deutsch |  english |  español  |  français  |  italiano  |  nederlands  |  polski  |  português  |  svenska  |  türkçe  |  中文  |  عربي  |  русский

latest news

 Ireland
Joe Higgins addresses packed anti-household tax meeting

04/02/2012: Joe Higgins argues in Cork, 26 January, to resist the household tax: "Yes, we have a choice!"

  Ireland North, Video

Belgium
January 30 General Strike

03/02/2012: A strike corresponding to the level of anger over austerity programme

  Belgium

EU summit
No capitalist solutions to the spiralling eurozone crisis

03/02/2012: The capitalist classes of Europe are all adopting the same policy of attempting to make the working class pay for the capitalist economic crisis.

  Europe

 Nigeria
Story of the great general strike

02/02/2012: A socialist view on recent showdown between government and people

  Nigeria, Video

Italy
Dozens of No TAV activists arrested

01/02/2012: The repression will not stop the movement!

  Italy

Socialism
Answering Common Questions

31/01/2012: Frequently asked questions

Kazakhstan
Free Vadim Kuramshin!

31/01/2012: Urgent solidarity needed

  Kazakhstan

Kazakhstan
‘Labour Start’ editor makes outrageous claims against oil workers and CWI

31/01/2012: Worldwide solidarity campaign means the Kazakhstan regime can no longer deny 16 December massacre

  Kazakhstan

Tunisia
“The mass of people continue to struggle”

31/01/2012: Interview with two Tunisian socialists, one year after the fall of Ben Ali

  Tunisia

US
For an independent Left challenge in Presidential elections

30/01/2012: Fight Against Corporate Politics

  US

 US
Capitalist crisis and the occupy movement

30/01/2012: Bryan Koulouris explains how the USA is being transformed by the occupy movements which have arisen in anger at the growing inequality between the 1% and the 99% in the United States

  US, Video

Climate change
Dithering in Durban

30/01/2012: Once again, a United Nations-sponsored climate change conference has completely failed to address the issue of global warming.

  Environment

Cyprus
Partial general strike paralyses public sector

29/01/2012: December’s industrial action against austerity just the beginning of the fight-back!

  Cyprus

Asia
Feeling the coming storm

29/01/2012: Whole continent on the verge of major social convulsions and political shocks

  Asia, CWI Comment And Analysis

Latin America
No escape from world crisis

28/01/2012: The illusory appearance of a peculiar isolation from the international picture of stagnation, recession and economic crisis is fragile - a new period of turbulent class conflict lays ahead

  CWI Comment And Analysis, Latin America

China
“I was arrested by China’s Secret Police”.

27/01/2012: CWI’s Zhang Shujie speaks out at hearing in Sweden’s parliament

  China

Egypt
Huge crowds in Tahrir Square mark revolution anniversary

26/01/2012: Masses in Cairo and other cities demand end to military rule

  Egypt

China
‘Long Hair’ to attend Stockholm hearing on state repression

26/01/2012: LSD legislator from Hong Kong to speak in support of young socialist Zhang Shujie, forced to flee China

  China

 CWI International Meeting
Illusion of stability in Latin America

25/01/2012: Contradictions and new struggles define situation in region

  CWI, Latin America

Brazil
In defence of Pinheirinho inhabitants!

25/01/2012: 3 year old child killed in fatal repression

  Brazil

Kazakhstan
New wave of arrests against opposition

25/01/2012: Release Vadim Kuramshin and all those arrested – End harassment of opposition activists!

  Kazakhstan

 Kazakhstan
After the Zhanaozen clampdown

25/01/2012: 16 December underlined the need for the workers’ movement to link economic demands to the struggle to bring down the regime

  Kazakhstan, Video

USA
Mobilize to Support Longshore Workers

24/01/2012: Key Battle for the Labour and Occupy Movements

  US

 CWI International Meeting
World capitalism in crisis

22/01/2012: As world economy worsens, inter-imperialist relations intensify

  CWI, CWI Comment And Analysis

Britain
Stephen Lawrence murder – The untold story

21/01/2012: How socialists and the local community fought back against racism and the BNP

  Britain

Scotland
ConDem government blunders independence referendum

20/01/2012: Scottish National Party’s version of indepdendence a nightmare for workers

