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by currymj
2210 days ago
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the argument is that there shouldn't be police forces as we know them today -- that the whole issue of crime and punishment should be handled completely differently, with communities organizing themselves to prevent malicious activity. typically this argument goes along with the idea of abolishing prisons as well, and ending incarceration as punishment for crimes. it's not a completely ridiculous idea -- there have been many societies throughout history that didn't have formal professional police forces, but still had functioning legal systems. it's also particularly appealing in the US because the police and prison systems here have such severe problems and seemingly cannot be reformed. (unclear whether it could actually work at a large scale in the modern world, but I can see some of the appeal.) police and prison abolition have also just become buzzwords, so sometimes people just use them to express frustration, or to describe what are really reforms. |
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