Ready Or Not, the Black Movement Enters a New Stage 

 


By BAR executive editor Glen Ford
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NOTE: ALL IMAGE CAPTIONS, PULL QUOTES AND COMMENTARY BY THE EDITORS, NOT THE AUTHORS

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Glen Ford is a founding editor of Black Agenda Report.

Note to Commenters
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American Sniper


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The only outcome more predictable than Micah Johnson’s killing of five cops and wounding of seven others in Dallas is White incredulity that race and class divisions lie at the heart of American social relations. Theorists of self-evidence face the contradiction that differences in lived experience provide fundamentally different filters through which acts like the police murders of Philando Castile and Alton Sterling are interpreted. These differences place pleas for ‘unity’ and universal condemnation of Mr. Johnson’s actions on the side of repressive power as diminution of legitimate grievances. Otherwise, when precisely, and by whom, will police murders be ended if not by the people being murdered?

Micah Xavier Johnson: the much vilified shooter in Dallas, especially by the sanctimonious liberal punditocracy. Johnson pulled the trigger, but despicable, entrenched injustice loaded the gun.

Micah Xavier Johnson: the much vilified shooter in Dallas. Johnson pulled the trigger, but despicable, entrenched racist injustice loaded the gun.

In theory the powers-that-be could have ended murders by police decades ago by prosecuting killer cops. Given their systematic nature, as evidenced by persistence across time and geographical dispersion, the reasonable conclusion to draw is that ‘the state,’ broadly considered, has no interest in ending them. And the targeted nature of police violence–toward the intersection of race and class that has evolved to include new and historical underclasses, ties it to an implied rationale that has nothing to do with the contrived misdirection of ‘law and order.’ Any real state interest in curtailing crime would start with the ruling class that commits the most socially destructive crimes, witness the American War of Aggression against Iraq.

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Graph: the self-serving storyline used by murderous police and their supporters is that police violence is a public service to quell public, usually ‘Black-on-Black,’ violence. While public violence is indeed a problem that ties closely to the looting of inner-cities by connected capitalists and the institutions they control, this violence appears to be completely unrelated to the propensity of cops to murder citizens.

Source: mappingpoliceviolence.com.

The oft-made relation of ‘crime’ to police violence made its most inauspicious appearance in recent history (the past few weeks) through the murders of Philando Castile and Alton Sterling. Mr. Castile was pulled over (in official explanation) for a broken tail light and Mr. Sterling was harassed for selling CDs. The implausibility of these escalating into capital offenses reframes the police role from crime ‘control’ to that of social repression. Under no reasonable configuration of events would Messrs. Castile and Sterling be dead were stopping crime the goal of the police. ‘Crime’ is but a pretext for assertion of state power. And the eternal refrain of ‘rogue’ and / or poorly trained cops is belied by the systematic nature of police violence. That bourgeois Whites find ‘crime’ a plausible explanation for systematic social repression speaks to a divide unlikely to be resolved through ‘reforms.’

The historical development of the police in America from slave patrols to economic agents for ‘private interests’ through the racist repression of Black codes and Jim Crow to occupation armies in poor communities and communities of color has at its core economic basis with the overlay of White Supremacy. Slavery was an economic institution, whatever else it might have been. The racial repression that followed had economic basis. Convict leasing was an economic institution, whatever else it might have been. This isn’t to reduce White Supremacy to economics. But it is to link imperialism and colonialism to economic extraction through the use of force, including systematic social repression.

The role of the police as an ‘army of the rich’ is worth considering inasmuch as their militarization, immunity from prosecution and attendant impunity have grown in approximate proportion to the concentration of wealth that is itself tied to the impoverishment of growing portions of the population. The Black migration north following WWII was driven by relatively well-paying industrial jobs that were the first to be eliminated through de-industrialization in the 1970s and through the relocation of industry overseas in the capitalist revival that followed. Black unemployment, historically a multiple higher than White unemployment, provides a ‘reserve army of the unemployed’ to keep an upper bound on wages. Therein lies part of the class dynamic of structural racism.

