Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Fire the Cops!


Killer cops and cop-killers, "police as workers" and police as soldiers, copwatching and counterinsurgency operations... these subjects and more are examined in this collection of essays by veteran activist Kristian Williams, released to mark ten years since the first publication of his book Our Enemies in Blue in 2004.

In section one, focusing in on police murders in Portland, Seattle, and Oakland, Fire the Cops examines the relationship between working-class
communities (predominantly Black) and the police, showing how police violence and impunity function to buttress the power of the State, and arguing that the left should recognize the political content of much of the violence directed against police.

Next, in section two, Williams traces the history of the sometimes confusing relationship between the police and organized labor, from the age of the Pinkertons to the much publicized involvement of police in the protests against Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker in 2011, and varied police responses to the Occupy movement around the same time. Addressing claims that "police are workers too," Williams shows how any instances of police acting in solidarity with the working class have been atypical, inconsistent, and fleeting at best.

By far the most in-depth section of Fire the Cops is the third section, a study of the role of police in counterinsurgency operations. Drawing on a range of sources, including activist reports and the U.S. Army's Field Manual on Counterinsurgency, Williams shows how, from "anti-gang" operations to "community policing," military theories of repression are increasingly being applied in oppressed communities across the United States.

Finally, in the concluding section, Fire the Cops takes on some of the questions facing those of us engaged in copwatch activities, as well as
the position that the police should be abolished, not reformed. Here, Williams maps out some of the conclusions this practice and position imply for our communities and movements, both today and tomorrow.

Fire the Cops is a collection of several essays written in the decade following the publication of Our Enemies in Blue, years in which Williams was heavily involved in the Rose City Copwatch organization in Portland. This book can be read as a supplement to Our Enemies in Blue, or on its own, as a series of attempts to apply historical lessons to circumstances as they unfold.

Including both reports from the frontlines and reconnaissance into the plans and practices of our opponents, Fire the Cops is intended to help inform future critique, and further struggle.

Fire the Cops includes several photographs by Bette Lee, documenting protests against the police in Portland, Oregon, during the years these essays were being written.

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