It has been a while, omninet, so let me tell you more of our home in the New Era:
Here on Sanjak, we do not have police. We maintain order among ourselves, and maintain a militia for our defense, but we have no orgs or order that would put a gun in your hand to bear against your comrade. We understand the need for community justice, yes, and we understand that people also do wrong, but we have seen the betrayal of revolutions in the decision to form organizations to punish lawbreakers in their wake.
When we put a gun in our comrades hand and ask them to enforce order upon their neighbors, they begin to see their job as the correction of their neighbors. They come to identify with the gun, and the filth of the world as a stain they must clean.
They may fix problems with their gun, but they learn to see their neighbors first as rule breakers and then as comrades. In their minds, what echoes is only the knowledge of those who have done wrong and not the connections that draw them together. They begin to see the world as a thing they must order and the gun as the thing to do the ordering. They no longer see their comrades as people, just potential threats.
The problem with the institution of policing is that it makes police. The problem with the violent enforcement of laws is that it produces law enforcement agents. It is from law enforcement agents that violence and distrust springs.
When Ludra kept us beneath the ground, the ones enforcing the law were the ones who kept us down. They were recruited because they wanted to do violence to us. They did violence to us because their job was to do so.
Consider this when thinking upon your comrades who take up the enforcement of the laws of the state. Consider what it does to how they see the people around them. Justice is not the hand of the state wielding the gun or the prison. Justice is the community seeking redress and rehabilitation as one.
Do not cave to the blind appeal of the law. Remember that a New Era is possible.
— Mistral











