{"id":11222,"date":"2021-05-18T18:41:01","date_gmt":"2021-05-18T18:41:01","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/lavozlit.com\/?p=11222"},"modified":"2021-05-18T18:41:01","modified_gmt":"2021-05-18T18:41:01","slug":"for-an-independent-working-class-struggle-against-policing","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/2021\/05\/18\/for-an-independent-working-class-struggle-against-policing\/","title":{"rendered":"For an Independent Working Class Struggle Against Policing"},"content":{"rendered":"<h1><b>For an Independent Working Class Struggle Against Policing: A Balance Sheet of Recent Reforms and Next Steps for the Socialist Movement<\/b><\/h1>\n<p><i>By A. al-Tariqi\u00a0<\/i><br \/>\n&nbsp;<br \/>\nIn mid-September 2020 the state of Kentucky refused to charge officers who killed Breonna Talyor. More recently, while the trial of Derek Chauvin, the officer who murdered George Floyd in Minneapolis, yielded a <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2021\/04\/20\/us\/george-floyd-chauvin-verdict.html\">rare conviction<\/a><\/span> in a case of a police killing of a Black or Brown person, police murders of working class people have <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2021\/04\/17\/us\/police-shootings-killings.html\">continued unabated<\/a><\/span>, with Black and Latino people representing over half these murders. To name only a few of these cases: Police in the nearby Minneapolis suburb of Brooklyn Center shot and killed a 20-year old Black man, Daunte Wright, at a traffic stop on the afternoon of April 11. The police stopped Wright because an air freshener was obscuring his rear view mirror. <i>Democracy Now!<\/i> <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.democracynow.org\/2021\/4\/13\/daunte_wright_minnesota_police_killing\">reports<\/a><\/span> that on April 12, \u201cpolice fired tear gas, rubber-coated bullets, stun grenades, as protesters defied a curfew and took to the streets, Brooklyn Center, for a second straight night. Police said 40 people were arrested. More than a dozen were also arrested during protests in Minneapolis.\u201d A few days later, Chicago Police released bodycam footage showing the police murder of unarmed Latino 13-year old Adam Toledo on March 29. City officials, including the mayor Lori Lightfoot, \u201c<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.democracynow.org\/2021\/4\/16\/chicago_adam_toledo_police_killing_video\">spent weeks<\/a><\/span> disparaging Adam Toledo before releasing the bodycam footage,\u201d according to Chicago alderperson Rossana Rodr\u00edguez-Sanchez. Shortly before the verdict in the Chauvin trial, Columbus, Ohio police <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/live\/2021\/04\/21\/us\/derek-chauvin-verdict-guilty#as-the-chauvin-verdict-was-about-to-be-read-the-police-killed-a-teenage-girl-in-ohio\">fatally shot<\/a><\/span> Ma\u2019Khiah Bryant, a 16-year old Black girl.<br \/>\n&nbsp;<br \/>\nThe questions of police reform and of the effectiveness of summer 2020\u2019s mass protests in bringing it about continue to be of central importance for our movement. These questions can be further specified. As the police killings of Black and Brown people continue during and after the Chauvin trial, growing sectors of the working class see through the emptiness of Democratic Party officials\u2019 promises of police reform and the co-optation of slogans like \u201cBlack Lives Matter\u201d by the capitalist class and its political parties. Workers and youth are increasingly asking deeper questions such as \u201cwhat is the role of police and their relation to the capitalist class,\u201d \u201cwhy are Black people especially targeted,\u201d and \u201chow can this be stopped\u201d?<br \/>\n&nbsp;<br \/>\nAs revolutionary Marxists, our view is that the police are a fundamental part of the capitalist state apparatus, a key to reproducing the status quo of capitalist property relations. The police, along with other coercive state forces (FBI, NSA, Border Patrol, ICE etc.) are, as Friedrich Engels said, \u201cspecial bodies of armed men\u201d, separate from the working class, accountable to and serving only the ruling class. Capitalism in the United States depends on racial division and animus to maintain itself. First, since capitalism itself generates the inequalities and material insecurity in society, its continued existence depends on the division of the working class along lines of identity. Second, racial discrimination and terror help to secure \u201c<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2020\/07\/01\/modern-u-s-racial-capitalism\/\">super-profits<\/a><\/span>\u201d for the capitalist class, both within US borders and