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Protests over the death of George Floyd, an unarmed black man who died after being pinned down by a white police officer in Minneapolis, continued on the ninth consecutive day in New York City on June 3, 2020. (Photo: Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
As law enforcement officers across the country continue to brutalize peaceful demonstrators in the nationwide protests sparked by the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis last week, support for defunding the police is rising as Americans become increasingly fed up with the institution's racism and violence.
"In moments of crisis, people want services and resources that go directly to help people rather than police that surveil, brutalize, and kill us," Black Lives Matter LA co-founder Melina Abdullah told the Guardian.
The murder of Floyd by four Minneapolis police officers on May 25 served as the catalyst for the uprising that has filled city streets around the nation with unprecedented numbers of protesters.
As Common Dreams reported Wednesday, polling this week shows a majority of Americans believe both the anger and the actions of the protesters are at least partially justified--including the burning of the Minneapolis Police Department Third Precinct building last week.
Activists have long called for defunding the police as part of the solution to the institution's myriad problems. Long seen as a fringe position by more mainstream liberals and conservatives, the call to defund is now seeing widespread support among the public and politicians alike.
"We need to defund the police and make sure that money goes back into the communities that need it," said Cori Bush, a progressive candidate running for Missouri's 1st District House seat, in a statement.
"We have to end the militarization of police, stop the racial profiling," Bush added. "Throwing money at the problem will not solve it."
According to Rolling Stone:
As the protests continue around the country, activists in New York, where the police department's budget is poised to swell to nearly $6 billion in 2021, and Los Angeles, where LAPD's funding was increased this year to $1.8 billion, are mounting their own defunding campaigns. The first step for anyone interested in pushing for a re-thinking of their city's priorities is to get involved in the budgeting process by attending city council meetings and speaking. The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human rights had a toolkit, praised earlier this week by former President Barack Obama, with more resources and information on how to get involved.
The increasing support comes as images and videos of police attacking peaceful protesters and innocent bystanders continue to spread across social media as demonstrations entered their tenth consecutive day Thursday.
In New York City, peaceful activists were beaten by police wielding batons and it appeared officers were also randomly assaulting passers-by.
The Working Families Party, in response to the ongoing brutality, issued a statement saying the group would not support any candidate who would not commit to defunding the NYPD.
Alex Vitale, writer of the book "The End of Policing," said in an interview with The Nation Thursday that he believes the funding for police departments should instead be put toward community service jobs.
"The police department and the corrections department are always hiring and community centers aren't," said Vitale. "And when they do hire, it's at half the salary and half the benefits. So this budget battle is about getting cities to reprioritize how they deal with the very real needs of the most disadvantaged communities that are subjected to the most intensive policing."
The speed with which public opinion has turned on the issue didn't surprise Tony Williams, a member of Minneapolis-based abolitionist group MPD150, who noted the increasing nationwide anger over the high number of police killings of unarmed black men since 2015.
"This is unprecedented in our movement," Williams told the Guardian, "but it is a natural consequence of where we've been over the last five years."
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
As law enforcement officers across the country continue to brutalize peaceful demonstrators in the nationwide protests sparked by the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis last week, support for defunding the police is rising as Americans become increasingly fed up with the institution's racism and violence.
"In moments of crisis, people want services and resources that go directly to help people rather than police that surveil, brutalize, and kill us," Black Lives Matter LA co-founder Melina Abdullah told the Guardian.
The murder of Floyd by four Minneapolis police officers on May 25 served as the catalyst for the uprising that has filled city streets around the nation with unprecedented numbers of protesters.
As Common Dreams reported Wednesday, polling this week shows a majority of Americans believe both the anger and the actions of the protesters are at least partially justified--including the burning of the Minneapolis Police Department Third Precinct building last week.
Activists have long called for defunding the police as part of the solution to the institution's myriad problems. Long seen as a fringe position by more mainstream liberals and conservatives, the call to defund is now seeing widespread support among the public and politicians alike.
"We need to defund the police and make sure that money goes back into the communities that need it," said Cori Bush, a progressive candidate running for Missouri's 1st District House seat, in a statement.
"We have to end the militarization of police, stop the racial profiling," Bush added. "Throwing money at the problem will not solve it."
