mouthporn.net
#cop city atlanta – @thoughtportal on Tumblr
Avatar

Thought Portal

@thoughtportal / thoughtportal.tumblr.com

A blog of the media I am consuming
Avatar

Atlanta’s Attack on Cop City Protesters Should Be a Warning to Us All

The fight against the militarized police training center dubbed “Cop City” is one of the great struggles of our time.

By Angela Y. Davis & Barbara Ransby , Truthout Published June 23, 2023

The ongoing attack on the network of environmental and abolitionist activists in Atlanta should make all people concerned with the right to protest, the future of the environment and the rise of militarized police forces take notice.

At 5 am on June 6, after over 200 community members had spoken against moving forward with the facility, the Atlanta City Council voted to allocate $31 million in public funds toward construction of a militarized police training center dubbed “Cop City.” This was the most recent development in a fierce and violent struggle over police expansion and forest preservation in Georgia, and has repercussions well beyond the state. In January, a young protester was shot and killed by police in a surprise raid on a protest encampment at the proposed site of the facility. Soon afterwards 42 protesters were arrested and outrageously charged with domestic terrorism. “Dissent is being criminalized,” warned Atlanta organizer Kamau Franklin.

On May 31, three people associated with a legal aid and bail fund supporting the Stop Cop City protesters arrested earlier were themselves arrested on false allegations of financial fraud and “money laundering.” Even the judge in the case found the evidence uncompelling. Nevertheless, Republican Gov. Brian Kemp referred to the ecoactivists and abolitionists as criminals and pledged to prosecute them aggressively.

The situation in Atlanta should alarm abolitionists and progressives everywhere. There we see an all-out assault on two movements — the environmental justice movement and the movement against policing and prisons — that have seen growing popular support and influence in recent years.

Here is the backstory for those who have not been following this struggle: A $90 million militarized police training facility that will destroy 85 acres of the Weelaunee Forest just outside Atlanta (but owned by the city) has become the epicenter of a fierce fight around policing, environmental justice and the right to protest. This training center is slated to include “mock cities” to help police rehearse how to undermine and disrupt future protests of all sorts.

The struggle in Atlanta is a part of a bigger story. With corporations like Amazon, Wells Fargo and Delta backing the Atlanta Police Foundation’s development of this project the direct link between the police state and encroaching environmental degradation becomes obvious. Moreover, Black and working-class people are losing their lives to both at a record pace. And when brave community members and their supporters have stepped forward to defend the forest and object to a training ground designed to further perfect the use of state violence, they themselves have been systematically targeted.

On January 18, 2023, the police killed Manuel Esteban Paez Terán, a forest defender affectionately known as “Tortuguita” or “Tort,” and then said they were fired on first. Their own official accounts contradicted their story and an independent autopsy showed that Tortuguita’s hands were raised when they were shot. Dozens of people were arrested not long after during another raid on a Stop Cop City gathering, resulting in outrageous charges of domestic terrorism.

As egregious as they might seem, the police attacks on activists in Atlanta do not constitute a new trend. We know that at least 1,700 environmental activists have been murdered around the world in the past decade. Corporate hitmen and state violence are used to bludgeon anything that gets in the way of profit and power. Atlanta’s business elite and political class have pulled from this playbook and have worked to misrepresent the movement as the work of “outside agitators.” It’s ironic to hear classic segregationist rhetoric from those who claim to uphold the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. The same lines were used against the Freedom Riders and voter rights volunteers, after all, when they traveled to the South to participate in the Black Freedom Movement in the 1960s.

Black student protesters, a coalition of movement organizations, and Black communities that are opposed to Cop City are being outright ignored by a Black establishment. Even when students and faculty from historically Black colleges and universities like Morehouse and Spelman joined the outcry against Cop City, Mayor Andre Dickens didn’t stop pushing for this facility. When the decision to sign off on domestic terrorism warrants came before Fatima El-Amin, a Black judge, she signed them. And Atlanta’s Black police officers have never broken ranks with their white counterparts. This is not a simple matter that political representation will sort out for us; it is a question that must be answered by abolitionist praxis, which means both creating alternatives to police and prisons to achieve harm-reduction, and continuing the ongoing work of building a more just society.

