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View Full Version : UC students explore 'alternatives to calling the police'



Teh One Who Knocks
02-15-2017, 01:08 PM
Anthony Gockowski, Investigative Reporter - Campus Reform


http://i.imgur.com/rXQLG6h.jpg

The University of Chicago will soon host a workshop on how to avoid the “negative ramifications” of contacting law enforcement by teaching students “alternatives to calling the police.”

During a workshop scheduled for February 22, explicitly titled “Alternatives to Calling the Police,” the prestigious school’s “Students Working Against Prisons” club will discuss “the negative ramifications of calling the police, especially in regards to their racial oppression of black people and other people of color.”

“It will then prompt participants to reflect on their own relationship to the police,” a description for the event explains, noting that the workshop will conclude with a “guided brainstorming of alternatives to calling the police.”

According to an advertisement for the event, students will consider alternatives to law enforcement officials in cases of “mugging,” “sexual assault,” “health emergencies,” “mental health crises,” and “public nuisances,” or “‘suspicious’ activity.”

Campus Reform contacted the group hosting the event for clarification on what precisely the alternatives to calling police would look like in each of those scenarios, but did not receive a response in time for publication.

Notably, Students Working Against Prisons was founded to protest the university’s ties to the food corporation “Bon Appetit,” a subsidiary of “Compass Group,” which the group describes as “the largest contract foodservice company in the world, and one that of course has a long history of involvement in prisons.”

The group goes on to explain that its objection to the Compass Group stems from the fact that it provides food to roughly 300,000 inmates at prisons across the country.

“Our goals are to educate U Chicago students about the prison-industrial complex, offer solidarity and support to prisoners, and end U Chicago’s ties to prisons,” the student group states.

DemonGeminiX
02-15-2017, 01:55 PM
Start by shooting the workshop presenters in the face. :tup:

deebakes
02-16-2017, 01:28 AM
:lolwut:

RBP
02-16-2017, 07:05 AM
Every criminal justice reform discussion I have read completely misses the point.

Godfather
02-16-2017, 07:17 AM
Every criminal justice reform discussion I have read completely misses the point.

I'm trying to figure out what the hell this idea even is :lol: I'd sort of be curious to watch a few minutes of their presentation because I have literally no clue what they're aiming for, trying to get people to rethink calling the cops over muggings and suspicious activity? What?!

RBP
02-16-2017, 07:45 AM
I'm trying to figure out what the hell this idea even is :lol: I'd sort of be curious to watch a few minutes of their presentation because I have literally no clue what they're aiming for, trying to get people to rethink calling the cops over muggings and suspicious activity? What?!

This message is so disjointed it's hard to tell. But there have been activist calls for police de-funding, even in Chicago. It's stupidity, as is the base assumption here that places criminal justice reform at the foot of the police.

If you want your head to explode, jump down the rabbit hole of the relationship between the Chicago gun violence spike and the agreement signed with the ACLU.

PorkChopSandwiches
02-16-2017, 04:51 PM
Every college seems to be ran by lunatics now