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More Black Men Now in Prison System than Were Enslaved

March 27, 2011 By Dick Price

black slavery prison privatization

More Black Men Now in Prison System than Were Enslaved“More African
American men are in prison or jail, on probation or parole than were
enslaved in 1850, before the Civil War began,” Michelle Alexander told
a standing room only house at the Pasadena Main Library this past
Wednesday, the first of many jarring points she made in a riveting
presentation.

Alexander, currently a law professor at Ohio State, had been brought
in to discuss her year-old bestseller, The New Jim Crow: Mass
Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness More Black Men Now in
Prison System than Were Enslaved. Interest ran so high beforehand that
the organizers had to move the event to a location that could
accommodate the eager attendees. That evening, more than 200 people
braved the pouring rain and inevitable traffic jams to crowd into the
library’s main room, with dozens more shuffled into an overflow room,
and even more latecomers turned away altogether. Alexander and her
topic had struck a nerve.

Growing crime rates over the past 30 years don’t explain the
skyrocketing numbers of black — and increasingly brown — men caught in
America’s prison system, according to Alexander, who clerked for
Supreme Court Justice  Harry Blackmun after attending Stanford Law.
“In fact, crime rates have fluctuated over the years and are now at
historical lows.”

“Most of that increase is due to the War on Drugs, a war waged almost
exclusively in poor communities of color,” she said, even though
studies have shown that whites use and sell illegal drugs at rates
equal to or above blacks. In some black inner-city communities, four
of five black youth can expect to be caught up in the criminal justice
system during their lifetimes.

As a consequence, a great many black men are disenfranchised, said
Alexander — prevented because of their felony convictions from voting
and from living in public housing, discriminated in hiring, excluded
from juries, and denied educational opportunities.

“What do we expect them to do?” she asked, who researched her
ground-breaking book while serving as Director of the Racial Justice
Project at the ACLU of Northern California. “Well, seventy percent
return to prison within two years, that’s what they do.”

Organized by the Pasadena Public Library and the Flintridge Center,
with a dozen or more cosponsors, including the ACLU Pasadena/Foothills
Chapter and Neighborhood Church, and the LA Progressive as the sole
media sponsor, the event drew a crowd of the converted, frankly — more
than two-thirds from Pasadena’s well-established black community and
others drawn from activists circles. Although Alexander is a polished
speaker on a deeply researched topic, little she said stunned the
crowd, which, after all, was the choir. So the question is what to do
about this glaring injustice.

Michelle Alexander Michelle 300x215 More Black Men Now in Prison
System than Were Enslaved
ACLU Pasadena/Foothills President Michelle White, Author Michelle
Alexander, LA Progressive Publisher Sharon Kyle, and ACLU Pasadena
Past President Kris Ockershauser.

Married to a federal prosecutor, Alexander briefly touched on the
differing opinion in the Alexander household. “You can imagine the
arguments we have,” Alexander said in relating discussions she has
with her husband. “He thinks there are changes we can make within the
system,” she said, agreeing that there are good people working on the
issues and that improvements can be made. “But I think there has to be
a revolution of some kind.”

However change is to come, a big impediment will be the massive
prison-industrial system.

“If we were to return prison populations to 1970 levels, before the
War on Drugs began,” she said. “More than a million people working in
the system would see their jobs disappear.”

So it’s like America’s current war addiction. We have built a massive
war machine — one bigger than all the other countries in the world
combined — with millions of well-paid defense industry and billions of
dollars at stake. With a hammer that big, every foreign policy issue
looks like a nail — another bomb to drop, another country to invade,
another massive weapons development project to build.

zz dick More Black Men Now in Prison System than Were
EnslavedSimilarly, with such a well-entrenched prison-industrial
complex in place — also with a million jobs and billions of dollars at
stake — every criminal justice issue also looks like a nail — another
prison sentence to pass down, another third strike to enforce, another
prison to build in some job-starved small town, another chance at a
better life to deny.

Alexander, who drew her early inspiration from Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr., devotes the last part of “The New Jim Crow” to steps people can
take to combat this gross injustice. In particular, she recommended
supporting the Drug Policy Alliance. At the book signing afterwards,
Dr. Anthony Samad recruited Michelle Alexander to appear this fall at
one his Urban Issues Forums, typically at the California African
American Museum next to USC.

Dick Price
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