An Abolitionist Response to Disaster

cuomo cancel rent

By Capri Jones


high rent = murder sign

The worldwide COVID-19 death toll just hit 1.6 million, amounting to a spectacular disaster. Since the virus’ discovery in December 2019, it has wiped out entire communities, and forced hunger, houselessness, and an inability to receive medical attention. The death and suffering that COVID has caused is spectacular. As Rob Nixon defines it in his book, Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor, spectacular violence is, “an event or action that is immediate in time, explosive and spectacular in space, and as erupting into instant sensational visibility.” While this may be the case for the pandemic itself, the events that cultivated the environment for death to become a new normal were not spectacular. Instead, they took place over time. It’s important to premise this article with the understanding that disasters are not natural. They are not nature’s best effort at revenge on the human species, or the result of a god punishing its people. Disasters are political, meaning that during events like the COVID-19 pandemic, life and death are predetermined. The conditions that led COVID-19 to develop, and in turn kill so many people, were crafted by the oppressive systems that we live under. It was by no accident that the virus became so deadly, instead, COVID-19 became weaponized by the war-like conditions baked into our capitalist system. For the purpose of this article, I will focus on the underlying disaster of the commodification of housing in the United States. But it is important to note that this is not the only underlying disastrous aspect of the pandemic that took place over time. The housing crisis is only one facet of the austerity-based society that has ripped away any access to safety—economic, medical, community—in an era of neoliberal globalization. It is with this understanding of death in 2020, that analyzing an abolitionist response to disaster is essential. I argue that abolition of the systems that cultivated the environment for premature death by COVID-19 to become a new normal is the only solution for survival in an epoch that is, and will continue to be, stricken by a myriad of crises.

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Suburban Wasteland: Beneath the Illusion of Idyllic Living

suburban roof

By McKenna Hall


I grew up in the suburbs, in a house that was identical to others, bound by picket fences and sprawling verdant yards. There were children with their grubby bare feet running throughout the streets and darting behind bushes. Lemonade stands and kickball and neighbors asking you to come out to play were scattered throughout like dozens of acorns. Paths in the forest led to fallen logs and secret forts. Summers were spent in the sticky humidity walking to the local pool or riding bikes that meticulously balanced slushies and bags of chips. It was a suburban fantasy. 

 

But then one day, some neighbors started to notice a smell. A rotting smell coming from the thick of the clouds hanging overhead. Illness and death had hid itself within these clouds, secretly running rampant throughout the streets. It latched itself within the people’s homes and deliquesced into their lemonade. Slowly, it found itself within the people and began to rot them as well. Some families decided to search for the source of this decay.  They peeled back the suburban facade in order to discover the true nature of the suburb’s being – the suburb was a sacrifice zone.

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