The New Jim Crow
Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness
MICHELLE ALEXANDER
THE NEW PRESS
NEW YORK LONDON
Introduction
Jarvious Cotton cannot vote. Like his father, grandfather, great-grandfather, and great-great-grandfather, he has been denied the right to participate in our electoral democracy. Cotton's family tree tells the story of several generations of black men who were born in the United States but who were denied the most basic freedom that democracy promises-the freedom to vote for those who will make the rules and laws that govern one's life. Cotton's great-great-grandfather could not vote as a slave. His great-grandfather was beaten to death by the Ku Klux Klan for attempting to vote. His grandfather was prevented from voting by Klan intimidation. His father was barred from voting by poll taxes and literacy tests. Today, Jarvious Cotton cannot vote because he, like many black men in the United States, has been labeled a felon and is currently on parole. J
Cotton's story illustrates, in many respects, the old adage "The more things change, the more they remain the same." In each generation, new tactics have been used for achieving the same goals-goals shared by the Founding Fathers. Denying African Americans citizenship was deemed essential to the formation of the original union. Hundreds of years later, America is still not an egalitarian democracy. The arguments and rationalizations that have been trotted out in support of racial exclusion and discrimination in its various forms have changed and evolved, but the outcome has remained largely the same. An extraordinary percentage of black men in the United States are legally barred from voting today, just as they have been throughout most of American history. They are also subject to legalized discrimination in
2
THE NEW JIM CROW
INTRODUCTION
3
employment, housing, education, public benefits, and jury service, just as their parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents once were.
What has changed since the collapse of Jim Crow has less to do with the basic structure of our society than with the language we use to justify it. In the era of colorblindness, it is no longer socially permissible to use race, explicitly, as a justification for discrimination, exclusion, and social contempt. So we don't. Rather than rely on race, we use our criminal justice system to label people of color "criminals" and then engage in all the practices we supposedly left behind. Today it is perfectly legal to discriminate against criminals in nearly all the ways that it was once legal to discriminate against African Americans. Once you're labeled a felon, the old forms of discriminationemployment discrimination, housing discrimination, denial of the right to vote, denial of educational opportunity, denial of food stamps and other public benefits, and exclusion from jury service-are suddenly legal. As a criminal, you have scarcely more rights, and arguably less respect, than a black man living in Alabama at the height of Jim Crow. \;\1e have not ended racial caste in America; we have merely redesigned it. .
man cowering in the street, and then averted their gaze. What did the election of Barack Obama mean for him?
Like many civil rights lawyers, I was inspired to attend law school by the civil rights victories of the 1950s and 1960s. Even in the face of growing social and political opposition to remedial policies such as affirmative action, I clung to the notion that the evils of Jim Crow are behind us and that, while we have a long way to go to fulfill the dream of an egalitarian, multiracial democracy, we have made real progress and are now struggling to hold on to the gains of the past. I thought my job as a civil rights lawyer was to join with the allies of racial progress to resist attacks on affirmative action and to eliminate the vestiges of Jim Crow segregation, including our still separate and unequal system of education. I understood the problems plaguing poor communities of color, including problems associated with crime and rising incarceration rates, to be a function of poverty and lack of access to quality education-the continuing legacy of slavery and Jim Crow. Never did I seriously consider the possibility that a new racial caste system was operating in this country. The new system had been developed and implemented swiftly, and it was largely invisible, even to people, like me, who spent most of their waking hours fighting for justice.
I first encountered the idea of a new racial caste system more than a decade ago, when a bright orange poster caught my eye. I was rushing to catch the bus, and I noticed a sign stapled to a telephone pole that screamed in large bold print: THE DRUG WAR Is THE NEW JIM CROW. I paused for a moment and skimmed the text of the flyer. Some radical group was holding a community meeting about police brutality, the new three-strikes law in California, and the expansion of America's prison system. The meeting was being held at a small community church a few blocks away; it had seating capacity for no more than fifty people. I sighed, and muttered to myself something like, "Yeah, the criminal justice system is racist in many ways, but it really doesn't help to make such an absurd comparison. People will just think you're crazy." I then crossed the street and hopped on the bus. I was headed to my new job, director of the Racial Justice Project of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in Northern California.
When I began my work at the ACLU, I assumed that the criminal justice system had problems of racial bias, much in the same way that all major institutions in our society are plagued with problems associated with conscious
I reached the conclusions presented in this book reluctantly. Ten years ago, I would have argued strenuously against the central claim made herenamely, that something akin to a racial caste system currently exists in the United States. Indeed, if Barack Obama had been elected president back then, I would have argued that his election marked the nation's triumph over racial caste-the final nail in the coffin of Jim Crow. My elation would have been tempered by the distance yet to be traveled to reach the promised land of racial justice in America, but my conviction that nothing remotely similar to Jim Crow exists in this country would have been steadfast.
Today my elation over Obama's election is tempered by a far more sobering awareness. As an African American woman, with three young children who will never know a world in which a black man could not be president of the United States, I was beyond thrilled on election night. Yet when I walked out of the election night party, full of hope and enthusiasm, I was immediately reminded of the harsh realities of the New Jim Crow. A black man was on his knees in the gutter, hands cuffed behind his back, as several police officers stood around him talking, joking, and ignoring his human existence. People poured out of the building, many stared for a moment at the black
4
THE NEW ]JM CROW
INTRODUCTJON
5
and unconscious bias. As a lawyer who had litigated numerous class-action employment-discrimination cases, I understood well the many ways in which racial stereotyping can permeate subjective decision-making processes at all levels of an organization, with devastating consequences. I was familiar with the challenges associated with reforming institutions in which racial stratification is thought to be normal-the natural consequence of differences in education, culture, motivation, and, some still believe, innate ability. While at the ACLU, I shifted my focus from employment discrimination to criminal justice reform and dedicated myself to the task of working with others to identify and eliminate racial bias whenever and wherever it reared its ugly head.
By the time I left the ACLU, I had come to suspect that I was wrong about the criminal justice system. It was not just another institution infected with racial bias but rather a different beast entirely. The activists who posted the sign on the telephone pole were not crazy; nor were the smattering of lawyers and advocates around the country who were beginning to connect the dots between our current system of mass incarceration and earlier forms of social control. Quite belatedly, I came to see that mass incarceration in the United States had, in fact, emerged as a stunningly comprehensive and well-disguised system of racialized social control that functions in a manner strikingly similar to Jim Crow.
In my experience, people who have been incarcerated rarely have difficulty identifying the parallels between these systems of social control. Once they are released, they are often denied the right to vote, excluded from juries, and relegated to a racially segregated and subordinated existence. Through a web of laws, regulations, and informal rules, all of which are powerfully reinforced by social stigma, they are confined to the margins of mainstream society and denied access to the mainstream economy. They are legally denied the ability to obtain employment, housing, and public benefits-much as African Americans were once forced into a segregated, second-class citizenship in the Jim Crow era.
Those of us who have viewed that world from a comfortable distance-yet sympathize with the plight of the so-called underclass-tend to interpret the experience of those caught up in the criminal justice system primarily through the lens of popularized social science, attributing the staggering increase in incarceration rates in communities of color to the predictable, though unfortunate, consequences of poverty, racial segregation, unequal
educational opportunities, and the presumed realities of the drug market, including the mistaken belief that most drug dealers are black or brown. Occasionally, in the course of my work, someone would make a remark suggesting that perhaps the War on Drugs is a racist conspiracy to put blacks back in their place. This type of remark was invariably accompanied by nervous laughter, intended to convey the impression that although the idea had crossed their minds, it was not an idea a reasonable person would take seriously.
Most people assume the War on Drugs was launched in response to the crisis caused by crack cocaine in inner-city neighborhoods. This view holds that the racial disparities in drug convictions and sentences, as well as the rapid explosion of the prison population, reflect nothing more than the government's zealous-but benign-efforts to address rampant drug crime in poor, minority neighborhoods. This view, while understandable, given the sensational media coverage of crack in the 1980s and 1990s, is simply wrong.
While it is true that the publicity surrounding crack cocaine led to a dramatic increase in funding for the drug war (as well as to sentencing policies that greatly exacerbated racial disparities in incarceration rates), there is no truth to the notion that the War on Drugs was launched in response to crack cocaine. President Ronald Reagan officially announced the current drug war in 1982, before crack became an issue in the media or a crisis in poor black neighborhoods. A few years after the drug war was declared, crack began to spread rapidly in the poor black neighborhoods of Los Angeles and later emerged in cities across the country.' The Reagan administration hired staff to publicize the emergence of crack cocaine in 1985 as part of a strategic effort to build public and legislative support for the war." The media campaign was an extraordinary success. Almost overnight, the media was saturated with images of black "crack whores," "crack dealers," and "crack babies"images that seemed to confirm the worst negative racial stereotypes about impoverished inner-city residents. The media bonanza surrounding the "new demon drug" helped to catapult the War on Drugs from an ambitious federal policy to an actual war.
The timing of the crack crisis helped to fuel conspiracy theories and general speculation in poor black communities that the War on Drugs was part of a genocidal plan by the government to destroy black people in the United States. From the outset, stories circulated on the street that crack and other drugs were being brought into black neighborhoods by the CIA. Eventually,
o
THE NEW JIM CHOW
even the Urban League came to take the claims of genocide seriously In its 1990 report "The State of Black America," it stated: "There is at least one concept that must be recognized if one is to see the pervasive and insidious nature of the drug problem for the African American community. Though difficult to accept, that is the concept of genocide." 4 \i\lhile the conspiracy theories were initially dismissed as far-fetched, if not downright loony, the word on the street turned out to be right, at least to a point. The CIA admitted in 1998 that guerilla armies it actively supported in Nicaragua were smuggling illegal drugs into the United States-drugs that were making their way onto the streets of inner-city black neighborhoods in the form of crack cocaine. The CIA also admitted that, in the midst of the \;\far on Drugs, it blocked law enforcement efforts to investigate illegal drug networks that were helping to fund its covert war in Nicaragua.5
It bears emphasis that the CIA never admitted (nor has any evidence been revealed to support the claim) that it intentionally sought the destruction of the black community by allowing illegal drugs to be smuggled into the United States. Nonetheless, conspiracy theorists surely must be forgiven for their bold accusation of genocide, in light of the devastation wrought by crack cocaine and the drug war, and the odd coincidence that an illegal drug crisis suddenly appeared in the black community after-not before-a drug war had been declared. In fact, the War on Drugs began at a time when illegal drug use was on the decline.6 During this same time period, however, a war was declared, causing arrests and convictions for drug offenses to skyrocket, especially among people of color.
The impact of the drug war has been astounding. In less than thirty years, the U.S penal population exploded from around 300,000 to more than 2 million, with drug convictions accounting for the majority of the increase. 7 The United States now has the highest rate of incarceration in the world, dwarfing the rates of nearly every developed country, even surpassing those in highly repressive regimes like RUSSia, China, and Iran. In Germany, 93 people are in prison for every 100,000 adults and children. In the United States, the rate is roughly eight times that, or 750 per 100,0008
The racial dimension of mass incarceration is its most striking feature. No other country in the world imprisons so many of its racial or ethnic minorities. The United States imprisons a larger percentage of its black population than South Africa did at the height of apartheid. In Washington, D.C., Our nation's capitol, it is estimated that three out of four young black men (and
INTRODUCTION
nearly all those in the poorest neighborhoods) can expect to serve time in prison." Similar rates of incarceration can be found in black communities across America.
These stark racial disparities cannot be explained by rates of drug crime.
Studies show that people of all colors use and sell iIlegal drugs at remarkably similar rates. 10 If there are significant differences in the surveys to be found, they frequently suggest that whites, particularly white youth, are more likely to engage in drug crime than people of color. II That is not what one would guess, however, when entering our nation's prisons and jails, which are overflowing with black and brown drug offenders. In some states, black men have been admitted to prison on drug charges at rates twenty to fifty times greater than those of white men.' ? And in major cities wracked by the drug war, as many as 80 percent of young African American men now have criminal records and are thus subject to legalized discrimination for the rest of their lives.13 These young men are part of a growing undercaste, permanently locked up and locked out of mainstream society.
It may be surprising to some that drug crime was declining, not rising, when a drug war was declared. From a historical perspective, however, the lack of correlation between crime and punishment is nothing new. SOCiologists have frequently observed that governments use punishment primarily as a tool of social control, and thus the extent or severity of punishment is often unrelated to actual crime patterns. Michael Tonry explains in Thinhng About Crime: "Governments decide how much punishment they want, and these decisions are in no simple way related to crime rates." !" This fact, he points out, can be seen most clearly by putting crime and punishment in comparative perspective. Although crime rates in the United States have not been markedly higher than those of other Western countries, the rate of incarceration has soared in the United States while it has remained stable or declined in other countries. Between 1960 and 1990, for example, official crime rates in Finland, Germany, and the United States were close to identical. Yet the U.S. incarceration rate quadrupled, the Finnish rate fell by 60 percent, and the German rate was stable in that period. 15 Despite similar crime rates, each government chose to impose different levels of punishment.
Today, due to recent declines, U.S. crime rates have dipped below the international norm. Nevertheless, the United States now boasts an incar-
8
THE NEW JIM CROW
ceration rate that is six to ten times greater than that of other industrialized nations'v=-a development directly traceable to the drug war. The only country in the world that even comes close to the American rate of incarceration is Russia, and no other country in the world incarcerates such an astonishing percentage of its racial or ethnic minorities.
The stark and sobering reality is that, for reasons largely unrelated to actual crime trends, the American penal system has emerged as a system of social control unparalleled in world history. And while the size of the system alone might suggest that it would touch the lives of most Americans, the primary targets of its control can be defined largely by race. This is an astonishing development, especially given that as recently as the mid-1970s, the most well-respected criminologists were predicting that the prison system would soon fade away. Prison did not deter crime Significantly, many experts concluded. Those who had meaningful economic and social opportunities were unlikely to commit crimes regardless of the penalty, while those who went to prison were far more likely to commit crimes again in the future. The growing consensus among experts was perhaps best reflected by the National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals, which issued a recommendation in 1973 that "no new institutions for adults should be built and existing institutions for juveniles should be closed."l? This recommendation was based on their finding that "the prison, the reformatory and the jail have achieved only a shocking record of failure. There is overwhelming evidence that these institutions create crime rather than prevent it."lS
These days, activists who advocate "a world without prisons" are often dismissed as quacks, but only a few decades ago, the notion that our society would be much better off without prisons-and that the end of prisons was more or less inevitable-not only dominated mainstream academic discourse in the field of criminology but also inspired a national campaign by reformers demanding a moratorium on prison construction. Marc Mauer, the executive director of the Sentencing Project, notes that what is most remarkable about the moratorium campaign in retrospect is the context of imprisonment at the time. In 1972, fewer than 350,000 people were being held in prisons and jails nationwide, compared with more than 2 million people today. The rate of incarceration in 1972 was at a level so low that it no longer seems in the realm of possibility, but for moratorium supporters,
INTRODUCTION
9
that magnitude of imprisonment was egregiously high. "Supporters of the moratorium effort can be forgiven for being so narve," Mauer suggests, "since the prison expansion that was about to take place was unprecedented in human history"!" No one imagined that the prison population would more than quintuple in their lifetime. It seemed far more likely that prisons would
fade away.
Far from fading away, it appears that prisons are here to stay. And despite the unprecedented levels of incarceration in the African American community, the civil rights community is oddly quiet. One in three young African American men is currently under the control of the criminal justice system-in prison, in jail, on probation, or on parole-yet mass incarceration tends to be categorized as a criminal justice issue as opposed to a racial justice or civil rights issue (or crisis).