According to Rolling Stone:
As the protests continue around the country, activists in New York, where the police department's budget is poised to swell to nearly $6 billion in 2021, and Los Angeles, where LAPD's funding was increased this year to $1.8 billion, are mounting their own defunding campaigns. The first step for anyone interested in pushing for a re-thinking of their city's priorities is to get involved in the budgeting process by attending city council meetings and speaking. The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human rights had a toolkit, praised earlier this week by former President Barack Obama, with more resources and information on how to get involved.
The increasing support comes as images and videos of police attacking peaceful protesters and innocent bystanders continue to spread across social media as demonstrations entered their tenth consecutive day Thursday.
In New York City, peaceful activists were beaten by police wielding batons and it appeared officers were also randomly assaulting passers-by.
The Working Families Party, in response to the ongoing brutality, issued a statement saying the group would not support any candidate who would not commit to defunding the NYPD.
Alex Vitale, writer of the book "The End of Policing," said in an interview with The Nation Thursday that he believes the funding for police departments should instead be put toward community service jobs.
"The police department and the corrections department are always hiring and community centers aren't," said Vitale. "And when they do hire, it's at half the salary and half the benefits. So this budget battle is about getting cities to reprioritize how they deal with the very real needs of the most disadvantaged communities that are subjected to the most intensive policing."
The speed with which public opinion has turned on the issue didn't surprise Tony Williams, a member of Minneapolis-based abolitionist group MPD150, who noted the increasing nationwide anger over the high number of police killings of unarmed black men since 2015.
"This is unprecedented in our movement," Williams told the Guardian, "but it is a natural consequence of where we've been over the last five years."
As law enforcement officers across the country continue to brutalize peaceful demonstrators in the nationwide protests sparked by the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis last week, support for defunding the police is rising as Americans become increasingly fed up with the institution's racism and violence.
"In moments of crisis, people want services and resources that go directly to help people rather than police that surveil, brutalize, and kill us," Black Lives Matter LA co-founder Melina Abdullah told the Guardian.
The murder of Floyd by four Minneapolis police officers on May 25 served as the catalyst for the uprising that has filled city streets around the nation with unprecedented numbers of protesters.
As Common Dreams reported Wednesday, polling this week shows a majority of Americans believe both the anger and the actions of the protesters are at least partially justified--including the burning of the Minneapolis Police Department Third Precinct building last week.
Activists have long called for defunding the police as part of the solution to the institution's myriad problems. Long seen as a fringe position by more mainstream liberals and conservatives, the call to defund is now seeing widespread support among the public and politicians alike.
"We need to defund the police and make sure that money goes back into the communities that need it," said Cori Bush, a progressive candidate running for Missouri's 1st District House seat, in a statement.
"We have to end the militarization of police, stop the racial profiling," Bush added. "Throwing money at the problem will not solve it."
According to Rolling Stone:
As the protests continue around the country, activists in New York, where the police department's budget is poised to swell to nearly $6 billion in 2021, and Los Angeles, where LAPD's funding was increased this year to $1.8 billion, are mounting their own defunding campaigns. The first step for anyone interested in pushing for a re-thinking of their city's priorities is to get involved in the budgeting process by attending city council meetings and speaking. The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human rights had a toolkit, praised earlier this week by former President Barack Obama, with more resources and information on how to get involved.
The increasing support comes as images and videos of police attacking peaceful protesters and innocent bystanders continue to spread across social media as demonstrations entered their tenth consecutive day Thursday.
In New York City, peaceful activists were beaten by police wielding batons and it appeared officers were also randomly assaulting passers-by.
The Working Families Party, in response to the ongoing brutality, issued a statement saying the group would not support any candidate who would not commit to defunding the NYPD.
Alex Vitale, writer of the book "The End of Policing," said in an interview with The Nation Thursday that he believes the funding for police departments should instead be put toward community service jobs.
"The police department and the corrections department are always hiring and community centers aren't," said Vitale. "And when they do hire, it's at half the salary and half the benefits. So this budget battle is about getting cities to reprioritize how they deal with the very real needs of the most disadvantaged communities that are subjected to the most intensive policing."
The speed with which public opinion has turned on the issue didn't surprise Tony Williams, a member of Minneapolis-based abolitionist group MPD150, who noted the increasing nationwide anger over the high number of police killings of unarmed black men since 2015.
"This is unprecedented in our movement," Williams told the Guardian, "but it is a natural consequence of where we've been over the last five years."