TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「What could replace the police? The question, until recently confined to activist circles, has been forced into national debate by a brutal logic: If the killing of George Floyd truly left Americans with a resolve to address systemic racism, shouldn't the starting point be the system that produced his excruciating death? Almost two weeks after a police officer knelt on Floyd's neck, the Minneapolis city council concluded that its police department was beyond reform and must instead be replaced. In a unanimous vote, the council embarked on a yearlong quest to produce a "new model for cultivating safety in our city," explicitly steered by the desires of the people most oppressed by the current one. If Minneapolis produces a new safety paradigm, the implications will be profound—reaching beyond the horror of police killings toward a rethinking of a criminal-justice system lamented by liberals and conservatives alike. If it fails, a status quo deeply rooted in the control of Black bodies will remain the norm, "and this will have been a nice little moment in history where we almost did something," says Jeremiah Ellison, a council member for Minneapolis' north side. Read more by Karl Vick and Josiah Bates at the link in bio. In these photographs: Phillipe Cunningham, a city-council member representing part of North Minneapolis, where members of the community stepped up to protect their fellow citizens after Floyd's killing, enacting a different type of public safety than the flawed one that is currently in place; a boarded-up storefront in North Minneapolis; the Rev. Jerry McAfee, a Baptist preacher who relies on former and active gang members to stop violence; and police officers in Minneapolis. Photographs by @rahimfortune for TIME」8月26日 22時21分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 8月26日 22時21分


What could replace the police? The question, until recently confined to activist circles, has been forced into national debate by a brutal logic: If the killing of George Floyd truly left Americans with a resolve to address systemic racism, shouldn't the starting point be the system that produced his excruciating death? Almost two weeks after a police officer knelt on Floyd's neck, the Minneapolis city council concluded that its police department was beyond reform and must instead be replaced. In a unanimous vote, the council embarked on a yearlong quest to produce a "new model for cultivating safety in our city," explicitly steered by the desires of the people most oppressed by the current one. If Minneapolis produces a new safety paradigm, the implications will be profound—reaching beyond the horror of police killings toward a rethinking of a criminal-justice system lamented by liberals and conservatives alike. If it fails, a status quo deeply rooted in the control of Black bodies will remain the norm, "and this will have been a nice little moment in history where we almost did something," says Jeremiah Ellison, a council member for Minneapolis' north side. Read more by Karl Vick and Josiah Bates at the link in bio. In these photographs: Phillipe Cunningham, a city-council member representing part of North Minneapolis, where members of the community stepped up to protect their fellow citizens after Floyd's killing, enacting a different type of public safety than the flawed one that is currently in place; a boarded-up storefront in North Minneapolis; the Rev. Jerry McAfee, a Baptist preacher who relies on former and active gang members to stop violence; and police officers in Minneapolis. Photographs by @rahimfortune for TIME


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