Solauren wrote: ↑2020-06-10 04:44pm
The problem with cutting funding to police departments is, they'll just increase their enforcement of stuff that results in fines and the like. That would increase the amount of money they bring in, and give them a reason to go to city council "And now, imagine if you increased our budget!"
The thing about "defunding" is that it isn't just "cutting funding to police departments", it's dissolving those police departments and replacing them with successor entities which have a greatly reduced scope, allowing a new culture of operation to be built from the ground up.
Police
culture is one of the biggest problems that need fixing. Culture that is built up from the academy onwards and reinforced by bullshit like "warrior training" that emphasises an "us-vs-them" mentality between police and public and instils police with a sense of superiority. That's one of the reasons police in the US focus so much on immediate compliance, because they have a cultural mentality that they are
entitled to tell the public what to do and entitled to immediate compliance not because they're currently serving a public interest but because they've got the badge and uniform that says you comply now.
You can't fix that with new training, officers will show up, check out, and not change.
You can't fix it with external disciplinary oversight because the culture will protect its members through silence, and through denial.
Chronic overpolicing is another major problem, and we've got a fine example in this very thread. George Floyd was killed by police for allegedly trying to use a counterfeit bank note. Something which the police shouldn't even be
involved in dealing with and certainly not one where any form of forcing compliance should ever have been necessary, it's a purely administrative crime that should have been dealt with from a desk and in a magistrate's court.
Likewise Eric Garner, killed for selling
individual cigarettes and depriving the taxman of a few cents. Not a crime which should involved the police.
And again, you can't fix that with training or disciplinary boards.
You can fix those things by removing the police from policing, and rebuilding successor organisations with cultures that better fit the needs they fulfil.