prison being built in Seattle currently be repurposed. ...


I find it quite radical, and regressive as hell, so I would be a little comforted if it's some catchy name that stands in the place of tired old "reform the police" mottos. But some people mean it as defund. Conservatives know defund from defund Planned Parenthood, defund NPR, defund import-export bank. And we mean defund, cut the funding of, get rid of all taxpayer means of support.

Have fun with the populist fervor. The movement is starting to look more along the lines of Occupy Wall Street. I don't even knock too hard the cool sense of community and meeting people that think like you and exploring politics from a changed approach. That's all political activity, and it will be instructive to the individual seeing what comes from it.
Great armies come from happy zealots, and happy zealots come from California!
TL+ Member
IgnE
Profile Joined November 2010
United States7681 Posts
Last Edited: 2020-06-10 17:01:09
June 10 2020 16:48 GMT
#48169
On June 10 2020 22:42 GreenHorizons wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 10 2020 22:26 DarkPlasmaBall wrote:
On June 10 2020 11:20 JimmiC wrote:
There is so much to unpack when it comes to the US and the issues around the police and crime. You have the rampant systemic racism. You have civic governments often looking for arrest "stats" to help in the next election instead of actual results. You have a massive amount of poor people considering the countries wealth. You have prohibition and a unwinnable "war on drugs" You have the mass, mostly unregulated gun ownership making being police a much more dangerous job than most countries. You have a for profit healthcare system which means prevention is not a priority since they want more customers and their customers to stay for longer, which is the opposite of what your society should want. You have a for profit prison system which means to succeed they need more customers who stay longer, which is exactly the opposite of what your society should want. You don't tackle the mental health issues of the poor or of the police. You have a police forces and unions who operate like gangs protecting their own regardless if they should and massive amounts of PSTD since there is so many shootings (both at them and others) where the police are first on the scene or involved.

Simply defunding the police is not going to accomplish anything without understanding that none of these issues work independently of each other.

The first and easiest step would be to tackle all the gun issues, by regulating it FAR FAR more and making them so much less accessible. Your police are armed to their teeth because so is the populous. Can you imagine the stress of every traffic stop even being a possible interaction with some one with a gun? You can make a great case for why police forces need to make a report for each time they uuholster their gun in other countries, not so much in the US. You could vastly disarm the police if you disarm the populous as well. It is very strange for me to that people on the left even are against this when it works EVERY where else. It is clear why it does not happen, gun and weapons companies are big business and make big donations to all politician's, and the more they can sell to people the more they can sell to the police. It is a vicious circle that everyone on the outside knows the solution for but some how the NRA's amazing marketing campaign has convinced people that guns some how equal freedom, hell they even took some of the wording out of the second amendment to the point where many Americans believe it says their slogan to help them sell more guns rather than what was actually written. (The actual "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/second_amendment

What the NRA doesn’t like to admit is that guns were regulated in early America. People deemed untrustworthy — such as British loyalists unwilling to swear an oath to the new nation — were disarmed. The sale of guns to Native Americans was outlawed. Boston made it illegal to store a loaded firearm in any home or warehouse. Some states conducted door-to-door registration surveys so the militia could “impress” those weapons if necessary. Men had to attend musters where their guns would be inspected by the government.

https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/10/12/16418524/nra-second-amendment-guns-violence

If American's do not end their gun issues, they will likely never fix their police. This has become so accepted that the satirical news site the Onion has been able to regularly repromote its article “‘No Way To Prevent This,’ Says Only Nation Where This Regularly Happens.”



But if that is a unwinable battle the next best place to start is dealing with the nations mental health issues.


I really doubt that all the people who want to be police are psychopath's as has been suggested, heck I don't think there would even be enough psycopaths. But I don't doubt that given the massive stress, horrible events they both witness as first responders (not just murders, rapes, assaults and so on but also gruesome car accidents and so on), that they become very desensitized to violence and gain more and more prejudices both because of the culture they are surrounded with, but also because of the horrible things they see and experience. If you blame the people in the police for the problems instead of the system, you are no different than the people who blame the people committing the crimes instead of the system. On a case by case basis either can be true, but when it is this widespread it becomes clear that the conditions of the system are what is broken, and what breaks the people.

So this means making sure that everybody poor, rich, everyone in between has medical care, that includes mental health. It means moving the system from treating the symptoms (all stages criminally, policing and incarceration, and healthcare for that matter) to treating the causes. There is actually a huge savings in doing this for the overall system the problem is because of how everything is structured "for profit" the people who could are incentivized not too. The easiest way to do this is make it government funded. That way the government and the people are better off if the system works better and therefore costs less. Right now hospitals want you to be sick (it is not surprising that the US has some of the worst overall health) and the prisons want you to get jailed, stay jailed and come back to jail once you get out. (In fact judges have gotten in trouble for taking kick backs from prisons for sentencing people longer and to their facilities). So for socialist's the government oversight is likely a positive and for capitalists, all the money being wasted in that system can now be spent on various other goods. And all the criminals in jail can now because customers and positive members of the economy.

The people who are against the "defund the police" movement are right to be questing it, because no system in the world operates without some sort of policing. You can't stop paying the police, and make the job even more stressful and worse for mental health, while you are doing it and expect all the violence to magically go away.

What you need is a full system overhaul where all the various stages are pulling together for the same goal. No one has found the perfect system yet. But there are many that are functioning a lot better than the US.

The Netherlands would be a great place to start since they are actually closing prisons because they don't have enough "customers" instead of bursting at the seems.

https://johnhoward.ca/blog/dutch-closing-prisons/

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/dec/12/why-are-there-so-few-prisoners-in-the-netherlands

And there are a bunch of other countries that you could also look at that have actual well (MUCH MUCH better than the US) functioning systems and take the best aspects from all of them.

It is actually more drastic societal changes that are needed to improve the situation than defunding the police. And it means spending a lot more money up front to end up saving even a bunch more at the end.

