In short, we address the predominant form of theft in the US with civil court cases, not criminal cases. We have literally defined "wage theft" as not a crime. Theft by you, a crime. Theft by your employer, not a crime.
This is what we mean when we say crime is "socially constructed." Not all social harms are criminalized. Not all actors committing social harm are criminalized.
I settled a case for $27K for three clients last year. We spent a MONTH negotiating the non-disclosure agreement because the employer stated if all his employees sued him and settled like this, he would go BANKRUPT. His business model DEPENDED on wage theft. 8/
These employers go on to hold elected office. 45 famously used wage theft to improve his finances on construction projects, leaving a trail of victims in his wake. Some sued and he had to pay them. Others didn't have resources to pursue multi-year litigation + got nothing. 9/
What should we do about it? criminalize employers or decriminalize theft or something else? 10/ https://twitter.com/bstonkittymafia/status/1269567952082386945?s=20
Wage theft shows that we believe restitution is important. Giving the money back is important. Currently, AG keeps track of bad actors and will increase future financial penalties for bad actors. 11/
It also shows when harm is committed, we don't have to lock someone in a cage or label them a felon, both of which destroy years of life even after the sentence is over. We can demand restitution instead of punishment. 11/
It also shows how ridiculous the label "high crime neighborhood" is. And the arbitrary and racist response of police surveillance in HCN. Because we defined it that way.

Consider the social construction of murder: 12/
Poison a person, go to jail, they call you a felon for life. Poison a city resulting in dozens of deaths and thousands with brain damage, get a teaching fellowship at Harvard, they call you ex-Gov of Michigan Rick Snyder. Same with much corporate poisoning. 13/
The people commiting the most harm aren't in jail, don't live in high crime neighborhoods. And "black people commit more crime" is true only bc of how we have defined crimes, and how we then surveil their community in response to find more crimes. 14/
There are so many orgs trying to address harm and create accountability within community + without incarceration. We call ourselves prison abolitionists. 15/

Just a few: @byp100 @survivepunishNY @justicehealing @DeeperThanWater @BlackAndPinkBos @BlmBoston
A few more you might want to follow or support @GKMC18 @ignitekindred @MsKellyMHayes @prisonculture @crlosangeles 16/
In the employment context, we can prevent wage theft by replacing corporate ownership with employee ownership: worker owned cooperatives that share profits and losses, removing the power dynamic that incentivizes wage theft in the first place. Power corrupts. /20
#8ToAbolition https://twitter.com/survivepunishNY/status/1269671482013224960?s=20
@avitale 's book The End of Policing is now available for FREE. It's been on my list to read for a while. https://twitter.com/VersoBooks/status/1268196060226338816?s=20
Getting a lot of questions, so I'd like to clarify I am not saying we should criminalize wage theft! https://twitter.com/djmckenna00/status/1271104750612877314?s=20
You can follow @djmckenna00.
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