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Graph: As corporations gained power over labor— the reciprocal of labor’s share in the graph above, prime-age American labor, and Black workers in particular, have been forced out of the labor ‘market.’ In other words, rising corporate profits tie directly to the immiseration of Black workers with many being forced into permanent unemployment as a result. The causal link is ‘free-trade’ with NAFTA, signed by Bill Clinton, put into effect just as the Clinton crime bill (link below) was being passed. Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve.

‘Criminality’ is substantially tied to participation in the ‘informal’ economy by which those excluded from the formal economy survive. As evidenced by current widespread use of opioids prescribed through official channels and the ready availability of cheap, plentiful alcohol, the powers-that-be have no problem with socially destructive drug usage as long as the drugs are distributed through official channels so that profits can be made. It is other than paradoxical that the public health interest put forward to explain drug law enforcement finds its most violent expression through repressive policing in poor neighborhoods. Were concern for public health the motivation the police would be helping the poor find jobs, get needed health care and assuring the availability of nutritious food.

That bourgeois Whites find ‘crime’ a plausible explanation for systematic social repression speaks to a divide unlikely to be resolved through ‘reforms.’

The link between the ‘war on drugs’ and strategies to legitimate state repression of antiwar protestors and the Black Left was conceived by Richard Nixon at a time when open rebellion threatened ruling class power. Hillary Clinton’s slander of Black children, dehumanizing them as ‘super-predators,’ coincided with the Clintons’ support for the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 that increased capital punishment, the militarization of the police, mandatory prison sentences and the build-out of prisons for mass incarceration. The liberal patina given to strategies of social repression ties directly to the ascendance of neo-imperial capitalism that ‘freed’ a substantial portion of the former workforce to exist as it could.

The coded racism of the Clintons’ welfare ‘reform’ tied race to class to assure cheap and malleable labor for their neo-capitalist patrons on Wall Street and in industry. That most of those receiving welfare were White begs the question of why coded racism was used to end it? The answer, that stoking White resentment was the most effective way to sell policies antithetical to White, working class interests, ties the Clintons’ retrograde racism to their support for neo-capitalist resurgence. By passing NAFTA the trifecta of increasing the size of the global labor force, cutting the social safety net to force people into labor markets and building out the mechanisms of social repression to suppress resistance to the process completed the neo-capitalist coup.

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Graph: the question of how to get Whites to cut their own throats, economically speaking, gets to the heart of divide-and-conquer racial strategies and with them, racial repression. The Clintons stoked racial resentment to sell polices of immiseration for labor broadly considered. Since Bill Clinton passed NAFTA the prime-age workforce has declined through sequential booms and busts. The storyline of economic recovery is sold as cover for the broader trend of economic decline. Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve.

The question of how to end police murders of citizens, Blacks in particular, ties the hard violence of police repression to the soft violence of economic exclusion and zen economicsimmiseration. While racism does exist separate and apart from its manufactured incarnation in divide-and-conquer political strategies, broader economic and political distribution would go far toward resolving the material consequences of racism. And given the role that engineered racial divisions play in accruing profits for connected capitalists, ending capitalism seems a necessary step toward racial reconciliation. Furthermore, it is well within the ability of the Federal government to provide guaranteed jobs that pay a living wage, health care, quality education and adequate pensions for everyone. The impediment to doing so is political, not resource constraints.

Tactical considerations join the broad condemnation of Black justice and empowerment movements that have arisen from Micah Johnson’s murder of cops in Dallas with the fact that police murders of Blacks are intolerable and need to be ended immediately, not in some distant future. Peaceful protest, always a first choice, pushes against an increasingly insistent global capitalism that has state support and that feeds from the racial divisions that political opportunists create. Moral pleading depends on a shared perspective that doesn’t exist for common ground. And the strategy of electing better plantation managers— Hillary Clinton instead of whatever candidate Republicans put forward, is placed against the Clintons’ history as the most effective proponents of radical capitalist resurgence through strategies of racial division.