It does not take much analysis to see that taking the police completely out of the picture when you see how well armed the Boogaloo boys, Proud boys (strange how they all call themselves boys, I guess they also know they are not mature enough to be men, but I digress), gangs and various other well armed and bad intentioned groups that left to their own idea of justice will not end as a benefit to society. You don't even have to get into the criminal gangs in the US and beyond, because you have so many "legal" or legal adjacent gun owners who are not the people you want in control of justice.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boogaloo_movement#:~:text=The boogaloo movement, members of,they call the "boogaloo".

This seems like another case of American exceptionalism where you can easily look at other countries and see what they are doing and copy them, hell talk to them and see how you can do what they do and do it better. Otherwise if the answer is more of the same you are going to keep getting the same results. Defunding the police is just going to make people buy more guns, I bet it already has. Sure "guns don't kill people, people kill people" but you are not putting any effort or money into fixing the people, you are just creating more messed up people who kill people with more guns. You need to attack the root issues which is way to many mental health issues and culture that creates more. Then you mix in a fetishist attitude about guns and gun violence and you get what you have now.

The answer is not some confusing message and something that has never worked anywhere. The answer is in finding out what has worked in other places the best and customize it to work for your unique setting.


I've slowly learned that the "Defund The Police" movement and related sets of ideas are extremely diverse, and everything falling under that three-word catchphrase can end up hiding some of the more constructive, comprehensive solutions. For example, I've seen many clarifying posts and messages that the "Defund The Police" movement actually means something like this:+ Show Spoiler +


[image loading]

Now, a lot of these exploratory ideas are things I can easily get behind. I think these potential options would actually help those who want to protect and serve communities, because it would put less pressure on cops. They're currently asked to do wayyy more than they're trained to do (or that any one person should be expected to do, for that matter). The proponents of these ideas are intending to alleviate that burden and allocate a significant amount of resources towards additional, necessary professionals who can work parallel to the police, and often resolve conflicts without the required intervention of law enforcement.

The biggest problem, I think, is that the phrase "Defund The Police" does a poor, unclear job of getting these points across. We have to keep in mind that a large percentage of Americans couldn't even manage to comprehend a three-word catchphrase that was literally and semantically crystal clear ("Black Lives Matter") without throwing in absurd extrapolations about other lives not mattering... if we're starting off with another three-word message that already isn't equally clear because of the word "Defund" and has a negative connotation attached to it, then the DTP message is already dead on arrival. I'm sure that there are other catchphrases that can be used that could have a better chance of resonating with people, like "Alleviate Blue Burden" or something else that's equally loaded and contrived. People can look at that and actually ask what that means (or, if they recognize Blue = Police, probably infer that the movement is to help the police in some way... which might not be the worst context in the world, especially if we're trying to persuade more people to join the cause).


All this being said, if you're an advocate of completely defunding and completely abolishing law enforcement, then the phrase "Defund The Police" does a pretty good job of laying out your central thesis. If, instead, you're looking for a broader financial reform that includes law enforcement and a variety of other entities, then I think you need a better, broader catchphrase.


It's important to note that "defund the police" comes specifically out of the abolitionist movement. Work that goes back decades. Work that included dialectically moving past reformist strategies like you see there. The stuff you're seeing there DPB is the centrist reactionary cooption of that phrase and is at the core of the discordance between the tepid reforms listed and the phrase "defund the police".

Now reformists are free to do what they wish, but it's important to know this distinction and not try to tell people that do want to abolish the police (because reformism has categorically failed them) that they actually want to go back to fruitless reformist strategies.


What counts as "categorical failure" for reform efforts? If government is not a monolith but an assemblage of actors with different interests and different motivations, how are we accounting for counter-resistance to reform in your model?

For example, you might view civil rights reform as a success. And you might point to the setting up of a carceral state in the 80s and 90s as a revanchist movement that targets black life. Those two things can both be true, because the battlefield or position shifted between the 60s/70s and the 80s/90s and they are the outcomes of different processes conducted along different discursive lines of attack. What is far from clear is whether "reformism" generally speaking is a failure, and most people would be hard-pressed to explain why it is worse now for black gen-z youth than it was for black baby boomers fifty years ago for reasons solely attributable to their blackness.

There are a couple strands of thought that you might mobilize against this argument, like afro-pessimism. But since you are a Marxist first and foremost it seems unlikely you subscribe to those views. What I would like to do is disentangle a Marxist-Leninist intuition that reform is incapable of overcoming capital and an anti-racist intuition that civil reform is incapable of overcoming racism. I think that capital is entirely capable of equal opportunity exploitation. Capital undoubtedly relies upon a libidinal economy shaped and hierarchized by skin color, but it is not clear to me that that is necessarily the case.

EDIT: One question might be to ask what the difference is between reform and revolution. Does distinguishing between the two sometimes involve Sorites paradox? were the crack laws a reform of the law or a revolution in the law? how are we so sure that reducing police budgets and using more social workers to resolve disputes and reducing the prison population is only "reform"?
The unrealistic sound of these propositions is indicative, not of their utopian character, but of the strength of the forces which prevent their realization.
Yurie
Profile Blog Joined August 2010
11880 Posts
Last Edited: 2020-06-10 16:52:43
June 10 2020 16:51 GMT
#48170
On June 11 2020 01:26 Danglars wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 11 2020 00:14 Falling wrote:
If you shoot for the stars and miss, you at least hit the moon or something.

Or you get dismissed out of hand because it looks like the trajectory is straight into the ground, rather than some sort of upward direction, stars or otherwise.

I think the second defund the police caught on, the chance for national change ended. Not dense inner cities with heavily leftist voting populations, but across the country.