In our view, the money that it takes to build police training facilities would be better spent advancing deteriorating infrastructure. Atlanta has the highest income inequality in the nation, and more police won’t fix that. Resources for health care, housing, and education could change the politically preordained circumstances that create such oppressive conditions.

The call to stop Cop City is much bigger than just one facility. It is also connected to the years-long fight against the West Side Cop Academy in Chicago and against Urban Shield in Oakland. It is also directly linked to the uprisings in Ferguson, Baltimore and the massive response to the public execution of George Floyd. Because the forest where the City of Atlanta wants to construct the training facility consists of land that was taken from Muscogee Creek people, resisting Cop City is directly linked to Indigenous struggles against the Keystone XL Pipeline and other extractive infrastructure. Neither corporate nor government elites want another precedent of conscientious activists interrupting an unethical profit-driven project, which is why they are waging war against the “Stop Cop City” movement.

The movement for the abolition of police and prisons, as well as the urgent and growing movement for environmental justice, are two key pillars of a collective vision for a more hopeful, egalitarian future. The targeting of organizers in Atlanta seeks to send a dangerous and chilling message to the larger national and global movements. We must oppose this effort and support and defend the Atlanta organizers now being attacked, harassed and persecuted for daring to speak truth to power and organize for a more just future. We urge people who share our values and views on this question to support Atlanta’s upcoming week of action to protest Cop City and defend those being harassed and prosecuted. We also support the referendum the network of activists plan to have on the November 7 election ballot to ask Atlantans to decide if they want $90 million invested in a Cop City or in vital city services and programs.

Avatar

For over two years, Atlantans across race, class, age, and neighborhood have united in opposition to Cop City. And, for two years, we’ve been ignored.

Now, we’ve come together to launch a ballot referendum to let the people of Atlanta decide. We’re taking our power back to make sure our communities are heard.

For too long, the City of Atlanta has conflated policing with community safety and sustainability, which has resulted in decades of harm and violence against poor, Black and Brown communities. But our communities are calling for a new vision. We can create real safety by fully funding our communities, not a $90 million dollar police training facility. When we Stop Cop City, we can invest in the healthcare, education, housing, and safety needed for the people of Atlanta to thrive.

Avatar

By Tia Mitchell, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

June 7, 2023

WASHINGTON — Charges of domestic terrorism against activists connected to protests of Atlanta’s proposed public safety training facility have repeatedly been justified by a U.S. Department of Homeland Security designation that does not exist.

Arrest warrants for dozens of people affiliated with the Defend the Atlanta Forest group, and three individuals who operate a charity that provided bail money for protestors, all has similar language tying the movement to extremist behavior. The three individuals arrested last week had their home raided by a SWAT team and are charged with financial crimes.

Each of their arrest warrants had a sentence tying their charity to extremism, saying it raised money to “fund in part the actions of Defend the Atlanta Forest, a group classified by the United States Department of Homeland Security as Domestic Violent Extremists.”

But Homeland Security officials have said that is not the case.

The agency has released national terrorism alert bulletins that described some of the protests of the Atlanta facility as exhibiting the characteristics of domestic violent extremists, but no individuals or organizations are named.

“The Department of Homeland Security does not classify or designate any groups as domestic violent extremists,” a spokesman said in a statement shared with The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

The FBI, which tracks domestic terrorism threats nationwide, also said it “does not and cannot designate domestic terrorist organizations.” In a statement to the AJC, the FBI cautions against using group affiliations to condemn individuals’ behavior.

“It’s also important to note that membership in groups that espouse domestic extremist ideology is not illegal in and of itself,” the FBI statement said. “Membership in a group alone is not sufficient basis for a domestic terrorism investigation.”

