:stalin-shining:

https://hexbear.net/post/52672/comment/496787

  • TossedAccount [he/him]
    ·
    4 years ago

    I can see where you're coming from, but I've already pointed out how calls to abolish the police have already been recuperated in Minneapolis, partly because the local BLM organizers were arguably more politically advanced than many of their counterparts in other large US cities. If the maximalist abolition demand isn't carefully formulated, we can expect to see this outcome replicated elsewhere: the local bourgie government gets rid of their official police department following the letter of the demand but not the intent, replacing their official police department with a more loose/informal sheriff's office or "public safety" institution capable of summoning posses; or we see sudden growth in private security, rent-a-cops, or armed mercenaries/goons like the Pinkertons. Either way we have our "abolition" of the police, but that special body of armed men ready to make workers bleed to defend the capitalist class and their property hasn't actually gone away, it's just changed form into something more opaque and sinister.

    I could maybe see the argument for refining the maximalist version of the demand into something like "establish workers' councils to abolish and replace the cops", but the US working class for the most part has almost none of the historical memory or context to understand what the hell that means yet. US workers as a whole are still too immature to actually begin that work, and our immediate task includes laying the foundations to even make that possible. A more carefully formulated version of the defund demand, something to the effect of "reduce [insert city here]'s police budget by 90% to fund social services/public transportation/education/etc., demilitarize the PD, and also don't do this by recategorizing police spending as non-police spending in other budgets", is of course also inevitably going to be bastardized by the liberal city councils but it gives us a more tangible and recognizable transitional goal to organize around, and through that process we attract people to a revolutionary banner and begin building community coalitions which will eventually be developed and disciplined enough to form the basis for a mass workers' party and revolutionary party, and later the workers' councils representing the embryo of the workers' state.