It's just all nonsensical. Places like Minneapolis actually mean defund the police, since there are real city council members advocating for exactly that. Seattle is trending that way too. Activists took over some blocks after police bailed on East Precinct, declared it an autonomous zone, and published a list of demands:
Show nested quote +
  1. The Seattle Police Department and attached court system are beyond reform. We do not request reform, we demand abolition. We demand that the Seattle Council and the Mayor defund and abolish the Seattle Police Department and the attached Criminal Justice Apparatus. This means 100% of funding, including existing pensions for Seattle Police. At an equal level of priority we also demand that the city disallow the operations of ICE in the city of Seattle.
  2. In the transitionary period between now and the dismantlement of the Seattle Police Department, we demand that the use of armed force be banned entirely. No guns, no batons, no riot shields, no chemical weapons, especially against those exercising their First Amendment right as Americans to protest.
  3. We demand an end to the school-to-prison pipeline and the abolition of youth jails. Get kids out of prison, get cops out of schools. We also demand that the new youth prison being built in Seattle currently be repurposed. ...


I find it quite radical, and regressive as hell, so I would be a little comforted if it's some catchy name that stands in the place of tired old "reform the police" mottos. But some people mean it as defund. Conservatives know defund from defund Planned Parenthood, defund NPR, defund import-export bank. And we mean defund, cut the funding of, get rid of all taxpayer means of support.

Have fun with the populist fervor. The movement is starting to look more along the lines of Occupy Wall Street. I don't even knock too hard the cool sense of community and meeting people that think like you and exploring politics from a changed approach. That's all political activity, and it will be instructive to the individual seeing what comes from it.


With some rephrasing 2 seems reasonable and 3 is. I honestly think the Police fills an important function, so I don't agree with 1. I do not want to go back to people guarding their neighbourhood, where leaving the city block is the same as not having done anything and hangings without due process being the norm.

Automatically being investigated when any of those tools are used and the investigation result being public seems a reasonable demand for 2. That combined with full time cameras to enable those investigations.
Danglars
Profile Blog Joined August 2010
United States12133 Posts
June 10 2020 17:01 GMT
#48171
On June 11 2020 01:51 Yurie wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 11 2020 01:26 Danglars wrote:
On June 11 2020 00:14 Falling wrote:
If you shoot for the stars and miss, you at least hit the moon or something.

Or you get dismissed out of hand because it looks like the trajectory is straight into the ground, rather than some sort of upward direction, stars or otherwise.

I think the second defund the police caught on, the chance for national change ended. Not dense inner cities with heavily leftist voting populations, but across the country.

It's just all nonsensical. Places like Minneapolis actually mean defund the police, since there are real city council members advocating for exactly that. Seattle is trending that way too. Activists took over some blocks after police bailed on East Precinct, declared it an autonomous zone, and published a list of demands:
  1. The Seattle Police Department and attached court system are beyond reform. We do not request reform, we demand abolition. We demand that the Seattle Council and the Mayor defund and abolish the Seattle Police Department and the attached Criminal Justice Apparatus. This means 100% of funding, including existing pensions for Seattle Police. At an equal level of priority we also demand that the city disallow the operations of ICE in the city of Seattle.
  2. In the transitionary period between now and the dismantlement of the Seattle Police Department, we demand that the use of armed force be banned entirely. No guns, no batons, no riot shields, no chemical weapons, especially against those exercising their First Amendment right as Americans to protest.
  3. We demand an end to the school-to-prison pipeline and the abolition of youth jails. Get kids out of prison, get cops out of schools. We also demand that the new youth prison being built in Seattle currently be repurposed. ...


I find it quite radical, and regressive as hell, so I would be a little comforted if it's some catchy name that stands in the place of tired old "reform the police" mottos. But some people mean it as defund. Conservatives know defund from defund Planned Parenthood, defund NPR, defund import-export bank. And we mean defund, cut the funding of, get rid of all taxpayer means of support.

Have fun with the populist fervor. The movement is starting to look more along the lines of Occupy Wall Street. I don't even knock too hard the cool sense of community and meeting people that think like you and exploring politics from a changed approach. That's all political activity, and it will be instructive to the individual seeing what comes from it.


With some rephrasing 2 seems reasonable and 3 is. I honestly think the Police fills an important function, so I don't agree with 1. I do not want to go back to people guarding their neighbourhood, where leaving the city block is the same as not having done anything and hangings without due process being the norm.

Automatically being investigated when any of those tools are used and the investigation result being public seems a reasonable demand for 2. That combined with full time cameras to enable those investigations.

Hopefully, they’re willing to negotiate lower. I don’t think that’s likely, just given how much BLM and left wing have pounded on this issue. But if it’s just a Trumpian opening bargaining position, I can count your rephrasing. #3 has some laudable goals, but ending youth jails for real violent young criminals is treating the victims like crap and worsens the perception that you can get away with it.

I can always get behind more investigations of cops and more transparency about the results. First half is political leadership willing to fire bad cops, second half is the union rules and justice system that doesn’t stop them from doing it.
Great armies come from happy zealots, and happy zealots come from California!
TL+ Member
Mohdoo
Profile Joined August 2007
United States15713 Posts
June 10 2020 17:16 GMT
#48172
On June 11 2020 02:01 Danglars wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 11 2020 01:51 Yurie wrote:
On June 11 2020 01:26 Danglars wrote:
On June 11 2020 00:14 Falling wrote:
If you shoot for the stars and miss, you at least hit the moon or something.

Or you get dismissed out of hand because it looks like the trajectory is straight into the ground, rather than some sort of upward direction, stars or otherwise.

I think the second defund the police caught on, the chance for national change ended. Not dense inner cities with heavily leftist voting populations, but across the country.

It's just all nonsensical. Places like Minneapolis actually mean defund the police, since there are real city council members advocating for exactly that. Seattle is trending that way too. Activists took over some blocks after police bailed on East Precinct, declared it an autonomous zone, and published a list of demands:
  1. The Seattle Police Department and attached court system are beyond reform. We do not request reform, we demand abolition. We demand that the Seattle Council and the Mayor defund and abolish the Seattle Police Department and the attached Criminal Justice Apparatus. This means 100% of funding, including existing pensions for Seattle Police. At an equal level of priority we also demand that the city disallow the operations of ICE in the city of Seattle.
  2. In the transitionary period between now and the dismantlement of the Seattle Police Department, we demand that the use of armed force be banned entirely. No guns, no batons, no riot shields, no chemical weapons, especially against those exercising their First Amendment right as Americans to protest.
  3. We demand an end to the school-to-prison pipeline and the abolition of youth jails. Get kids out of prison, get cops out of schools. We also demand that the new youth prison being built in Seattle currently be repurposed. ...


