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Anonymous asked:

What do prison/jail abolitionist want instead of jail time for criminals like kkKyle rittenhouse?

Good question.

Firstly, jail/prison/police is not designed to provide justice. These systems exist to enforce white supremacy: they're the evolution of slave catchers & strikebreakers and forced labor camps. Why would that system punish those who act in the interest of white supremacy via lynching to defend private property and the idea of Black americans accepting genocide and enslavement against them.

Ideally, Kyl* would never have been indoctrinated to aspire to be a cop, to defend private property, or to be a vigilante in the name of state mandated law and order. This would require (1) the refutation of state propaganda and (2) democratic media (e.g. strong channels for dispersing abolitionist media, end of corporate or entertainment news, and the ability for small groups to share local news). This also requires (3) accessible leftist education (e.g. Black Panthers, mutual aid groups). Kyl* became this because of state education, capitalist media, ahistorical narratives of white heroes. The police to prison system empowers him to act on these as well, requiring (4) the demolition of police and prisons (police arrested him then set him free until the trial, they acted as they were created to do). This work is the bulk of abolition I believe.

Reacting to now, the mission of abolition does not change. Police and jails are institutions of administering white supremacy. Civilian lynching has always been a critical component of it (the kl*n is allowed to exist as a complement to police). Prison would not prevent more people like him nor reform him. For me, abolition includes the democratization of violence. Violence is a tool that the state claims only it can wield: women are jailed for killing their abusers while presidents are honored for bombing hospitals. Democratized violence means if the public wanted to beat the living shit of Kyl*, they can do so without retaliation from a sovereign state claiming rule over them. Police do not prevent mob violence, they regulate it to allow expressions of white power (Capitol riots, kyl*, Dyl*n Roof, school shootings).

This is a super condensed answer, but I can answer any good-faith follow up questions.

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Further readings and some of the sources of my ideas:

  1. Dr. Angela Y. Davis - Are Prisons Obsolete? 
  2. K Agbebiyi - Prison Abolition FAQ
  3. Book: Jackie Wang - Carceral Capitalism
  4. Jackie Wang - Against Innocence
  5. Ruth Wilson Gilmore and James Kilgore - The Case for Abolition
  6. John Duda - Toward the Horizon of Abolition: A Conversation with Mariame Kaba
  7. Ruth Wilson Gilmore - Globalization and US Prison Growth: From Military Keynesianism to Post-Keynesian Militarism
  8. Dr. Angela Y. Davis - Racialized Punishment and Prison Abolition
  9. Oscar Perry Abello - These Urban Planners Don’t Think New York City Needs New Jails
  10. Kalaniopua Young - From a Native Trans Daughter: Carceral Refusal, Settler Colonialism, Re-routing the Roots of an Indigenous Abolitionist Imaginary
  11. Deshonay Dozier - A Response to Abolitionist Planning: There is No Room for ‘Planners’ in the Movement for Abolition
  12. Dan Berger, Mariame Kaba, and David Stein - What Abolitionists Do
  13. UCLA Abolitionist Planning Group - Abolitionist Planning for Resistance
  14. #8toAbolition
  15. Prison Abolition Syllabus & 2.0
  16. No New Jails - Close Rikers Now, We Keep Us Safe: A New Yorker’s Guide to Building 
  17. Community Care and Safety by Closing Rikers with No New Jails
  18. William Calathes - Racial Capitalism and Punishment Philosophy and Practices: What Really Stands in the Way of Prison Abolition
  19. Critical Resistance Resources
  20. Micah Herskind - Resource Guide: Prisons, Policing, and Punishment 
  21. Kim Kelly - What the Prison-Abolition Movement Wants 
  22. Prison Policy - Instead of Prisons: A Handbook for Abolitionists
  23. Prison Policy - Abolitionist Futures: Abolition Reading Group
  24. Transformharm
  25. Gilbert Gee & Chandra Ford - Structural Racism & Health Inequities 
  26. Vickie L. Shavers, PhD and Brenda S. Shavers, JD - Racism and Health Inequity
  27. among Americans
  28. Peace Builder - What Does it Mean to Be Trauma-Informed and Resilience-Oriented?
  29. Saed - Prison Abolition as an Ecosocialist Struggle
  30. Critical Resistance - Abolition Organizing Toolkit
  31. Jae Hyun Shim - Minneapolis Organizers are Already Building the Tools for Safety Without Police
  32. Beth Richie, Dylan Rodriguez, Mariame Kaba, Melissa Burch, Rachel Herzing and Shana Agid - Problems with Community Control of Police and Proposals for Alternatives
  33. Movement 4 Black Lives - Defund the Police
  34. Video: Dream Defenders SunDDay School - Unlock Us, Abolition in Our Lifetime
  35. No New Jails - Abolitionist Recommendations to Defund NYPD
  36. K. Agbebiyi, Sarah T. Hamid, Rachel Kuo, and Mon Mohapatra - Abolition is the Practice of Building a Radical Vision for the End of Imperialism, Cis Heteropatriarchy, Capitalism and White Supremacy - and it is Very Possible
  37. Survived and Punished NY
  38. S. Lamble - Transforming Carceral Logics: 10 Reasons to Dismantle the Prison Industrial Complex Through Queer/Trans Analysis and Action
  39. Podcast: Millennials are Killing Capitalism - #8toAbolition ft. Nnennaya Amuchie, Rachel Kuo, Eli, Micah Herskind and Reina Sultan
  40. Podcast: Millennials are Killing Capitalism - We Want Freedom: Abolition In Philly and Beyond with Robert Saleem Holbrook and Megan Malachi
  41. Timothy Shenk, Dissent Magazine - Booked: The Origins of the Carceral State
  42. Patrisse Cullors and Tim Black - Community-Based Emergency First Responders: Explained
  43. Leila Raven, Mon Mohapatra and Rachel Kuo - 8 to Abolition is Advocating to Abolish Police to Keep Us All Safe
  44. Free Them All 4 Public Health
  45. Kim Tran - Transformative Justice, Explained
  46. Transforming Harm - Summary Statement Re: Community Accountability Process
  47. Video: Haymarket Books - Abolition Can't Wait: A Teach in with #8toAboltion
  48. Book: Maya Schenwar - Prison by Any Other Name: The Harmful Consequences of Popular Reforms
  49. Dr. Destiny Thomas - ‘Safe Streets’ Are not Safe for Black Lives
  50. Ariel Ward - A Tale of Two Truths: Transportation and Nuance in the Time of COVID-19
  51. Cory Lira - Transformative Justice Resources
  52. Ashanté Reese and SA Smythe - Abolition Study
  53. Critical Resistance - Our Communities, Our Solutions: An Organizer’s Toolkit for Developing Campaigns to Abolish Policing
  54. Stefano Harney & Fred Moten - The Undercommons: Fugitive Planning and Black Study
  55. Camonghne Felix - Aching for Abolition: As a survivor of sexual violence, I know prison isn’t the answer
  56. Deshonay Dozier - A Response to Abolitionist Planning: There is No Room for ‘Planners’ in the Movement for Abolition
  57. Abolition Journal - If You’re New to Abolition: Study Group Guide
  58. Compiled by Micah Herskind - 2021 New Abolitionist Books
  59. Book: Liat Ben-Moshe - Decarcerating Disability: Deinstitutionalization and Prison Abolition
  60. Book: Mariame Kaba - We Do This ‘til We Free Us: Abolitionist Organizing and Transforming Justice
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