That is correct, which is why it is incorrect to stick to a narrow definition of "defund".
It's not a narrow definition, it's what the word actually means.
I am not terribly impressed by the
"When I use a word, it means just what I choose it to mean—neither more nor less" Humpty Dumpty nonsense.
You have in no way established that the above is the case, and I do not accept it to be true.
I indeed have, even if you refuse to admit it.
I am relatively sure that he would think the same of your apologetics.
It's not apologetics, just reality, but I would be very disappointed if he didn't.
Why should anyone think that cutting police overtime is a good faith effort to make the kind of cuts to the NYPD budget that are being called for?
Why should anyone think that the kind of cuts to the NYPD budget that radicals like AOC call for are in any way sensible? If even a lefty like BdB thinks this is going way too far, maybe the Left needs to pump the breaks lest they go off the cliff!
If overtime is necessary to do the job then it is necessary, and if it is not necessary, and being abused, then it should be cut, but that is an entirely separate issue, and not one that BLM is focused on.
Overtime offers flexibility in staffing levels. It is pretty obvious that you don't need the same level of police presence at all times equally.
At the same time, #BLM is focused on attacking police for the sake of attacking police. Even when police does nothing wrong, #BLMers still call a police shooting "murder". I have not seen any reasonable proposals for reform come from the trained Marxists at #BLM!
Mariame Kaba wants to abolish police and prisons altogether, not just severely defund police like AOC is proposing.
That people can see a better world where police and prisons are not necessary is not a bad thing.
Think again. Prisons and police will be necessary at least for the foreseeable future, if not forever. What is the alternative?
The quote I reference from Brookings even provides an example of police abolishment in Camden, New Jersey that actually worked.
Are you even serious right now? Police wasn't "abolished" in Camden. They still have police. It's just run by the county, not the city. They have a
website and everything. Doesn't look very "abolished" to me!
There is much talk about rural vs urban crime in this thread. Guess what, many (likely even most, but I don't care to look up the stat right now) rural municipalities do not have a police force, as they are much too small to be able to afford one.
That doesn't mean there isn't a police force of course. It may be a county police department. It may be the county sheriff's department, especially in rural areas. And they can be assisted by the state police if needed. So there most definitely IS policing.
Yet the rural conservatives are the first to freak out when BLM says "defund the police". Here's a new flash, redneck, they won't be defunding the police department that you don't have.
That may be the stupidest comment I have ever read by you. Not every municipality has to have their own police department for there to be police that has jurisdiction in that municipality. I guess you think there is no
police in Scotland because it's all been consolidated into one single country-wide department in 2013?
It is not unrealistic, look at Camden, New Jersey. Look at the thousands of rural towns that have no police force.
Camden has police. As do the thousands of rural towns policed by county police or sheriff's departments. And yes, in absence of a separate police department, policing duties are exercised by the sheriff's departments. It may be called differently, but if you have armed personnel empowered to enforce the law, it is a distinction without a difference as far as "police abolition" movement is concerned!
Again, do you think that police in Edinburgh was "abolished" in 1975 when it was consolidated into "Lothian and Borders Police" and again in 2013 when it was consolidated countrywide into "Police Scotland"?