I find it quite radical, and regressive as hell, so I would be a little comforted if it's some catchy name that stands in the place of tired old "reform the police" mottos. But some people mean it as defund. Conservatives know defund from defund Planned Parenthood, defund NPR, defund import-export bank. And we mean defund, cut the funding of, get rid of all taxpayer means of support.

Have fun with the populist fervor. The movement is starting to look more along the lines of Occupy Wall Street. I don't even knock too hard the cool sense of community and meeting people that think like you and exploring politics from a changed approach. That's all political activity, and it will be instructive to the individual seeing what comes from it.


With some rephrasing 2 seems reasonable and 3 is. I honestly think the Police fills an important function, so I don't agree with 1. I do not want to go back to people guarding their neighbourhood, where leaving the city block is the same as not having done anything and hangings without due process being the norm.

Automatically being investigated when any of those tools are used and the investigation result being public seems a reasonable demand for 2. That combined with full time cameras to enable those investigations.
I can count your rephrasing. #3 has some laudable goals, but ending youth jails for real violent young criminals is treating the victims like crap and worsens the perception that you can get away with it.


Can you point me to a study showing that jailing youth has the purpose you are describing? All information I have read suggests that imprisoning children has a very detrimental effect and that psychological therapy has a very positive impact. The whole discouragement thing just isn't how it all pans out.
GreenHorizons
Profile Blog Joined April 2011
United States23295 Posts
Last Edited: 2020-06-10 17:23:52
June 10 2020 17:20 GMT
#48173
On June 11 2020 01:48 IgnE wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 10 2020 22:42 GreenHorizons wrote:
On June 10 2020 22:26 DarkPlasmaBall wrote:
On June 10 2020 11:20 JimmiC wrote:
There is so much to unpack when it comes to the US and the issues around the police and crime. You have the rampant systemic racism. You have civic governments often looking for arrest "stats" to help in the next election instead of actual results. You have a massive amount of poor people considering the countries wealth. You have prohibition and a unwinnable "war on drugs" You have the mass, mostly unregulated gun ownership making being police a much more dangerous job than most countries. You have a for profit healthcare system which means prevention is not a priority since they want more customers and their customers to stay for longer, which is the opposite of what your society should want. You have a for profit prison system which means to succeed they need more customers who stay longer, which is exactly the opposite of what your society should want. You don't tackle the mental health issues of the poor or of the police. You have a police forces and unions who operate like gangs protecting their own regardless if they should and massive amounts of PSTD since there is so many shootings (both at them and others) where the police are first on the scene or involved.

Simply defunding the police is not going to accomplish anything without understanding that none of these issues work independently of each other.

The first and easiest step would be to tackle all the gun issues, by regulating it FAR FAR more and making them so much less accessible. Your police are armed to their teeth because so is the populous. Can you imagine the stress of every traffic stop even being a possible interaction with some one with a gun? You can make a great case for why police forces need to make a report for each time they uuholster their gun in other countries, not so much in the US. You could vastly disarm the police if you disarm the populous as well. It is very strange for me to that people on the left even are against this when it works EVERY where else. It is clear why it does not happen, gun and weapons companies are big business and make big donations to all politician's, and the more they can sell to people the more they can sell to the police. It is a vicious circle that everyone on the outside knows the solution for but some how the NRA's amazing marketing campaign has convinced people that guns some how equal freedom, hell they even took some of the wording out of the second amendment to the point where many Americans believe it says their slogan to help them sell more guns rather than what was actually written. (The actual "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/second_amendment

What the NRA doesn’t like to admit is that guns were regulated in early America. People deemed untrustworthy — such as British loyalists unwilling to swear an oath to the new nation — were disarmed. The sale of guns to Native Americans was outlawed. Boston made it illegal to store a loaded firearm in any home or warehouse. Some states conducted door-to-door registration surveys so the militia could “impress” those weapons if necessary. Men had to attend musters where their guns would be inspected by the government.

https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/10/12/16418524/nra-second-amendment-guns-violence

If American's do not end their gun issues, they will likely never fix their police. This has become so accepted that the satirical news site the Onion has been able to regularly repromote its article “‘No Way To Prevent This,’ Says Only Nation Where This Regularly Happens.”



But if that is a unwinable battle the next best place to start is dealing with the nations mental health issues.


I really doubt that all the people who want to be police are psychopath's as has been suggested, heck I don't think there would even be enough psycopaths. But I don't doubt that given the massive stress, horrible events they both witness as first responders (not just murders, rapes, assaults and so on but also gruesome car accidents and so on), that they become very desensitized to violence and gain more and more prejudices both because of the culture they are surrounded with, but also because of the horrible things they see and experience. If you blame the people in the police for the problems instead of the system, you are no different than the people who blame the people committing the crimes instead of the system. On a case by case basis either can be true, but when it is this widespread it becomes clear that the conditions of the system are what is broken, and what breaks the people.

So this means making sure that everybody poor, rich, everyone in between has medical care, that includes mental health. It means moving the system from treating the symptoms (all stages criminally, policing and incarceration, and healthcare for that matter) to treating the causes. There is actually a huge savings in doing this for the overall system the problem is because of how everything is structured "for profit" the people who could are incentivized not too. The easiest way to do this is make it government funded. That way the government and the people are better off if the system works better and therefore costs less. Right now hospitals want you to be sick (it is not surprising that the US has some of the worst overall health) and the prisons want you to get jailed, stay jailed and come back to jail once you get out. (In fact judges have gotten in trouble for taking kick backs from prisons for sentencing people longer and to their facilities). So for socialist's the government oversight is likely a positive and for capitalists, all the money being wasted in that system can now be spent on various other goods. And all the criminals in jail can now because customers and positive members of the economy.

