Permanently Deleted

  • Wojackhorseman2 [he/him]
    ·
    edit-2
    4 years ago

    Disintegrate the police

    This post made by posadists with space lasers gang

  • acealeam [he/him]
    ·
    4 years ago

    there was a neoliberal thread on this. they came up with these "reform the police", and "make police better" as better slogans

      • acealeam [he/him]
        ·
        4 years ago

        oh i know. "Make police better" is literally a fucking joke how inept it is. And on the point of more funding, that's what they want lol. Another less popular one was "REfund the police"

  • hogposting [he/him,comrade/them]
    ·
    4 years ago

    "Police the Police"

    Jailing cops for misconduct would be a legitimate improvement, it proposes a specific solution, and it might even cut back against some of the milder "law and order" criticism from small-C conservatives who aren't fully lost to right-wing brainworms.

    The downside is this could be twisted into giving more money to the FBI or to useless existing oversight, but anything can be twisted to an extent.

  • MarxistHedonism [she/her]
    ·
    4 years ago

    A lot of them prefer “Reform the police” but that’s what people have been saying since Ferguson and it’s done nothing.

    • grisbajskulor [he/him]
      ·
      4 years ago

      Not to mention as I understand it many US departments outside NYC are actually pretty underfunded so cops are often unable to assist at all. Which yeah ACAB, but if you're defenseless against someone threatening you you'd probably want some help.

      Vivek Chibber goes into this often and I'm like 50/50 on his takes. He thinks "defund" is playing into austerity mindset and thinks "schools not jails" is a better slogan (which seems like pointless tone policing to me and ignores people's genuine anger). But he does bring up good points that a lot of people calling for defund the police (including me) are ignoring that crime actually does exist, and seriously affects working people. It's a flip on Kamala's "you haven't addressed why I have 3 padlocks on my front door" quote which is funny, but from an ordinary person's perspective I do sort of understand the argument. The problem with the austerity mindset is that you focus only on police budgets in the richest country on earth, that taking money out of the police budget is totally not a prerequisite to all the good things defunders want, like mental health professional first responders, funding for schools etc. You COULD actually do this without defunding the police. But then to counter that, this argument completely ignores how infiltrated US cops are with white supremacists, and how there's a pervasive culture of violence against both poor people & POC.

      Idk where to go from here rhetorically or theoretically. All I know is Kamala & friends use this argument for a larger carceral state which I'm fully against. But it is an important question. I think in my ideal socialist transitional egalitarian government, we would still want some form of armed first responders to protect people from violent crime, but with the materialist understanding that reducing poverty will reduce their need. The problem is that this goal doesn't really translate to a solid position or action in our current circumstances.

      • MarxistHedonism [she/her]
        ·
        4 years ago

        I understand the thought that crime still happens and people need protection, but do police even actually prevent crime?

        If your house is broken into, the police come after and it’s very unlikely your stuff is recovered. It’s also possible police arrest or kill you. If a cop car happens to be driving past your house as it’s being broken into, how likely is it that they’ll pull over and stop it?

        Outside of hostage situations, I don’t really understand where police actually help.

        • grisbajskulor [he/him]
          ·
          4 years ago

          It's a good question, I really don't have an answer. I have comrades who organize basically 8hrs a day helping with bail relief and police reform policies. When I made the same points as I just did, their perspective seems to line up more with yours, I guess the more strictly abolitionist stance.

          My perspective is from as a relatively well off position in a place with high crime and homelessness problems, so it's a bit skewed. Getting held up & robbed by a homeless person sucks, so my instinct is "damn if only there were cops around." But I at least have the frame of mind to know my instinct is missing the full picture.

          Big IDK energy in this thread for me, at least strategically speaking.

  • VernetheJules [they/them]
    ·
    4 years ago

    I think "De-fund the police, re-fund [any number of social programs that have had their budgets cut]"

    Sounds pretty good and can work on signage, if you have enough signs to cover a slew of issues that could use the funding

    • hogposting [he/him,comrade/them]
      ·
      4 years ago

      "Defund/refund" is short enough to stick and communicates more than "defund the police" alone. It's a genuine improvement.

      • VernetheJules [they/them]
        ·
        4 years ago

        I think refund also acknowledges that money has been taken away from those pillars and we need to give it back, whereas "funding" something just means giving.

        It helps get the point across that other cuts have never seen the same kind of backlash that calls for defunding the police did.

    • CommieElon [he/him]
      ·
      4 years ago

      I agree. I convinced my conservative dad by saying "the police do too much" so adding "refund the police" makes it sound more like narrowing the role of police.