• Belgdore@lemm.ee
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    6 months ago

    The US is politically older than most European countries.

    European exceptionalism will lead to the complacency that leads to the kind of problems the US has.

  • drascus@sh.itjust.works
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    6 months ago

    we sorta haven’t. We haven’t even made it a few hundred years without a civil war or some sort of uprising.

  • dudinax@programming.dev
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    6 months ago

    Also Europe:

    “Let’s do this obviously good thing for the sake of the whole continent.”

    “No, because it would help France.”

    • Venicon@sopuli.xyz
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      6 months ago

      ALL cops you say?

      I have many friends and family who have joined the Scottish Police and given years of their lives to serving their communities, risking their own lives and health. Should I say fuck them too?

      I joined the police for six months before deciding it wasn’t the career for me and got back into charity work. Are you saying Fuck Me now or just for the six months I was in? Did my fuckery expire?

      How can thousands, millions of people doing a job be reduced to such a binary sentiment.

      • DessertStorms@kbin.social
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        6 months ago

        Yes, fuck them, and fuck you.

        You choose to knowingly join the organisation that was literally created and exists solely to serve the rich and oppress everyone else to do it.

        Cops are class traitors who can choose to leave their position at any time, the marginalised people they exist to abuse have no such luxury.

        Your feeling are irrelevant.

        ACAB

      • bl_r@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        6 months ago

        How can thousands, millions of people doing a job be reduced to such a binary statement

        The reason why most people (including myself) say ACAB is because of the system of policing, not the merits of any given police officer. Systems are inflexible and adverse to change. Individual good cops can exist, but once again, the system itself is the problem. A good cop can never fix the system, nor could a hundred, or a thousand. A million could, at best, give the illusion of a good system. People often say a rotten apple spoils the bunch, and I think that looking at policing from the perspective of individual rotten cops, or rotten cops “spoiling the bunch” is problematic when the system itself is rotten. And for participating in the system, yes, all cops are bastards.

        • Venicon@sopuli.xyz
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          6 months ago

          Okay I agree with the idea of a rotten system as think that generally many legal or government institutions are rotten and self serving for the rich.

          But the flaw in the argument from my perspective is that if all the decent people don’t go into the police, the ones with integrity, a moral compass who genuinely try to help people and do the right thing, then that leaves the bad apples.

          So for going into a system and hoping to change it for the better, help/protect their community from criminals and the bad apples and make a real difference in lives, by that logic those people striving for better are still bastards and that just doesn’t feel right to me.

          Again no hate here just a genuine conversation

          • bl_r@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            6 months ago

            if all the decent people don’t go into the police, the ones with integrity… that leaves the bad apples

            and

            [good cops that] help/protect their people from … bad apples

            I think this is flawed. The policing system is built in such a way that it protects the bad apples at all costs. From police unions making it difficult to get rid of the bad cops, to the laws, legal precedent, and cultural norms which make it impossible to prosecute them. In the US, police are allowed to lie to people, but they are often trusted in court, regardless if they regularly lie. The police often form a Blue wall of silence in order to protect other cops when literally perjuring themselves in the process. Qualified immunity makes it impossible for people to seek damages from individual cops when they violate their rights. While good cops might break the blue wall of silence (and they might get punished for it) and they don’t violate other’s rights and therefore are not protected in court by qualified immunity, the participation of these good cops does nothing to address the system in the first place.

            You and I both agree that there are many legal or governmental institutions that are rotten, but police fundamentally protect them and enforce their will. It is police who break strikes. It is the police that arrest protestors and activists. It is the police that hold the power to call legal protests illegal by declaring them riots. Fundamentally, the police protect the system that lets them be corrupt, and make it difficult to change it outside the impossible task of making change within electoral systems.

            … protect their community from criminals …

            Police are often an ineffective force at catching criminals. One of the best examples of this is sexual assault and rape. 70% of survivors do not involve the police. All the survivors I know did not call the police. They have good reason not to, 24% of them are arrested after doing so! If a person belongs to a group that is often oppressed by the police, such as gay and trans people, or a group that is criminalized, such as sex workers, there is nowhere for these people to turn in order to get justice.

            In the event these people do call the police, odds are there will be no arrests. Only 5% of cases will result in arrest. Fewer will result in convictions and incarceration. (WATR Zine (this is a download link))

            On a more ironic note, Policing increases crime. After NYC cops went on strike and reduced proactive policing, major crime reports fell.

            So for [cops] going into a system and hoping to change it for the better … and make a real difference in lives …

            While I wholeheartedly support trying to make a change for the better, and protecting and building community, I think police are a terrible way to do so. I think working outside the system is a much better way to materially help people’s lives. Organizations like Food Not Bombs helps people with food insecurity eat. Instead of joining the police which might make you destroy homeless encampments and make them worse off, you could instead volunteer at soup kitchens and homeless shelters. Joining an antifascist organization can help protect communities from fascists, but joining the police might make you side with the fascists and protect people with demonstrably harmful rhetoric, or worse, oppressive and murderous, fascist, intent

            by that logic [cops] striving for better are still bastards and that just doesn’t feel right to me.

            I still think it is fair to call them bastards. While it sucks to call someone with good intentions a bastard, ACAB points out that police as a whole is a flawed institution, and participating in it does not change that, it reinforces the legitimacy of it, and brings erroneous hope to people that it can be fixed from within, when in reality it needs drastic change if not total abolition.

            Again no hate here just a genuine conversation

            I genuinely appreciate this, ngl. I live in a very conservative area and when speaking about this, I’m used to discussion quickly devolving into meaningless argument

      • TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee
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        6 months ago

        ALL cops you say?