The people who are against the "defund the police" movement are right to be questing it, because no system in the world operates without some sort of policing. You can't stop paying the police, and make the job even more stressful and worse for mental health, while you are doing it and expect all the violence to magically go away.

What you need is a full system overhaul where all the various stages are pulling together for the same goal. No one has found the perfect system yet. But there are many that are functioning a lot better than the US.

The Netherlands would be a great place to start since they are actually closing prisons because they don't have enough "customers" instead of bursting at the seems.

https://johnhoward.ca/blog/dutch-closing-prisons/

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/dec/12/why-are-there-so-few-prisoners-in-the-netherlands

And there are a bunch of other countries that you could also look at that have actual well (MUCH MUCH better than the US) functioning systems and take the best aspects from all of them.

It is actually more drastic societal changes that are needed to improve the situation than defunding the police. And it means spending a lot more money up front to end up saving even a bunch more at the end.

It does not take much analysis to see that taking the police completely out of the picture when you see how well armed the Boogaloo boys, Proud boys (strange how they all call themselves boys, I guess they also know they are not mature enough to be men, but I digress), gangs and various other well armed and bad intentioned groups that left to their own idea of justice will not end as a benefit to society. You don't even have to get into the criminal gangs in the US and beyond, because you have so many "legal" or legal adjacent gun owners who are not the people you want in control of justice.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boogaloo_movement#:~:text=The boogaloo movement, members of,they call the "boogaloo".

This seems like another case of American exceptionalism where you can easily look at other countries and see what they are doing and copy them, hell talk to them and see how you can do what they do and do it better. Otherwise if the answer is more of the same you are going to keep getting the same results. Defunding the police is just going to make people buy more guns, I bet it already has. Sure "guns don't kill people, people kill people" but you are not putting any effort or money into fixing the people, you are just creating more messed up people who kill people with more guns. You need to attack the root issues which is way to many mental health issues and culture that creates more. Then you mix in a fetishist attitude about guns and gun violence and you get what you have now.

The answer is not some confusing message and something that has never worked anywhere. The answer is in finding out what has worked in other places the best and customize it to work for your unique setting.


I've slowly learned that the "Defund The Police" movement and related sets of ideas are extremely diverse, and everything falling under that three-word catchphrase can end up hiding some of the more constructive, comprehensive solutions. For example, I've seen many clarifying posts and messages that the "Defund The Police" movement actually means something like this:+ Show Spoiler +


[image loading]

Now, a lot of these exploratory ideas are things I can easily get behind. I think these potential options would actually help those who want to protect and serve communities, because it would put less pressure on cops. They're currently asked to do wayyy more than they're trained to do (or that any one person should be expected to do, for that matter). The proponents of these ideas are intending to alleviate that burden and allocate a significant amount of resources towards additional, necessary professionals who can work parallel to the police, and often resolve conflicts without the required intervention of law enforcement.

The biggest problem, I think, is that the phrase "Defund The Police" does a poor, unclear job of getting these points across. We have to keep in mind that a large percentage of Americans couldn't even manage to comprehend a three-word catchphrase that was literally and semantically crystal clear ("Black Lives Matter") without throwing in absurd extrapolations about other lives not mattering... if we're starting off with another three-word message that already isn't equally clear because of the word "Defund" and has a negative connotation attached to it, then the DTP message is already dead on arrival. I'm sure that there are other catchphrases that can be used that could have a better chance of resonating with people, like "Alleviate Blue Burden" or something else that's equally loaded and contrived. People can look at that and actually ask what that means (or, if they recognize Blue = Police, probably infer that the movement is to help the police in some way... which might not be the worst context in the world, especially if we're trying to persuade more people to join the cause).


All this being said, if you're an advocate of completely defunding and completely abolishing law enforcement, then the phrase "Defund The Police" does a pretty good job of laying out your central thesis. If, instead, you're looking for a broader financial reform that includes law enforcement and a variety of other entities, then I think you need a better, broader catchphrase.


It's important to note that "defund the police" comes specifically out of the abolitionist movement. Work that goes back decades. Work that included dialectically moving past reformist strategies like you see there. The stuff you're seeing there DPB is the centrist reactionary cooption of that phrase and is at the core of the discordance between the tepid reforms listed and the phrase "defund the police".

Now reformists are free to do what they wish, but it's important to know this distinction and not try to tell people that do want to abolish the police (because reformism has categorically failed them) that they actually want to go back to fruitless reformist strategies.


What counts as "categorical failure" for reform efforts? If government is not a monolith but an assemblage of actors with different interests and different motivations, how are we accounting for counter-resistance to reform in your model?

For example, you might view civil rights reform as a success. And you might point to the setting up of a carceral state in the 80s and 90s as a revanchist movement that targets black life. Those two things can both be true, because the battlefield or position shifted between the 60s/70s and the 80s/90s and they are the outcomes of different processes conducted along different discursive lines of attack. What is far from clear is whether "reformism" generally speaking is a failure, and most people would be hard-pressed to explain why it is worse now for black gen-z youth than it was for black baby boomers fifty years ago for reasons solely attributable to their blackness.

There are a couple strands of thought that you might mobilize against this argument, like afro-pessimism. But since you are a Marxist first and foremost it seems unlikely you subscribe to those views. What I would like to do is disentangle a Marxist-Leninist intuition that reform is incapable of overcoming capital and an anti-racist intuition that civil reform is incapable of overcoming racism. I think that capital is entirely capable of equal opportunity exploitation. Capital undoubtedly relies upon a libidinal economy shaped and hierarchized by skin color, but it is not clear to me that that is necessarily the case.


Like we see now, the civil rights movement was composed of an assemblage of actors with different interest and motivations. The first distinction I would make generally is one between reform and non-reformist reforms. That is reforms that change the system vs reforms to make life more tolerable within the system. Which is to say you're right that both of things can be (and imo are) true. This theme is also seen in the slavery abolition movement that culminated during (but wasn't the motive for) the Civil War (which was first and foremost a conflict over capital). In this light the successes and failures and difference in approaches are more clear imo.