The attention of civil rights advocates has been largely devoted to other issues, such as affirmative action. During the past twenty years, virtually every progressive, national civil rights organization in the country has mobilized and rallied in defense of affirmative action. The struggle to preserve affirmative action in higher education, and thus maintain diversity in the nation's most elite colleges and universities, has consumed much of the attention and resources of the civil rights community and dominated racial justice discourse in the mainstream media, leading the general public to believe that affirmative action is the main battlefront in U.S. race relations-even as our prisons fill with black and brown men.
My own experience reflects this dynamic. When I first joined the ACLU, no one imagined that the Racial Justice Project would focus its attention on criminal justice reform. The ACLU was engaged in important criminal justice reform work, but no one suspected that work would eventually become central to the agenda of the Racial Justice Project. The assumption was that the project would concentrate its efforts on defending affirmative action. Shortly after leaving the ACLU, I joined the board of directors of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area. Although the organization included racial justice among its core priorities, reform of the criminal justice system was not (and still is not) a major part of its racial justice work. The Lawyers' Committee is not alone.
In january 2008, the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights-an organiza-
10
THE NEW .11M CROW
tion composed of the leadership of more than 180 civil rights organizationssent a letter to its allies and supporters informing them of a major initiative to document the voting record of members of Congress. The letter explained that its forthcoming report would show "how each representative and senator cast his or her vote on some of the most important civil rights issues of 2007, including voting rights, affirmative action, immigration, nominations, education, hate crimes, employment, health, housing, and poverty." Criminal justice issues did not make the list. That same broad-based coalition organized a major conference in October 2007, entitled Why \;\fe Can't Wait:
Reversing the Retreat on Civil Rights, which included panels discussing school integration, employment discrimination, housing and lending discrimination, economic justice, environmental justice, disability rights, age discrimination, and immigrants' rights. Not a single panel was devoted to criminal justice reform.
The elected leaders of the African American community have a much broader mandate than civil rights groups, but they, too, frequently overlook criminal justice. In January 2009, for example, the Congressional Black Caucus sent a letter to hundreds of community and organization leaders who have worked with the caucus over the years, soliciting general information about them and requesting that they identify their priorities. More than thirty-five topics were listed as areas of potential special interest, including taxes, defense, immigration, agriculture, housing, banking, higher education, multimedia, transportation and infrastructure, women, seniors, nutrition, faith initiatives, civil rights, census, economic security, and emerging leaders. No mention was made of criminal justice. "Re-entry" was listed, but a community leader who was interested in criminal justice reform had to check the box labeled "other."
This is not to say that important criminal justice reform work has not been done. Civil rights advocates have organized vigorous challenges to specific aspects of the new caste system. One notable example is the successful challenge led by the NAACP Legal Defense Fund to a racist drug sting operation in Tulia, Texas. The 1999 drug bust incarcerated almost 15 percent of the black population of the town, based on the uncorroborated false testimony of a single informant hired by the sheriff of Tulia. More recently, civil rights groups around the country have helped to launch legal attacks and vibrant grassroots campaigns against felon disenfranchisement laws and
1NTRODUCTION
11
have strenuously opposed discriminatOlY crack sentencing laws and guidelines, as well as "zero tolerance" policies that effectively funnel youth of color from schools to jails. The national ACLU recently developed a racial justice program that includes criminal justice issues among its core priorities and has created a promising Drug Law Reform Project. And thanks to the aggressive advocacy of the ACLU, NAACP, and other civil rights organizations around the country, racial profiling is widely condemned, even by members of law enforcement who once openly embraced the practice.
Still, despite these significant developments, there seems to be a lack of appreciation for the enormity of the crisis at hand. There is no broad-based movement brewing to end mass incarceration and no advocacy effort that approaches in scale the fight to preserve affirmative action. There also remains a persistent tendency in the civil rights community to treat the criminal justice system as just another institution infected with lingering racial bias. The NAACP's Web site offers one example. As recently as May 2008, one could find a brief introduction to the organization's criminal justice work in the section entitled Legal Department. The introduction explained that "despite the civil rights victories of our past, racial prejudice still pervades the criminal justice system." Visitors to the Web site were urged to join the NAACP in order to "protect the hard-earned civil rights gains of the past three decades." No one visiting the Web site would learn that the mass incarceration of African Americans had already eviscerated many of the hardearned gains it urged its members to protect.
Imagine if civil rights organizations and African American leaders in the 1940s had not placed Jim Crow segregation at the forefront of their racial justice agenda. It would have seemed absurd, given that racial segregation was the primary vehicle of racialized social control in the United States during that period. This book argues that mass incarceration is, metaphorically, the New Jim Crow and that all those who care about social justice should fully commit themselves to dismantling this new racial caste system. Mass incarceration-not attacks on affirmative action or lax civil rights enforcement-is the most damaging manifestation of the backlash against the Civil Rights Movement. The popular narrative that emphasizes the death of slavery and Jim Crow and celebrates the nation's "triumph over race" with the election of Barack Obama, is dangerously misguided The colorblind public consensus that prevails in America today-i.e., the widespread belief that
12
THE NEW JIIVl CROW
race no longer matters-has blinded us to the realities of race in our society and facilitated the emergence of a new caste system.
Clearly, much has changed in my thinking about the criminal justice system since I passed that bright orange poster stapled to a telephone pole ten years ago. For me, the new caste system is now as obvious as my own face in the mirror. Like an optical illusion-one in which the embedded image is impossible to see until its outline is identified-the new caste system lurks invisibly within the maze of rationalizations we have developed for persistent racial inequality. It is possible-quite easy, in fact-never to see the embedded reality. Only after years of working on criminal justice reform did my own focus finally shift, and then the rigid caste system slowly came into view. Eventually it became obvious. Now it seems odd that I could not see it before.
Knowing as I do the difficulty of seeing what most everyone insists does not exist, I anticipate that this book will be met with skepticism or something worse. For some, the characterization of mass incarceration as a "racial caste system" may seem like a gross exaggeration, if not hyperbole. Yes, we may have "classes" in the United States-vaguely defined upper, middle, and lower classes-and we may even have an "underclass" (a group so estranged from mainstream society that it is no longer in reach of the mythical ladder of opportunity), but we do not, many will insist, have anything in this country that resembles a "caste."
The aim of this book is not to venture into the long-running, vigorous debate in the scholarly literature regarding what does and does not constitute a caste system. I use the term racial caste in this book the way it is used in common parlance to denote a stigmatized racial group locked into an inferior position by law and custom. Jim Crow and slavery were caste systems. So is our current system of mass incarceration.
It may be helpful, in attempting to understand the basic nature of the new caste system, to think of the criminal justice system-the entire collection of institutions and practices that comprise it-not as an independent system but rather as a gateway into a much larger system of facial stigmatization and permanent marginalization. This larger system, referred to here as mass incarceration, is a system that locks people not only behind actual bars in actual prisons, but also behind virtual bars and virtual walls-walls that are invisible to the naked eye but function nearly as effectively as Jim Crow laws
1NTRODUCT10N
13
once did at locking people of color into a permanent second-class citizenship. The term mass incarceration refers not only to the criminal justice system but also to the larger web of laws, rules, policies, and customs that control those labeled criminals both in and out of prison. Once released, former prisoners enter a hidden underworld of legalized discrimination and penllanent social exclusion. They are members of America's new undercaste.
The language of caste may well seem foreign or unfamiliar to some. Public discussions about racial caste in America are relatively rare. We avoid talking about caste in our society because we are ashamed of our racial history. We also avoid talking about race. We even avoid talking about class. Conversations about class are resisted in part because there is a tendency to imagine that one's class reflects upon one's character. What is key to America's understanding of class is the persistent belief-despite all evidence to the contrary-that anyone, with the proper discipline and drive, can move from a lower class to a higher class. We recognize that mobility may be difficult, but the key to our collective self-image is the assumption that mobility is always possible, so failure to move up reflects on one's character. By extension, the failure of a race or ethnic group to move up reflects very poorly on
the group as a whole.
\t\That is completely missed in the rare public debates today about the
plight of African Americans is that a huge percentage of them are not free to move up at all. It is not just that they lack opportunity, attend poor schools, or are plagued by poverty. They are barred by law from doing so. And the major institutions with which they come into contact are designed to prevent their mobility. To put the matter starkly: The current system of control permanently locks a huge percentage of the African American community out of the mainstream society and economy. The system operates through our criminal justice institutions; but it functions more like a caste system than a system of crime control. Viewed from this perspective, the socalled underclass is better understood as an undercaste-a lower caste of individuals who are permanently barred by law and custom from mainstream society. Although this new system of racialized social control purports to be colorblind, it creates and maintains racial hierarchy much as earlier systems of control did. Like Jim Crow (and slavery), mass incarceration operates as a tightly networked system of laws, policies, customs, and institutions that operate collectively to ensure the subordinate status of a group defined
largely by race.
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THE NEW J11Vl CHOW
This argument may be particularly hard to swallow given the election of Barack Obama. Many will wonder how a nation that just elected its first black president could possibly have a racial caste system. It's a fair question. But as discussed in chapter 6, there is no inconsistency whatsoever between the election of Barack Obama to the highest office in the land and the existence of a racial caste system in the era of colorblindness. The current system of control depends on black exceptionalism; it is not disproved or undermined by it. Others may wonder how a racial caste system could exist when most Americans-of all colors-oppose race discrimination and endorse colorblindness. Yet as we shall see in the pages that follow, racial caste systems do not require racial hostility or overt bigotry to thrive. They need only racial indifference, as Martin Luther King Jr. warned more than fortyfive years ago.
The recent decisions by some state legislatures, most notably New York's, to repeal or reduce mandatory drug sentencing laws have led some to believe that the system of racial control described in this book is already fading away. Such a conclusion, I believe, is a serious mistake. Many of the states that have reconsidered their harsh sentencing schemes have done so not out of concern for the lives and families that have been destroyed by these laws or the racial dimensions of the drug war, but out of concern for bursting state budgets in a time of economic recession. In other words, the racial ideology that gave rise to these laws remains largely undisturbed. Changing economic conditions or rising crime rates could easily result in a reversal of fortunes for those who commit drug crimes, particularly if the drug criminals are perceived to be black and brown. Equally important to understand is this:
Merely reducing sentence length, by itself, does not disturb the basic architecture of the New Jim Crow. So long as large numbers of African Americans continue to be arrested and labeled drug criminals, they will continue to be relegated to a permanent second-class status upon their release, no matter how much (or how little) time they spend behind bars. The system of mass incarceration is based on the prison label, not prison time.
Skepticism about the claims made here is warranted. There are important differences, to be sure, among mass incarceration, Jim Crow, and slaverythe three major racialized systems of control adopted in the United States to date. Failure to acknowledge the relevant differences, as well as their implications, would be a disservice to racial justice discourse. Many of the differences are not as dramatic as they initially appear, however; others serve
1NTHODUCT10N
15
to illustrate the ways in which systems of racial izec1 social control have managed to morph, evolve, and adapt to changes in the political, social, and legal context over time. Ultimately, I believe that the similarities between these systems of control overwhelm the differences and that mass incarceration, like its predecessors, has been largely immunized from legal challenge. If this claim is substantially correct, the implications for racial justice advo-
cacy are profound.
With the benefit of hindsight, surely we can see that piecemeal policy re-
form or litigation alone would have been a futile approach to dismantling Jim Crow segregation. \Nhile those strategies certainly had their place, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the concomitant cultural shift would never have occurred without the cultivation of a critical political consciousness in the African American community and the Widespread, strategic activism that flowed from it. Likewise, the notion that the New Jim Crow can ever be dismantled through traditional litigation and policy-reform strategies that are wholly disconnected from a major social movement seems fundamen-
tally misgUided.
Such a movement is impossible, though, if those most committed to abol-
ishing racial hierarchy continue to talk and behave as if a state-sponsored racial caste system no longer exists. If we continue to tell ourselves the popular myths about facial progress or, worse yet, if we say to ourselves that the problem of mass incarceration is just too big, too daunting for us to do anything about and that we should instead direct our energies to battles that might be more easily won, history will judge us harshly. A human rights
nightmare is occurring on our watch.
A new social consensus must be forged about race and the role of race in
defining the basic structure of our society, if we hope ever to abolish the New Jim Crow. This new consensus must begin with dialogue, a conversation that fosters a critical consciousness, a key prerequisite to effective social action. This book is an attempt to ensure that the conversation does not
end with nervous laughter.
It is not possible to write a relatively short book that explores all aspects of the phenomenon of mass incarceration and its implications for racial justice. No attempt has been made to do so here. This book paints with a broad brush, and as a result, many important issues have not received the attention they deserve. For example, relatively little is said here about the unique
]6
THE NEW JIM CROW
experience of women, Latinos, and immigrants in the criminal justice system, though these groups are particularly vulnerable to the worst abuses and suffer in ways that are important and distinct. This book focuses on the experience of African American men in the new caste system. I hope other scholars and advocates will pick up where the book leaves off and develop the critique more fully or apply the themes sketched here to other groups and other contexts.
What this book is intended to do-the only thing it is intended to do-is to stimulate a much-needed conversation about the role of the criminal justice system in creating and perpetuating racial hierarchy in the United States. The fate of millions of people-indeed the future of the black community itself-may depend on the willingness of those who care about racial justice to re-examine their basic assumptions about the role of the criminal justice system in our society. The fact that more than half of the young black men in many large American cities are currently under the control of the criminal justice system (or saddled with criminal records) is not-as many argue-just a symptom of poverty or poor choices, but rather evidence of a new racial caste system at work.
Chapter 1 begins our journey. It briefly reviews the history of racialized social control in the United States, answering the basic question: How did we get here? The chapter describes the control of African Americans through racial caste systems, such as slavery and Jim Crow, which appear to die but then are reborn in new form, tailored to the needs and constraints of the time. As we shall see, there is a certain pattern to the births and deaths of racial caste in America. Time and again, the most ardent proponents of racial hierarchy have succeeded in creating new caste systems by triggering a collapse of resistance across the political spectrum. This feat has been achieved largely by appealing to the racism and vulnerability of lower-class whites, a group of people who are understandably eager to ensure that they never find themselves trapped at the bottom of the American totem pole. This pattern, dating back to slavery, has birthed yet another racial caste system in the United States: mass incarceration.
The structure of mass incarceration is described in some detail in chapter 2, with a focus on the War on Drugs. Few legal rules meaningfully constrain the police in the drug war, and enormous financial incentives have been granted to law enforcement to engage in mass drug arrests through militarystyle tactics. Once swept into the system, one's chances of ever being truly
1NTRODUCTION
11
free are slim, often to the vanishing point. Defendants are typically denied meaningful legal representation, pressured by the threat of lengthy sentences into a plea bargain, and then placed under formal control-in prison or jail, on probation or parole. Upon release, ex-offenders are discriminated against, legally, for the rest of their lives, and most will eventually return to prison. They are members of America's new undercaste.
Chapter 3 turns our attention to the role of race in the U.S. criminal justice system. It describes the method to the madness-how a formally raceneutral criminal justice system can manage to round up, arrest, and imprison an extraordinary number of black and brown men, when people of color are actually no more likely to be guilty of drug crimes and many other offenses than whites. This chapter debunks the notion that rates of black imprisonment can be explained by crime rates and identifies the huge racial disparities at every stage of the criminal justice process-from the initial stop, search, and arrest to the plea bargaining and sentencing phases. In short, the chapter explains how the legal rules that structure the system guarantee discriminatOlY results. These legal rules ensure that the undercaste is over-
whelmingly black and brown.
