The Movement for Black Livesâa coalition of 150 organizations from across the nation that was formed in 2014 and has been instrumental in organizing anti-racism protests since the Black Lives Matter movement beganâhas let it be known that it opposes the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act (pdf). Of course, the coalition doesnât disapprove of the legislation for the same reason all but one House Republican did when it passed in the House earlier this month, which is because Republicans think itâs anti-cop, anti-America and anti-white peopleâs fragile-ass feelings (I made up the last one, but itâs definitely true). Instead, the movement opposes it because it believes the bill does nothing but provide more of the same type of reform policies that have failed in the past. And while one could easily argue that no single bill is likely to unilaterally solve systemic racism in policing, the organization makes some damn good points.
From the Associated Press:
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âOver this summer, communities lifted up solutions that would truly address the root causes of police violence and terror,â the movement wrote in a letter addressed to the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., and to Reps. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas, and Karen Bass, D-Calif., and Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., and shared with the AP on Wednesday. âJustice in Policing, by its very name, centers investments in policing rather than what should be front and center â upfront investments in communities and people.â
The bill, which is named for the man whose killing by police in Minnesota last Memorial Day sparked global protests against racial inequity, would ban chokeholds and âqualified immunityâ for law enforcement while creating national standards for policing in a bid to bolster accountability. The bill is supported by President Joe Biden and has received support from some of the nationâs leading civil rights organizations.
The general issue here is that laws are being named for victims of police violence, but the contents of those laws make it clear that, even if they had been enacted while the victim was alive, itâs not likely they would have saved that personâs life.
For example: Besides the fact that there have been laws and policies barring police chokeholds for decades that hasnât stopped the practice from happening. How exactly would a chokehold ban have saved Floyd when a knee pressed into his neck is not what anyone thinks of when they think of chokeholds?
Another example is Breonnaâs Law, which was named for Breonna Taylor and bans no-knock warrants. While I do believe no-knock warrants should be banned across the country, I wonder how the ban would have saved Taylor considering the fact that the cops involved in her shooting claimed they did knock first? Perhaps a better âBreonnaâs Lawâ would have been aimed at cops obtaining search warrants through faulty information and a half-assed vetting process.
All of this is addressed in the movementâs letter.
âThe bill bans federal use of chokeholds, ignoring the reality that police have killed Black people in this manner regardless of whether these bans are in place,â the letter states. âA no-knock warrant ban would not have saved Breonna Taylorâs life, just like a ban on chokeholds did not save Eric Garnerâs life. The JPA fails to address the root causes and realities of policing in this country.â
Anyway, the movement said it supports the ban on qualified immunity, but it said the rest of the bill is too focused on what it called âincrementalist reforms.â
And in case youâre thinking, âWell they are citing problems, but do members of the Movement for Black Lives have any solutions of their own?ââwell, the answer is yes, yes they do.
More from AP:
Instead, the movement is pushing political leaders to enact the BREATHE Act, which it proposed last July and believes addresses the fundamental causes of police violence.
The AP first reported that the BREATHE Act would transform the nationâs criminal justice system through sweeping changes, such as eliminating the Drug Enforcement Administration and the use of surveillance technology, abolishing mandatory minimums and ending life sentences.
The bill, designed by the Movement for Black Livesâ Electoral Justice Project, would also redirect funding toward communities to address the nationâs systemic racial injustices.
âItâs not just about after the fact accountability,â said Gina Clayton-Johnson, the lead BREATHE Act architect and leadership team member of the Movement for Black Livesâ Policy Table. âThereâs this thought that Black people are dying at the hands of police officers because individual officers are bad actors, but it is actually a systemic issue, and if you understand it to be systemic, then the solutions must also be systemic.â
And there you have it. Because what exactly is police reform if it doesnât address systemic issues in policing? Basically, itâs just more of the same.
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