Whether it is directly or indirectly,
the Police-Justice-Prison trio is part of our lives. Who has never
tasted their handcuffs or their trials, who has never dealt with
prison or detention centers? Who has never felt their threatening
presence? There is no way to deny that poverty always associate with
state domination. In the North-East of Paris and in the Parisian
Eastern suburbs just like anywhere else, who can ignore the parades
of cops swaying their shoulders, in plain clothes or in uniforms,
whatever their names (BAC, BST, Correspondants de Nuit or
security guards for landlords, for the city council, for the public
transportation company), scrutinizing the actions of everyone,
checking IDs, with a mistrusting gaze, with the blessing and support
of judges and prosecutors whose job is to lock us up? No job is below
any other, we can hear sometimes. But nothing is further from the
truth when some individuals chose, to earn their lives, to stop us
from living ours.
But repression is not only uniforms and
judges. It’s a whole way of thinking that we have come to
internalize, from the nursery to the grave. The citizen, this police
assistant who chooses our masters at each election, is the first
barrier against the revolt of the dominated. And let’s not be
mistaken: social peace is an insidious and violent form of the war
that is conducted each day against the revolted. It is at the same
time the most institutionalized and the most delegated form of the
power’s domination. It’s aim is to subject us to social war
instead of conducting it against the power and its minions. But it’s
a war of every moment and its psychological aspect is probably the
most dreadful. By creating its own categories – honest citizen
against racailles, legals against illegals, innocent and
included against guilty and excluded... - the power has already won
an important battle by managing to divide those who, united, could
take down its system of death through revolt and insurrection.
Our last illusions are probably those
who send us the most to their grinder, whether they are our different
comfort zones (community, family, clan, religion) or the
internalization of its ideology, which produce snitches, sexists of
all kinds, racists, defenders of property rights, suspicious looks,
mistrust towards everything that does not fit into their standards or
phone calls to the cops instead of dealing autonomously with
problems. All of this because some believe it is still possible to
live free while delegating our responsibilities to intermediaries,
whether they are cops, politicians, religious leaders, or simply
while looking the other way towards a foggy dream of an elsewhere
where it would be possible to recover from here (drugs, alcohol,
prayers, television...).
But in this social war, control is not
an abstract concept. It is many names and addresses, thousands of
cameras, cops and judges. It is companies who make profit out of our
misery (banks, real estate agencies, controllers, bailiffs,
supermarkets) or our seclusion (builders, architects, humanitarians,
managers). It is social welfare in exchange for our resignation and
thus our complicity, active or passive. In many places, social peace
crumbles when revolts break out, when individuals stand up and regain
their dignity against oppressors. Going from crumbles to explosion
solely depends on our will to never bow down again, to never expect
anything from them and to fight this world of domination where the
true violence lays in the power of the money and the police stick.
This
is why, on these few basis, we feel the need to meet around the
shared desire to let this rage express itself publicly, as it pleases
each and everyone, as a moment among many other.
In the North-East of Paris as anywhere
else,
To put an end to the police occupation of our lives
To put an end to the police occupation of our lives