Chapter 4 considers how the caste system operates once people are re-
leased from prison. In many respects, release from prison does not represent the beginning of freedom but instead a cruel new phase of stigmatization and control. Myriad laws, rules, and regulations discriminate against exoffenders and effectively prevent their meaningful re-integration into the mainstream economy and society. I argue that the shame and stigma of the "prison label" is, in many respects, more damaging to the African American community than the shame and stigma associated with Jim Crow. The crirninalization and demonization of black men has turned the black community against itself, unraveling community and family relationships, decimating networks of mutual support, and intensifying the shame and self-hate expe-
rienced by the current pariah caste.
The many parallels between mass incarceration and Jim Crow are ex-
plored in chapter 5. The most obvious parallel is legalized discrimination. Like Jim Crow, mass incarceration marginalizes large segments of the African American community, segregates them physically (in prisons, jails, and ghettos), and then authorizes discrimination against them in voting, employment, housing, education, public benefits, and jury service. The federal court system has effectively immunized the current system from challenges on the
• ........ ,~ ..... n' J ll>'l ...... J\\....I VV
grounds of racial bias, much as earlier systems of control were protected and endorsed by the U.S. Supreme Court. The parallels do not end there, however. Mass incarceration, like Jim Crow, helps to define the meaning and significance of race in America. Indeed, the stigma of criminality functions in much the same way that the stigma of race once did. It justifies a legal, social, and economic boundary between "us" and "them." Chapter 5 also explores some of the differences among slavery, Jim Crow, and mass incarceration, most significantly the fact that mass incarceration is designed to warehouse a population deemed disposable-s-unnecessary to the functioning of the new global economy-while earlier systems of control were designed to exploit and control black labor. In addition, the chapter discusses the experience of white people in this new caste system; although they have not been the primary targets of the drug war, they have been harmed by ita powerful illustration of how a racial state can harm people of all colors. Finally, this chapter responds to skeptics who claim that mass incarceration cannot be understood as a racial caste system because many "get tough on crime" policies are supported by African Americans. Many of these claims, I note, are no more persuasive today than arguments made a hundred years ago by blacks and whites who claimed that racial segregation simply reflected "reality," not racial animus, and that African Americans would be better off not challenging the Jim Crow system but should focus instead on improving themselves within it. Throughout our history, there have been African Americans who, for a variety of reasons, have defended or been complicit with the prevailing system of control.
Chapter 6 reflects on what acknowledging the presence of the New Jim Crow means for the future of civil rights advocacy. I argue that nothing short of a major social movement can successfully dismantle the new caste system. Meaningful reforms can be achieved without such a movement, but unless the public consensus supporting the current system is completely overturned, the basic structure of the new caste system will remain intact. Building a broad-based social movement, however, is not enough. It is not nearly enough to persuade mainstream voters that we have relied too heavily on incarceration or that drug abuse is a public health problem, not a crime. If the movement that emerges to challenge mass incarceration fails to confront squarely the critical role of race in the basic structure of our society, and if it fails to cultivate an ethic of genuine care, compassion, and concern for every human being-of every class, race, and nationality-within our
nation's borders (including poor whites, who are often pitted against poor people of color), the collapse of mass incarceration will not mean the death of racial caste in America. Inevitably a new system of racialized social control will emerge-one that we cannot foresee, just as the current system of mass incarceration was not predicted by anyone thirty years ago. No task is more urgent for racial justice advocates today than ensuring that America's current racial caste system is its last.
I
The Rebirth of Caste
[Tjhe slave went free; stood a brief moment in the sun; then moved back again toward slavery
-W.E.B Du Bois, Black Reconstruction in America
For more than one hundred years, scholars have written about the illusory nature of the Emancipation Proclamation. President Abraham Lincoln issued a declaration purporting to free slaves held in Southern Confederate states, but not a single black slave was actually free to walk away from a master in those states as a result. A civil war had to be won first, hundreds of thousands of lives lost, and then-only then-were slaves across the South set free. Even that freedom proved illusory, though. As W.E.B. Du Bois eloquently reminds us, former slaves had "a brief moment in the sun" before they were returned to a status akin to slavery. Constitutional amendments guaranteeing African Americans "equal protection of the laws" and the right to vote proved as impotent as the Emancipation Proclamation once a white backlash against Reconstruction gained steam. Black people found themselves yet again powerless and relegated to convict leasing camps that were, in many ways, worse than slavery. Sunshine gave way to darkness, and the Jim Crow system of segregation emerged-a system that put black people nearly back where they began, in a subordinate racial caste.
Few find it surprising that Jim Crow arose following the collapse of slavery.
The development is described in history books as regrettable but predictable, given the virulent racism that gripped the South and the political dynamics
r
of the time. What is remarkable is that hardly anyone seems to imagine that similar political dynamics may have produced another caste system in the years following the collapse of Jim Crow-one that exists today. The story that is told during Black History Month is one of triumph; the system of racial caste is officially dead and buried. Suggestions to the contrary are frequently met with shocked disbelief. The standard reply is: "How can you say that a racial caste system exists today? Just look at Barack Obama! Just look at Oprah Winfrey!"
The fact that some African Americans have experienced great success in recent years does not mean that something akin to a racial caste system no longer exists. No caste system in the United States has ever governed all black people; there have always been "free blacks" and black success stories, even during slavery and Jim Crow. The superlative nature of individual black achievement today in formerly white domains is a good indicator that Jim Crow is dead, but it does not necessarily mean the end of racial caste. If history is any guide, it may have simply taken a different form.
Any candid observer of American racial history must acknowledge that racism is highly adaptable. The rules and reasons the political system employs to enforce status relations of any kind, including racial hierarchy, evolve and change as they are challenged. The valiant efforts to abolish slavery and Jim Crow and to achieve greater racial equality have brought about significant changes in the legal framework of American society-new "rules of the game," so to speak. These new rules have been justified by new rhetoric, new language, and a new social consensus, while producing many of the same results. This dynamic, which legal scholar Reva Siegel has dubbed "preservation through transformation," is the process through which white privilege is maintained, though the rules and rhetoric change. 1
This process, though difficult to recognize at any given moment, is easier to see in retrospect. Since the nation's founding, African Americans repeatedly have been controlled through institutions such as slavery and Jim Crow, which appear to die, but then are reborn in new form, tailored to the needs and constraints of the time. As described in the pages that follow, there is a certain pattern to this cycle. Following the collapse of each system of control, there has been a period of confusion-transition-in which those who are most committed to racial hierarchy search for new means to achieve their goals within the rules of the game as currently defined. It is during this period of uncertainty that the backlash intensifies and a new form of racial-
22
TI-1E NEW JIM CROW
THE REB1RTH OF CASTE
23
ized social control begins to take hold. The adoption of the new system of control is never inevitable, but to date it has never been avoided. The most ardent proponents of racial hierarchy have consistently succeeded in implementing new racial caste systems by triggering a collapse of resistance across the political spectrum. This feat has been achieved largely by appealing to the racism and vulnerability of lower-class whites, a group of people who are understandably eager to ensure that they never find themselves trapped at the bottom of the American hierarchy.
The emergence of each new system of control may seem sudden, but history shows that the seeds are planted long before each new institution begins to grow. For example, although it is common to think of the Jim Crow regime following immediately on the heels of Reconstruction, the truth is more complicated. And while it is generally believed that the backlash against the Civil Rights Movement is defined primarily by the rollback of affirmative action and the undermining of federal civil rights legislation by a hostile judiciary, the seeds of the new system of control-mass incarceration-were planted during the Civil Rights Movement itself, when it became clear that the old caste system was crumbling and a new one would have to take its place.
With each reincarnation of racial caste, the new system, as sociologist Loic Wacquant puts it, "is less total, less capable of encompassing and controlling the entire race.' ? However, any notion that this evolution reflects some kind of linear progress would be misguided, for it is not at all obvious that it would be better to be incarcerated for life for a minor drug offense than to live with one's family, earning an honest living under the Jim Crow regime-notwithstanding the ever-present threat of the Klan. Moreover, as the systems of control have evolved, they have become perfected, arguably more resilient to challenge, and thus capable of enduring for generations to come. The story of the political and economic underpinnings of the nation's founding sheds some light on these recurring themes in our history and the reasons new racial caste systems continue to be born.
sis ted largely of a great mass of white and black bondsmen, who occupied roughly the same economic category and were treated with equal contempt by the lords of the plantations and legislatures. Curiously unconcerned about their color, these people worked together and relaxed together.'
-Lerone Bennett Jr.
The Birth of Slavery
The concept of race is a relatively recent development. Only in the past few centuries, owing largely to European imperialism, have the world's people been classified along racial lines." Here, in America, the idea of race emerged as a means of reconciling chattel slavery-as well as the extermination of American Indians-with the ideals of freedom preached by whites in the
new colonies.
In the early colonial period, when settlements remained relatively small,
indentured servitude was the dominant means of securing cheap labor. Under this system, whites and blacks struggled to survive against a common enemy, what historian Lerone Bennett Jr. describes as "the big planter apparatus and a social system that legalized terror against black and white bondsmeri." Initially, blacks brought to this country were not all enslaved; many were treated as indentured servants. As plantation farming expanded, particularly tobacco and cotton farming, demand increased greatly for both la-
bor and land.
The demand for land was met by invading and conquering larger and larger
swaths of territory. American Indians became a growing impediment to white European "progress," and during this period, the images of American Indians promoted in books, newspapers, and magazines became increasingly negative. As sociologists Keith Kilty and Eric Swank have observed, eliminating "savages" is less of a moral problem than eliminating human beings, and therefore American Indians came to be understood as a lesser race-uncivilized savagesthus providing a justification for the extermination of the native peoples."
The growing demand for labor on plantations was met through slavery.
American Indians were considered unsuitable as slaves, largely because native tribes were clearly in a position to fight back. The fear of raids by Indian tribes led plantation owners to grasp for an alternative source of free labor. European immigrants were also deemed poor candidates for slavery, not because of their race, but rather because they were in short supply and enslavement would, quite naturally, interfere with voluntary immigration to the
Back there, before Jim Crow, before the invention of the Negro or the white man or the words and concepts to describe them, the Colonial population con-
24
THE NEW JIM CROW
new colonies. Plantation owners thus viewed Africans, who were relatively powerless, as the ideal slaves. The systematic enslavement of Africans, and the rearing of their children under bondage, emerged with all deliberate speed-quickened by events such as Bacon's Rebellion.
Nathaniel Bacon was a white property owner in Jamestown, Virginia, who managed to unite slaves, indentured servants, and poor whites in a revolutionary effort to overthrow the planter elite. Although slaves clearly occupied the lowest position in the social hierarchy and suffered the most under the plantation system, the condition of indentured whites was barely better, and the majority of free whites lived in extreme poverty. As explained by historian Edmund Morgan, in colonies like Virginia, the planter elite, with huge land grants, occupied a vastly superior position to workers of all colors? Southern colonies did not hesitate to invent ways to extend the terms of servitude, and the planter class accumulated uncultivated lands to restrict the options of free workers. The simmering resentment against the planter class created conditions that were ripe for revolt.
Varying accounts of Bacon's rebellion abound, but the basic facts are these:
Bacon developed plans in 1675 to seize Native American lands in order to acquire more property for himself and others and nullify the threat of Indian raids. When the planter elite in Virginia refused to provide militia support for his scheme, Bacon retaliated, leading an attack on the elite, their homes, and their property. He openly condemned the rich for their oppression of the poor and inspired an alliance of white and black bond laborers, as well as slaves, who demanded an end to their servitude. The attempted revolution was ended by force and false promises of amnesty. A number of the people who participated in the revolt were hanged. The events in Jamestown were alarming to the planter elite, who were c\eepl)1 teartul ot tl'\e multiracial a\\iaI."\ce at banel wm\"ers anel sh'Je'S. 'Nmd ot \?'acon'S \:ebe\\'\.Cln 'S\)\:ead ta\: and
\"Jide, and se'Je\:a\ mme u\)rising,s 0\ a'Sim'l\ar t)1\)e \o\\owed.
In an ettort to \)wtect tneir su\)erior status anc\ economic \)osition, tne
planters snihed thei.r strate'6)' tor maintaining dominance. t\'\e)1 anandoned t\'\eir hea\1)' reliance on 'Indentured seI'Jant'S 'In ta'Jm ot the im\)OTtation ot more nlac\<. siaves. lnstead ot importing English-speaking sla'Jes trom the West Indies, who were more likely to be familiar with European language and culture, many more slaves were shipped directly from Africa. These slaves would be far easier to control and far less likely to form alliances with poor whites.
THE REBIRTH OF CASTE
25
Fearful that such measures might not be sufficient to protect their interests, the planter class took an additional precautionary step, a step that would later come to be known as a "racial bribe." Deliberately and strategically, the planter class extended special privileges to poor whites in an effort to drive a wedge between them and black slaves. White settlers were allowed greater access to Native American lands, white servants were allowed to police slaves through slave patrols and militias, and barriers were created so that free labor would not be placed in competition with slave labor. These measures effectively eliminated the risk of future alliances between black slaves and poor whites. Poor whites suddenly had a direct, personal stake in the existence of a race-based system of slavery Their own plight had not improved by much, but at least they were not slaves. Once the planter elite split the labor force, poor whites responded to the logic of their situation and sought ways to expand their racially privileged position.f
By the mid-I 770s, the system of bond labor had been thoroughly transformed into a racial caste system predicated on slavery. The degraded status of Africans was justified on the ground that Negros, like the Indians, were an uncivilized lesser race, perhaps even more lacking in intelligence and laudable human qualities than the red-skinned natives. The notion of white supremacy rationalized the enslavement of Africans, even as whites endeavored to form a new nation based on the ideals of equality, liberty, and justice for all. Before democracy, chattel slavery in America was born.
It may be impossible to overstate the significance of race in defining the basic structure of American society. The structure and content of the original Constitution was based largely on the effort to preserve a racial caste system-slavery-while at the same time affording political and economic rights to whites, especially propertied whites. The southern slaveholding colonies would. agree to torm a union only on the condition that the federal government would not be able to interfere with the right to own slaves. Northern white elites were sympathetic to the demand for their "property rights" to be respected, as they, too, wanted the Constitution to protect their property interests. As James Madison put it, the nation ought to be constituted "to protect the minority of the opulent against the majority"? Consequently, the Constitution was designed so the federal government would be weak, not only in its relationship to private property, but also in relationship to the rights of states to conduct their own affairs. The language of the Constitution itself was deliberately colorblind (the words slave or Negro were
26
THE NEW JIM CROW
never used), but the document was built upon a compromise regarding the prevailing racial caste system. Federalism-the division of power between the states and the federal government-was the device employed to protect the institution of slavery and the political power of slaveholding states. Even the method for determining proportional representation in Congress and identifying the winner of a presidential election (the electoral college) were specifically developed with the interest of slaveholders in mind. Under the terms of our country's founding document, slaves were defined as threefifths of a man, not a real, whole human being. Upon this racist fiction rests the entire structure of American democracy.
The Death of Slavery
The history of racial caste in the United States would end with the Civil War if the idea of race and racial difference had died when the institution of slavery was put to rest. But during the four centuries in which slavery flourished, the idea of race flourished as well. Indeed, the notion of racial differencespecifically the notion of white supremacy-proved far more durable than the institution that gave birth to it.