I disagree that capital is capable of equal opportunity exploitation and we'll find historically that an idealized meritocracy of exploitation is simply imaginary. Fundamentally it requires a class of people (of which the sorting can be so arbitrary as to appear to be 'equal opportunity' maybe?) to exploit. When considered with the material conditions of wealth distribution, racism has deep roots, and simply can't be properly addressed by clipping what we see above the ground then hoping it grows the way we wish. Non-reformist reforms/abolition is about removing the poison root rather than trying to trim the poisonous tree into a palatable shape.

Reformism is based on trying to mediate harm within the system and can have a role and can provide momentary relief and be noted as 'successes' to some degree. But what we know historically and theory tells us that it can't be permanent without both mindful maintenance and deeper non-reformist type reforms (or revolutionary changes) alleviating the need to upkeep the harm reduction.

This is notably apparent in Trump's ability to rollback/disregard decades of legislative work and regulatory frameworks with a flick of his pen
"People like to look at history and think 'If that was me back then, I would have...' We're living through history, and the truth is, whatever you are doing now is probably what you would have done then" "Scratch a Liberal..."
IgnE
Profile Joined November 2010
United States7681 Posts
June 10 2020 17:23 GMT
#48174
When I say "equal opportunity" I just mean along lines of skin color, generalizable to any particular feature you want, even if, as you say, it still requires a sorting mechanism. One might imagine some gated class sorting mechanism (like college) that perfectly represented an arbitrary number of population subgroups.
The unrealistic sound of these propositions is indicative, not of their utopian character, but of the strength of the forces which prevent their realization.
GreenHorizons
Profile Blog Joined April 2011
United States23295 Posts
June 10 2020 17:25 GMT
#48175
On June 11 2020 02:23 IgnE wrote:
When I say "equal opportunity" I just mean along lines of skin color, generalizable to any particular feature you want, even if, as you say, it still requires a sorting mechanism. One might imagine some gated class sorting mechanism (like college) that perfectly represented an arbitrary number of population subgroups.


Theoretically, from a vacuum, I guess? You know I'm not a fan of attempts at class reductionism though because we do have real material conditions and history to contend with.
"People like to look at history and think 'If that was me back then, I would have...' We're living through history, and the truth is, whatever you are doing now is probably what you would have done then" "Scratch a Liberal..."
WombaT
Profile Blog Joined May 2010
Northern Ireland25658 Posts
June 10 2020 17:34 GMT
#48176
On June 10 2020 12:13 GreenHorizons wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 10 2020 11:52 Jockmcplop wrote:
I feel like the issue of mental health in the US is something that has never been addressed because the first problem that comes up in dealing with such things is the reliance on pharmaceuticals in the US mental health system, and the power the pharma companies have over the medical industry. You can't solve the law and order side of mental health with drugs alone unfortunately, and its better with no drugs at all, and from what very limited information i have about the US mental health system drugs is pretty much all they do (sorry if i've got that wrong but its the impression i get).

You need community engagement and proactive mental health programs, better mental health provision in schools etc.

I can't understand for the life of me why kids aren't taught how to look after their mental health.

For example:

https://www.mhanational.org/issues/state-mental-health-america

Youth mental health is worsening. From 2012 to 2017, the prevalence of past-year Major Depressive Episode (MDE) increased from 8.66 percent to 13.01 percent of youth ages 12-17. Now over two million youth have MDE with severe impairment


Its so frustrating to see this when the solutions are staring everyone in the face but no-one can be bothered to implement them. It feels like maybe a cultural attitude shift is required to begin dealing with this stuff.



Both people living with mental health issues and mental development issues are among/the most victimized by police brutality as well.

The dumping of people from "mental health facilities" onto the streets and then putting them in prison fills a lot of private prison beds for profit, but has had devastating impacts on society.

I've talked before about the pervasive use of prescription drugs on children and such before as well of course.

I’ve complained about it many, many times before here as well.

When I had my psychotic break incidentally and became very unstable (and violent) the police actually did have to pseudo-arrest me. Now if I was to transplant myself and that interaction to being in the States, especially if I was a PoC I would worry how that interaction would have gone.

In the wider sense I feel societally we’re improving on ‘how should mental health problems be treated?’, but really missing the forest for the trees in why these problems develop in the first place.

Some have a pretty obvious causation, be it body image issues and media representation, the stress of testing and seeking validation in education to the detriment of others.

Plenty of others are less obvious but just as destructive to afflicted individuals. Hopefully we’ll keep developing as a society to look at these in via much more holistic, systemic analysis.
'You'll always be the cuddly marsupial of my heart, despite the inherent flaws of your ancestry' - Squat
IgnE
Profile Joined November 2010
United States7681 Posts
Last Edited: 2020-06-10 18:03:20
June 10 2020 17:53 GMT
#48177
On June 11 2020 02:25 GreenHorizons wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 11 2020 02:23 IgnE wrote:
When I say "equal opportunity" I just mean along lines of skin color, generalizable to any particular feature you want, even if, as you say, it still requires a sorting mechanism. One might imagine some gated class sorting mechanism (like college) that perfectly represented an arbitrary number of population subgroups.


Theoretically, from a vacuum, I guess? You know I'm not a fan of attempts at class reductionism though because we do have real material conditions and history to contend with.


The question we are considering is whether it is possible within a liberal democracy to get rid of institutional, juridical racism, or at least reduce it so much that "racism" as an explanation of outcomes does not offer any additional explanatory power. Whether you want to deny that it's possible to totally eliminate "racism" tout court is not really important so as long we agree that reducing racism to some "vacuum" level where the background average is zero would be a good (maybe the best) result.

So we can elaborate on the question, and ask whether liberal democracy can achieve that via a series of reforms internal to its method of government or whether the only way to eliminate racism is revolution. That leads to a subquestion: what is the difference between reform and revolution?

