The story of the Stop Cop City fight in Atlanta is one of the most important stories of organizing against the present state of affairs in the U.S. It is a great use then, that this book is an incredible anthology of this struggle - why it is occurring, how it took shape, how it struggled against behemoth odds, and how it should inform all of our work moving forward.
It is critical to understand the Stop Cop City fight as the epitome of the current inflection point of racial capitalism after decades of neoliberal economic order. Atlanta has long been understood as a city that is "open for business", a city with a tamed and docile Black working class that can be exploited when necessary and displaced when necessary. But deep inequalities were forced into the mainstream when the "Atlanta Way", the compromise political order between white business leaders and Black centrist Democrats, was exposed for its hollowness amidst the summer 2020 uprisings, particularly after the police murder of Rayshard Brooks.
White capital did not take kindly to this confrontation, and Cop City, a massive sprawling cop training facility proposed to be built on an Indigenous forest, was the solution. The manufactured "crime hysteria city in chaos" narrative needed to be resolved with a massive infusion of public and private dollars to crush Black working class organizing.
So what did people do about it? Short answer: everything they physically could. And all of it mattered.
First, they successfully forced the conversation to shift from the official name - the Atlanta Public Safety Training Center - to what it truly deserved to be called, Cop City. People protested, petitioned, they took over public comment at public meetings, they canvassed their neighbors. They forced mainstream churches and civil rights orgs to come out against it. They launched targeted pressure campaigns on the contractors and banks, which helped delay the project. Media collectives investigated the deep ties between the Atlanta Police Foundation and the politicians and business leaders that supported the deal, when the mainstream media was openly campaigning for it. And even after the City Council approved the deal, the fight did not end - because an autonomous network of anarchists took to the Welaunee Forest and occupied it, literally putting their bodies on the line, modelling a better vision of communal care, while directly interfering with the developers plans for construction, and actively sabotaged construction equipment, significantly delaying the project. The police responded to this by murdering beloved comrade Tortuguita, a name now made famous around the world as an reminder of the brutality and inhumanity that lies at the core of projects like Cop City. Folks even attempted to launch a referendum campaign to block the project - which secured significantly more signatures than necessary but is still tied up in the courts.
No one of these efforts was sufficient to defeat Cop City - in fact, this is still fundamentally a battle in progress that is unfortunately not going how we'd want it to. But every single step of this struggle mattered. It built up new networks of resistance, it mobilized and radicalized many, and it is one front of a larger battle against the Cop World we will be trapped in if we do not continue to fight back.
I am so grateful to all of the organizers who shared their POVs to help write this book. The lesson I've learned from this fight is to focus on our opponents, and to use every single tool in our toolbox to fight them. To avoid fixating on dividing the movement between "good" and "bad" tactics and stay clear-eyed about the core battle we are up against.
From the ending of the book: "For Tortuguita, for Palestine, for the forest defenders and the land defenders, for all struggling for liberation locally and globally, we must continue to fight and to say: No Cop City, No Cop World!"