White supremacy, over time, became a religion of sorts. Faith in the idea that people of the African race were bestial, that whites were inherently superior, and that slavery was, in fact, for blacks' own good, served to alleviate the white conscience and reconcile the tension between slavery and the democratic ideals espoused by whites in the so-called New World. There was no contradiction in the bold claim made by Thomas Jefferson in the Declaration of Independence that "all men are created equal" if Africans were not really people. Racism operated as a deeply held belief system based on "truths" beyond question or doubt. This deep faith in white supremacy not only justified an economic and political system in which plantation owners acquired land and great wealth through the brutality, torture, and coercion of other human beings; it also endured, like most articles of faith, long after the historical circumstances that gave rise to the religion passed away. In Wacquant's words: "Racial division was a consequence, not a precondition of slavery, but once it was instituted it became detached from its initial function and acquired a social potency all its own." !" After the death of slavery, the idea of race lived on.
THE REB1RTl-I OF CASTE
27
One of the most compelling accounts of the postemancipation period is n~e Strange Career of Jim Grow, written by C. Vann Woodward in 1955.ll The book continues to be the focal point of study and debate by scholars and was once described by Martin Luther King Jr. as the "historical bible of the Civil Rights Movement." As Woodward tells the story, the end of slavery created an extraordinary dilemma for Southern white society. Without the labor of former slaves, the region's economy would surely collapse, and without the institution of slavery, there was no longer a formal mechanism for maintaining racial hierarchy and preventing "amalgamation" with a group of people considered intrinsically inferior and vile. This state of affairs produced a temporary anarchy and a state of mind bordering on hysteria, particularly among the planter elite. But even among poor whites, the collapse of slavery was a bitter pill. In the antebellum South, the lowliest white person at least possessed his or her white skin-a badge of superiority over even the most skilled slave or prosperous free African American.
While Southern whites-poor and rich alike-were utterly outraged by emancipation, there was no obvious solution to the dilemma they faced. Following the Civil War, the economic and political infrastructure of the South was in shambles. Plantation owners were suddenly destitute, and state governments, shackled by war debt, were penniless. Large amounts of real estate and other property had been destroyed in the war, industry was disorganized, and hundreds of thousands of men had been killed or maimed. With all of this went the demoralizing effect of an unsuccessful war and the extraordinary challenges associated with rebuilding new state and local governments. Add to all this the sudden presence of 4 million newly freed slaves, and the picture becomes even more complicated. Southern whites, Woodward explains, strongly believed that a new system of racial control was clearly required, but it was not immediately obvious what form it should take.
Under slavery, the racial order was most effectively maintained by a large degree of contact between slave owners and slaves, thus maximizing opportunities for supervision and discipline, and minimizing the potential for active resistance or rebellion. Strict separation of the races would have threatened slaveholders' immediate interests and was, in any event, wholly unnecessary as a means of creating social distance or establishing the infe-
rior status of slaves.
Following the Civil War, it was unclear what institutions, laws, Of customs
would be necessary to maintain white control now that slavery was gone.
28
THE NEW JIM CROW
Nonetheless, as numerous historians have shown, the development of a new racial order became the consuming passion for most white Southerners. Rumors of a great insurrection terrified whites, and blacks increasingly came to be viewed as menacing and dangerous. In fact, the current stereotypes of black men as aggressive, unruly predators can be traced to this period, when whites feared that an angry mass of black men might rise up and attack them or rape their women.
Equally worrisome was the state of the economy. Former slaves literally walked away from their plantations, causing panic and outrage among plantation owners. Large numbers of former slaves roamed the highways in the early years after the war. Some converged on towns and cities; others joined the federal militia. Most white people believed African Americans lacked the proper motivation to work, prompting the provisional Southern legislatures to adopt the notorious black codes. As expressed by one Alabama planter:
"We have the power to pass stringent police laws to govern the Negroesthis is a blessing-for they must be controlled in some way or white people cannot live among them." ? While some of these codes were intended to establish systems of peonage resembling slavery, others foreshadowed Jim Crow laws by prohibiting, among other things, interracial seating in the firstclass sections of railroad cars and by segregating schools.
Although the convict laws enacted during this period are rarely seen as part of the black codes, that is a mistake. As explained by historian William Cohen, "the main purpose of the codes was to control the freedmen, and the question of how to handle convicted black law breakers was vety much at the center of the control issue." 13 Nine southern states adopted vagrancy laws-which essentially made it a criminal offense not to work and were applied selectively to blacks-and eight of those states enacted convict laws allowing for the hiring-out of county prisoners to plantation owners and private companies. Prisoners were forced to work for little or no pay. One vagrancy act specifically provided that "all free negroes and mulattoes over the age of eighteen" must have written proof of a job at the beginning of every year. Those found with no lawful employment were deemed vagrants and convicted. Clearly, the purpose of the black codes in general and the vagrancy laws in particular was to establish another system of forced labor. In W.E.B. Du Bois's words: "The Codes spoke for themselves .... No openminded student can read them without being convinced they meant nothing more nor less than slavery in daily toil." !"
THE HEBIRTI-l OF CASTE
29
Ultimately, the black codes were overturned, and a slew of federal civil rights legislation protecting the newly freed slaves was passed during the relatively brief but extraordinary period of black advancement known as the Reconstruction Era. The impressive legislative achievements of this period include the Thirteenth Amendment, abolishing slavery; the Civil Rights Act of 1866, bestowing full citizenship upon African Americans; the Fourteenth Amendment, prohibiting states from denying citizens due process and "equal protection of the laws"; the Fifteenth Amendment, providing that the right to vote should not be denied on account of race; and the Ku Klux Klan Acts, which, among other things, declared interference with voting a federal offense and the violent infringement of civil rights a crime. The new legislation also provided for federal supervision of voting and authorized the president to send the army and suspend the writ of habeas corpus in districts declared to be in a state of insurrection against the federal government.
In addition to federal civil rights legislation, the Reconstruction Era brought the expansion of the Freedmen's Bureau, the agency charged with the responsibility of providing food, clothing, fuel, and other forms of assistance to destitute former slaves. A public education system emerged in the South, which afforded many blacks (and poor whites) their first opportunity to learn to read and write.
While the Reconstruction Era was fraught with corruption and arguably doomed by the lack of land reform, the sweeping economic and political developments in that period did appear, at least for a time, to have the potential to seriously undermi.ne, if not completely eradicate, the racial caste system in the South. Wit]; the protection of federal troops, African Americans began to vote in large numbers and seize control, in some areas, of the local political apparatus. Literacy rates climbed, and educated blacks began to populate legislatures, open schools, and initiate successful businesses. In 1867, at the dawn of the Reconstruction Era, no black man held political office in the South, yet three years later, at least 15 percent of all Southern elected officials were black. This is particularly extraordinary in light of the fact that fifteen years after the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965- the high water mark of the Civil Rights Movement-fewer than 8 percent of all Southern elected officials were black. 15
At the same time, however, many of the new civil rights laws were proving largely symbolic.!" Notably absent from the Fifteenth Amendment, for example, was language prohibiting the states from imposing educational, resi-
30
THE NEW JIM CROW
dential, or other qualifications for voting, thus leaving the door open to the states to impose poll taxes, literacy tests, and other devices to prevent blacks from voting. Other laws revealed themselves as more an assertion of principle than direct federal intervention into Southern affairs, because enforcement required African Americans to take their cases to federal courts, a costly and time-consuming procedure that was a practical impossibility for the vast majority of those who had claims. Most blacks were too poor to sue to enforce their civil rights, and no organization like the NAACP yet existed to spread the risks and costs of litigation. Moreover, the threat of violence often deterred blacks from pressing legitimate claims, making the "civil rights" of former slaves largely illusory-existing on paper but rarely to be found in real life.
Meanwhile, the separation of the races had begun to emerge as a comprehensive pattern throughout the South, driven in large part by the rhetoric of the planter elite, who hoped to re-establish a system of control that would ensure a low-paid, submissive labor force. Racial segregation had actually begun years earlier in the North, as an effort to prevent race-mixing and preserve racial hierarchy following the abolition of Northern slavery. It had never developed, however, into a comprehensive system-operating instead largely as a matter of custom, enforced with varying degrees of consistency. Even among those most hostile to Reconstruction, few would have predicted that racial segregation would soon evolve into a new racial caste system as stunningly comprehensive and repressive as the one that came to be known simply as Jim Crow.
The Birth of Jim Crow
The backlash against the gains of African Americans in the Reconstruction Era was swift and severe. As African Americans obtained political power and began the long march toward greater social and economic equality, whites reacted with panic and outrage. Southern conservatives vowed to reverse Reconstruction and sought the "abolition of the Freedmen's Bureau and all -po\itica\ instmmentahties designed to secure Negro sutlremacy." 17 their
camtlaign to "redeem" the Sout\'\. was reintmced '0'1 a \ysmgent Ku ¥J.ux \(ian, which tought a terrOIist camtlaign against Reconstruction governments ancl local leaclers, comtllete with bombings, lynchings, ancl mob violence.
THE REBIRTH OF CASTE
31
The terrorist campaign proved highly successful. "Redemption" resulted in the withdrawal of federal troops from the South and the effective abandonment of African Americans and all those who had fought for or supported an egalitarian racial order. The federal government no longer made any effort to enforce federal civil rights legislation, and funding for the Freedmen's Bureau was slashed to such a degree that the agency became
virtually defunct.
Once again, vagrancy laws and other laws defining activities such as "mis-
chief" and "insulting gestures" as crimes were enforced vigorously against blacks. The aggressive enforcement of these criminal offenses opened up an enormous market for convict leasing, in which prisoners were contracted out as laborers to the highest private bidder. Douglas Blackmon, in Slavery by Another Name, describes how tens of thousands of African Americans were arbitrarily arrested during this period, many of them hit with court costs and fines, which had to be worked off in order to secure their release." With no means to payoff their "debts," prisoners were sold as forced laborers to lumber camps, brickyards, railroads, farms, plantations, and dozens of corporations throughout the South. Death rates were shockingly high, for the private contractors had no interest in the health and well-being of their laborers, unlike the earlier slave-owners who needed their slaves, at a minimum, to be healthy enough to survive hard labor. Laborers were subject to almost continual lashing by long horse whips, and those who collapsed due to injuries or exhaustion were often left to die.
Convicts had no meaningful legal rights at this time and no effective redress. They were understood, quite literally, to be slaves of the state. The Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution had abolished slavery but allowed one major exception: slavery remained appropriate as punishment for a crime. In a landmark decision by the Virginia Supreme Court, Ruffin v. Commonwealth, issued at the height of Southern Redemption, the court put to rest any notion that convicts were legally distinguishable from slaves:
For a time, during his service in the penitentiary, he is in a state of penal servitude to the State. He has, as a consequence of his crime, not only forfeited his liberty, but all his personal rights except those which the law in its humanity accords to him. He is for the time being a slave of the State. He is civiliter mortus; and his estate, if he has any, is administered like that of a dead man.!"
32
THE NEW J1M CROW
The state of Mississippi eventually moved from hiring convict labor to organizing its own convict labor camp, known as Parchman Farm. It was not alone. During the decade following Redemption, the convict population grew ten times faster than the general population: "Prisoners became younger and blacker, and the length of their sentences soared." 20 It was the nation's first prison boom and, as they are today, the prisoners were disproportionately black. After a brief period of progress during Reconstruction, African Americans found themselves, once again, virtually defenseless. The criminal justice system was strategically employed to force African Americans back into a system of extreme repression and control, a tactic that would continue to prove successful for generations to come. Even as convict leasing faded away, strategic forms of exploitation and repression emerged anew. As Blackmon notes: "The apparent demise ... of leasing prisoners seemed a harbinger of a new day. But the harsher reality of the South was that the new post-Civil War neoslavery was evolving-not disappearing." 21
Redemption marked a turning point in the quest by dominant whites for a new racial equilibrium, a racial order that would protect their economic, political, and social interests in a world without slavery. Yet a clear consensus among whites about what the new racial order should be was still lacking.
The Redeemers who overthrew Reconstruction were inclined to retain such segregation practices as had already emerged, but they displayed no apparent disposition to expand or universalize the system.
Three alternative philosophies of race relations were put forward to compete for the region's support, all of which rejected the doctrines of extreme racism espoused by some Redeemers: liberalism, conservatism, and radicalism.22 The liberal philosophy of race relations emphasized the stigma of segregation and the hypocrisy of a government that celebrates freedom and equality yet denies both on account of race. This philosophy, born in the North, never gained much traction among Southern whites or blacks.
I'he con.set'Jat1ve -P\1.1\oSOllh)1, 'D)1 contrast, attracted wiue sUllllort and was 1m-p\ementec\ In vat10\.\s conte'li.ts ovet a conslc\etab\e \)et\.oc\ ot time. c,o~setvatrves blamed \iberals tot '\)ushing, blac\(,_s a\,ead ot their '\)LO'\)er statlon 1Il lite and '\)\acing, o\acks in '\)ositlons they were un'\)re'\)ared to n\\, a circumstance that \,ad a\\eg,ed\)! contriouted to their down£a\\. the)! warned b\acl< .. s that some Redeemers were not satished with having, decimated Reconstn1Ction, and were prepared to wage an aggressive war against blacks throughout
THE REBIRTH OF CASTE
33
the South. With some success, the conservatives reached out to African American voters, reminding them that they had something to lose as well as gain and that the liberals' preoccupation with political and economic equality presented the danger of losing all that blacks had so far gained.
The radical philosophy offered, for many African Americans, the most promise. It was predicated on a searing critique of large corporations, particularly railroads, and the wealthy elite in the North and South. The radicals of the late nineteenth century, who later formed the Populist Party, viewed the privileged classes as conspiring to keep poor whites and blacks locked into a subordinate political and economic position. For many African American voters, the Populist approach was preferable to the paternalism of liberals. Populists preached an "equalitarianism of want and poverty, the kinship of a common grievance, and a common oppressor." 23 As described by Tom Watson, a prominent Populist leader, in a speech advocating a union between black and white farmers: "You are kept apart that you may be separately fleeced of your earnings. You are made to hate each other because upon that hatred is rested the keystone of the arch of financial despotism that enslaves you both. You are deceived and blinded that you may not see how this race antagonism perpetuates a monetary system which beggars both." 24
In an effort to demonstrate their commitment to a genuinely multiracial, working-class movement against white elites, the Populists made strides toward racial integration, a symbol of their commitment to class-based unity. African Americans throughout the South responded with great hope and enthusiasm, eager to be true partners in a struggle for social justice. According to Woodward, "It is altogether probable that during the brief Populist upheaval in the nineties Negroes and native whites achieved a greater comity of mind and harmony of political purpose than ever before or since in
the South." 25
The challenges inherent in creating the alliance sought by the Populists
were formidable, as race prejudice ran the highest among the very white populations to which the Po'\)ulist ap'\)eal was specincally addressed-the depressed lower economic classes. Nevertheless, the Populist movement initially enjoyed remarkable success in the South, fueled by a wave of discontent aroused by the severe agrarian depression of the 1880s and 1890s. The Populists took direct aim at the conservatives, who were known as comprising a party of privilege, and they achieved a stunning series of political
34
THE NEW JIM CROW
victories throughout the region. Alarmed by the success of the Populists and the apparent potency of the alliance between poor and working-class whites and African Americans, the conservatives raised the cry of white supremacy and resorted to the tactics they had employed in their quest for Redemption, including fraud, intimidation, bribery, and terror.