My position is that it seems possible in principle to get rid of racism via reform, where "reform" means utilizing the legitimate methods of liberal democracy to enact change. I don't see the necessity of revolution (where "revolution" means enacting change outside of liberal democratic norms). Typically one would argue either that eliminating racism within liberal democracy is not possible in principle (afro-pessimism perhaps, but I find this unconvincing or at least under-theorized) or that it is not possible in practice. But its being merely impracticable does not necessitate anti-racist "revolution," without an explanation of how revolution makes it more practicable. Any such explanation would have to be an explanation that affirms its impracticability within liberal democratic norms while affirming its practicability outside of those norms. I don't know of any such convincing explanation.

EDIT: I guess there is another distinction to be made between "revolution" with regard to policing and "revolution" with regard to liberal democracy. A liberal democracy may very well decide to "get rid of" police entirely through its internal governing mechanisms. This might be characterized as a "revolution" within the context of police and a "reform" within the context of liberal democracy. The question would then turn on whether the prison/police abolition movement felt that revolution was necessary to overturn a democratic practice that refused to abolish the police. This is what I am arguing against.
The unrealistic sound of these propositions is indicative, not of their utopian character, but of the strength of the forces which prevent their realization.
Danglars
Profile Blog Joined August 2010
United States12133 Posts
June 10 2020 18:19 GMT
#48178
On June 11 2020 02:16 Mohdoo wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 11 2020 02:01 Danglars wrote:
On June 11 2020 01:51 Yurie wrote:
On June 11 2020 01:26 Danglars wrote:
On June 11 2020 00:14 Falling wrote:
If you shoot for the stars and miss, you at least hit the moon or something.

Or you get dismissed out of hand because it looks like the trajectory is straight into the ground, rather than some sort of upward direction, stars or otherwise.

I think the second defund the police caught on, the chance for national change ended. Not dense inner cities with heavily leftist voting populations, but across the country.

It's just all nonsensical. Places like Minneapolis actually mean defund the police, since there are real city council members advocating for exactly that. Seattle is trending that way too. Activists took over some blocks after police bailed on East Precinct, declared it an autonomous zone, and published a list of demands:
  1. The Seattle Police Department and attached court system are beyond reform. We do not request reform, we demand abolition. We demand that the Seattle Council and the Mayor defund and abolish the Seattle Police Department and the attached Criminal Justice Apparatus. This means 100% of funding, including existing pensions for Seattle Police. At an equal level of priority we also demand that the city disallow the operations of ICE in the city of Seattle.
  2. In the transitionary period between now and the dismantlement of the Seattle Police Department, we demand that the use of armed force be banned entirely. No guns, no batons, no riot shields, no chemical weapons, especially against those exercising their First Amendment right as Americans to protest.
  3. We demand an end to the school-to-prison pipeline and the abolition of youth jails. Get kids out of prison, get cops out of schools. We also demand that the new youth prison being built in Seattle currently be repurposed. ...


I find it quite radical, and regressive as hell, so I would be a little comforted if it's some catchy name that stands in the place of tired old "reform the police" mottos. But some people mean it as defund. Conservatives know defund from defund Planned Parenthood, defund NPR, defund import-export bank. And we mean defund, cut the funding of, get rid of all taxpayer means of support.

Have fun with the populist fervor. The movement is starting to look more along the lines of Occupy Wall Street. I don't even knock too hard the cool sense of community and meeting people that think like you and exploring politics from a changed approach. That's all political activity, and it will be instructive to the individual seeing what comes from it.


With some rephrasing 2 seems reasonable and 3 is. I honestly think the Police fills an important function, so I don't agree with 1. I do not want to go back to people guarding their neighbourhood, where leaving the city block is the same as not having done anything and hangings without due process being the norm.

Automatically being investigated when any of those tools are used and the investigation result being public seems a reasonable demand for 2. That combined with full time cameras to enable those investigations.
I can count your rephrasing. #3 has some laudable goals, but ending youth jails for real violent young criminals is treating the victims like crap and worsens the perception that you can get away with it.


Can you point me to a study showing that jailing youth has the purpose you are describing? All information I have read suggests that imprisoning children has a very detrimental effect and that psychological therapy has a very positive impact. The whole discouragement thing just isn't how it all pans out.

It is time to stop respecting police and treat them like the deviants they are. Most middle ground solutions still pretend police are good people and I won't entertain that kind of nonsense.

With all due respect, I’m gonna wait until this frenzy has passed to go dispassionate statistics with you, given the animated takes you’ve been laying down recently. Denying the blackness of black people, calling for treating the police as deviants, comparing WW2 soldiers to two-bit thug student activists in antifa. It’s too recent, or you’re too extreme on this issue for me to think any engagement is worthwhile. Let’s do a discovery and analysis after some time and distance from the sizzling hot takes.
Great armies come from happy zealots, and happy zealots come from California!
TL+ Member
GreenHorizons
Profile Blog Joined April 2011
United States23295 Posts
Last Edited: 2020-06-10 18:37:35
June 10 2020 18:30 GMT
#48179
On June 11 2020 02:53 IgnE wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 11 2020 02:25 GreenHorizons wrote:
On June 11 2020 02:23 IgnE wrote:
When I say "equal opportunity" I just mean along lines of skin color, generalizable to any particular feature you want, even if, as you say, it still requires a sorting mechanism. One might imagine some gated class sorting mechanism (like college) that perfectly represented an arbitrary number of population subgroups.


Theoretically, from a vacuum, I guess? You know I'm not a fan of attempts at class reductionism though because we do have real material conditions and history to contend with.


The question we are considering is whether it is possible within a liberal democracy to get rid of institutional, juridical racism, or at least reduce it so much that "racism" as an explanation of outcomes does not offer any additional explanatory power. Whether you want to deny that it's possible to totally eliminate "racism" tout court is not really important so as long we agree that reducing racism to some "vacuum" level where the background average is zero would be a good (maybe the best) result.