The Georgia Bureau of Investigations said it is standing by the “domestic violent extremists” justifications used in the arrest warrants.

“Although DHS reports that they do not classify or designate any groups as domestic violent extremists, the description provided by DHS for a domestic violent extremist does in fact describe the behavior of the individuals of the group in question which is being investigated by the GBI multi-agency task force,” GBI spokeswoman Nelly Miles said.

DeKalb County District Attorney Sherry Boston, who has assisted the GBI in its investigation, deferred questions to the GBI.

Gov. Brian Kemp and Attorney General Chris Carr, who have both condemned violence at the protests and pledged to crack down it, both released statements that did not directly respond to questions about why arrest warrants by Georgia officials misinterprets or exaggerates what Homeland Security said.

“Our office will continue to defend the First Amendment right to peacefully protest,” Carr said. “However, we will not tolerate acts of violence to person or property.”

Kemp in his statement referenced acts of violence that have been tied to the protests.

“Members of this militant group have committed acts of violence and significant damage to property with Molotov cocktails and other weapons designed to injure law enforcement,” Kemp said. “That will not be allowed to stand in Georgia.”

U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock on Wednesday asked Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas to weigh in on whether Defend the Atlanta Forest should be described as a known “domestic violent extremist” group.

“I am seeking clarification about whether DHS has designated any group in Georgia as a DVE, and if not, I request that DHS share this policy clarification with any relevant state and local law enforcement partners,” Warnock said in a letter to Mayorkas.

The Atlanta Democrat also asks Mayorkas to provide guidance to state and local law enforcement agencies on how to address threats of violent extremism without infringing on rights to assemble and protest.

“The First Amendment protects the freedom of speech and the freedom of peaceful association,” Warnock wrote. “Consistent with these principles, I am concerned by any misunderstandings regarding a federal DVE designation and seek clarification for the public and our valued law enforcement partners.”

Avatar

The Atlanta Police Foundation has plans–backed by $60 million in corporate funding and $30 million in taxpayer money–to build an enormous police training facility over the city's Weelaunee Forest.

Activists and forest defenders are calling the plan "Cop City," as it will include a mock village (complete with a nightclub), a Black Hawk helipad, an emergency vehicle driving course, dozens of firing ranges, and an area for explosives training.

The neighborhoods that surround the forest are largely made up of lower-income Black residents. Cop City will decimate green space, which is already so rare in BIPOC communities, and replace it with a playground for the police to practice warfare tactics.

Communities of color live with police-induced trauma every day. Now this Atlanta community will feel and hear the presence of a training facility where cops learn new ways to enact violence against Black and Brown communities, right in their own backyard.

In addition to the terror of an ever-present police force, Cop City is an environmental racism nightmare. The Weelaunee Forest provides ecological relief for the people of Atlanta. It offsets stormwater runoff, which might otherwise push unwanted sediment into the drinking water. The mere presence of trees helps to keep the city cool during the long, hot, humid summers, and improves air quality by reducing carbon dioxide released into the air.

Cop City has been gaining nationwide attention, and for good reason. The city of Atlanta, its police force, and its corporate sponsors are actively cooperating to increase police power, at a time when police departments are under scrutiny for abusing that power.

Cop City will do irreparable harm to the city of Atlanta, and inspire more play villages for cops across the country. But there's hope. Cop City does not have the full funding necessary to scale the project from private entities, meaning there is still time to put pressure on these investors to halt all funding to the Atlanta Police Foundation and APF Support Inc.

Sign the petition to private investors: No massive police training complex. Stop Cop City!

Participating Organizations

Presente.org

198 methods

Corporate Accountability

Daily Kos

DemCast USA

Democracy for America Advocacy Fund

Earth Action, Inc.

