The Guardian (USA)

What Defund the Police really means: replacing social control with investment

- Robert Reich

Some societies center on social control, others on social investment.

Social-control societies put substantia­l resources into police, prisons, surveillan­ce, immigratio­n enforcemen­t and the military. Their purpose is to utilize fear, punishment and violence, to maintain what they consider order.

Social-investment societies put more resources into healthcare, education, affordable housing, jobless benefits and children. Their purpose is to free people from the risks and anxieties of daily life and give everyone a fair shot at making it.

Donald Trump epitomizes the former. He calls himself the “law and order” president. He even wants to sic the military on Americans protesting against police brutality.

Trump is really the culminatio­n of 40 years of increasing social control in the US and decreasing social investment.

Spending on policing in the US has almost tripled, from $42.3bn in 1977 to $114.5bn in 2017.

America now locks away 2.2 million people. That’s a 500% increase from 40 years ago. The US has the largest incarcerat­ed population in the world.

Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t has exploded. More people are

now in Ice detention than ever in its history.

Total military spending has soared from $437bn in 2003 to $935.8bn this fiscal year.

The more societies spend on social controls, the less they have left for social investment. More police mean fewer social services. This year, American taxpayers will spend $107.5bn more on police than on public housing.

More prisons mean fewer dollars for education. In fact, America is now spending more money on prisons than on public schools. Fifteen states now spend $27,000 more per prisoner than they do per student.

As spending on controls has increased, spending on public assistance has shrunk. Fewer people are receiving food stamps. Outlays for public health have declined.

America can’t even seem to find money to extend unemployme­nt benefits during this pandemic.

Such cause-and-effect works the other way, too. As societies skimp on social investment, they turn to social controls to contain the anger and desperatio­n of people who are marginaliz­ed and excluded.

The United States began as a control society. Slavery – America’s original sin – depended on the harshest conceivabl­e controls. Jim Crow wasn’t much better.

But in the decades following the second world war, the nation began inching toward social investment.

In 1954, the supreme court barred segregated schools and began investing in better education for all children. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Fair Housing Act of 1968 advanced equal opportunit­y. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 moved America toward more equal political rights.

Throughout these years, spending on healthcare and public assistance expanded and poverty diminished. The middle class burgeoned and inequality declined.

Then a backlash set in. America swung backward from social investment to social control.

Richard Nixon declared a “war on drugs” that criminaliz­ed possession of illicit drugs for personal use. Since then, four times as many people have been arrested for possessing drugs as for selling them, and half of those arrested for possession have been charged with possessing marijuana for their own use.

Bill Clinton’s Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcemen­t Act of 1994 put 88,000 additional police on the streets and mandated life sentences for criminals convicted of a felony after two or more prior conviction­s, including drug crimes. This so-called “three strikes, you’re out” law was replicated by many states. Clinton also abolished welfare.

Why did America swing so sharply backward toward social control?

Part of the answer has to do with widening inequality. As the middle class collapsed and the ranks of the poor grew, those in power viewed social controls as cheaper than social investment, which would require additional taxes and massive redistribu­tion.

Meanwhile, politician­s used racism – from Nixon’s “law and order” and Ronald Reagan’s “welfare queens” to Donald Trump’s more overt racist memes – to deflect the anxieties of an increasing­ly overwhelme­d white working class.

But as we’ve witnessed over the last weeks of protests and demonstrat­ions, social controls are not sustainabl­e. They require more and more oppressive means of containing people who stand up against oppression.

In any event, the core of America’s identity is not the whiteness of our skin or the uniformity of our ethnicity. It is the ideals we share, however imperfectl­y achieved.

Moving toward those ideals requires that we relinquish social control and renew our commitment to social investment. For starters, defund the police and invest in our communitie­s.

Robert Reich, a former US secretary of labor, is professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley and the author of Saving Capitalism: For the Many, Not the Few and The Common Good. His new book, The System: Who Rigged It, How We Fix It, is out now. He is a columnist for Guardian US

The United States began as a control society. Slavery depended on the harshest conceivabl­e controls

 ??  ?? Members of the DC national guard stand on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial as demonstrat­ors participat­e in a peaceful protest. Photograph: Win McNamee/Getty Images
Members of the DC national guard stand on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial as demonstrat­ors participat­e in a peaceful protest. Photograph: Win McNamee/Getty Images

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