So we can elaborate on the question, and ask whether liberal democracy can achieve that via a series of reforms internal to its method of government or whether the only way to eliminate racism is revolution. That leads to a subquestion: what is the difference between reform and revolution?

My position is that it seems possible in principle to get rid of racism via reform, where "reform" means utilizing the legitimate methods of liberal democracy to enact change. I don't see the necessity of revolution (where "revolution" means enacting change outside of liberal democratic norms). Typically one would argue either that eliminating racism within liberal democracy is not possible in principle (afro-pessimism perhaps, but I find this unconvincing or at least under-theorized) or that it is not possible in practice. But its being merely impracticable does not necessitate anti-racist "revolution," without an explanation of how revolution makes it more practicable. Any such explanation would have to be an explanation that affirms its impracticability within liberal democratic norms while affirming its practicability outside of those norms. I don't know of any such convincing explanation.

EDIT: I guess there is another distinction to be made between "revolution" with regard to policing and "revolution" with regard to liberal democracy. A liberal democracy may very well decide to "get rid of" police entirely through its internal governing mechanisms. This might be characterized as a "revolution" within the context of police and a "reform" within the context of liberal democracy. The question would then turn on whether the prison/police abolition movement felt that revolution was necessary to overturn a democratic practice that refused to abolish the police. This is what I am arguing against.


I think it's a bit more simple in that the uprisings throughout US history are demonstrative of liberal democratic framing/norms failure to resolve these contradictions between their platonic form and material character.

The easiest way to articulate it might be that a non-racist US might not have land on which to exist.

EDIT: Not to look a gift horse in the mouth btw, but there's some space in between durp and Antidisestablishmentarianism
"People like to look at history and think 'If that was me back then, I would have...' We're living through history, and the truth is, whatever you are doing now is probably what you would have done then" "Scratch a Liberal..."
farvacola
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
United States18832 Posts
Last Edited: 2020-06-10 18:34:23
June 10 2020 18:33 GMT
#48180
On June 11 2020 03:19 Danglars wrote:
Show nested quote +
On June 11 2020 02:16 Mohdoo wrote:
On June 11 2020 02:01 Danglars wrote:
On June 11 2020 01:51 Yurie wrote:
On June 11 2020 01:26 Danglars wrote:
On June 11 2020 00:14 Falling wrote:
If you shoot for the stars and miss, you at least hit the moon or something.

Or you get dismissed out of hand because it looks like the trajectory is straight into the ground, rather than some sort of upward direction, stars or otherwise.

I think the second defund the police caught on, the chance for national change ended. Not dense inner cities with heavily leftist voting populations, but across the country.

It's just all nonsensical. Places like Minneapolis actually mean defund the police, since there are real city council members advocating for exactly that. Seattle is trending that way too. Activists took over some blocks after police bailed on East Precinct, declared it an autonomous zone, and published a list of demands:
  1. The Seattle Police Department and attached court system are beyond reform. We do not request reform, we demand abolition. We demand that the Seattle Council and the Mayor defund and abolish the Seattle Police Department and the attached Criminal Justice Apparatus. This means 100% of funding, including existing pensions for Seattle Police. At an equal level of priority we also demand that the city disallow the operations of ICE in the city of Seattle.
  2. In the transitionary period between now and the dismantlement of the Seattle Police Department, we demand that the use of armed force be banned entirely. No guns, no batons, no riot shields, no chemical weapons, especially against those exercising their First Amendment right as Americans to protest.
  3. We demand an end to the school-to-prison pipeline and the abolition of youth jails. Get kids out of prison, get cops out of schools. We also demand that the new youth prison being built in Seattle currently be repurposed. ...


I find it quite radical, and regressive as hell, so I would be a little comforted if it's some catchy name that stands in the place of tired old "reform the police" mottos. But some people mean it as defund. Conservatives know defund from defund Planned Parenthood, defund NPR, defund import-export bank. And we mean defund, cut the funding of, get rid of all taxpayer means of support.

Have fun with the populist fervor. The movement is starting to look more along the lines of Occupy Wall Street. I don't even knock too hard the cool sense of community and meeting people that think like you and exploring politics from a changed approach. That's all political activity, and it will be instructive to the individual seeing what comes from it.


With some rephrasing 2 seems reasonable and 3 is. I honestly think the Police fills an important function, so I don't agree with 1. I do not want to go back to people guarding their neighbourhood, where leaving the city block is the same as not having done anything and hangings without due process being the norm.

Automatically being investigated when any of those tools are used and the investigation result being public seems a reasonable demand for 2. That combined with full time cameras to enable those investigations.
I can count your rephrasing. #3 has some laudable goals, but ending youth jails for real violent young criminals is treating the victims like crap and worsens the perception that you can get away with it.


Can you point me to a study showing that jailing youth has the purpose you are describing? All information I have read suggests that imprisoning children has a very detrimental effect and that psychological therapy has a very positive impact. The whole discouragement thing just isn't how it all pans out.

Show nested quote +
It is time to stop respecting police and treat them like the deviants they are. Most middle ground solutions still pretend police are good people and I won't entertain that kind of nonsense.

With all due respect, I’m gonna wait until this frenzy has passed to go dispassionate statistics with you, given the animated takes you’ve been laying down recently. Denying the blackness of black people, calling for treating the police as deviants, comparing WW2 soldiers to two-bit thug student activists in antifa. It’s too recent, or you’re too extreme on this issue for me to think any engagement is worthwhile. Let’s do a discovery and analysis after some time and distance from the sizzling hot takes.

Danglars doesn't wanna justify his zeal for jailing minors unless you stop saying things he doesn't like, Mohdoo. Why that same criticism doesn't apply to the use of garbage phrases like "two-bit thug student activists in antifa" is beyond me.

By the way, as of yesterday morning, Bill Barr's Antifa Busting DoJ has yet to arrest a single person affiliated with antifa in relation to the protests. Better tone down that crazed language if you want to have a real conversation, Danglars.
"when the Dead Kennedys found out they had skinhead fans, they literally wrote a song titled 'Nazi Punks Fuck Off'"
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