An interesting article by Peter Gelderloos about the recent
police shootings and brutality in America which provides a refreshing viewpoint
that many socialists share and worth quoting extracts from.
“We don’t want better police. We don’t want to fix the
police. On the contrary, we understand that the police work quite well; they
simply do not work for us and they never have. We want to get rid of the police
entirely, and we want to live in a world where police are not necessary…
…The police are not an instrument fit to protect a society;
on the contrary they are an instrument fit to protect an elite, parasitical
class from society….
….We can’t get rid of police brutality without getting rid
of the police, and we can’t get rid of the police without getting rid of an
entire system based on exploitation, oppression, and hierarchy. There is no
easy, band-aid solution to this problem, and bandying them about only
perpetuates the problem….
…If we assert that it is not permitted to speak of a world
without police, this is only true if we understand the police as one function
in an interlocking system of domination, and the abolition of the police means
the abolition of that entire system….
…We need more people who are talking about a world without
prisons….
…Fighting back against the police, especially shooting back
at them, as was happening in Ferguson, is not a safe activity. Change is never
safe. And if we can successfully overcome the police to create a liberated
zone, the State will eventually send in the military….It is understandable that
many people would not want to face the extreme risks involved with uprooting
the oppressions that grip our society. There is nothing wrong with being
afraid, so long as you have the courage to admit it….”
The essay concludes:
“In the streets, we need to learn how to seize space, to
make sure that those who fight back are never isolated, to make collective
responses possible so no one has to react in an individual, suicidal way again,
and to build a struggle that has room for young and old, for the peaceful and
the bellicose, for those who know how to fight and those who know how to heal.
It will be a long process, and in the meantime, there is a great need to speak
loud and clear about a world without police, so everyone will know there is
another way, beyond the false alternatives of obedience or ineffectual reform.”
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