Segregation laws were proposed as part of a deliberate effort to drive a wedge between poor whites and African Americans. These discriminatory barriers were designed to encourage lower-class whites to retain a sense of superiority over blacks, making it far less likely that they would sustain interracial politicaJ alliances aimed at toppling the white elite. The laws were, in effect, another racial bribe. As William Julius Wilson has noted, "As long as poor whites directed their hatred and frustration against the black competitor, the planters were relieved of class hostility directed against them." 26 Indeed, in order to overcome the well-founded suspicions of poor and illiterate whites that they, as well as blacks, were in danger of losing the right to vote, the leaders of the movement pursued an aggressive campaign of white supremacy in every state prior to black disenfranchisement.
Ultimately, the Populists caved to the pressure and abandoned their former allies. "While the [Populist] movement was at the peak of zeal," Woodward observed, "the two races had surprised each other and astonished their opponents by the harmony they achieved and the goodwill with which they co-operated.' ?" But when it became clear that the conservatives would stop at nothing to decimate their alliance, the biracial partnership dissolved, and Populist leaders re-aligned themselves with conservatives. Even Tom Watson, who had been among the most forceful advocates for an interracial alliance of farmers, concluded that Populist principles could never be fully embraced by the South until blacks were eliminated from politics.
The agricultural depression, taken together with a series of failed reforms and broken political promises, had pyramided to a climax of social tensions. Dominant whites concluded that it was in their political and economic interest to scapegoat blacks, and "permission to hate" came from sources that had formerly denied it, including Northern liberals eager to reconcile with the South, Southern conservatives who had once promised blacks protection from racial extremism, and Populists, who cast aside their dark-skinned allies when the partnership fell under siege.28
History seemed to repeat itself. Just as the white elite had successfully driven a wedge between poor whites and blacks following Bacon's Rebellion
THE REBIRTH OF CASTE
35
by creating the institution of black slavery, another racial caste system was emerging nearly two centuries later, in part due to efforts by white elites to decimate a multiracial alliance of poor people. By the turn of the twentieth century, every state in the South had laws on the books that disenfranchised blacks and discriminated against them in virtually every sphere of life, lending sanction to a racial ostracism that extended to schools, churches, housing, jobs, restrooms, hotels, restaurants, hospitals, orphanages, prisons, funeral homes, morgues, and cemeteries. Politicians competed with each other by proposing and passing ever more stringent, oppressive, and downright ridiculous legislation (such as laws specifically prohibiting blacks and whites from playing chess together). The public symbols and constant reminders of black subjugation were supported by whites across the political spectrum, though the plight of poor whites remained largely unchanged. For them, the racial bribe was primarily psychological.
The new racial order, known as Jim Crow-a term apparently derived from a minstrel show character-was regarded as the "final settlement," the "return to sanity," and "the permanent system." 29 Of course, the earlier system of racialized social control-slavery-had also been regarded as final, sane, and permanent by its supporters. Like the earlier system, Jim Crow seemed "natural," and it became difficult to remember that alternative paths were not only available at one time, but nearly embraced.
The Death of Jim Crow
Scholars have long debated the beginning and end of Reconstruction, as well as exactly when Jim Crow ended and the Civil Rights Movement or "Second Reconstruction" began. Reconstruction is most typically described as stretching from 1863 when the North freed the slaves to 1877) when it abandoned them and withdrew federal troops from the South. There is much less certainty regarding the beginning of the end of Jim Crow.
The general public typically traces the death of Jim Crow to Brown v.
Board of Education, although the institution was showing signs of weakness years before. By 1945, a growing number of whites in the North had concluded that the Jim Crow system would have to be modified, if not entirely overthrown. This consensus was due to a number of factors, including the increased political power of blacks due to migration to the North and the
36
THE NEW JIM CROW
growing membership and influence of the NAACP, particularly its highly successful legal campaign challenging Jim Crow laws in federal courts. Far more important in the view of many scholars, however, is the influence of World War II. The blatant contradiction between the country's opposition to the crimes of the Third Reich against European Jews and the continued existence of a racial caste system in the United States was proving embarrassing, severely damaging the nation's credibility as leader of the "free world." There was also increased concern that, without greater equality for African Americans, blacks would become susceptible to communist influence, given Russia's commitment to both racial and economic equality. In Gunnar MyrdaI's highly influential book The American Dilemma, published in 1944, Myrdal made a passionate plea for integration based on the theory that the inherent contradiction between the "American Creed" of freedom and equality and the treatment of African Americans was not only immoral and profoundly unjust, but was also against the economic and foreign-policy interests of the United States. 30
The Supreme Court seemed to agree. In 1944, in Smith v. Allwright, the Supreme Court ended the use of the all-white primary election; and in 1946, the Court ruled that state laws requiring segregation on interstate buses were unconstitutional. Two years later, the Court voided any real estate agreements that racially discriminated against purchasers, and in 1949 the Court ruled that Texas's segregated law school for blacks was inherently unequal and inferior in every respect to its law school for whites. In 1950, in McLaurin v. Oldahoma, it declared that Oklahoma had to desegregate its law school. Thus, even before Brown, the Supreme Court had already begun to set in motion a striking pattern of desegregation.
Brown v. Board of Education was unique, however. It signaled the end of "home rule" in the South with respect to racial affairs. Earlier decisions had chipped away at the "separate but equal" doctrine, yet Jim Crow had managed to adapt to the changing legal environment, and most Southerners had remained confident that the institution would survive. Brown threatened not only to abolish segregation in public schools, but also, by implication, the entire system of legalized discrimination in the South. After more than fifty years of nearly complete deference to Southern states and noninterference in their racial affairs, Brown suggested a reversal in course.
A mood of outrage and defiance swept the South, not unlike the reaction to emancipation and Reconstruction following the Civil War. Again, racial
THE REBIRTH OF CASTE
37
equality was being forced upon the South by the federal government, and by 1956 Southern white opposition to desegregation mushroomed into a vicious backlash. In Congress, North Carolina Senator Sam Ervin Jr. drafted a racist polemic, "the Southern Manifesto," which vowed to fight to maintain Jim Crow by all legal means. Erwin succeeded in obtaining the support of 101 out of 128 members of Congress from the eleven original Confederate states.
A fresh wave of white terror was hurled at those who supported the dismantling of Jim Crow. White Citizens' Councils were formed in almost every Southern city and backwater town, comprised primarily of middle- to uppermiddle-class whites in business and the clergy. Just as Southern legislatures had passed the black codes in response to the early steps of Reconstruction, in the years immediately following Brown v. Board, five Southern legislatures passed nearly fifty new Jim Crow laws. In the streets, resistance turned violent. The Ku Klux Klan reasserted itself as a powerful terrorist organization,
. committing castrations, killings, and the bombing of black homes and churches. NAACP leaders were beaten, pistol-whipped, and shot. As quickly as it began, desegregation across the South ground to a halt. In 1958, thirteen school systems were desegregated; in 1960, only seventeen."
In the absence of a massive, grassroots movement directly challenging the racial caste system, Jim Crow might be alive and well today. Yet in the 1950s, a civil rights movement was brewing, emboldened by the Supreme Court's decisions and a shifting domestic and international political environment. With extraordinary bravery, civil rights leaders, activists, and progressive clergy launched boycotts, marches, and sit-ins protesting the Jim Crow system. They endured fire hoses, police dogs, bombings, and beatings by white mobs, as well as by the police. Once again, federal troops were sent to the South to provide protection for blacks attempting to exercise their civil rights, and the violent reaction of white racists was met with horror in the North.
The dramatic high point of the Civil Rights Movement occurred in 1963.
The Southern struggle had grown from a modest group of black students demonstrating peacefully at one lunch counter to the largest mass movement for racial reform and civil rights in the twentieth century. Between autumn 1961 and the spring of 1963, twenty thousand men, women, and children had been arrested. In 1963 alone, another fifteen thousand were imprisoned, and one thousand desegregation protests occurred across the
region, in more than one hundred cities.32
On June 12, 1963, President Kennedy announced that he would deliver
38
THE NEW JIM CROW
to Congress a strong civil rights bill, a declaration that transformed him into a Widely recognized ally of the Civil Rights Movement. Following Kennedy's assassination, President Johnson professed his commitment to the goal of "the full assimilation of more than twenty million Negroes into American life," and ensured the passage of comprehensive civil rights legislation. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 formally dismantled the Jim Crow system of discrimination in public accommodations, employment, voting, education, and federally financed activities. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 arguably had even greater scope, as it rendered illegal numerous discriminatory barriers to effective political participation by African Americans and mandated federal review of all new voting regulations so that it would be possible to determine whether their use would perpetuate voting discrimination.
Within five years, the effects of the civil rights revolution were undeniable. Between 1964 and 1969, the percentage of African American adults registered to vote in the South soared. In Alabama the rate leaped from 19.3 percent to 61.3 percent; in Georgia, 27.4 percent to 60.4 percent; in Louisiana, 31.6 percent to 60.8 percent; and in MiSSissippi, 6.7 percent to 66.5 percent. 33 Suddenly black children could shop in department stores, eat at restaurants, drink from water fountains, and go to amusement parks that were once off-limits. Miscegenation laws were declared unconstitutional, and the rate of interracial marriage climbed.
While dramatic progress was apparent in the political and social realms, civil rights activists became increasingly concerned that, without major economic reforms, the vast majority of blacks would remain locked in poverty. Thus at the peak of the Civil Rights Movement, activists and others began to turn their attention to economic problems, arguing that socioeconomic inequality interacted with racism to produce crippling poverty and related social problems. Economic issues emerged as a major focus of discontent. As political scientists Frances Fox Piven and Richard Cloward have described, "blacks became more indignant over their condition-not only as an oppressed racial minority in a white society but as poor people in an affluent one." >" Activists organized boycotts, picket lines, and demonstrations to attack discrimination in access to jobs and the denial of economic opportunity.
Perhaps the most famous demonstration in support of economic justice is the March on Washington for Jobs and Economic Freedom in August 1963. The wave of activism associated with economic justice helped to focus President Kennedy's attention on poverty and black unemployment. In the
THE REBIRTH OF CASTE
39
summer of 1963, he initiated a series of staff studies on those subjects. By the end of the summer, he declared his intention to make the eradication of poverty a key legislative objective in 1964.35 Following Kennedy's assassination, President Lyndon Johnson embraced the antipoverty rhetoric with great passion, calling for an "unconditional war on poverty," in his State of the Union Address in January 1964. Weeks later he proposed to Congress the Economic Opportunities Bill of 1964.
The shift in focus served to align the goals of the Civil Rights Movement with key political goals of poor and working-class whites, who were also demanding economic reforms. As the Civil Rights Movement began to evolve into a "Poor People's Movement," it promised to address not only black poverty, but white poverty as well-thus raising the specter of a poor and workingclass movement that cut across racial lines. Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights leaders made it clear that they viewed the eradication of economic inequality as the next front in the "human rights movement" and made great efforts to build multiracial coalitions that sought economic justice for all. Genuine equality for black people, King reasoned, demanded a radical restructuring of society, one that would address the needs of the black and white poor throughout the country. Shortly before his assassination, he envisioned bringing to Washington, D.C., thousands of the nation's disadvantaged in an interracial alliance that embraced rural and ghetto blacks, Appalachian whites, Mexican Americans, Puerto Ricans, and Native Americans to demand jobs and income-the right to live. In a speech delivered in 1968, King acknowledged there had been some progress for blacks since the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, but insisted that the current challenges required even greater resolve and that the entire nation must be transformed for economic justice to be more than a dream for poor people of all colors. As historian Gerald McKnight observes, "King was proposing nothing less than a radical transformation of the Civil Rights Movement into a populist crusade calling for redistribution of economic and political power. America's only civil rights leader was now focusing on class issues and was planning to descend on Washington with an army of poor to shake the foundations of the power structure and force the government to respond to the needs of the ignored underclass." 36
With the success of the Civil Rights Movement and the launching of the Poor People's Movement, it was apparent to all that a major disruption in the nation's racial equilibrium had occurred. Yet as we shall see below, Negroes
40
THE NEW JIM CROW
stood only a "brief moment in the sun." Conservative whites began, once again, to search for a new facial order that would conform to the needs and constraints of the time. This process took place with the understanding that whatever the new order would be, it would have to be formally race-neutral-it could not involve explicit or clearly intentional race discrimination. A similar phenomenon had followed slavery and Reconstruction, as white elites struggled to define a new racial order with the understanding that whatever the new order would be, it could not include slavery. Jim Crow eventually replaced slavery, but now it too had died, and it was unclear what might take its place. Barred by law from invoking race explicitly, those committed to racial hierarchy were forced to search for new means of achieving their goals according to the new rules of American democracy.
History reveals that the seeds of the new system of control were planted well before the end of the Civil Rights Movement. A new race-neutral language was developed for appealing to old racist sentiments, a language accompanied by a political movement that succeeded in putting the vast majority of blacks back in their place. Proponents of racial hierarchy found they could install a new racial caste system without violating the law or the new limits of acceptable political discourse, by demanding "law and order" rather than "segregation forever."
The Birth of Mass Incarceration
The rhetoric of "law and order" was first mobilized in the late 1950s as Southern governors and law enforcement officials attempted to generate and mobilize white opposition to the Civil Rights Movement. In the years folloWing Brown v. Board of Education, civil rights activists used direct-action tactics in an effort to force reluctant Southern states to desegregate public facilities. Southern governors and law enforcement officials often characterized these tactics as criminal and argued that the rise of the Civil Rights Movement was indicative of a breakdown of law and order. Support of civil rights legislation was derided by Southern conservatives as merely "rewarding lawbreakers."
For more than a decade-hom the mid-1950s until the late 19605- conse'CVatlves S)lstematica\\)1 and. strateg,icall)1 llnl<.ed o-p-positlon to civil
THE REBIRTH OF CASTE
41
rights legislation to calls for law and order, arguing that Martin Luther King Jr.'s philosophy of civil disobedience was a leading cause of crime. Civil rights protests were frequently depicted as criminal rather than political in nature, and federal courts were accused of excessive "lenience" toward lawlessness, thereby contributing to the spread of crime. In the words of then-Vice President Richard Nixon, the increasing crime rate "can be traced directly to the spread of the corrosive doctrine that every citizen possesses an inherent right to decide for himself which laws to obey and when to disobey them." 37 Some segregationists went further, insisting that integration causes crime, citing lower crime rates in Southern states as evidence that segregation was necessary, In the words of Representative John Bell Williams, "This exodus of Negroes from the South, and their influx into the great metropolitan centers of other areas of the Nation, has been accompanied by a wave of crime .... What has civil rights accomplished for these areas? ... Segregation is the only answer as most Americans-not the politicianshave realized for hundreds of years." 38
Unfortunately, at the same time that civil rights were being identified as a threat to law and order, the FBI was reporting fairly dramatic increases in the national crime rate. Despite significant controversy over the accuracy of the statistics, these reports received a great deal of publicity and were offered as further evidence of the breakdown in lawfulness, morality, and social stability." To make matters worse, riots erupted in the summer of 1964 in Harlem and Rochester, followed by a series of uprisings that swept the nation following the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968. The racial imagery associated with the riots gave fuel to the argument that civil rights for blacks led to rampant crime. Cities like Philadelphia and Rochester were described as being victims of their own generosity. Conservatives argued that, having welcomed blacks migrating from the South, these cities "were repaid with crime-ridden slums and black discontent.T'"
Barry Goldwater, in his 1964 presidential campaign, aggressively exploited the riots and fears of black crime, laying the foundation for the "get tough on crime" movement that would emerge years later. In a widely quoted speech, Goldwater warned voters, "Choose the way of [the [ohnson] Administration and you have the way of mobs in the street." 41 Civil rights activists who argued that the uprisings were directly related to widespread police harassment and abuse were dismissed by conservatives out of hand. "If [blacks]
42
THE NEW JIM CROW
conduct themselves in an orderly way, they will not have to worry about police brutality," argued West Virginia Senator Robert Byrd42
Early on, little effort was made to disguise the racial motivations behind the law and order rhetoric and the harsh criminal justice legislation proposed in Congress. The most ardent opponents of civil rights legislation and desegregation were the most active on the emerging crime issue. Well-known segregationist George Wallace, for example, argued that "the same Supreme Court that ordered integration and encouraged civil rights legislation" was now "bending over backwards to help criminals." 43 Three other prominent segregationists-Senators McClellan, Erwin, and Thurmond-led the legislative battle to curb the rights of criminal defendants.?"