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Graph: not only do murders by police bear no relation to levels of violent crime (top graph), unarmed Blacks were 5X as likely to be murdered by the police in 2015 as unarmed Whites. While unfounded fears of Blacks are used to explain the sociology of police murders of Black citizens, the systematic nature of these murders— across time and geography, in association with the systematic failure to prosecute killer cops, leaves plausible explanations at the level of system. Source: mappingpoliceviolence.org.

Blanket condemnation of political violence, and Micah Johnson’s killing of cops in Dallas was most certainly political, requires a plausible alternative. Pointing to the resulting White backlash runs headlong into the manufacture, or more minimally exploitation, of racial divisions by the political agents of ruling class interests that are used to boost capitalist profits. While it’s convenient to point to Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan as historical motivators of America’s long political turn hard-right, prominent liberals including Bill and Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama have been the more effective proponents of the move. It’s hardly coincidence that Mr. Obama is basing his legacy on getting the labor and civil rights killing TPP and TTIP trade deals passed.

Moreover, police violence is political violence of the first order. Efforts to humanize the murdered cops in Dallas run up against four decades of militarizing them— turning them into occupation forces in capitalist-created ghettoes. If the goal were really to humanize, de-militarizing the police is a necessary first step. The Black Panthers began as the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense in response to police violence in Black communities. The state response was swift and savage. But does that mean that the Panthers were wrong, or that they even had a choice? The powers-that-be could end police violence in a few days by prosecuting killer cops and redefining the role of the police toward real community service. That this hasn’t happened helps to clarify the task at hand.

Finally, deepest sympathies to the families and communities of Philando Castille, Alton Sterling and all of those murdered by the police. They deserved better.


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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Rob Urie is an artist and political economist. His book Zen Economics is published by CounterPunch Books. 
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Note to Commenters
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No, President Obama: “That’s EXACTLY Who We Are”

=By= Michael Roberts

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Thank you Michael Roberts for speaking the truth – actually several truths – in this slushy time of “let’s cover over any ‘little’ blemishes that the ‘few bad apples’ are placing on our otherwise sterling police.” And thank you for pointing out that frequently over looked truth regarding the reason for police forces in this country from their inception: “So why is there seemingly no way ever to curb the violence of the police? The fact is that the police were founded, formed and created to use violence to reconcile electoral democracy with industrial capitalism.” -rw

Guns. Americans are addicted to them. It’s not about the fabled Second Amendment crafted at a time when there were no cops on the streets and America was a relatively young nation with a small population. And it sure as hell is not about the so-called “right to bear arms,” as patently stupid as that sounds in a modern, presumably “civilized nation.” America today, in 2016, is an armed camp with over 340 million guns in private hands, a nation dotted with military camps, anti-government militias armed to the teeth, criminals with all kinds of military style hardware, and street punks with illegal handguns. There is also the police, the group that’s supposed to “protect and serve” the public but who routinely dish out brutal and often fatal violence against the very citizens that they supposedly protect.

So when President Obama told the world in the bloody aftermath of five cops gunned down in Dallas, Texas by a former army reservist, that “that’s not who we are,” I beg to respectfully differ. It’s EXACTLY who we are. The president should know that when he was reelected for a second term national gun sales soared out of the ballpark because his haters felt that a race war was eminent. Stoked and jacked up on the National Rifle Association’s Armageddon gun hyperbole and fear-mongering, a people addicted to firearms could not wait to get their next gun fix. They genuinely think that a race war is coming. That’s EXACTLY what former congressman Joe Walsh tweeted as the carnage unfolded in Texas — “race war. Bring it on. We’re coming for you Obama.” You’d think that he was talking about “Gunfight At The OK Corral.” It’s the way many among us think — they need guns to “defend” themselves from the “others” and the government.

And why that’s EXACTLY who we are as Americans? Well, we LOVE violence. This nation was founded on violence and children are fed a steady, sustained diet of violence EVEN BEFORE they can talk or walk. From Bugs Bunny cartoons that send out subliminal messages of violence, and the gory details of other cartoons, children, at an early age, see violence as fun and play. When they get older they’re exposed to wrestling, violent trash talk, and video games that are built on violence. They play games that simulate real life combat further reinforcing this addiction to guns and violence.