without. Examples range from the real estate and insurance industries, to the pharmaceutical industry, to the slavery-like labor conditions in the prison-industurial complex, to the impoverishment of the global south by US imperialism. As WEB DuBois <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theatlantic.com\/magazine\/archive\/2014\/08\/the-african-roots-of-war\/373403\/\">wrote<\/a><\/span> over a hundred years ago, it is from the \u201cdarker nations&#8221; and the racially oppressed that the fabulous wealth of Western imperialist nations comes. Today in the United States, it is Black, Brown, Indigenous peoples, and immigrants who are most vulnerable to police violence and other forms of state violence. Race, to summarize, is a core contradiction of US capitalism. The fight against racism and the police is therefore integral to the working class struggle for socialism. Here, we offer a balance sheet of the police reform movement since summer 2020. We show why liberal attempts to reform the police have failed, and the role that electoralism and dependence on the Democratic Party played in this failure. In the concluding section we outline next steps for the working class movement and a Marxist strategy for police abolition.<br \/>\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h2>Balance Sheet of the Reform Movement<\/h2>\n<h3><i>Reforms since Summer 2020<\/i><\/h3>\n<p>By late fall 2020, the federal government and majority of state governments had failed to enact real reforms of policing, let alone address the movement\u2019s most radical demands, such as defunding the police and diverting those funds to social needs, especially of Black communities which have been hit hardest by the ongoing COVID and unemployment crises. Even states with liberal legislatures have taken no major steps in this direction. Racial justice and police reform activists attribute this to pushback by police unions and to poor timing, according to an <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.politico.com\/news\/2020\/09\/23\/breonna-taylor-police-reforms-420799\">article<\/a><\/span> in Politico (by late May 2020, 25 state legislatures had adjourned for the summer, though some had returned in the aftermath of the George Floyd murder to convene special sessions on police reform and COVID). Consider the following:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li aria-level=\"1\">In California, the failure to pass any significant police reforms was particularly glaring given the state\u2019s liberal reputation and Democratic supermajority.<\/li>\n<li aria-level=\"1\">In Colorado, one of the few \u201csuccess stories,\u201d the legislature passed a law ending qualified immunity. Qualified immunity refers to the way that cops have circumvented a US federal legal code called Section 1983, based on the Fourth Amendment, which should allow individuals to sue state or local officials for violations of federal constitutional rights. Under qualified immunity, cops (or other officials) can have lawsuits dismissed by claiming that their actions do not \u201c<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/newrepublic.com\/article\/162026\/new-mexico-ended-qualified-immunity\">violate a clearly established\u201d<\/a> <\/span>constitutional right. More than 240 officers resigned or retired after the Colorado bill was signed in June 2020.<\/li>\n<li aria-level=\"1\">Virginia failed in summer 2020 to pass a qualified immunity bill, though the Massachusetts legislature did<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"> <a href=\"https:\/\/www.axios.com\/police-reform-george-floyd-protest-2150b2dd-a6dc-4a0c-a1fb-62c2e999a03a.html\">pass such a bill <\/a><\/span>in late June (allegedly; see below) and Connecticut did so in July, with New York City and New Mexico following suit by March and April 2021, respectively.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>&nbsp;<br \/>\nIt may seem that the bills passed in Massachusetts, Colorado, etc., are positive steps. However, a closer look reveals that these bills are not what they are hyped up to be. In practice, despite the existence of Section 1983, federal courts have usually sided with cops, in effect giving them carte blanche. They commonly rule that even egregious actions by cops,<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"> <a href=\"https:\/\/newrepublic.com\/article\/162026\/new-mexico-ended-qualified-immunity\">such as property destruction or theft<\/a><\/span>, let alone violence against persons, \u201cdon\u2019t violate clearly established rules.