As the rules of acceptable discourse changed, however, segregationists distanced themselves from an explicitly racist agenda. They developed instead the racially sanitized rhetoric of "cracking down on crime"-rhetoric that is now used freely by politicians of every stripe. Conservative politicians who embraced this rhetoric purposefully failed to distinguish between the direct action tactics of civil rights activists; violent rebellions in inner cities, and traditional crimes of an economic or violent nature. Instead, as Marc Mauer of the Sentencing Project has noted, "all of these phenomenon were subsumed under the heading of 'crime in the streets.' ?"
After the passage of the Civil Rights Act, the public debate shifted focus from segregation to crime. The battle lines, however, remained largely the same. Positions taken on crime policies typically cohered along lines of racial ideology. Political scientist Vesla Weaver explains: "Votes cast in opposition to open housing, busing, the Civil Rights Act, and other measures time and again showed the same divisions as votes for amendments to crime bills .... Members of Congress who voted against civil rights measures proactively designed crime legislation and actively fought for their proposals. "46
Although law and order rhetoric ultimately failed to prevent the formal dismantling of the Jim Crow system, it proved highly effective in appealing to poor and working-class whites, particularly in the South, who were opposed to integration and frustrated by the Democratic Party's apparent support for the Civil Rights Movement. As Weaver notes, "rather than fading, the segregationists' crime-race argument was reframed, with a slightly different veneer," and eventually became the foundation of the conservative agenda on crime." ? In fact, law and order rhetoric-first employed by
THE REBIRTH OF CASTE
43
segregationists-would eventually contribute to a major realignment of political parties in the United States.
Following the Civil War, party alignment was almost entirely regional. The South was solidly Democratic, embittered by the war, firmly committed to the maintenance of a racial caste system, and extremely hostile to federal intervention on behalf of African Americans. The North was overwhelming Republican and, while Republicans were ambivalent about equality for African Americans, they were far more inclined to adopt and implement racial justice reforms than their Democratic counterparts below the MasonDixon line.
The Great Depression effectuated a sea change in American race rela-
tions and party alignment. The New Deal-spearheaded by the Democratic Party of President Franklin D. Roosevelt-was designed to alleviate the suffering of poor people in the midst of the Depression, and blacks, the poorest of the poor, benefited disproportionately. While New Deal programs were rife with discrimination in their administration, they at least included blacks within the pool of beneficiaries-a development, historian Michael Klarman has noted, that was "sufficient to raise black hopes and expectations after decades of malign neglect from Washington." 48 Poor and working-class whites in both the North and South, no less than African Americans, responded positively to the New Deal, anxious for meaningful economic relief. As a result, the Democratic New Deal coalition evolved into an alliance of urban ethnic groups and the white South that dominated electoral politics from 1932 to the early 1960s.
That dominance came to an abrupt end with the creation and implementation of what has come to be known as the Southern Strategy. The success of law and order rhetoric among working-class whites and the intense resentment of racial reforms, particularly in the South, led conservative Republican analysts to believe that a "new majority" could be created by the Republican Party, one that included the traditional Republican base, the white South, and half the Catholic, blue-collar vote of the big cities.I" Some conservative political strategists admitted that appealing to racial fears and antagonisms was central to this strategy, though it had to be done surreptitiously. H.R. Haldeman, one of Nixon's key advisers, recalls that Nixon himself deliberately pursued a southern, racial strategy: "He [President Nixon] emphasized that you have to face the fact that the whole problem is really the blacks. The key is to devise a system that recognizes this while not ap-
44
THE NEW JIM CROW
pearing to." 50 Similarly, John Ehrlichman, special counsel to the president, explained the Nixon administration's campaign strategy of 1968 in this way:
"We'll go after the racists." >' In Ehrlichrnan's view, "that subliminal appeal to the anti-black voter was always present in Nixon's statements and speeches." 52
Republican strategist Kevin Phillips is often credited for offering the most influential argument in favor of a race-based strategy for Republican political dominance in the South. He argued in The EWlerging Republican Majority, published in 1969, that Nixon's successful presidential election campaign could point the way toward long-term political realignment and the bUilding of a new Republican majority, if Republicans continued to campaign primarily on the basis of racial issues, using coded antiblack rhetoric. 53 He argued that Southern white Democrats had become so angered and alienated by the Democratic Party's support for civil rights reforms, such as desegregation and busing, that those voters could be easily persuaded to switch parties if those racial resentments could be maintained. Warren Weaver, a New Yorl« Times journalist who reviewed the book upon its release, observed that Phillips's strategy largely depended upon creating and maintaining a racially polarized political environment. "Full racial polarization is an essential ingredient of Phillip's political pragmatism. He wants to see a black Democratic party, particularly in the South, because this will drive into the Republican party precisely the kind of anti-Negro whites who will help constitute the emerging majority. This even leads him to support some civil rights efforts." 54 Appealing to the racism and vulnerability of working-class whites had worked to defeat the Populists at the turn of the century, and a growing number of conservatives believed the tactic should be employed again, albeit in a more subtle fashion.
Thus in the late 1960s and early 1970s, two schools of thought were offered to the general public regarding race, poverty, and the social order. Conservatives argued that poverty was caused not by structural factors related to race and class but rather by culture-particularly black culture. This view received support from Daniel Patrick Moynihan's now infamous report on the black family, which attributed black poverty to a black "subculture" and the "tangle of pathology" that characterized it. As described by sociologist Katherine Beckett, 'The (alleged) misbehaviors of the poor were transformed from adaptations to poverty that had the unfortunate effect of reproducing it into character failings that accounted for poverty in the first place." 55 The
THE REBIRTH OF CASTE
45
"social pathologies" of the poor, particularly street crime, illegal drug use, and delinquency, were redefined by conservatives as having their cause in overly generous relief arrangements. Black "welfare cheats" and their dangerous offspring emerged, for the first time, in the political discourse and media imagery.
Liberals, by contrast, insisted that social reforms such as the War on Poverty and civil rights legislation would get at the "root causes" of criminal behavior and stressed the social conditions that predictably generate crime. Lyndon Johnson, for example, argued during his 1964 presidential campaign against Bany Goldwater that antipoverty programs were, in effect, anticrime programs: "There is something mighty wrong when a candidate for the highest office bemoans violence in the streets but votes against the Waf on Poverty, votes against the Civil Rights Act and votes against major educational bills that come before him as a legislator." 56
Competing images of the poor as "deserving" and "undeserving" became central components of the debate. Ultimately, the racialized nature of this imagery became a crucial resource for conservatives, who succeeded in using law and order rhetoric in their effort to mobilize the resentment of white working-class voters, many of whom felt threatened by the sudden progress of African Americans. As explained by Thomas and Mary Edsall in their insightful book Chain Reaction, a disproportionate share of the costs of integration and racial equality had been borne by lower- and lower-middle-class whites, who were suddenly forced to compete on equal terms with blacks for jobs and status and who lived in neighborhoods adjoining black ghettos. Their children-not the children of wealthy whites-attended schools most likely to fall under busing orders. The affluent white liberals who were pressing the legal claims of blacks and other minorities "were often sheltered, in their private lives, and largely immune to the costs of implementing minority claims." 57 This reality made it possible for conservatives to characterize the "liberal Democratic establishment" as being out of touch with ordinary working people-thus resolving one of the central problems facing conservatives: how to persuade pOOl' and working-class voters to join in alliance with corporate interests and the conservative elite. By 1968, 81 percent of those responding to the Gallup Poll agreed with the statement that "law and order has broken down in this country," and the majority blamed "Negroes who start riots" and "Communists.P"
46
THE NEW ]lM CROW
During the presidential election that year, both the Republican candidate, Richard Nixon, and the independent segregationist candidate, George Wal-
lace, made "law and order" a central theme of their campaigns, and together
they collected 57 percent of the vote. 59 Nixon dedicated seventeen speeches solely to the topic of law and order, and one of his television ads explicitly called on voters to reject the lawlessness of civil rights activists and embrace "order" in the United States.v? The advertisement began with frightening music accompanied by flashing images of protestors, bloodied victims, and violence. A deep voice then said:
It is time for an honest look at the problem of order in the United States. Dissent is a necessary ingredient of change, but in a system of government that provides for peaceful change, there is no cause that justifies resort to violence. Let us recognize that the first right of every American is to be free from domestic violence. So I pledge to you, we shall have order in the United States.
At the end of the ad, a caption declared: "This time ... vote like your whole world depended on it ... NIXON." Viewinc his own campaign ad
b b ,
Nixon reportedly remarked with glee that the ad "hits it right on the nose.
It's all about those damn Negro-Puerto Rican groups out there." 61
Race had become, yet again, a powerful wedge, breaking up what had been
a solid liberal coalition based on economic interests of the poor and the working and lower-middle classes. In the 1968 election, race eclipsed class as the organizing principle of American politics, and by 1972, attitudes on racial issues rather than socioeconomic status were the primary determinant of voters' political self-identincation. The late 1960s and early 1970s marked the dramatic erosion in the belief among wor\ting-class whites that the condition
ot the poor, or those who fail to prosper, was the result ot a faulty economic system that needed to be cl1.al\enged. As the £dsa\ls explain, "the l_)itting at whites and blacks at the low end ot the income distribution against each
other intensined the view among man)' wl1.ites that the condition ot lite to\' the disadvantaged-l_)articularl), to'( disadvantaged blacl<:..s-is the resl_)onsibi\ity of those aHlicted, and not the resl_)onsibility ot the larger society." 6"4 Just as race had been used at the turn of the century by Southern elitesto rupture class solidarity at the bottom of the income ladder, race as a national
Tl-1E REBIRTH OF CASTE
47
issue had broken up the Democratic New Deal "bottom-up" coalition-a coalition dependent on substantial support from all voters, white and black, at or below the median income.
The conservative revolution that took root within the Republican Party in the 1960s did not reach its full development until the election of 1980. The decade preceding Ronald Reagan's ascent to the presidency was characterized by political and social crises, as the Civil Rights Movement was promptly followed by intense controversy over the implementation of the equality principle-especially busing and affirmative action-as well as dramatic political clashes over the Vietnam War and Watergate. During this period, conservatives gave lip service to the goal of racial equality but actively resisted desegregation, busing, and civil rights enforcement. They repeatedly raised the issue of welfare, subtly framing it as a contest between hardworking, blue-collar whites and poor blacks who refused to work. The not-so-subtle message to working-class whites was that their tax dollars were going to support special programs for blacks who most certainly did not deserve them. During this period, NL'Xon called for a "war on drugs"-an announcement that proved largely rhetorical as he declared illegal drugs "public enemy number one" without proposing dramatic shifts in drug policy. A backlash against blacks was clearly in force, but no consensus had yet been reached regarding what racial and social order would ultimately emerge from these turbulent times.
In his campaign for the presidency, Reagan mastered the "excision of the language of race from conservative public discourse" and thus built on the success of earlier conservatives who developed a strategy of exploiting racial hostility or resentment for political gain without making explicit reference to race.63 Condemning "welfare queens" and criminal "predators," he rode into office with the strong support of disaffected whites-poor and working-class whites who felt betrayed by the Democratic Party's embrace of the civil rights agenda. As one political insider explained, Reagan's appeal derived primarily from the ideological fervor of the right wing of the Republican Party and "the emotional distress of those who fear or resent the Negro, 'and who expect Reagan somehow to keep him 'in his place' or at least echo the1r own anger and frustration." 64 To great effect, Reagan echoed white frustration in race-neutral terms through implicit racial appeals. His "colort;lind'l rhetoric on crime, welfare, taxes, and states' rights was clearly under-
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stood by white (and black) voters as having a racial dimension, though claims to that effect were impossible to prove. The absence of explicitly racist rhetoric afforded the racial nature of his coded appeals a certain plausible deniability. For example, when Reagan kicked off his presidential campaign at the annual Neshoba County Fair near Philadelphia, Mississippi-the town where three civil rights activists were murdered in 1964-he assured the crowd "I believe in states' rights," and promised to restore to states and local governments the power that properly belonged to them.65 His critics promptly alleged that he was signaling a racial message to his audience, suggesting allegiance with those who resisted desegregation, but Reagan firmly denied it, forcing liberals into a position that would soon become familiararguing that something is racist but finding it impossible to prove in the absence of explicitly racist language.
Crime and welfare were the major themes of Reagan's campaign rhetoric.
According to the Edsalls, one of Reagan's favorite and most-of ten-repeated anecdotes was the story of a Chicago "welfare queen" with "80 names, 30 addresses, 12 Social Security cards," whose "tax-free income alone is over $150,000." 66 The term "welfare queen" became a not-so-subtle code for "lazy, greedy, black ghetto mother." The food stamp program, in turn, was a vehicle to let "some fellow ahead of you buy a T-bone steak," while "you were standing in a checkout line with your package of hamburger." 67 These highly racialized appeals, targeted to poor and working-class whites, were nearly always accompanied by vehement promises to be tougher on crime and to enhance the federal government's role in combating it. Reagan portrayed the criminal as "a staring face-a face that belongs to a frightening reality of our time: the face of the human predator." 68 Reagan's racially coded rhetoric and strategy proved extraordinarily effective, as 22 percent of all Democrats defected from the party to vote for Reagan. The defection rate shot up to 34 percent among those Democrats who believed civil rights leaders were pushing "too fast." ?
Once elected, Reagan's promise to enhance the federal government's role in fighting crime was complicated by the fact that fighting street crime has traditionally been the responsibility of state and local law enforcement. After a period of initial confusion and controversy regarding whether the FBI and the federal government should be involved in street crime, the Justice Department announced its intention to cut in half the number of specialists assigned to identify and prosecute white-collar criminals and to
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shift its attention to street crime, especially drug-law enforcement.I" In October 1982, President Reagan officially announced his administration's War on Drugs. At the time he declared this new war, less than 2 percent of the American public viewed drugs as the most important issue facing the nation." This fact was no deterrent to Reagan, for the drug war from the outset had little to do with public concern about drugs and much to do with public concern about race. By waging a war on drug users and dealers, Reagan made good on his promise to crack down on the racially defined "others"-the undeserving.