By the time children reach their teens, especially boys, they are hooked on violence and guns. In school they play ultra-violent games like football (not to be confused with soccer) and ice hockey where violence is not only a feature of the games but is expected and anticipated by adoring fans. The best part of baseball is when there is a free-for-all dust up and even in games like basketball there are many, many violent incidents that get fans – and the opportunistic media -excitedly talking for days on end. You hear language like “he took down so and so” for saying something; he or she: “kicked his ass” for so and so etc. etc. The United States government routinely says on TV that they will “kill or capture” some enemy. We’ve become desensitized to violence, death and killing. It’s the new normal.

Then there is the romanticizing of “our men and women in uniform.” Many are the flowers of youth taken from their homes, trained to kill, and packed off to fight wars that presumably “defend our interests.” They are supposed to have “served our country well ” fighting in wars that they do not understand but are fed a diet rich in self-righteous rhetoric, deceptiveness, and hypocrisy. Sun Tzu said in the Art of War “ALL war is deception.” He was right — the deception goes two ways: from those making, conducting and waging war and their enemies.

And the sad thing is that after they’ve killed for America in her wars, these “broken vessels,” and traumatized “wounded warriors,” are discarded, kicked to the curb, as so much useless garbage. You can find them selling used books or hot dogs on street corners in New York or begging for pittances in subways, many still proudly displaying their medals, tokens of their “service” to their country. These discarded former soldiers possess no other marketable skill that’s of use in the civilian economy. So they become low wage security guards and others still end up homeless, broken, disillusioned and the frequent guests at soup kitchens and food pantries. They are one day away from snapping and killing.

So you’re wondering why people are angry? And why anger is so prevalent today in American society?

But let’s talk about how police violence is an integral part of American society. Every time a white cop guns down an unarmed Black man the narrative is the same: the whorish mainstream media jazz up the story and then start telling viewers that the Black man “had a record.” He smoked marijuana, was arrested for not paying child support, he was accused of domestic violence, he was a petty thief. This demonizing of the victim sends a loud dog whistle to white America that “he got what he deserved” and we should support the cops. This narrative further enhances the belief that “Black lives do not matter.”

Don’t get enraged and incensed when the Black community says that for police and law enforcement “Black lives do not matter” — they don’t. There are no Black person’s rights that a white cop is bound to respect. That’s why you hear the cops say in the wake of a shooting that the Black man or woman “disrespected him.” That real or perceived disrespect coming from a person that he consciously or unconsciously “see as a sub-human” was therefore the justification for gunning down this Black sub-human, this slave prodigy, this rude n***er, this criminal in Black skin. Most white cops (not all) see Black skin and they think “criminal,” “lazy, raper of white women” and “talking monkeys.” To them Blacks should “know their place” and don’t get uppity, especially when speaking to them at a traffic stop or any other minor encounter. There are two American justice systems: one privileged, tolerant, fair, sometimes benign, white and exclusive; the other black, bigoted, unjust, racist and violent.

It is this culture of violence and its historic targeting of Black people that’s at issue here. No amount of prayers, church vigils, marches, songs, platitudes from politicians, calls for calm by Black sellouts doing their masters’ biddings will cause things to change between cops and the Black community. Power concedes NOTHING without a fight. Racism and violence go hand in hand because racism sees the “other” as inferior and of no value; expendable and not worthy of respect. And America, still living in, and experiencing the Peter Pan syndrome, has NEVER grown up and matured enough to accept responsibility for 400 years of state-sanctioned violence, brutality and mayhem, visited on a defenseless Black community, the end-result of which we’re reaping and experiencing today.

To fix this problem and find answers we must go back to the origin’s of America’s police and why its fundamental nature and behavior are driven by age-old prejudices and inculcated violence. The oft cited “To protect and serve” begs the question: but whom? That’s where a history lesson offered by Professor Sam Mitrani of the College of Dupage comes in. Let’s start with a time in the U.S. before we had organized city-run police forces.