  Scotland

Egypt
A year of revolution and counter-revolution

18/01/2012: As economic crisis worsens, new class conflicts loom

  Egypt

Nigeria
Widespread disapointment and anger as labour suspends strike

17/01/2012: Struggle forces Jonathan back a bit, but could have won far more with a more resolute leadership - We Condemn Repression by Police and Army

  Nigeria

World economy
The year of all risks

15/01/2012: On the brink of a new downturn

  World Economy

Britain
Pensions battle continues

15/01/2012: Public sector union left group organises open conference to keep up the fight

  Britain

Iran
New imperialist war clouds

13/01/2012: Tensions increase with sanctions and navy exercises

  Iran

 Ireland
Workers occupy against redundancies and abuses

12/01/2012: Socialist MPs support La Senza workers’ Dublin occupation

  Ireland Republic, Video

print



US

Police Murder of Oscar Grant Exposes Injustice System

www.socialistworld.net, 09/08/2010
website of the committee for a workers' international, CWI

According to President Obama, America has come “90 percent of the way” towards ending racism. This statement, however, is violently contradicted by the brutal police killing of Oscar Grant, a young black man, by a police officer in Oakland, CA on New Years Day.

Pete Ikeler, New York, Socialist Alternative (CWI USA)

The case provoked angry demonstrations in Oakland after the police officer was recently found guilty of involuntary manslaughter — by a jury without a single black member. This drives another nail in the coffin of the idea about the “end of racism” that Obama holds so dear.

In their closing statement, the defense for the police officer who killed Oscar Grant tried to convince the jury that the case was an “isolated incident” and not to make “some sort of commentary on the state of relations between the police and the community in this country,” (San Francisco Chronicle, 7/2/10).

Time and again this is what jurors and the wider public is told: race had nothing to do with it; it was just an isolated incident. But then why is it that practically every case of police brutality — from Rodney King to Sean Bell, Oscar Grant and countless others — is perpetrated against people of color? Clearly, the murder of Oscar Grant is indicative of a larger pattern. It is an old and persistent pattern of brutal racial oppression in America.

Oscar Grant and several others were detained by Oakland police in the early morning hours of New Year’s Day, 2010. The Oakland PD were responding to an alleged fight taking place between some of the men in the Fruitvale station of the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) system. After detaining the men for almost an hour, questioning and arguing with them, police officers moved to handcuff several of them and Mehserle restrained Oscar Grant by kneeling on his back while he lay prostrate, stomach - down on the train platform. It was at this point that officer Mehserle drew his gun and shot Grant in the back at point-blank range. Grant then screamed “you shot me!” and died several hours later from his wounds from a bullet that ricocheted off the ground and punctured his lung.

Fellow riders on the subway that night filmed the incident and their recordings clearly show that Grant was not threatening the police in any way at the time he was shot. Furthermore, eye witnesses described the officers’ behavior as antagonistic from the beginning and some attested to the officers’ use of racial slurs during the incident. Roy Bedard, a police use-of-force expert, said of the shooting after viewing several video recordings of it, that “it looks like an execution” (San Francisco Chronicle, 1/7/09).

Communities of color — in Oakland, throughout California, and across the country — have been outraged at this blatant case of police brutality, yet again perpetrated by a white police officer against a young black man. In Alameda County, where the shooting took place, the public outcry was so great that Mehserle’s defense attorney appealed for — and received from the judge — a change of venue for the trial, claiming that Mehserle could not receive “a fair trial” in Alameda. Conducted in downtown Los Angeles, the trial took place with a jury consisting of seven white members, four of Hispanic and one of Asian background — i.e. no black jurors. As many as six of the jurors were said to have “law enforcement connections,” meaning that either a spouse or family member was a police officer, and Mehserle’s defense attorney successfully argued that video evidence not be shown in court.

Of the three charges brought against Mehserle — second-degree murder, voluntary manslaughter and involuntary manslaughter — the jury convicted him of only the third and least serious. Apparently, Mehserle’s excuse that he “meant to taze” Grant, despite the fact the tazer was worn on the opposite side of his body from his gun, weighed about half as much and had a completely different shape, was enough to convince the jury of non-malicious intent.