Green America

National Campaign for Justice

Stop the Money Pipeline

TakeItBack.Org

PETITIONINGCop City Private InvestorsSPONSORED BY

ADDITIONAL SPONSORS

Seattle, WA

Sioux Falls, SD

,

Boston, MA

Our Message to Cop City Private Investors:

Your contributions to Cop City cause environmental, mental, and physical harm to the Black and Brown communities of Atlanta. We strongly oppose your efforts to contribute financially or in any capacity to the Atlanta Police Foundation and APF Support Inc. to further the development of Cop City. We call on your organization and all individual investors, foundations, endowments, pension funds, and corporations to withhold resources and funding from Cop City as well as collaboration with the Atlanta Police Foundation and APF Support, Inc. We encourage you to engage with the community to invest your financial support toward policies and programs that promote public health and safety for Atlanta.

Avatar
Avatar
crimethinc

New Zine: “The Forest in the City—Two Years of Forest Defense in Atlanta, Georgia.”

We’ve prepared a zine version of our article, “The Forest in the City—Two Years of Forest Defense in Atlanta, Georgia.”

Please print these out and distribute them in your community!

#StopCopCity #DefendtheAtlantaForest

Worth the short read 👆

Avatar

Basically, nobody wants Cop City

Except the investors, contractors and politicians driving this project.

The investors supply the money, the contractors do the work, and politicians sell the idea. We need to get the investors to pull their money out because its not worth the reputational cost, the construction companies to void their contracts and the politicians to realize its in their interest to come out against the project.

follow the link to an interactive map of businesses and organizations connected to cop city. there is probably one near you. send them letters, postcards, and flood their phone lines with opposition to the project

Avatar
Avatar
darkarches

Help protect Weelaunee Forest and stop the construction of cop city!

There was a conference last night for the Stop Cop City week of solidarity coming up February 19th-26th.

The main takeaway is that if people are interested in taking action, the best thing to do would be to target the construction company that the police have contracted, the funders of the project, and the insurance company insuring the project. The cops are the ones who want cop city built, but they can't do it without the groups mentioned above.

The construction company is Brasfield and Gorrie. My understanding is the company itself probably won't turn a huge profit from the project and is mostly doing it to strengthen relations with the police. If we can show them they will lose money from this project they may pull out. One way to show them how unprofitable this venture would be for them is to make it harder for them to complete other projects they're working on. One suggestion from the conference is that those who live near construction projects being done by Brasfield and Gorrie could try to obstruct progress on these projects to show there will be repercussions if they don't pull out of cop city.

The main funders of the project are big banks and corporations. I've included a link at the bottom with more details but some of the groups funding this are Wells Fargo, Bank of America, Target, Home Depot, and Chik-fil-a. The Atlanta Police Foundation is also helping fund and support the project. Below I've linked a map that shows the locations of these funders and offices of members of the Atlanta Police Foundation.

The insurance company signed onto the cop city project is AXA. At the conference last night it was emphasized that AXA is the main target we want to go after during the upcoming week of solidarity. The destruction of the forest cannot continue without an insurance company covering them. I did a quick google search and was able to find several AXA offices near me. Like with Brasfield and Gorrie, if we put the pressure on AXA they will hopefully realize this project is simply not worth it and pull out.

This is a list of targets which includes a map of where these targets are located throughout the US. There is also a list of actions that people can take, but be creative.

Nobody wants cop city except the police and corporations. Let's help save the Weelaunee Forest!

Avatar
Avatar
atlurbanist

It's a forest. Just say it.

This is the exact section of South River Forest property that's becoming the "cop city" training facility for the City of Atlanta.

I'm no expert on what constitutes a forest. But from Google Earth, this sure resembles one.

And yet the City of Atlanta put out some "facts" about the police training center being built here, and they're trying to convince us this is no big loss because it's not really a forest:

Weird. They know we have access to the internet, right?

Whatever this greenery is (and I still say it's a forest) it's going away for the training center. We're losing a huge stretch of trees -- which was supposed to all be a public green space, per the Atlanta City Design -- while massive highways stay the same & even get bigger. It's screwed up.

Remember this:

Nobody regrets the forests we saved. Just the ones we lost.

You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.
mouthporn.net