Friday, March 30, 2012

I Ain’t No Broken Window

Jenise Standfield from the Coalition on Homelessness in San Francisco posted this essay online today.  Springfield had its own Broken Window proponent, former police commissioner Edward Flynn, who would have his officers take pictures of homeless people, so this article struck home to me.


The person credited with coining the theory of Broken Windows policing died last month and people are starting to ask what Broken Windows are all about.  Those of us who have been identified as no more than a broken window are sick of it.
The Broken Window social theory holds that one poor person in a neighborhood (or, using social theorist James Q. Wilson words, “a vagrant or a drunk”) is like a first unrepaired broken window.  If the window is not immediately fixed, if the vagrant is not immediately removed, it is a signal that no one cares, disorder will flourish, and the community (warehouse) will go to hell in a hand basket.
For this theory to make sense, you first have to step far far away from thinking of people, or at least poor people, as human beings. You need to objectify them.  You need to see them as dusty broken windows in a vacant warehouse.
Wilson himself admits that his reasoning here seems unjust.  One drunk or vagrant suddenly becomes a score of drunks or a hundred vagrants.  They will destroy an entire community, and they will destroy an entire downtown business district and that is why we now have Business Improvement Districts with police enforcement to keep that neighborhood flourishing and poor unsightly people out of it. 
There are now over 1500 BIDs throughout the United States and Canada and their number are growing.
And we are right back to local laws we had under Jim Crow, Sundown laws, Ugly Laws and Anti Okie laws, local laws that profess to “uphold the locally accepted obligations of civility.” Such laws have always been used by people in power against those on the outside.   In other words, today’s Business Improvement District Broken Window policing is, at its core, a reincarnation of various phases of American history none of us are proud of.
Central to the argument is the need to adhere to “locally accepted obligations of civility.”   But who is setting these “locally accepted obligations of civility”?   Where is our “human civility”?
We have gone from the days where people could be told “you can’t sit at this lunch counter” to “you can’t sit on this sidewalk,” from “don’t let the sun set on you here” to “this public park closes at dusk” and from “you’re on the wrong side of the tracks” to “it is illegal to hang out” on this street or corner.
Of course a tired shopper can sit on the sidewalk to rest between stores and the people that lined up for two days waiting to get the new IPod can loiter and none of them will ever be ticketed, moved on or arrested. These are the civilized people, they are consumers. They are us.
The people these laws are enforced against are not us. They are them. And their mere presence makes us uncomfortable so therefore they are not civil and need to be replaced with someone more like those of us who set the locally accepted obligations of civility.

Jim Crow, Anti-Okie, Broken Window its all the same old wine just in a new bottle.
I guess history really does repeat itself and that’s sad. Print Friendly and PDF

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