\u201d More obviously &#8211; though perhaps this is a technicality &#8211; the aforementioned examples by definition do not actually abolish qualified immunity, since this is a question of federal law, not of state or local law, as a useful article by Matt Ford in <i>The New Republic <\/i>recently points out. From Ford\u2019s analysis, we can infer two salient points. First, while states may have found a possible way to circumvent qualified immunity by applying it, on paper, to local and state officials, its implementation at the federal level remains untouched. Second, there are inconsistencies, gaps, or flaws in these laws. Colorado\u2019s qualified immunity law applies only to \u201cpeace officers\u201d while New Mexico\u2019s applies to all state and local officials. Connecticut\u2019s has <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/reason.com\/volokh\/2020\/08\/02\/connecticut-passes-law-curbing-back-qualified-immunity-but-with-loopholes\/\">loopholes<\/a> <\/span>for officers who \u201cact in good faith\u201d, i.e., they didn\u2019t \u201cintend\u201d to violate anyone\u2019s constitutional rights; and it requires the state, instead of the cop who is sued, to pay damages. Ford rightly worries that these state-level laws may in fact be \u201cfake bans\u201d that end up undermining the serious reforms that policing reform activists have been demanding. We should note here that this confirms what revolutionary socialists have been saying for a long time about the real function of the Democratic Party: its function is to divert, demobilize, and destroy social movements.<br \/>\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h3><i>The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act\u00a0<\/i><\/h3>\n<p>With the new Biden-Harris administration and Democratic majorities in both chambers of the legislature, many progressive activists felt that there would be a new and more welcoming climate for racial justice and policing reforms, though other liberals expressed <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/nymag.com\/intelligencer\/2020\/11\/2020-election-police-reform-is-probably-dead-under-biden.html\">some doubts<\/a><\/span>. Perhaps sensing the need to signal to their base their putative sincerity in addressing racial justice movement demands, the Democratic-controlled House in early March, with the backing of the Biden White House, passed the<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"> <a href=\"https:\/\/apnews.com\/article\/breonna-taylor-joe-biden-race-and-ethnicity-police-legislation-57796a64d9dd71b35aa48ac217249cec\">George Floyd Justice in Policing Act<\/a><\/span>. The bill would ban chokeholds and end qualified immunity for cops. Further, it would give<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"> <a href=\"https:\/\/www.npr.org\/2021\/03\/23\/980234498\/the-breathe-act-is-a-counterproposal-to-justice-in-policing-act\">monetary incentives<\/a> <\/span>to local police for improved training. Along with the White House, it is<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"> <a href=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/newshour\/politics\/movement-for-black-lives-opposes-george-floyd-justice-in-policing-act\">supported<\/a><\/span> by leading civil rights <a href=\"https:\/\/naacp.org\/latest\/civil-rights-leaders-call-on-congress-to-pass-george-floyd-justice-in-policing-act\/\"><span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">organizations<\/span><\/a> and<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"> <a href=\"https:\/\/chicago.suntimes.com\/columnists\/2021\/4\/12\/22380284\/george-floyd-justice-policing-act-national-standards-jesse-jackson\">figures<\/a><\/span>. It is notable, however, that the bill <i>does not cut police budgets, let alone defund police or reinvest said funds in communities<\/i>. Indeed, Democratic leaders have consistently stated that, in spite of the fact that \u201cno one\u201d in their party ran on defunding the police, their party\u2019s association in the public mind with the slogan hurt them in the November elections. Quite the contrary, prominent Democrats have<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"> <a href=\"https:\/\/apnews.com\/article\/breonna-taylor-joe-biden-race-and-ethnicity-police-legislation-57796a64d9dd71b35aa48ac217249cec\">pushed<\/a><\/span> for <i>increased<\/i> police funding, as does, in the form of the aforementioned incentives, the George Floyd Act. Ultimately, we expect that the bill will face serious difficulties going forward. Given the filibuster, it needs to pass by <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/newshour\/politics\/with-senate-split-50-50-heres-what-democrats-can-and-cant-do\">60 &#8211; 40 votes<\/a><\/span>. Further, the party will in no way call for extra-parliamentary pressure (protests, street mobilizations, strikes) on recalcitrant Republicans and right-wing members of their own party such as <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/newshour\/politics\/democrats-police-reform-bill-faces-opposition-in-the-senate-but-thats-only-the-first-hurdle\">Joe Manchin<\/a><\/span>.