JahFocus CS
Get It How You Get It
Sure, if you're being that narrow.
The communities you mentioned IMO are the American "have nots"/"poor", and the poor are being oppressed(in similar fashion) around the world under damn near every economic model.
The idea that the poor being more heavily policed is exclusive to capitalism is silly IMHO.
I'm not gonna take the time to look it up, but I'm positive the poor/working class suffer more from law enforcement, in communist, fascist, and dictator ran countries as well.
I was asking you to clarify what type of discrimination you meant, as my earlier post was mostly about the drug war.
Hmmmm, the poor are oppressed? So it's not simply a reflection of their economic worth and contribution as determined by the market?

What other economic models do you see as being in existence in the world today? There is class oppression in class societies. And the state is the only way to carry this out... if not for the state, the ruling class would fall. Under capitalism, this means that bosses could no longer enforce private property rights (different from personal property rights, by the way) to the means of production, thereby controlling people's labor and access to the things they need to survive.
Fascist countries are capitalist (perhaps not the "free market" as you conceive of it, but this just shows that the ruling class will wield the state in whichever way is most effective to maintain its rule). "Dictatorship" is too broad, that's just a description of government without much bearing or significance for the economic system. And what countries are "communist-run" that have workers controlling the means of production - that is, which ones are actually pushing for socialism and then communism and aren't actually state capitalist?
The modern institution of police arose at the same time capitalism solidified as a system. It is qualitatively different from analogues you may point to under previous modes of production in human history. Otherwise, if you want to just say, "force has always been used to suppress and oppress people," that is true, but how is that social analysis at all, and especially social analysis with any rigor?
Sure, if you're being that narrow.
, but I'm positive the poor/working class suffer more from law enforcement, in communist, fascist, and dictator ran countries as well.

no white flags, please share your definition of capitalism so we can gain some clarity and get to the meat of some of these disagreements.


This article... That use of stats. That systemic critique.