Shoot
To Kill:
The
Militarization of the U.S. Police
by Charles Simmons
-Guest Columnist-
The fatal shooting by Detroit Police of a deaf man
holding a rake was followed several days later by the murder of a
factory worker who was trying to kill a dog that had been terrorizing
the neighborhood for two years.
These recent killings are the culmination of a series
of brutal beatings and murders of residents during the administration of
Mayor Dennis Archer, and Detroit residents are demanding the resignation
of the Mayor and Police Chief Benny Napoleon for continuing to support a
"shoot-to-kill" policy. Detroit police killings have won the
city the distinction of the highest rate of murders by a police
department in the United States.
The policy of "shoot-to-kill" is also the
policy of the U.S. Marines, CIA and Mafia hit men, and is fast becoming
the de facto policy of civilian police forces throughout the nation. The
armaments, supplies, computerized and military vehicles, combat and
intelligence training, and values of U.S. police forces are similar to
that of military forces in many nations which serve exclusively to
suppress their local populations. In Georgia, at the School of the
Americas, the United States trains military leaders from Latin America
in torture tactics and death squad operations to oppress and rob the
little people of a continent. How many of those professors of death are
training the Detroit Police? A friend from Spain recently remarked that
the conduct of American police forces reminds her of the treatment of
civilians by the police and military during the Nazi regime in Spain
under General Franco. In addition, some big corporations are making
tremendous profits from this massive domestic weaponry.
The U.S. armaments industry, one of the leading
sectors of the global economy and the major export of the United States,
makes billions of dollars annually from domestic and international sales
of weapons and support systems. The increasing globalization of the
economy is rapidly intensifying the gap between big wealth and workers.
With this process everywhere there are the usual suspects: downsizing,
privatization, outsourcing, union-busting, a growing disrespect for
people of color, youth, and workers, and everywhere there is the
expansion of the police and military forces to maintain the old order of
exploitation surrounded by a sea of riches.
In Michigan, this police "shoot-to-kill"
policy goes hand-in-hand with the "shoot-to-kill" policy of
Governor Engler�s cuts in domestic services and fundamental democratic
ideals. The massive cuts in services for health care, the closing of
mental health institutions, the elimination of home rule, the opposition
to affirmative action, the take over of the Detroit judiciary�all
reflect a "shoot-to-kill" domestic policy. The opposition to
urban and rural environmental
policies to promote clean air and water, and legislation against living
wages, reflect the "shoot-to-kill" mentality and a race to the
bottom in providing fundamental needs in a society in which the people
seek a true democracy rather than nice speeches about democracy.
The globalization of the economy by the giant
corporations is a world wide "shoot-to-kill" policy that
wreaks havoc in American urban neighborhoods by grabbing the land,
health and safety in the inner cities from Detroit�s Brush Park to Los
Angeles� South Central. The "shoot-to-kill" policy steals
the wealth of diamond mine workers and their families in South Africa.
In Nigeria, residents who live near the oil deposits suffer from chronic
health problems and police
brutality caused by environmental degradation imposed by foreign
corporations headquartered in New York, London and Paris. Smiling Bill
Clinton�s remedy is to send Marines to train the Nigerian soldiers,
already experts in brutality against their own people. Farmers and
workers in Colombia, South America, face death squads armed with U.S.
weapons financed by American tax dollars which Clinton claims are being
sent to stop CIA drug trafficking which continues to expand in New York
and Little Rock.
The "shoot-to-kill" policy is responsible
for the fact that mothers, teenage girls and war refugees in Africa,
Asia, Eastern Europe, the former Soviet Union, and female immigrants
across the globe are being brutalized and sold by the tens of thousands
into slavery as prostitutes throughout the world. And in the
industrialized nations, and in states such as Michigan, women are
increasingly the victims of impoverishment, and are filling the prisons
as never before.
But this is not simply the time for complaints; this
is a call for peoples� action and empowerment. This is not a call to
hear the usual speeches of eloquent politicians, but a call to form a
grassroots movement to make fundamental changes in the system right now
at the local and national level. In the process of building such a
movement, we must reach across borders and boundaries to join hands with
others who seek social and political and environmental justice.
As we demand the resignation of the mayor and police
chief, we must also demand a democratic method of selecting officials to
oversee the police by the working people and in the community and not by
big corporations. We must demand that police at every rank will be
personally liable for their corruption, abuse and murder. We must demand
that the training, selection, and discipline of police be supervised by
elected community representatives at the top level who are not allowed
to take money or benefits from big corporations. We must demand that the
profits be taken out of the prison industry and that the administration
of prisons and other penal institutions be turned over to elected
officials whose objective is to rehabilitate the inmates so that they be
returned to the society prepared to make a positive contribution.
We have to call for a living wage for all those
employed and a guaranteed wage for all residents. We have to demand the
restoration of social and health services to all people and a new and
positive environmental policy that is compatible with good public
health.
In addition, we have to demand socially relevant public education at
every grade level that incorporates these issues into the curriculum so
those students will feel connected to their community.
This approach to education will help the youth to
feel empowered to participate in the positive life of the community.
This approach will compel the youth to use their energy in creative ways
to begin to make changes that will contribute to a better home and
family, a better neighborhood and a true democratic nation.
(Charles Simmons teaches journalism and media law at
Eastern Michigan University and is co-chair of the Committee for the
Political Resurrection of Detroit.)
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