        While acab is probably too generalized a term to apply to ALL police forces in the world… Interpreting acab in absolutes is also kinda silly and needlessly pedantic.

        If I were to say all Nazi are bastards… Would we be making the same arguments? Surely there were Nazi that were forced to join the party, surely there were Nazi giving years of their lives to serving their communities, risking their lives and health.

        The point of ACAB is to highlight the inherent and institutional failures of policing actions native to the vast majority of western democracies. Where police are primarily utilized to protect property and institutional power, rather than protecting the most disadvantaged communities in our society.

        • Venicon@sopuli.xyz
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          6 months ago

          Trouble with that theory is that I think regular people won’t hear something like ‘All Cops Are Bastards’ and immediately think ‘well they probably don’t mean all cops’. It literally says it there.

          Maybe because I’m Scottish living in Scotland I’m separate from the US side of the movement/argument but knowing so many good people in the service who have probably done more for their communities than some people spray painting on walls it just sounds so blatant. If it was a different slogan then I doubt people would have an issue with it but not everyone hears all the details about what it apparently means online or whatnot, they just see the words.

          No desire to be pedantic at all, just explaining why a lot of folk won’t get behind the message.

          • azertyfun@sh.itjust.works
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            6 months ago

            ACAISAETOSOOSBTNOTPI or All Cops Are Inherently Supporting And Enforcing The Opressive Systems Of Our Society By The Nature Of The Policing Institution doesn’t quite have the same ring to it though.

            I mean I get it, “ACAB” sounds a bit like an over-reaction and I wouldn’t use that term to talk about Belgian cops, but within leftist circles like lemmy I think it’s an acceptable shorthand since 90+ percent of people already understand The Discourse™ on some level.

            • Venicon@sopuli.xyz
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              6 months ago

              Haha that acronym gave me a chuckle.

              Yeah I get it, I just don’t like when things are reduced to all x’s are y’s, think that kind of polarised thinking isn’t helpful when the world has a whole lot of grey in it. Equally if someone is happy to post a comment like that online I don’t think there is anything bad about chatting it through like reasonable humans.

            • The_Lopen@sh.itjust.works
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              6 months ago

              I mean how about instead of hyperbolizing, we actually find a good acronym that does less to push people away from our world-view? If the problem is the system, find an acronym about the system. It doesn’t have to be perfect, but if we don’t genuinely think every single cop is bad, we should stop saying it, no?

            • brbposting@sh.itjust.works
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              6 months ago

              PEB

              Policing Enables Bastards

              Meanwhile, “ACAB” is obviously wrong and disrespect to anyone who signs up to get fired for being a good cop.

              Don’t need to say literally wrong things that have to be re-explained, even if it is catchy. Be The Change!

              AACABAL! (All ACAB’rs Are Lazy!) :)

      • DessertStorms@kbin.social
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        6 months ago

        I’m not American, and the article linked is by a European about Europe…
        Swing and a fucking miss, clown… lmfao 🤣

    • fosforus@sopuli.xyz
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      6 months ago

      You should purge all the white cells from your body. Not only are they extremely militant cops, they’re white.

      • Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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        6 months ago

        I don’t know, what does “we” mean here? A lot of people colonized America prior to the creation of the united states of America.

    • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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      6 months ago

      It was the same with the original development of the country.

      The difference is apparent when compared to Canada.

      In Canada the pioneers were led or joined by the police, the newly created Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Law and order arrived either before or with the new pioneers.

      In the US, it was the other way around. Pioneers went west without any officials, police or law enforcement. Pioneers dealt with everything by the force of a gun. Whoever had a gun was the one with power and controlled everything … you could be a good moral person and lead a community or you could be a gang leader, decrepit, immoral and unjust, as long as you had a gun, you could do whatever you wanted.

  • Jknaraa@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    Pretty bold for a region that can’t last more than a generation or two before devolving into a police state so severe that it plunges the entire globe into armed conflict.

  • Sniatch@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    I’m from germany and I’m scared about the future. The far-right is getting more and more voters. It’s not just the USA who is fckd.

    • generalpotato@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Thanks for sharing our pain. I don’t understand how people pretend that Europe isn’t going thru the same stuff like we are in the US.

      Inflation, migration debates, cost of living crises, rise of authoritarianism, income inequality, all of this is and has been global. Some places affected more than others depending on what you look at.

  • arymandias@sh.itjust.works
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    6 months ago

    French cops are perfectly normal, just don’t google “ici on noie les Algériens” and why it keeps being graffitied on a specific bridge in Paris.

  • ZILtoid1991@kbin.social
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    6 months ago

    ACAB means the police is upholding unjust systems and laws, isn’t that cops as individuals are bad. Of course a large percent of them are domestic abusers and racist, but that’s an entirely different issue.

    • DragonTypeWyvern@literature.cafe
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      6 months ago

      Define country, because the American government is actually one of the oldest continuous governmental systems in the world. Certainly the oldest republic that isn’t a micro-state.

      Now if you want argue that France, for example, is an older country than America because there’s been a fairly stable region largely called France for several centuries you can, you’d just be wrong.

      Now if you want to start talking about nations that’s different, but also a much, much blurrier subject in general.

      • CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social
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        6 months ago

        I’m using the term to mean more or less the collectively agreed upon “identity” of a state. Not merely a single contiguous government (for the same reason you just bring up, people still consider France to be France even though the government has changed fundamentally many times over the years), but I’m not using it to just mean “nation” either, since were France to be completely conquered and annexed by a foreign power, the French nation, as in the group of people, would still exist, but the country would not, at least until such time as it could be recreated, or for a different reason, that one can have a national identity split between different states, or a state involving different such groups.