Racial Profiling

The massive and ongoing protests which have taken place since this verdict was released on July 8th show the immense anger and frustration that exist among America’s black community. Oscar Grant’s killing is but the latest and one of the most vicious examples of the systematic racial profiling pursued by police departments across the country. A recent New York Times article noted that in Brooklyn, and New York City as a whole, the NYPD has been pursuing a policy known as “stop and frisk” in which people on the street are simply stopped for infractions like “furtive movement” in order to be interrogated and frisked. Complete records for all of these individuals — over 575,000 in 2009 alone — are kept on file.

A recent Village Voice article said that 85 percent of those stopped in New York City were either black or Latino, and this humiliating and invasive police tactic has been most actively pursued in predominantly black and Latino neighborhoods, such as Bedford-Stuyvesant and Brownesville. The rate of stop-and-frisk in one section of Brownesville was found to be so high that it equaled one stop per year for each of the 14,000 residents in that area (New York Times 7/11/10). One long-time resident noted that people in the neighborhood “fear the police because you can get stopped at any time.” Less than 1 percent of the 52,000 stops resulted in an arrest and only 25 guns were recovered from those stopped and frisked.

Such systematic policies of racial profiling, combined with the brutal murders of Oscar Grant and Sean Bell and the incredibly disproportionate incarceration rate for African Americans (six times more likely to be incarcerated in a country that already has the highest overall incarceration rate of any nation ever) lead to only one logical conclusion: the police forces and criminal “justice” system across the country are used to keep people of color, African Americans and Latinos in particular, as a permanent underclass in American society.

Keeping the majority of blacks in a near-constant state of anxiety about police oppression—as with undocumented immigrants about deportation — serves the interests of the American ruling class in several ways. First, it works to provide a source of cheap labor by deterring African Americans from speaking up about the economic injustices they face. Why bother advocating your interests in a society that’s clearly out to keep you down? Second, such policies divide the broader working class along racial and ethnic lines by scapegoating black people for many of the problems in society while providing white workers with a relative sense of privilege. The police oppression of blacks and Latinos also provides inmates for America’s massive — and growing — prison-industrial complex, which creates jobs for an increasing number of rural Americans while lining the pockets of private for-profit “corrections” contractors, paid to do everything from building new jails, catering the food, and providing prison guards.

Under capitalism, the police represent the armed wing of the state of corporate class rule and capitalism. While many individual officers may have working class ties and an increasing proportion are themselves black or Latino, this does not change the fundamental character and function of the police force as whole — namely, to protect private property and support the existing power structure in which stockholders and CEOs run the show. Instances like the murder of Oscar Grant are not isolated at all. They are not the acts of a few “bad cops” or even of a misguided policy that could somehow be reviewed and corrected. Rather, brutal police tactics, racial profiling, and the barbarism of the death penalty, are a natural outgrowth of a state apparatus designed to support the profits of the few against the interests of the many.

Community organizations, unions and working people should continue to call for demonstrations and demand a commission composed of ordinary working class people to investigate and expose police practices, police racism and for democratic control of the police. Furthermore, the outrage at the police killing of Oscar Grant should be linked to the struggle to tax Wall Street and the rich, and to use the money for decent jobs, free education, rebuilding the inner cities, affordable, decent housing and full funding of community needs. This is a program to start to deal with the serious social problems of poverty and street crime across the country.

Ultimately, racial profiling and institutionalized police brutality against African Americans stem from a system in which ordinary people do not control the police, and the police act like an occupation army in communities of color like Oakland. As the violent death of Oscar Grant shows, the stakes are too high. And as the favorable treatment of his killer makes even clearer, people of color cannot “trust” the courts and criminal justice system to right such wrongs. It is time for labor, community, immigrant and youth activists to work together to challenge the capitalist system - a system that needs exploitation, poverty, racism, environmental degradation and war in order to keep itself afloat.


print



Europe

 video

Ireland: Joe Higgins addresses packed anti-household tax meeting, 04/02/2012

 further videos

CWI - get involved

cwi comment & analysis

world economic crisis

analysis and commentary

iraq

afghanistan

featured links

Paul Murphy, MEP

cwi links

Marxist.net, CWI marxist archive

solidarity

tamil solidarity campaign kazakhstan

cwi publications

marxism in today's world che

Che Guevara: Símbolo de Lucha

Por Tony Saunois

A socialist world is possible, the history of the cwi with new introduction by Peter Planning green growth, a contribution to the debate on enviromental sustainability