<br \/>\n&nbsp;<br \/>\nOn March 18, our comrades in Socialist Resurgence summarized the current state of police reforms in their<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"> <a href=\"https:\/\/socialistresurgence.org\/2021\/03\/18\/u-s-ruling-class-grasps-for-temporary-solutions-to-long-term-problems\/\">political perspectives document<\/a><\/span>. This is a perspective with which we agree. Our comrades write:<br \/>\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n<blockquote class=\"td_quote_box td_box_center\"><p>While there has been a nominal increase in some places of non-police first-responder programs, the fact remains that none of the demands of the movement last summer have been realized. On a local level, this seems to at least be partially due to the co-optation of new and young activists into running as Democrats or through incorporation into the \u201cnon-profit industrial complex.\u201d Nationally, the Justice for George Floyd Act not only increases funding for police but if it had been passed in 2019, Floyd would still be dead. Despite a massive amount of police violence against protesters and BIPOC communities, virtually none have seen charges.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>&nbsp;<br \/>\nAs we have also previously <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/lavozlit.com\/what-do-we-mean-by-police-abolition\/\">discussed<\/a><\/span>, liberal reforms are a <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.versobooks.com\/books\/2817-the-end-of-policing\">dead end<\/a><\/span>. Their function is both to legitimize the capitalist state &#8211; showing that it is capable of antiracist \u201cwokeness\u201d and of delivering sustained reforms &#8211; and to de-escalate and demobilize the energy of bottom-up movements such as we saw last summer. This is the ambiguity and instability (from our class\u2019s perspective) of bourgeois reformism: reforms are won through the combativity of our class, but the capitalist state always finds new ways to re-establish capitalist rule. As our SR comrades point out, at the very moment that policing reforms seem on the horizon, state legislatures across the United States are escalating their attack on voting rights, especially of Black working class people:<br \/>\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n<blockquote class=\"td_quote_box td_box_center\"><p>The movement against voting rights is reaching a new stage. Georgia, which was the Democratic Party\u2019s shining example of the possibilities of electoralism and enfranchising Black people to vote, just passed one of the most restrictive assaults on voter rights in recent years. That is just one of 253 voter-suppression laws being considered in 43 states.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h3>Movement for Black Lives\u2019 Alternative: The BREATHE Act<\/h3>\n<p>&nbsp;<br \/>\nOn March 17, news sources <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/newshour\/politics\/movement-for-black-lives-opposes-george-floyd-justice-in-policing-act\">reported<\/a><\/span> that the Movement for Black Lives (M4BL) had come out in opposition to the George Floyd Act. As M4BL spokespeople told the media, this was because the bill \u201ccenters investments in policing rather than what should be front and center \u2014 upfront investments in communities and people.\u201d Further, while M4BL does support ending qualified immunity, it criticizes the George Floyd Act for being too reactive and incrementalist. They are particularly concerned that the bill would increase funds for policing and the carceral state and that it fails, as M4BL spokespeople put it to national media, to \u201ccenter the voices\u201d of the communities most affected by these.<br \/>\n&nbsp;<br \/>\nM4BL has instead proposed the BREATHE Act, a bill which would abolish the DEA, the use of surveillance technology, mandatory minimums sentencing and life sentences, and would redistribute funding away from policing and towards communities \u201cto address the nation\u2019s systemic racial injustices.\u201d Above, we discussed the trajectory that police reforms have taken within the confines of electoralism, both at the federal and state levels, since summer 2020. What is clear is that the state will tolerate only reforms far less radical than those called for by M4BL.