The True History of the Origins of Police — Protecting and Serving the Masters of Society By Professor Sam Mitrani.

The liberal way of viewing the problem rests on a misunderstanding of the origins of the police.

“… Before the 19th 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.” [Underline mine]

Exactly what happened to change this? United States capitalism and its dependence on the low-paid physical labor of immigrants, and later of Blacks moving north after the Civil War — up the Mississippi through St. Louis to Kansas City and Chicago, and up the eastern seaboard to Washington, New York and Boston, among other places.

Mitrani states:

“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-19th 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. 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. …”

Of course, the ruling class did not get everything it wanted. It 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.

The police, meanwhile, 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 de 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 and buildings and to establish a police pension out of their own pockets.” [www.Alternet.org] It’s the “identifying with order” that would morph into the modern day authoritarian personality and arrogant behavior of most cops today.

Listen to one of their own:

I’m a cop. If you don’t want to get hurt, don’t challenge me. By Sunil Dutta. August 19, 2014

Sunil Dutta, Ph.D., is a 17-year-veteran police officer in Los Angeles.

“… Even though it might sound harsh and impolitic, here is the bottom line: if you don’t want to get shot, tased, pepper-sprayed, struck with a baton or thrown to the ground, just do what I tell you. Don’t argue with me, don’t call me names, don’t tell me that I can’t stop you, don’t say I’m a racist pig, don’t threaten that you’ll sue me and take away my badge. Don’t scream at me that you pay my salary, and don’t even think of aggressively walking towards me.”

Because, he goes on to explain, “Officers are rarely at fault. When they use force, they are defending their, or the public’s, safety.”

You see the problem? It that attitude and the fact and the presumption that “officers are rarely at fault” that allows them to kill with impunity. If you are “rarely at fault” then using excessive violence becomes routine and second nature, especially against people that you do not feel compelled to respect. Not my words — those of a 17-year veteran of one of the most brutal police departments in the United States. The cop arrogance shines through with every word in that preceding quote dripping with belligerence, violence and aggression.

Here’s Professor Mitrani again on a key point — what this implies about rule of law:

“There was a never a time when the big city police neutrally enforced “the law” — nor, for that matter, a time when the law itself was neutral. Throughout the 19th century in the North, the police mostly arrested people for the vaguely defined “crimes” of disorderly conduct and vagrancy, which meant that they could target 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 of policies carefully 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. …

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.” [Underline mine].

So why is there seemingly no way ever to curb the violence of the police? The fact is that the police were founded, formed and created to use violence to reconcile electoral democracy with industrial capitalism. Today, in 2016, they are just one part of the “criminal justice” system that plays the same role. Their basic job is to enforce order among those with the most reason to resent the system — in our society today, disproportionately among poor Black people.


MICHAEL D. ROBERTS is a top Political Strategist and Business, Management and Communications Specialist in New York City’s Black community. He is an experienced writer whose specialty is socio-political and economic analysis and local community relations. He has covered the United Nations, the Caribbean and Africa in a career that spans over 32 years in journalism. As Editor of New York CARIB NEWS, a position that he’s held since 1990, he is in a unique position to have his hands on the pulse of the over 800,000 Caribbean-American community in Brooklyn, and the over 2.5 million members resident in the wider New York State community.

Source: OpEdNews.

 

Note to Commenters
Due to severe hacking attacks in the recent past that brought our site down for up to 11 days with considerable loss of circulation, we exercise extreme caution in the comments we publish, as the comment box has been one of the main arteries to inject malicious code. Because of that comments may not appear immediately, but rest assured that if you are a legitimate commenter your opinion will be published within 24 hours. If your comment fails to appear, and you wish to reach us directly, send us a mail at: editor@greanvillepost.com

We apologize for this inconvenience.

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Screen Shot 2015-12-08 at 2.57.29 PMNauseated by the
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What the nation doesn’t need: Race relations through a highly deformed and dirty media lens


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FERGUSON, MO - AUGUST 17: Police advance through a cloud of tear gas toward demonstrators protesting the killing of teenager Michael Brown on August 17, 2014 in Ferguson, Missouri.