Practically overnight the budgets of federal law enforcement agencies soared. Between 1980 and 1984, FBI antidrug funding increased from $8 million to $95 million.P Department of Defense antidrug allocations increased from $33 million in 1981 to $1,042 million in 1991. During that same period, DEA antidrug spending grew from $86 to $1,026 million, and FBI antidrug allocations grew from $38 to $181 million.73 By contrast, funding for agencies responsible for drug treatment, prevention, and education was dramatically reduced. The budget of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, for example, was reduced from $274 million to $57 million from 1981 to 1984, and antidrug funds allocated to the Department of Education were cut from $14 million to $3 million.?"
Determined to ensure that the "new Republican majority" would continue to support the extraordinary expansion of the federal government's law enforcement activities and that Congress would continue to fund it, the Reagan administration launched a media offensive to justify the War on Drugs.75 Central to the media campaign was an effort to sensationalize the emergence of crack cocaine in inner-city neighborhoods-communities devastated by deindustrialization and skyrocketing unemployment. The media frenzy the campaign inspired simply could not have come at a worse time for African Americans.
In the early 1980s, just as the drug war was kicking off, inner-city com-
munities were suffering from economic collapse. The blue-collar factory jobs that had been plentiful in urban areas in the 1950s and 1960s had suddenly disappeared.i" Prior to 1970, inner-city workers with relatively little formal education could find industrial employment close to home. Globalization, however, helped to change that. Manufacturing jobs were transferred by multinational corporations away from American cities to countries that lacked unions, where workers earn a small fraction of what is consid-
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ered a fair wage in the United States. To make matters worse, dramatic technological changes revolutionized the workplace-changes that eliminated many of the jobs that less skilled workers once relied upon for their survival. Highly educated workers benefited from the pace of technological change and the increased use of computer-based technologies, but bluecollar workers often found themselves displaced in the sudden transition from an industrial to a service economy.
The impact of globalization and deindustrialization was felt most strongly in black inner-city communities. As described by William Julius Wilson, in his book When Work Disappears, the overwhelming majority of African Americans in the 1970s lacked college educations and had attended racially segregated, underfunded schools lacking basic resources. Those residing in ghetto communities were particularly ill equipped to adapt to the seismic changes taking place in the U.S. economy; they were left isolated and jobless. One study indicates that as late as 1970, more than 70 percent of all blacks working in metropolitan areas held blue-collar jobs.:" Yet by 1987, when the drug war hit high gear, the industrial employment of black men had plummeted to 28 percent.i"
The new manufacturing jobs that opened during this time period were generally located in the suburbs. The growing spatial mismatch of jobs had a profound impact on African Americans trapped in ghettos. A study of urban black fathers found that only 28 percent had access to an automobile. The rate fell to 18 percent for those living in ghetto areas.79
Women fared somewhat better during this period because the socialservice sector in urban areas-which employs primarily women-was expanding at the same time manufacturing jobs were evaporating. The fraction of black men who moved into so called pink-collar jobs like nursing or clerical work was negligible. so
The decline in legitimate employment opportunities among inner-city residents increased incentives to sell drugs-most notably crack cocaine. Crack is pharmacologically almost identical to powder cocaine, but it has been converted into a form that can be vaporized and inhaled for a faster, more intense (though shorter) high using less of the drug-making it possible to sell small doses at more affordable prices. Crack hit the streets in 1985, a few years after Reagan's drug war Was announced, leading to a spike in violence as drug markets struggled to stabilize, and the anger and frustra-
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tion associated with joblessness boiled. Joblessness and crack swept inner cities precisely at the moment that a fierce backlash against the Civil Rights Movement was manifesting itself through the War on Drugs. The Reagan administration leaped at the opportunity to publicize crack cocaine in innercity communities in order to build support for its new war.
In October 1985, the DEA sent Robert Stutman to serve as director of its New York City office and charged him with the responsibility of shoring up public support for the administration's new war. Stutman developed a strategy for improving relations with the news media and sought to draw journalists' attention to the spread of crack cocaine. As Stutman recounted years later:
The agents would hear me give hundreds of presentations to the media as I attempted to call attention to the drug scourge. I wasted no time in pointing out its [the DE~s] new accomplishments against the drug traffickers .... In order to convince Washington, I needed to make it [drugs] a national issue and quicldy. I began a lobbying effort and I used the media. The media were only too willing to cooperate, because as far the New York media was concerned, crack was the hottest combat reporting StOlY to come along since the end of the Vietnam War.81
The strategy bore fruit. In June 1986, Newsweek declared crack to be the biggest StOlY since Vietnam/Watergate, and in August of that year, Time magazine termed crack "the issue of the year." Thousands of stories about the crack crisis flooded the airwaves and newsstands, and the stories had a clear racial sub text. The articles typically featured black "crack whores," "crack babies," and "gangbangers," reinforcing already prevalent racial stereotypes of black women as irresponsible, selfish "welfare queens," and black men as "predators"-part of an inferior and criminal subculture.V When two popular sports figures, Len Bias and Don Rogers, died of cocaine overdoses in June 1986, the media erroneously reported their deaths as caused by crack, contributing to the media hrestorm and groundswell of political activity and public concern relating to the new "demon drug," crack cocaine. The bonanza continued into 1989, as the media continued to disseminate claims that crack was an "epidemic," a "plague," "instantly addictive," and extraordinarily dangerous-claims that have now been proven
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false or highly misleading. Between October 1988 and October 1989, the Washington Post alone ran 1,565 stories about the "drug scourge." Richard Harwood, the Post's ombudsmen, eventually admitted the paper had lost "a proper sense of perspective" due to such a "hyperbole epidemic." He said that "politicians are doing a number on people's heads." 83 Sociologists Craig Reinarman and Harry Levine later made a similar point: "Crack was a godsend to the Right. ... It could not have appeared at a more politically opportune moment.f'"
In September 1986, with the media frenzy at full throttle, the House passed legislation that allocated $2 billion to the antidrug crusade, required the participation of the military in narcotics control efforts, allowed the death penalty for some drug-related crimes, and authorized the admission of some illegally obtained evidence in drug trials. Later that month, the Senate proposed even tougher antidrug legislation, and shortly thereafter, the president signed the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986 into law. Among other harsh penalties, the legislation included mandatory minimum sentences for the distribution of cocaine, including far more severe punishment for distribution of crack-associated with blacks-than powder cocaine, associated with whites.
Few criticisms of the legislation could be heard en route to enactment.
One senator insisted that crack had become a scapegoat distracting the public's attention from the true causes of our social ills, arguing: "If we blame crime on crack, our politicians are off the hook. Forgotten are the failed schools, the malign welfare programs, the desolate neighborhoods, the wasted years. Only crack is to blame. One is tempted to think that if crack did not exist, someone somewhere would have received a Federal grant to develop it." S5 Critical voices, however, were lonely ones.
Congress revisited drug policy in 1988. The resulting legislation was once again extraordinarily punitive, this time extending far beyond traditional criminal punishments and including new "civil penalties" for drug offenders. The new Anti- Drug Abuse Act authorized public housing authorities to evict any tenant who allows any form of drug-related criminal activity to occur on or near public housing premises and eliminated many federal benefits, including student loans, for anyone convicted of a drug offense. The act also expanded use of the death penalty for serious drug-related offenses and imposed new mandatory minimums for drug offenses, including a five-year
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mandatory minimum for simple possession of cocaine base-with no evidence of intent to sell. Remarkably, the penalty would apply to first-time offenders. The severity of this punishment was unprecedented in the federal system. Until 1988, one year of imprisonment had been the maximum for possession of any amount of any drug. Members of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) were mixed in their assessment of the new legislation-some believing the harsh penalties were necessary, others convinced that the laws were biased and harmful to African Americans. Ultimately the legislation passed by an overwhelming margin-346 to 11. Six of the negative votes came from the CBC86
The War on Drugs proved popular among key white voters, particularly whites who remained resentful of black progress, civil rights enforcement, and affirmative action. Beginning in the 1970s, researchers found that racial attitudes-not crime rates or likelihood of victimization-are an important determinant of white support for "get tough on crime" and antiwelfare measures.S ? Among whites, those expressing the highest degree of concern about crime also tend to oppose racial reform, and their punitive attitudes toward crime are largely unrelated to their likelihood of victimization.f'' Whites, on average, are more punitive than blacks, despite the fact that blacks are far more likely to be victims of crime. Rural whites are often the most punitive, even though they are least likely to be crime victims.t" The War on Drugs, cloaked in race-neutral language, offered whites opposed to racial reform a unique opportunity to express their hostility toward blacks and black progress, without being exposed to the charge of racism.
Reagan's successor, President George Bush Sr., did not hesitate to employ implicit racial appeals, having learned from the success of other conservative politicians that subtle negative references to race could mobilize poor and working-class whites who once were loyal to the Democratic Party. Bush's most famous racial appeal, the Willie Horton ad, featured a dark-skinned black man, a convicted murderer who escaped while on a work furlough and then raped and murdered a white woman in her home. The ad blamed Bush's opponent, Massachusetts governor Michael Dukakis, for the death of the white woman, because he approved the furlough program. For months, the ad played repeatedly on network news stations and was the subject of incessant political commentary. Though controversial, the ad was stunningly effective; it destroyed Dukakis's chances of ever becoming president.
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Once in the Oval Office, Bush stayed on message, opposing affirmative action and aggressive civil rights enforcement, and embracing the drug war with great enthusiasm. In August 1989, President Bush characterized drug use as "the most pressing problem facing the nation.Y? Shortly thereafter, a New York Times/CBS News Poll reported that 64 percent of those polledthe highest percentage ever recorded-now thought that drugs were the most significant problem in the United States." ! This surge of public concern did not correspond to a dramatic shift in illegal drug activity, but instead was the product of a carefully orchestrated political campaign. The level of public concern about crime and drugs was only weakly correlated with actual crime rates, but highly correlated with political initiatives, campaigns, and partisan appeals.92
The shift to a general attitude of "toughness" toward problems associated with communities of color began in the 1960s, when the gains and goals of the Civil Rights Movement began to require real sacrifices on the part of white Americans, and conservative politicians found they could mobilize white racial resentment by vowing to crack down on crime. By the late 1980s, however, not only conservatives played leading roles in the get-tough movement, spouting the rhetoric once associated only with segregationists. Democratic politicians and policy makers were now attempting to wrest control of the crime and drug issues from Republicans by advocating stricter anticrime and antidrug laws-all in an effort to win back the so-called "swing voters" who were defecting to the Republican Party. Somewhat ironically, these "new Democrats" were joined by virulent racists, most notably the Ku Klux Klan, which announced in 1990 that it intended to "join the battle against illegal drugs" by becoming the "eyes and ears of the police." 93 Progressives concerned about racial justice in this period were mostly silent about the War on Drugs, preferring to channel their energy toward defense of affirmative action and other perceived gains of the Civil Rights Movement.
In the early 1990s, resistance to the emergence of a new system of racialized social control collapsed across the political spectrum. A century earlier, a similar political dynamic had resulted in the birth of Jim Crow. In the 1890s, Populists buckled under the political pressure created by the Redeemers, who had successfully appealed to poor and working-class whites by proposing overtly racist and increasingly absurd Jim Crow laws. Now, a new racial caste system-mass incarceration-was taking hold, as politi-
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cians of every stripe competed with each other to win the votes of poor and working-class whites, whose economic status was precarious, at best, and who felt threatened by racial reforms. As had happened before, former allies of African Americans-as much as conservatives-adopted a political strategy that required them to prove how "tough" they could be on "them," the dark-skinned pariahs.
The results were immediate. As law enforcement budgets exploded, so did
prison and jail populations. In 1991, the Sentencing Project reported that the number of people behind bars in the United States was unprecedented in world history, and that one fourth of young African American men were now under the control of the criminal justice system. Despite the jaw-dropping impact of the "get tough" movement on the African American community, neither the Democrats nor the Republicans revealed any inclination to slow the pace of incarceration.
To the contrary, in 1992, presidential candidate Bill Clinton vowed that he would never permit any Republican to be perceived as tougher on crime than he. True to his word, just weeks before the critical New Hampshire primary, Clinton chose to fly home to Arkansas to oversee the execution of Ricky Ray Rector, a mentally impaired black man who had so little conception of what was about to happen to him that he asked for the dessert from his last meal to be saved for him until the morning. After the execution, Clinton remarked, "I can be nicked a lot, but no one can say I'm soft on crime." 94
Once elected, Clinton endorsed the idea of a federal "three strikes and you're out" law, which he advocated in his 1994 State of the Union address to enthusiastic applause on both sides of the aisle. The $30 billion crime bill sent to President Clinton in August 1994 was hailed as a victory for the Democrats, who "were able to wrest the crime issue from the Republicans and make it their own." 95 The bill created dozens of new federal capital crimes, mandated life sentences for some three-time offenders, and authorized more than $16 billion for state prison grants and expansion of state and local police forces. Far from resisting the emergence of the new caste system, Clinton escalated the drug war beyond what conservatives had imagined possible a decade earlier. As the Justice Policy Institute has observed, "the Clinton Administration's 'tough on crime' policies resulted in the largest increases in federal and state prison inmates of any president in American history." 96
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Clinton eventually moved beyond crime and capitulated to the conservative racial agenda on welfare. This move, like his "get tough" rhetoric and policies, was part of a grand strategy articulated by the "new Democrats" to appeal to the elusive white swing voters. In so doing, Clinton-more than any other president-created the current racial undercaste. He signed the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act, which "ended welfare as we know it," and replaced it with a block grant to states called Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF). TANF imposed a five-year lifetime limit on welfare assistance, as well as a permanent, lifetime ban on eligibility for welfare and food stamps for anyone convicted of a felony drug offense-including simple possession of marijuana.
Clinton did not stop there. Determined to prove how "tough" he could be on "them," Clinton also made it easier for federally-assisted public housing projects to exclude anyone with a criminal history-an extraordinarily harsh step in the midst of a drug war aimed at racial and ethnic minorities. In his announcement of the "One Strike and You're Out" Initiative, Clinton explained: "From now on, the rule for residents who commit crime and peddle drugs should be one strike and you're out." 97 The new rule promised to be "the toughest admission and eviction policy that HUD has implemented." 98 Thus, for countless poor people, particularly racial minorities targeted by the drug war, public housing was no longer available, leaving many of them homeless-locked out not only of mainstream society, but their own homes.
The law and order perspective, first introduced during the peak of the Civil Rights Movement by rabid segregationists, had become nearly hegemonic two decades later. By the mid-1990s, no serious alternatives to the War on Drugs and "get tough" movement were being entertained in mainstream political discourse. Once again, in response to a major disruption in the prevailing racial order-this time the civil rights gains of the 1960s-a new system of racialized social control was created by exploiting the vulnerabilities and racial resentments of poor and working-class whites. More than 2 million people found themselves behind bars at the turn of the twenty-first century, and millions more were relegated to the margins of mainstream society, banished to a political and social space not unlike Jim Crow, where discrimination in employment, housing, and access to education was perfectly legal, and where they could be denied the right to vote. The system functioned relatively automatically, and the prevailing system of racial meanings, identi-
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ties, and ideologies already seemed natural. Ninety percent of those admitted to prison for drug offenses in many states were black or Latino, yet the mass incarceration of communities of color was explained in race-neutral terms, an adaptation to the needs and demands of the current political cli-
mate. The New Jim Crow was born.