\u00a0 Winning the M4BL reforms would require not only the kind of mass surge in politicization which we witnessed this past summer, but the building of bases of power opposed to the capitalist class and its state that can put them on their backfoot. Specifically, it means mobilizing tactics that go beyond the episodic character of the summer protests, tactics such as work stoppages and strikes. Such tactics would necessitate a strategic vision, type of organization, and level confidence among our class that is, indeed, in contradiction to <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.versobooks.com\/blogs\/2508-the-paradox-of-social-democracy-the-american-case-part-one\">the logic<\/a><\/span> of<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"> <a href=\"https:\/\/lavozlit.com\/the-dsas-dirty-break-strategy-a-balance\/\">electoralism<\/a><\/span>. What do we mean more concretely? From the perspective of working class power, one of the frustrating features of protest waves, and those of summer 2020 were no exception, is how mass energies bubble up, briefly explode, and rapidly deflate. The reasons for this are a lack of democratic deliberation over movement demands and escalation strategy, of democratic leadership, and of inter-regional, national-scale coordination. Lacking these elements, activists and workers moving into politics see no option other than the electoral arena and the Democratic Party. Most others, who were briefly politicized by accelerating events, eventually tire of endless marches and protests, which in themselves provide weak results at best.<br \/>\n&nbsp;<br \/>\nYet M4BL\u2019s strategy, at least as articulated by its spokespeople to the national media, itself strongly tends towards electoralism. The BREATHE Act is unlikely to win majority support in either chamber of Congress let alone from Biden. Acknowledging this, M4BL leaders pin their hopes on the pressure that the younger voters and activists who played a big role in Biden\u2019s November victory can apply to lawmakers. This in turn relies on the notion of \u201cholding politicians\u2019 feet to the fire,\u201d the idea that social movements, through intermediaries in the non-profit sector, can directly hold politicians accountable. As <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/newshour\/politics\/movement-for-black-lives-opposes-george-floyd-justice-in-policing-act\">stated <\/a><\/span>recently by Gina Clayton-Johnson, the lead BREATHE Act architect and leadership team member of the Movement for Black Lives\u2019 Policy Table: \u201cBlack people have organized, have pushed and created the pathways for you to sit in the seat that you are in and it is because there has been a hope and an understanding that you will deliver on a commitment to race justice and equality.\u201d She adds: \u201cWe are owed the opportunity to be safe and that includes first and foremost to be safe from a criminal legal system that has been harming us and taking the lives of Black people and of our loved ones for years.\u201d<br \/>\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h3>BLM10 splits with BLMGN<\/h3>\n<p>&nbsp;<br \/>\nIn early February 2021, BLM chapters calling themselves BLM10 came out in <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/leftoutmag.com\/2021\/02\/04\/breaking\/\">opposition to<\/a> <\/span>BLM Global Network (BLMGN), the non-profit that claims leadership over the movement for Black Lives and which, in the public mind, often stands in for it. Particularly notable are BLM10\u2019s objections to BLMGN\u2019s <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.leftvoice.org\/black-socialists-speak-on-blm-democratic-party-co-optation-and-the-fight-for-revolution\">ties to the Democratic Party<\/a><\/span> and support for \u201cBlack capitalism\u201d. They state that the BLM name \u201cis now being used to sell products, acquire book deals, T.V. deals, and speaking engagements. We have no interest in these pursuits, and we are opposed to the movement to substitute Black capitalism for white capitalism.\u201d<br \/>\n&nbsp;<br \/>\nIt should be noted that there are two prominent organizations or networks bearing the Black Lives Matter name, BLMGN and <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/m4bl.org\">Movement for Black Lives<\/a>. <\/span>They have a collaborative relationship, although the latter seems further to the left and more oriented toward direct action. It is important to note that BLM10\u2019s critique has been focused on BLMGN. The latter recently published its annual<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"> <a href=\"https:\/\/blacklivesmatter.com\/2020-impact-report\/\">impact report<\/a> <\/span>for 2020. It is a very interesting read and gives further insight into the criticisms leveled by BLM10.