FERGUSON, MO – AUGUST 17: Police advance through a cloud of tear gas toward demonstrators protesting the killing of teenager Michael Brown on August 17, 2014 in Ferguson, Missouri.


The media tries to deform and obliterate the underlying truths that divide American society. Fox, as usual, is out front with its venomous packaging of important events. Observe how this presstitute frames the dialog:

Of course “all lives matter”, and by that standard the lives of police officers also matter. But that is not what the current national controversy is all about. Black and Latino activists are pointing out that police have grotesquely abused their power to inflict bodily harm, and committed outright murders that the justice system simply ignored. In that sense, just looking at the equation, it’s clear which side is bleeding more. The men (and women) in blue lost 51 of their own in 2014, in what is described as “felonious assaults.” This is indeed a needless and terrible tragedy, a total shame on any nation that struts around calling itself civilized. But on the other hand, Blacks, Brown and White (mostly poor whites, obviously showing that class is the most indicative demographic for police violence, and as far as all races go, the mentally impaired who abound in America,) lost at least 613 people at the hands of the U.S. police since January 1, 2016. (see
killedbypolice.net) and also the Facebook page on the same topic, killedbypolice. Chances are, therefore, that the year may end with approximately 1200 citizens dead in police encounters, most of whom obviously were the target of excessive force or disregard for his or her rights to due process or a professional approach designed to minimize fatalities. That is a ratio that speaks for itself—20:1—in favor of the men with the badge and the “right” to kill, an awesome responsibility.


BELOW: Disinformation and confusionism delivered expertly by CBS and its stable of overpaid pseudo journalists:


Matt Agorist of the Free Thought Project, notes,

"The increase in police brutality in this country is a frightening reality. In the last decade alone the number of  people murdered by police has reached 5,000. The number of soldiers killed since the inception of the Iraq war, 4489. What went wrong?

In the 1970’s SWAT teams were estimated to be used just a few hundred times per year, now we are looking at over 40,000 military style “knock and announce” police raids a year. The police presence in this country is being turned into a military with a clearly defined enemy, anyone who questions the establishment.


BELOW: The media are busy trotting out black faces urging "peace" and "calm," "calm", while nothing has ever been done to introduce an effective policy of police control. "Police brutality" or, at least, a "double standard", has been a complaint—a fact— in Black and Latino neighborhoods for generations, urban areas already traumatized by the raging violence of higher than normal crime stemming from intractable poverty, yet these pseudo leaders continue to argue that the usual non-remedies will effect a cure. We need new approaches to this plague, and these approaches cannot be founded on cosmetics or just empty, sanctimonious rhetoric, which is all we see on the mainstream media.—PAS



ARTICLE RESUMES HERE

[dropcap]I[/dropcap]f we look at the most recent numbers of non-military US citizens killed by terrorism worldwide, that number is 17. You have a better chance of being killed by a bee sting, or a home repair accident than you do a terrorist. And you are 29 times more likely to be murdered by a cop than a terrorist!

Obviously, something is systemically wrong here, these numbers do not happen by chance. We are not dealing with just the old case of “bad apples,” the “rogue cops” of pulp fiction. This is a pervasive cultural problem which remains deeply entrenched in all sectors of American society, and particularly so among the police,  and which dates back generations—testimony to the fact the ruling elites are loath to restrain or punish those whom they regard as their main line of defense against an uppity and redistributive populace.

That’s why only truth can clean up the air, and an energetic program of administrative and judicial punishment for those who disgrace the police uniform by going from protector to oppressor in the blink of an eye. Justice indeed should be blind, hardly a novel ideal, and so should the police, both color and class blind. Social peace must be planted in this nation in the ground of scrupulous social and racial justice. Anything else, beginning with foolish lies by politicians, the media (as exemplified by the devious video clips above), and their stooges (of all races and genders), or an increase in the application of repression by the establishment, will only delay the inevitable, a far greater social explosion that may totally destroy the remaining civilities we cherish in the United States.



ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Boston native Paul Smith has some knowledge of police culture. Close relatives —including two cousins and several uncles—have served (and some still do) on the force as police officers and firefighters for generations. He himself considered becoming a police officer upon high school graduation. Smith currently resides in Los Angeles, where he is working on his first novel, due to appear early next year.



Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/americans-killed-cops-outnumber-americans-killed-iraq-war/#wV0L6fzkXHlkwC2f.99

USEFUL REFS
(1) See the Guardian (UK): The Counted/ People killed by police in the US
(
2) See also the database KilledbyPolice, which provides detailed data on a yearly basis.
(3) How many people have been killed by the police?
(4) FiveThirtyEight.com
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As Police Killings of Minorities Mount, Attacks on Police Like the One in Dallas, While Awful, Are Also Sadly Predictable


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Philando Castile

Philando Castile, Killed in Minnesota, a day apart.

But it has to be said that, with American police — most of them white — gunning down over 500 people — most of them black or brown and most of them unarmed — in just the first half of this year, it was bound to happen that somebody, or some group of people, would decide to retaliate by taking revenge on the police. That’s not to justify what happened in Dallas, and we still need to learn who was involved in this shooting of 12 cops and two civilian protesters, killing five police officers, and what their motives were. It’s just to say that if the police continue to treat one segment of American society as enemy combatants in a war zone, and if the legal system continues to give brutal cops a pass when they maim or kill innocent citizens, including young children, effectively granting them immunity for their atrocities, there will inevitably be a violent reaction.

Recall the origins of the Black Panther movement, which grew out of a period of urban riots and insurrections across the country to which the nation responded not with jobs, social programs and better school funding, but with military assaults and occupations by armed soldiers. The Panthers openly armed themselves and started shadowing police on patrol in their communities, determined to make it clear that police could not occupy their communities and abuse the residents with impunity. Their bold actions were effective, but they brought down on themselves the full repressive force of the federal government, which launched a full-scale attack to destroy the Panther organization, using informants, agents provocateur, dirty tricks, mass arrests and murder.

In the post 9-11 era of military policing, the situation in minority communities today is at least as bad as, and probably worse, than it was in the 1960s. Social welfare programs that were created in response to the ‘60s riots, have been gutted, causing poverty and hopelessness to spread and deepen. Prisons have been filled with mostly non-white inmates as sentencing guidelines have become stricter and sentences longer. Violence in urban neighborhoods has exploded, and police today in many cities perceive themselves not as “peace officers” but as soldiers operating in hostile war zones, and act accordingly.

Can we be surprised then, that there has been a military-style response in one of those cities?  That is not to justify this bloody act in Dallas, just to explain its inevitability.

There will no doubt be calls, particularly this having happened in Texas, for an even more militaristic crackdown by police on minority neighborhoods. But that would be a terrible mistake. What is needed is an amping down of the violence on both sides — the communities and the police. And also an amping down of the rhetoric, particularly by political leaders.

American society needs to start living up to its demonstrably false claim to be a just society of equality under the law.

[dropcap]T[/dropcap]his is a good place to note that while this deadly assault on police in Dallas represents the worst attack on law enforcement personnel in memory, it is not the first planned coordinated sniper attack in Texas or the US.  The last one, which was reportedly planned but never activated, was to have taken place in neighboring Houston, in November 2011.  It was not, however, intended to target police officers. Rather, it was intended to assassinate the leaders of the Houston Occupy movement, which was just getting going in that city that fall.

A heavily redacted memorandum (provided to us by the Partnership for Civil Justice and obtained by that public interest lawfirm in a pile of documents it received in response to a Freedom of Information request), sent from the Houston FBI office to the Bureau’s national headquarters in Washington, DC explains:

“An identified [DELETED] as of October planned to engage in sniper attacks against protesters in Houston, Texas, if deemed necessary. An identified [DELETED] had received intelligence that indicated the protesters in New York and Seattle planned similar protests in Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, and Austin, Texas. [DELETED] planned to gather intelligence against the leaders of the protest groups and obtain photographs, then formulate a plan to kill the leadership via suppressed sniper rifles. (Note: protests continued throughout the weekend with approximately 6000 persons in NYC. ‘Occupy Wall Street’ protests have spread to about half of all states in the US, over a dozen European and Asian cities, including protests in Cleveland 10//8/11 at Willard Park which was initially attended by hundreds of protesters.”

