You don't have to be racist to participate in systemic racism. US policing produces racist outcomes even from "not-racist" people. I'm going to explain (again):
* why I've probably been pulled over way more times than most people you know, even though most of the times I'm pulled over, I get no ticket (because I did nothing wrong)
* how I stopped getting pulled over so much (because I understand the system)
* And why lots of cops say that the average voter is more racist than the average cop
Imagine yourself as a police officer. Hopefully you don't consider yourself racist! You're all ready to fix the system "from the inside" by being a good cop.
Your police chief tells you that you must write 200 tickets a month. If you fail to write 200 tickets a month you will be fired.
Imagine you write a ticket for a rich white lawyer that lives in Atherton. They can easily afford the $80 ticket; they bill out at $800/hr! But they will take a day off work just to go fight the ticket in court
If they overturn that ticket, it doesn't count to your total. If they show up in court and you don't, they win by default. If you go to court to make sure the ticket sticks, you're in court, and not out writing more tickets. As a police officer, you lose.
You're incentivized to write tickets that "stick."
If you wrote an $80 ticket for a Black janitor in East Palo Alto, they can't afford the ticket, but they *really* can't afford to take a day off of work. And they don't like courthouses...
If you write 220 tickets and 30 get overturned, you only wrote 190 tickets. Your job is at risk. If you write 210 tickets and only 2 get overturned, you're good!
Not all Black folk are poor, but your probability of getting a ticket that sticks is higher with Black drivers. If you (illegally) search the vehicle and find weed, you might get 2 tickets! The daily double!
But you can't search the car or the person, without escalating. You are *incentivized to escalate*.
This makes Black people not trust police officers. Because police officers seem like they are always trying to find some reason to mess with you, violate your civil rights, and "hem you up." And you visibly see that they don't seem to do this with white folk.
Again, I'm not even talking about the racist cops here, of which there are many! I'm just talking about the ones who just go with the flow of what the system wants them to do.
Black cops do this too. Black cops pull over Black drivers.
As part of trying to understand why I get pulled over so much I've straight up asked cops and police chiefs why they pulled me over so much. And they say this.
For the most part, cops hate this system! It doesn't exist because cops like the arrest and ticket metrics. It exists because voters elect people that put ticket and arrest quotas on cops.
And because city budgets live on the revenue from tickets and court fees.
And this explains why cops can't solve crimes in Black neighborhoods...
Because police don't solve crimes the way that TV shows pretend they do. Most serious crimes, especially murders, are solved by:
1) someone calls the cops (caller)
2) someone tells the cops exactly what happened (witness)
3) cops gather enough evidence to show that the witness' story is credible
4) DA builds a case
Without callers or witnesses, it's almost impossible to even know who committed a murder, let alone get a conviction in court. And Black folk don't call or play witness.
So cops can make the murder rate in a city *go up* just by brutalizing innocent Black civilians more.
Because then Black people call the cops less.
So murderers are more likely to get away with it.
So instead of being caught after one murder, they rack up *huge* body counts.
Out of every 1000 white folk or Black folk, N are multiple murderers. But in white neighbourhoods, the killer is often caught before their second murder. In Black neighborhoods, the killer is often never caught.
This phenomenon has been known since the 70s.
So when in 2021, we are still making SCORPION units to "address the rising murder rate," it makes no sense at all.
Brutalizing Tyre Nichols makes the murder rate *go up* not go down. It makes it *easier* to get away with murder, not harder.
Think of any US city with a high murder rate.
Notice that it has a low murder clearance rate (they're not catching any murderers).
Notice that police brutality in that city is even higher than average.
Now understand why civil rights leaders say that Chicago's plan to make murders go down by giving police officers an arrest quota, is doomed to fail.
Cops are just going to arrest the poorest, Blackest, people in the city for petty crimes, starting them down a poverty spiral that will ruin their lives.
This *reduces* trust in a way that can't be made up by "positive interactions."
"You arrested my mom, but later you smiled at me." Doesn't exactly win hearts and minds.
When people say, "Fewer cops reduces crime" they're not being hyperbolic. US policing is so violent and racist, that the only thing that has been consistently shown to reduce the level of police violence against Black people is... not having police there at all.
Reduce the number of police interactions, and reduce the number of negative police interactions experienced by Black people. Solve problems without guns.
@mekkaokereke Most police departments, if not all of them, behave like shitty state-backed protection rackets. So of course they make crime worse. They are committing a lot of crimes.
@MisuseCase @mekkaokereke
For anyone whose response to “police behave like shitty state-backed protection rackets” is “huh?” or “show me!,” hoo boy do I have a story for you:
I live in the neighborhood, I know what these cops are like, and still…the number of times my jaw dropped reading that article….
(For those who don’t live in the neighborhood: El Nuevo Rodeo was a short block away from the 3rd precinct, epicenter of the George Floyd uprising.)
@inthehands @MisuseCase @mekkaokereke Wait so Chauvin knew Floyd from his extra gig running a protection racket?
@drgroftehauge @MisuseCase @mekkaokereke
Yes.
It sounds bonkers, it sounds make up, but 100% yes.