<br \/>\n&nbsp;<br \/>\nThe report leans heavily into support for the Democratic Party and for Black capitalism. The politics it espouses are purely reformist, its vision entirely circumscribed by the goal of being represented in the \u201challs of power,\u201d channeling the grassroots to electoralism, and making connections to the philanthropic world. Among its stated accomplishments for 2020 include a statement calling for the replacement of Ruth Bader Ginsburg with a Black woman judge, its massive GOTV campaign, and a letter to the Biden-Harris administration asking them to meet with BLMGN. It argues that the 2020 election was \u201cthe most consequential election of our lifetime\u201d (p. 11) and envisions \u201cdeveloping a stake in the philanthropic world\u201d (p. 22) as an important front of its work. On pp. 27 &#8211; 28, the report acknowledges Black, particularly Black male, disaffection with the political system and discusses the importance of bringing these sectors back into electoralism. On p. 17, it discusses BLMGN\u2019s\u00a0 partnerships: \u201cBlack Lives Matter takes pride in our yearly roster of partners. When choosing partners, we look for entities that are actively engaging with issues affecting Black communities or have committed to donating a large amount to racial justice initiatives.\u201d Two partnerships they choose to highlight are <i>Hamilton: The Musical<\/i> and Sprite soda company. The same page ends with: \u201cAs our scope and capacity expands, we look forward to partnering with more institutions to creatively imagine how we can work together towards achieving Black liberation.\u201d The use of slogans like Black liberation and iconography from previous generations of Black revolutionaries such as Malcolm X side by side with corporate sponsorships gives one a more concrete sense of why Black revolutionary socialists find the BLM leaderships\u2019 behavior so galling.<br \/>\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h3><i>BLM Inland Empire breaks with BLMGN, Renames itself the Black Power Collective<\/i><\/h3>\n<p>&nbsp;<br \/>\nAccording to a widely circulated <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/leftoutmag.com\/2021\/02\/04\/breaking\/\">document<\/a><\/span> articulating BLM10\u2019s rejection of BLMGN, the BLM Inland Empire (California) chapter was approached by Patrisse Cullors in 2015 to join BLMGN as a BLM chapter. Cullors, they claim, told them BLM was \u201cdecentralized and leaderless,\u201d but this turned out not to be the case at all. BLM-IE found out, instead, that BLMGN was \u201ctop down\u201d and \u201cdogmatic.\u201d BLMGN promoted (the presumably more reformist and middle class) Los Angeles chapter and work with One United Bank. BLM-IE has accused BLMGN of a lack of financial transparency, of undemocratic \u201cpower moves\u201d by Cullors and other prominent members of the non-profit.<br \/>\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n<blockquote class=\"td_quote_box td_box_center\"><p>Together, the Los Angeles Chapter along with the Global Network have consistently tried to strong-arm other groups and have worked to undermine a grassroots movement by capitalizing on unpaid labor, suppressing any internal attempt at democracy, commodifying Black death, and profiting from the same pain and suffering inflicted on Black communities that we\u2019re fighting to end.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>&nbsp;<br \/>\nThey continue:<br \/>\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n<blockquote class=\"td_quote_box td_box_center\"><p>The use of the BLM name, which we believed was intended to unify our struggle, has been commodified and debased. It is now being used to sell products, acquire book deals, T.V. deals, and speaking engagements. We have no interest in these pursuits, and we are opposed to the movement to substitute Black capitalism for white capitalism. It has become clear that the Global network and certain figures have platformed our struggles with the sole purpose of exploiting our labor.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>&nbsp;<br \/>\nBLMGN\u2019s relationship to the Democratic Party is specifically and sharply criticized: \u201cthe Democratic Party,\u201d BLM-IE statement says, \u201chas historically rejected and ignored BLM\u2019s demands and has made it clear that they are pro-police, pro-prison, and committed to capitalism [&#8230;] the Global Network is essentially a steering committee acting in the best interest of various fractions within the Democratic Party.