By SJ Otto
It is sad that a city as
For the most part, Project Justice ICT is about Black Lives Matter and Defunding the Wichita Police Department. The last marches they held were in solidarity with the protesters inPortland Oregon.
Just recently there were arguments by right-wing people on Facebook against the idea that
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***IMPORTANT INFORMATION. PLEASE READ***
A letter to The People,
Over the course of the last two-and-a-half weeks, Project Justice has seen the
The debate around policing in this country goes far deeper than just mere questions of which reform policies to implement. In fact, the greater question is should we reform the police, or should we seek out a world in which policing is no longer necessary? Indeed, in a country where some 800,000 people are employed as officers of the law, where The Police and The Prison are made into award-winning comedy spectacles, and whose prison population outmatches that of the whole populations of many nations throughout the world, a
We have asked ourselves is reform enough? Can a system built from the remains of runaway slave patrols – and which continues to disproportionately incriminate, imprison, and disenfranchise our communities of color – truly be changed? Are we challenging the notion that police increase safety in our communities when we have so often seen that they do not? We have already passed laws that require body cameras, yet somehow body camera footage during fatal interactions with police winds up indiscernible, erased, or was simply never recorded. We have instituted policies that ban chokeholds and strangleholds, yet somehow police officers choke and strangle people in the streets to their deaths. We have changed the law to illegalize racial profiling, yet somehow in a country where Black and Latino people make up only a combined 25% of the population, Black and Latino people make up 77% of fatal police shootings.
As we have watched, waited, read, and listened, Project Justice has determined that mere reform policies are not enough to address the systemic issues that plague police forces around this country, and indeed, our own police force here in Wichita. We have taken time, we have educated ourselves, and we are prepared now more than ever to choose real change over mere reforms. We ask that those of you who have stood by us as we promoted reform please do not discount our altered views, but rather engage with us, educate yourselves, and hopefully continue to stand by us as we fight for real, radical change.
In solidarity,
Project Justice ICT
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Surveillance and arresting leaders for illegal assembly, is something we can not tolerate in this town. We need to oppose this and pressure the Wichita City Councils to respect the political rights of protesters in this town. We have been told that the city plans to increase spending on the police department while they plan to cut spending in most other departments. Much of the spending is because of the coronavirus pandemic. They have even considered cutting the spending that allows people to put stray cats and dogs in the local animal shelter. Without a dog pound, where will people send these lost animals?–SJ Otto