A second document, a memo from the Jacksonville, Florida FBI office sent out to a number of regional FBI offices and to Bureau headquarters in D.C., indicated that the plan, while not activated in Houston, may have been put on hold indefinitely:

“On 13 October 20111, writer sent via email an excerpt from the daily [DELETED] regarding FBI Houston’s [DELETED] to all IAs, SSRAs and SSA [DELETED] This [DELETED] identified the exploitation of the Occupy Movement by [LENGTHY DELETION] interested in developing a long-term plan to kill local Occupy leaders via sniper fire.”

The really disturbing aspect of all this is that when ThisCantBeHappening! contacted the FBI in Washington to find out what the Bureau had done about this deadly plot, which, as described, sounds like it may have involved some law enforcement or perhaps private security organization in Houston, we were basically blown off, and advised to contact the Houston FBI office or the Houston Police. The former would not return calls, and the latter claimed not to have even heard of the plot.

There were never any arrests of the Houston sniper plotters, though the FBI normally makes a big public announcement whenever it busts up some real or manufactured terrorism plot, suggesting that the Bureau was not at all concerned about this known plan to murder leaders of a lawful protest movement against corporate power.

Again, none of this justifies the murder of police officers, but it is important to note the grotesque double standard of justice that exists, not just in Texas, but in the nation as a whole.

Organizing to defend a community from abusive police, back in the late 1960s, prompted the US government to organize a massive coordinated campaign of  ruthless repression against the perpetrators — the Black Panther Party. But organizing a plot to murder the leaders of a peaceful demonstration against corporate power in the capital of the US oil industry apparently led to no action at all by the nation’s top law enforcement agency. (Nor did anyone in Congress see fit to call a hearing to investigation this plot of the resulting FBI inaction.)

The last planned sniper attack, reportedly planned but never activated, was to have taken place in neighboring Houston, in November 2011.  It was not, however, intended to target police officers. Rather, it was intended to assassinate the leaders of the Houston Occupy movement.

The same double standard applies to the problem of police brutality and murder of blacks and other people of color. If a cop is killed  — especially by a person of color — the full weight of the law enforcement and legal establishment is brought down on the alleged perpetrator. A good example of this is the case of Mumia Abu-Jamal, the Philadelphia journalist who was convicted in an abomination of a trial in 1982 for the 1981 killing of a white Philadelphia police officer. Sentenced to death initially, Abu-Jamal spent over two decades on Pennsylvania’s death row before ultimately having that sentence overturned by a federal court, leaving him facing life without possibility of parole. But at every turn, from being left to bleed to death in a police van from a police bullet before finally being brought to a hospital to having his legal appeals rejected by higher courts that had granted relief to other prisoners on the same grounds, down to the present time where the state’s Dept. of Corrections is leaving him untreated for a severe diagnosed case of easily curable active Hepatitis C, Abu Jamal has been abused by police and by the legal system.

Yet as we have seen over and over, especially in the past few years thanks to the proliferation of documentation via cellphones, when police murder an unarmed black or brown suspect (and often a white one too), they escape prosecution, or if prosecuted, skate free on a technicality.

A common refrain at #blacklivesmatter protests is the phrase “No justice, no peace!”

The intent of that phrase is that as long as there is no justice there will be protests. The reality, though, in a nation that so readily turns to guns to solve its grievances, is that there will also be events like what just happened in Dallas.

It’s time to turn things around, not by just ramping up the police repression, but by making justice a reality for all, and not just the privileged class.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Dave Lindorff is a founding member of ThisCantBeHappening!, an online newspaper collective, and is a contributor to Hopeless: Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion (AK Press).
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