Former Black Panther speaks of racial inequality in corrections system at UNC 
speaker series

                                by Analisa Romanogtreporters, 
greeleytribune.com                                                              
                                                                                
                   

        Sixty years ago, the civil rights movement was called something else, 
said 1970s political icon Angela Davis at the University of Northern Colorado 
on Wednesday night.

“It was called the ‘Freedom Movement,’ ” Davis told a crowd of about 700 in the 
University Center. “It stood for something vaster than legal rights.”

Davis was the third speaker in the university’s Provost Speaker Series, which 
invites speakers of a different expertise each semester. Davis’ experience 
comes from her time as a Black Panther activist, author and retired professor 
from the University of California-Santa Cruz.

This spring, in part to coincide with women and black history months, Davis was 
invited to speak of the need to reform racial inequalities in the U.S. 
corrections system and other policy structures.

The Freedom Movement, Davis said, was a more appropriate term because it 
included equal opportunity. An unequal policy structure “determines who gets to 
go to a university, and who gets to go to a penitentiary,” Davis said.

She cited the statistic that more black men are incarcerated in the U.S. now 
than were enslaved in 1850.

“People find it difficult to grasp that racism is still very much a reality in 
this country,” Davis said.

Karen Meulendyke, a master’s student at Colorado State University, said Davis’ 
presentation made her want to look more closely at racial inequalities in 
prisons and jails. 

“A lot of what she said is a good starting point for students,” Meulendyke 
said, especially if they want to get more involved.

Davis said getting involved is exactly what the issue needs. She spoke of her 
time as a Black Panther activist and the social movement of her generation.

“It was so powerful that it had to be victorious,” Davis said. “And I think we 
need that kind of movement today.”

Seth Morones, a sophomore at UNC, said he appreciated hearing Davis’ call for 
action more than he might from others.

“It was great to hear from someone who has actually experienced all of those 
social movements, and who also beat the system,” Morones said.

Davis said there are about 2.3 million people behind bars in the U.S. on any 
given day, but throughout the year, about 7 million are in and out of the 
prison and jail systems.

“We are a world leader in prisoners,” Davis said. She cited funding for 
education in place of incarceration as a solution. Davis said her hope was that 
one day, prisons might actually be abolished.

Flo Guido, committee member for the Provost Speaker Series, said some of Davis’ 
ideas might be controversial. But as an educator, she appreciated Davis’ 
emphasis on the need for discourse.

“When it’s really hard to have a conversation, that’s when it’s most important 
to have it,” Guido said. “You’ve got to bring everybody to the table to speak 
at every level in the community.”

Davis said her and others’ activism in the ’70s improved race inequality a 
great deal, but the struggle isn’t over yet. Incarceration is just a starting 
point.

“One black man in the White House doesn’t change the fact that there are a 
million black men in the big house,” Davis said.     

                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                        

Original Page: 
http://www.greeleytribune.com/article/20110420/NEWS/704209944/1002&parentprofile=1001

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