Whilst this article was not written to promote socialism we can relate to much that is presented here. From all continents there are numerous examples of how the police are upholding the will of the establishment against popular sentiment and laws are being created and tightened to make protest more difficult and unlawful. Socialism will not be without certain anti-social factors - however any form of 'policing' that is thought necessary will be carried out following democratic procedures for the benefit of the majority.
In most of the liberal discussions of the recent police killings of
unarmed black men, there is an underlying assumption that the police are
supposed to protect and serve the population. That is, after all, what
they were created to do. If only the normal,
decent relations between the police and the community could be
re-established, this problem could be resolved. Poor people in general
are more likely to be the victims of crime than anyone else, this
reasoning goes, and in that way, they are in more need than anyone else
of police protection. Maybe there are a few bad apples, but if only the
police weren’t so racist, or didn’t carry out policies like
stop-and-frisk, or weren’t so afraid of black people, or shot fewer
unarmed men, they could function as a useful service that we all need.
This liberal way of viewing the problem rests on a misunderstanding
of the origins of the police and what they were created to do. The
police were not created to protect and serve the population. They were
not created to stop crime, at least not as most people understand it.
And they were certainly not created to promote justice. They were
created to protect the new form of wage-labor capitalism that emerged in
the mid to late nineteenth century from the threat posed by that
system’s offspring, the working class. This is a blunt way of stating a nuanced truth, but sometimes nuance just serves to obfuscate.
Before the nineteenth century, there were no police forces that we
would recognize as such anywhere in the world. In the Northern United
States, there was a system of elected constables and sheriffs, much more
responsible to the population in a very direct way than the police are
today. In the South, the closest thing to a police force was the slave
patrols. Then, as Northern cities grew and filled with mostly immigrant
wage workers who were physically and socially separated from the ruling
class, the wealthy elite who ran the various municipal governments hired
hundreds and then thousands of armed men to impose order on the new
working class neighborhoods.
Class conflict roiled late nineteenth century American cities like
Chicago, which experienced major strikes and riots in 1867, 1877, 1886,
and 1894. In each of these upheavals, the police attacked strikers with
extreme violence, even if in 1877 and 1894 the U.S. Army played a bigger
role in ultimately repressing the working class. In the aftermath of
these movements, the police increasingly presented themselves as a thin
blue line protecting civilization, by which they meant bourgeois
civilization, from the disorder of the working class. This ideology of
order that developed in the late nineteenth century echoes down to today
– except that today, poor black and Latino people are the main threat,
rather than immigrant workers.
Of course, the ruling class did not get everything it wanted, and had
to yield on many points to the immigrant workers it sought to control.
This is why, for instance, municipal governments backed away from trying
to stop Sunday drinking, and why they hired so many immigrant police
officers, especially the Irish. But despite these concessions,
businessmen organized themselves to make sure the police were
increasingly isolated from democratic control, and established their own
hierarchies, systems of governance, and rules of behavior.
The police
increasingly set themselves off from the population by donning uniforms,
establishing their own rules for hiring, promotion, and firing, working
to build a unique esprit des corps, and identifying themselves with
order. And despite complaints about corruption and inefficiency, they
gained more and more support from the ruling class, to the extent that
in Chicago, for instance, businessmen donated money to buy the police
rifles, artillery, Gatling guns, buildings, and money to establish a
police pension out of their own pockets.
There was a never a time when the big city police neutrally enforced
“the law,” or came anywhere close to that ideal (for that matter, the
law itself has never been neutral). In the North, they mostly arrested
people for the vaguely defined “crimes” of disorderly conduct and
vagrancy throughout the nineteenth century. This meant that the police
could arrest anyone they saw as a threat to “order.” In the post-bellum
South, they enforced white supremacy and largely arrested black people
on trumped-up charges in order to feed them into convict labor systems.
The violence the police carried out and their moral separation from
those they patrolled were not the consequences of the brutality of
individual officers, but were the consequences of careful policies
designed to mold the police into a force that could use violence to deal
with the social problems that accompanied the development of a
wage-labor economy. For instance, in the short, sharp depression of the
mid 1880s, Chicago was filled with prostitutes who worked the streets.
Many policemen recognized that these prostitutes were generally
impoverished women seeking a way to survive, and initially tolerated
their behavior. But the police hierarchy insisted that the patrolmen do
their duty whatever their feelings, and arrest these women, impose
fines, and drive them off the streets and into brothels, where they
could be ignored by some members of the elite and controlled by others.
Similarly, in 1885, when Chicago began to experience a wave of strikes,
some policemen sympathized with strikers. But once the police hierarchy
and the mayor decided to break the strikes, policemen who refused to
comply were fired. In these and a thousand similar ways, the police were
molded into a force that would impose order on working class and poor
people, whatever the individual feelings of the officers involved. Though some patrolmen tried to be kind and others were openly brutal,
police violence in the 1880s was not a case of a few bad apples – and
neither is it today.
Much has changed since the creation of the police – most importantly
the influx of black people into the Northern cities, the mid-twentieth
century black movement, and the creation of the current system of mass
incarceration in part as a response to that movement. But these changes
did not lead to a fundamental shift in policing. They led to new
policies designed to preserve fundamental continuities. The police were
created to use violence to reconcile electoral democracy with industrial
capitalism. Today, they are just one part of the “criminal justice”
system which continues to play the same role. Their basic job is to
enforce order among those with the most reason to resent the system –
who in our society today are disproportionately poor black people.
A democratic police system is imaginable – one in which police are
elected by and accountable to the people they patrol. But that is not
what we have. And it’s not what the current system of policing was
created to be.
If there is one positive lesson from the history of policing’s
origins, it is that when workers organized, refused to submit or
cooperate, and caused problems for the city governments, they could back
the police off from the most galling of their activities. Murdering
individual police officers, as happened in in Chicago on May 3rd 1886
and more recently in New York on December 20th, 2014, only reinforced
those calling for harsh repression – a reaction we are beginning to see
already. But resistance on a mass scale could force the police to
hesitate. This happened in Chicago during the early 1880s, when the
police pulled back from breaking strikes, hired immigrant officers, and
tried to re-establish some credibility among the working class after
their role in brutally crushing the 1877 upheaval.
The police might be backed off again if the reaction against the
killings of Eric Garner, Michael Brown, Tamir Rice, and countless others
continues. If they are, it will be a victory for those mobilizing
today, and will save lives – though as long as this system that requires
police violence to control a big share of its population survives, any
change in police policy will be aimed at keeping the poor in line more
effectively.
We shouldn’t expect the police to be something they’re not. As
historians, we ought to know that origins matter, and the police were
created by the ruling class to control working class and poor people,
not help them. They’ve continued to play that role ever since.
by Sam Mitrani from here
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