\u201d The creation of Black Lives Matter PAC with the use of finances generated during the summer protests, they argue, violates the collective agreement that BLM does not work with police or endorse politicians. The formation of the PAC absorbs the movement into the nonprofit sector and the DP. They further highlight BLM\u2019s funding by <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.leftvoice.org\/black-socialists-speak-on-blm-democratic-party-co-optation-and-the-fight-for-revolution\">Amazon<\/a><\/span> as a violation of the spirit of the movement for Black Lives.<br \/>\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h2>Where Next?<\/h2>\n<p>&nbsp;<br \/>\nThe BLM10 and like-minded Black liberation fighters are currently consolidating as the vanguard of the struggle for Black Lives and against police and state coercion. We urge our party comrades and all socialists working in the same regions as BLM10 to support and collaborate with BLM10, Black Power Collective, and similar organizations. At the same time, our party will agitate in our workplaces, workers\u2019 organizations, activist networks, etc. around the basic ideas that the police and state coercive apparatus <i>need to be dismantled; <\/i>and that, <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/lavozlit.com\/who-we-are\/thesis-on-police-state-forces-of-repression-and-the-mass-rebellion\/\">as we have written<\/a><\/span> in our own thesis on police and state forces of repression, a change of administration, let alone the personal qualities of individual cops etc., do not change the structural role played by the police in maintaining the rule of the capitalist class. Further, wherever and whenever possible, we amplify a set of demands to weaken and eventually defeat the capitalist state forces of repression.<br \/>\n&nbsp;<br \/>\nTo be clear, we reject \u201c<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/lavozlit.com\/who-we-are\/thesis-on-police-state-forces-of-repression-and-the-mass-rebellion\/\">accommodationist solutions<\/a><\/span>\u201d to policing, such as better police training, implicit bias training etc., community advisory boards, building community support for policing, and civilian review boards, which differ little if at all from city council elections. All of these \u201csolutions\u201d are premised on the idea of community control of the existing police, not on police abolition or worker self-organization for self-defense.<br \/>\n&nbsp;<br \/>\nWe do, however, support demands that weaken the ability of the police to fulfill their capitalist and racist functions, including disarming the police, defunding the police and redistribution of those funds to social needs such as public education, healthcare, public and free facilities such as parks, community centers, arts programs, etc., the expulsion of police \u201cunions\u201d from the labor movement and of police from schools, and ending qualified immunity and making it easier to sue and prosecute cops.<br \/>\n&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h3><i>Building Mass Revolutionary Movement and Generalizing the Struggle against Oppression<\/i><\/h3>\n<p>&nbsp;<br \/>\nHowever, these demands, let alone the abolition of state forces of repression, will not succeed if they are disconnected from a strategy for building independent workers\u2019 power to dismantle capitalism and the capitalist state. Because the need for repression of workers and for<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2020\/07\/01\/modern-u-s-racial-capitalism\/\"> the reproduction of racism<\/a><\/span> and other forms of oppression are structural to capitalism, the state forces of repression cannot be abolished under capitalism. Capitalists can, for example, simply replace or complement state repressive forces with privatized forces. Therefore, total abolition will only be possible with a working class revolution. Consequently, rather than working on developing comprehensive alternatives to policing or for decarceration, our strategy is to <b><i>build the mass movement that can accomplish a working class revolution that would make these changes actually possible<\/i><\/b><b>.<\/b> This in turn requires that we prepare our class for self-government while, at the same time, continuously engaging in anti-racist and anti-sexist education. We also support building the confidence of our class to deal with internal conflicts without relying on state forces, such as police and courts, or on bosses as mediators. We think that it is critical to <b><i>build workers\u2019 committees<\/i><\/b> to deal with these matters instead. When we form such committees, we do so <b><i>as part of a process of struggle,<\/i><\/b> with the goal of increasing our anti-oppression consciousness and practice and developing mass action and independent organization of our class.