Want to Abolish the Police? The First Step Is Putting Them Under Democratic Control. – In These Times

This article is aresponse to Community Control Wont Fix Whats Wrong with Cops by Carl Williams and ChristianWilliams.

We need community control over the police to abolish the policebecause the police state wont dismantleitself.

Community control over police is an unfinished project begun by the Black Panther Party. Fifty years ago, the party worked in Northern California across San Francisco, Oakland, Richmond and Berkeley to try and win community control through ballot initiatives (though the initiatives failed). They even held amajor Community Control of the Police Conference in Chicago in 1973, featuring Fannie Lou Hamer and Bobby Rush. Today, that work is continued by organizers like Jazmine and groups like Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression and Pan-African Community Action (PACA), of which Iam amember.

The idea behind community control is simple: We oppose state violence itself along with what enables state violencethe fact that disinterested elites and outsiders control what happens in our communities. Community control over police is the only demand that addresses both the symptoms and thedisease.

Carl and Christian argue that policing is fundamentally tied to white supremacy and therefore unreformable. Its true; the police are white supremacist. But so is the government that policing defends, the same government that abolitionists are petitioning to make change. In the absence of community control, the demand to abolish police is functionally arequest for the state to reorganize itself and reshuffle its resourcesbut the powerful stay powerful and the disempowered stay disempowered. The question is not whether to abolish, then, but who we can trust to do theabolition.

Massive networks of institutions, across jurisdictions, combine to incentivize and stabilize policing as we know it, from prosecutors to prisons to legislatures. Many of these institutions operate most powerfully after the point of arrest. Community control intervenes, surgically: By taking public control over the police who handle the bulk of arrests, we act before other parts of the system can get involved. Without community control, abolition just means asking alarger set of white supremacist institutions to restructure asmaller set. Instead, we are asking ourneighbors.

One difference in PACAs proposal is that community control boards would be staffed by residents selected at random and rotated through temporary terms of service. This process would actually eliminate elections while being more democratic (similar to the jury duty system), preventing elites from recapturing police control through campaign contributions. Putting communities in the drivers seat whether or not they choose to abolish policecreates afundamentally different power structure than the current authoritarian chain ofcommand.

Carl and Christian are confusing the ideas of community policing and civilian oversight (both, essentially, public relations strategies) with actual community control over police. Other than the word community, the concepts are unrelated. Those first ideas change only what the power structure looks like; the latter flips the power structure upside down, putting the community in charge. The ruling class desperately wants us not to notice thedifference.

We do not need police officers and police departments. We do need community safety and the power to design and protect alternative ways to achieve it. If acommunity controls its police department and its resources, then nothing stops the community from firing every officer, hiring EMTs and tutors in their place, and directing resources toward mutual aid projects. That turn of events is rather obviously abolitionist in effect, whether or not the word police ever changes (though perhaps community control over public safety is amore aptphrase).

Community control over police is just one version of abroader commitment to community control and self-determination. The Black Panther Party, for example, also organized for community control over housing, education and land. The ultimate goal, as Jazmine puts it: that every action, policy and budget must be subject to the will of the people. If thats not abolitionist, Idont know whatis.

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Want to Abolish the Police? The First Step Is Putting Them Under Democratic Control. - In These Times

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