Supported by
Yes, We Mean Literally Abolish the Police
Because reform won’t happen.
Ms. Kaba is an organizer against criminalization.
Congressional Democrats want to make it easier to identify and prosecute police misconduct; Joe Biden wants to give police departments $300 million. But efforts to solve police violence through liberal reforms like these have failed for nearly a century.
Enough. We can’t reform the police. The only way to diminish police violence is to reduce contact between the public and the police.
There is not a single era in United States history in which the police were not a force of violence against black people. Policing in the South emerged from the slave patrols in the 1700 and 1800s that caught and returned runaway slaves. In the North, the first municipal police departments in the mid-1800s helped quash labor strikes and riots against the rich. Everywhere, they have suppressed marginalized populations to protect the status quo.
So when you see a police officer pressing his knee into a black man’s neck until he dies, that’s the logical result of policing in America. When a police officer brutalizes a black person, he is doing what he sees as his job.
Now two weeks of nationwide protests have led some to call for defunding the police, while others argue that doing so would make us less safe.
The first thing to point out is that police officers don’t do what you think they do. They spend most of their time responding to noise complaints, issuing parking and traffic citations, and dealing with other noncriminal issues. We’ve been taught to think they “catch the bad guys; they chase the bank robbers; they find the serial killers,” said Alex Vitale, the coordinator of the Policing and Social Justice Project at Brooklyn College, in an interview with Jacobin. But this is “a big myth,” he said. “The vast majority of police officers make one felony arrest a year. If they make two, they’re cop of the month.”
Subscribe to The Times to read as many articles as you like.
Related Content
Image by Pablo Delcan
Areca Roe
Will Matsuda for The New York Times
Juan Bernabeu
Hunter French
Illustration by Frank Augugliaro/The New York Times. Photographs by Alexander Nemenov, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Editors’ Picks
John Lamparski/Getty Images
Kezia Gabriella
Illustration by Andrei Cojocaru; Photographs by Getty Images
Trending in The Times
Photo Illustration by The New York Times; Photo: Damian Dovarganes/Associated Press
Joe Schildhorn/BFA.com, via Shutterstock
Hans Pennink/Associated Press
Mengshin Lin/The Deseret News, via Associated Press
Illustration by The New York Times; source photograph by John Bazemore/Associated Press
Sara Andreasson
Aijaz Rahi/Associated Press
Lila Barth for The New York Times
Paul Daly/The Canadian Press, via Associated Press
Advertisement