<br \/>\n&nbsp;<br \/>\nCapitalism is the root cause of all the inequality, precarity, and oppression in society, and policing is used not only to defend capitalist property relations but is often the misguided \u201ccommon sense\u201d or default (pseudo)solution to these problems. Our struggle therefore needs to agitate for <b><i>fully funded social services, such as healthcare, especially mental healthcare, housing, education, and social programs to combat violence against women<\/i><\/b>. For we know the interaction between civilians and police is exponentially multiplied when people lack the resources they need to live their lives. By targeting the social roots of policing, and diminishing the occasions for police interventions, we can draw our unions and community organizations into the struggle.<br \/>\n&nbsp;<br \/>\nIf the abolition of repressive forces is impossible without a mass working class movement, this means we need to broaden and widen the struggles that emerged last summer by <b><i>generalizing the struggle against all forms of policing<\/i><\/b>, mobilizing the whole working class into the fight against state repression. For example, <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/lavozlit.com\/the-immigrant-rights-struggle-is-a-working-class-struggle\/\">immigrant workers<\/a><\/span> in the United States are exploited with special violence by the capitalist class. They are, as a result, especially vulnerable to state repression, in the form of immigration raids by ICE along with municipal police forces etc. Women workers &#8211; a category that obviously overlaps with both Black and immigrant workers &#8211; are another sector of the working class whose ascribed identity the capitalist class uses to intensify exploitation. The fight against<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"> <a href=\"https:\/\/lavozlit.com\/our-marxist-approach-to-combating-womens-oppression-in-working-class-organizations-2\/\">women\u2019s oppression<\/a><\/span> is also a fundamental working class struggle. Building collaboration and solidarity between the immigrant workers\u2019 movement, the <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/lavozlit.com\/securing-and-expanding-womens-reproductive-rights-in-the-u-s-2\/\">women\u2019s and reproductive rights<\/a> <\/span>movement, and the movement for Black liberation is critical. It is only by both bringing anti-oppression to the heart of our working class struggles and agitating for the necessity of political independence from the political parties of the capitalists that we will be able to defeat racism and its apparatuses of violence.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>For an Independent Working Class Struggle Against Policing: A Balance Sheet of Recent Reforms and Next Steps for the Socialist Movement By A. al-Tariqi\u00a0 &nbsp; In mid-September 2020 the state of Kentucky refused to charge officers who killed Breonna Talyor. More recently, while the trial of Derek Chauvin, the officer who murdered George Floyd in [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":13882119,"featured_media":11223,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_crdt_document":"","_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_feature_clip_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":false,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","default_image_id":0,"font":"","enabled":false},"version":2},"_wpas_customize_per_network":false,"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false},"categories":[27671],"tags":[30232,30460,30176,30461,30462,30463,30189],"class_list":["post-11222","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uncategorized-en","tag-abolish-the-police","tag-black-lives-mater","tag-blm","tag-blm-inland-empire","tag-blm10","tag-blmgn","tag-defund-the-police"],"translation":{"provider":"WPGlobus","version":"3.0.2","language":"es","enabled_languages":["en","es"],"languages":{"en":{"title":true,"content":true,"excerpt":false},"es":{"title":false,"content":false,"excerpt":false}}},"aioseo_notices":[],"jetpack_publicize_connections":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_likes_enabled":true,"jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_shortlink":"https:\/\/wp.me\/pdQxqk-2V0","amp_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/11222","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/13882119"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=11222"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/11222\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=11222"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=11222"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=11222"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}