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The last sentence of this paragraph specifically stood out to me, as I considered the author’s important distinction the Jarvious Cotton “has been labeled a felon.” In mainstream media, discourse, and just general conversations, those who have been convicted of a crime are merely regarded as felons and reduced to that identity, stripped of any other aspect of their humanity. While a small distinction, I believe that it is important, as Anderson specifically chose her diction as commentary on the fact that Jarvious (and this in his situation) are not a “felon” in the permanent and dehumanizing sense of the word, they are merely labeled that way. Anderson’s wording grants him his full humanity outside of his incrimination.
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I agree with what you’ve said, but what I found the most intriguing part of this opening paragraph is that it gives us the ability to watch the timeline of the black man in history and today. It shows the development of the struggle and the way in which despite these changes they are all facing the same problem – the inability to vote. This sets up his book to address the idea that black men that have been incarcerated are experiencing the “new Jim Crow”.
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I agree with both Julia and Joelle’s comments regarding the last sentence of the opening paragraph. The author is both able to introduce what she will be discussing in the following pages and is able to keep Jarvious a human character in the eyes of the readers. I also think it is interesting to note that before this final sentence, Alexander points out that Jarvious’ father was unable to vote due to “poll taxes” and “literacy tests.” I think it is important to recognize that both money and lack of education are still consistent themes in the Wire and for the black community in the 21st century.
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I thought your comment brings up an interesting point in questioning why the label of someone being a felon is permanent and continues to follow them and define them for the rest of their lives, even when they have done their time. I think using the word “dehumanizing” adequately captures the situation felons are thrown into in society once they leave prison.
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The word choice used by Alexander and your comment both reminded me of the obvious case of Cutty and his identity while being characterized as a felon. Prof Williams brought it up previously in class, but the scene in which Cutty declines the voter’s ballot and the distributor knows its due to his status as a felon particularly stands out in this regard. And additionally, The Wire’s depiction of his arc serves to show his full humanity outside of his incrimination, to borrow your phrase.
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This sentence was thought-provoking. Not only does America society think of black men as felons, but the system the government through policies, laws, and prisons has made black men think they are felons or are bound to be one in the future. Watching the documentary, “13th,” it stated that 1 in 3 black males will be incarcerated in their lifetime. This had me thinking of when Avon Barksdale was arguing with Stringer Bell in which Avon said to Stringer that “you bleed green, and I bleed red.” This implied to me that the street life is all that he knows and he is ok with being labeled a felon, because he thinks it is normal. The system of incarceration and oppression in America has caused Avon to think this way.
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As stated by Joelle, I believe that the negative labels surrounding being a felon is related to the stigma that has been placed upon them in society to inhibit them from receiving jobs and maintaining their human rights. Voting is one of the most basic rights enacted onto citizens of the United States and it is an opportunity for individuals to make changes within their community. However, with a limitation on voting based on prior prison sentences, it shows the damage that the label itself can cause on an individual and their ability to properly readjust in the community.
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I think this line is powerful, because many times to disregard and dismiss the negative impact of racism and structure of racism people claim to be “color blind” when that may just be the most ignorant and racist thing you could say. I’ve had professors claim to be color blind. As humans we are designed to judge and to parallel and compare ourselves with others. “Color” has been ingrained in how we view other Americans, so it’s great that Alexander calls attention to this contradiction.
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Because people continue to be punished after prison in the sense that they are given far fewer opportunities in society, it brings about the idea that prison does not succeed in preventing crime. Since people are not treated equally afterwards, they have fewer options for pursuits such as finding employment, and when they are unfairly discriminated against it sets them up for failure. This sentence caused me to think that influencing people to change their ways after being arrested or even preventing crime constructively in the future are not priorities in our prison system.
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This comment reminds of me of Cutty from the Wire and his life after prison. He struggles with getting work for so long that he resorts to creating his own business within the boxing gym. Cutty tries to escape the Corner but gets roped into a mission with Slim Charles when he has no other way to get money. Cutty, like you said in your comment, was set up for failure when he was spat out of jail and expected to deal with life on his own. Luckily Cutty is an exception in some ways that he was able to leave ‘the game’ and find success.
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Alexander urges us to “think of the criminal justice system…not as an independent system but rather as a gateway into a much larger system of racial stigmatization and permanent marginalization” (12). I think the point you bring up here connects well with this theme of Alexander’s work. Mass incarceration is detrimentally problematic because it leads to the criminalization of individuals, in her work black men. This leads to further discrimination in so many areas of life that work to isolate and keep these men separate from the rest of society. So I think you are right in stating that our current prison system is not functioning in a way that can make any sort of lasting difference in preventing crime or creating lasting change.
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In my criminology course that I took last semester, we talked a lot about the challenges of individuals who were released from prison and could not adjust to the new limitations that existed for them in their society. These limitations created barriers for ex-felons and often led to them returning to prison soon after because they were unable to successfully adjust to life outside of prison. This is why it is important that prisons enact programs in the prison system because it allows ex-felons to have a smoother transition back into society and allows them to resume their normal lives through the availability of jobs and possibly housing.
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This section reminds me of the first episode of the podcast Revisionist History entitled “The Lady Vanishes.” The podcast describes the life of artist Elizabeth Thompson who painted “Roll Call,” one of the first paintings by a woman to perform well upon review by the British Royal Academy. At the time, people hailed the favorable review as a ground breaking and progressive move by the Academy — women were now equal to men! However, the podcast goes on to explain that after “Roll Call” a woman’s painting would not receive that level of favorable criticism by the Academy for a number of decades. In short, the podcast describes the phenomena of moral licensing and the idea that, for example, because we have a black president or voted for one that we are somehow not racist or live in a racist society. This phenomenon of moral licensing leads to regressive political views (and some think caused Hilary’s loss in 2016 — “well, we already had a black president so it is not like we should vote for Hilary just because she’s a woman”). So, this common argument about Obama’s election seems reflective of larger forces that have gone about marginalizing minority or disenfranchised groups for centuries. As it relates to this passage, the cognitive dissonance between the elation felt by Obama’s election and the apathy for the unnamed black man seems emblematic of this phenomenon of moral licensing.
Source: http://revisionisthistory.com/episodes/01-the-lady-vanishes
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Alexander talks about how during the Reconstruction era former slaves were arrested and sent to prison for minor crimes and forced to work off their debt in convict leasing. This convict leasing system was just another form of slavery. Poverty and lack of access to quality education inhibit many members of the community from living their lives. Stuck with things like debt, collection fees, child support, and unfair drug treatment poor communities are subjected to high incarceration rates. Incarcerated for issues such as failure to pay collection fees is similar to former slaves being sent to convict leasing systems, continuing a legacy of slavery just as Alexander says.
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This comment made me think about how there are many forms of slavery. It is sadly true that while someone may not be physically confined as we often imagine, using things like debt to control the actions of other people is certainly a form of slavery.
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Ironically, when this country was built the Founding Fathers expressly did NOT want any form of debtors’ prison because of examples like this. Even from the early days of this country, the Founding Fathers realized that punishing the poor with debt only leads to a cycle of poverty, crime, and poor education.
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Your comment on those in debt and the unfair targeting of poor communities made me think about how expensive it is for our country to run the prison system and keep people in jail for long periods of time. The poorest people most often wind up being the victims of the flaws in our prison system while the government spends so much money to support it.
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I found this paragraph especially interesting in light of this entire work. For him, even working with the ACLU and other civil rights groups, it took 10 years for him to realize the extent and potency of racial bias in this country. And through this realization, the entire piece reconfigures how we perceive great achievement in civil rights as long overdue recompense.
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I agree with you because I found this piece to be striking because of how many real problems it brings to light that I had not considered before. For example, by comparing today’s issues to the “new Jim Crow” it forces the readers to consider so many of the laws and social barriers that black men and women face today. By comparing the inability to vote with a grandfather limited by the KKK and a freed man from jail limited by his forced identity of a felon. This example and many others within the piece directly show how today’s laws, in some ways, are just as limiting as they were before.
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I agree with your points and think that this paragraph also brings to light that many people have the luxury of only having to deal with this issue from a distance and do not experience it personally. With such a complex and deeply rooted problem, its difficult to answer the question of where to start in fixing it or what exactly needs to be done.
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Yes, as citizens we have so many layers to uncover within our society and lots of these layers are wanted to stay hidden. Its our job to analyze our society’s perceived norms and ask if these things are right and empowering people to do good. If not, then we must question and try to bring solutions to the problem.
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I totally agree with your point. Many times lawyers do fight for the rights of the people, but corruption is prevalent within the justice system. It makes me question why these famous women are in big legal trouble for buying their daughters way into school, when we see that all the systems of America can be bought out by esteem and money. We even heard Prof.Williams speak about how he had people helping coach his son into better schools, which is also a privilege that low income and minority groups sometimes don’t have. We live in a world where many people are trying to strive and survive regardless of who is suffering and struggling in the oppressive environment that is America. So I do believe it is up to us to at the very least question these structures and try to search for solutions, or at the very least call attention to these inequities.
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I would like to say that a black man being president was a good thing for this country, but unfortunately, I think it made the racists louder, bigoted, and cruel. While Obama certainly made social and political strides for equality, he was quieted when he was being “overly black” or “giving black people more power than the white man.” Unfortunately, I think that this is something that peeved the radical conservatives were not okay with. Hence, the people who did not have as much of a voice, or a voice that didn’t have a platform, elected a racist and sexist president. The president, now, hounds people for being of a different race or breed than he and he just reversed all of Obama’s post-racial hopes.
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I agree with you that Obama presidency should’ve been a good thing, but also led to a revival of the Republican Party. In fact, I’ve read in news articles before that Obama’s election really allowed Republicans to rebuild their political power, both in national and state legislatures. I also agree that he had to tread a careful line between pushing social reform and not being “overly black”. Meanwhile Trump can be as crazy and inflammatory as he wants because he’s protected by his whiteness. On the bright side at least it’s brought all these issues of racism and sexism to the forefront, perhaps we’ll be able to finally put them to rest, but after reading this article I kind of doubt that.
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I definitely agree with both of what you had to say. I think the fact that we had a black president may have silenced the racists for a couple of years but it clearly did not fix the racial issues in America. Obama could barely get anything done without push back from Senate or the House. While he was president we can see that the racism in America began boiling to a new point that we haven’t witnessed since the Civil Rights Movement. We can see the outcome with the vote of the radical republican Trump into office. Now that these issues are in the forefront America is left in a subdued level of distress as we wonder what is to come next and how someone so erratic and unpredictable could be running our country. It’s absolutely FACTS that Obama wouldn’t last a day doing or saying any of the ignorant things that Trump has said and done while in office. We also see the racism in femininity when we look at how the first ladies are vastly different but how Michelle was painted as masculine and negatively in the white media while Melania seems to get nothing but sympathy for being with the man she chose to mary, to further her careers. I can say honestly that I don’t think any of us signed up for this, and even those who did vote for him didn’t and still don’t even know what they have done our country. It is funny though, that now we can make a joke of the systems in America even the presidential executive systems are clearly flawed and it makes America and its history out to be a joke in my opinion, which is nearing the truth.
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Alexander’s point, “I understand well the many ways in which racial stereotyping can permeate subjective decision-making process at all levels of organizations,” reminded me of the decision making that the neighborhood security Watch, Zimmerman, made when shooting 17 year-old Trayvon Martin walking innocently through a neighborhood. Instead of seeing that Trayvon was innocently walking with no form of weapons on him back to his father, he immediately assumed the worse of him due to his race and shot him in supposed “self defense.” This shooting brought light to the issue in America with an innocent killing due to black stereotypes, but here Alexander brings up the idea that this racial stereotyping is influencing other institutions as well. Her point makes me wonder: What other examples do we see in the Wire or in the institutions of our society that allow racial stereotypes to influence decision-making?
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This is very true. I think if we look at all aspects of life including pay wage, job opportunity, certain “urbanized” areas of housing, police brutality, and even institutions of higher learning we still see stereotyping and discrimination. You can find this in all aspects of life, although it is harder to witness personally and understand if you are not a minority. We see in higher education that the “Canon” of what great film, literature, art should be is framed by white men who were allowed access and privilege to education and these institutions from the beginning.
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I commented on this earlier for paragraph 15, but I think drawing the connection between Cutty from the Wire and this paragraph is very important. The post-jail experience is shown in The Wire through this character and Simon shows how mainstream society rejects someone like Cutty. Cutty turns away from the option to get a GED because of the poor connotations he has with education and after that cannot find employment. Despite wanting to leave ‘the game’ he does one more job with Slim Charles because he cannot find any other way to make money. This shows that he is treated as a second-class citizen because he is denied of so many rights. He can’t find where he fits in and therefore tries to make his own job. Like Alexander explains, without the ability to enter the mainstream economy it is only inevitable they will be not as successful as the white man.
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Cutty is an excellent example for how someone can be drawn back into crime after leaving prison. While he was not eager to reconnect with Avon, he was promised the riches and high social status that the drug game brings. More importantly, this was the only way for Cutty to quickly attain a high social and economic status given his circumstances, so it is not surprising that he took this opportunity. I also think the scene where he meets with city officials in order to legally open his gym portrays another struggle that those trying to get out of a criminal life face. He is overwhelmed and oblivious to the formalities that are required to live a fully legal life. He would not have been able to do it without the help of some individuals like the Preacher and Odell Wadkins who were more familiar with the rules of the city.
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To add onto the previous comment, it is clear that the system of oppression that the prison system brings down upon its convicted criminals shows that there is little to no way to get into the mainstream economy. Not only does Cutty have to work another job with Slim Charles to earn money, but when he tries to open up his gym, the equipment and furnishings within it are given by Avon Barksdale, which shows that his gym and himself are still and will be always apart of the drug trade. This shows how difficult it is to get out of the “The Game.”
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One of the most surprising aspects of the Wire was learning about how the drug leaders, the characters that control the money and their “employees”, those like Avon Barksdale and Stringer Bell, are removed from dealing directly with any of the drugs, as well as doing many of their drugs (with a few exceptions). I did not understand at first why this would be, but as I learned more about the law enforcement and the policies that restrict those in legal trouble, this policy makes more sense. As Alexander says, those in legal trouble “…are confined to the margins of mainstream society and denied access to the mainstream economy,” it is clear that once denied access from important aspects of life, characters like Stringer Bell and Avon Barksdale would be unable to hold their positions of authority in the drug trade. So, it is clear that these characters use inferior characters, like the young boys in the Pit to handle the drugs directly, so if they were caught and thrown in jail, it wouldn’t be the leaders who have to deal with the repercussions when released.
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I find the last part of this sentence to be particularly important. While I do not have the statistics on the distribution of those involved in the drug trade (which would be difficult to calculate with its illegality), this is an important reminder. According to the Hamilton project, white individuals and black individuals use and sell drugs at similar rates. Here is the link to the website if you’re interested in learning more: http://www.hamiltonproject.org/charts/rates_of_drug_use_and_sales_by_race_rates_of_drug_related_criminal_justice
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It is disheartening that we live in a country where there is outright hatred against minority groups that the government commits genocide on minorities to suppress them. When reading the rhetoric of Alexander, she is too nice and forgiving in her tone. Alexander adopts words like “odd coincidence” and “bold accusation” when describing this war. The war on drugs is a legal and immoral tactic by the government to control aspects outside of the government’s reach, and this is an unfair and unjust process. Alexander is too acceptant because nearly 80% of people in federal prison and 60% of people in state prison for drug offenses are black or Latino.
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I like this line because it is very true. The way the press and government demonized “drugs” to cover their racism gets more and more obvious as we educate ourselves and learn from the past. I think that Reagan absolutely planned this policy as propaganda and wanted to start an all out divide in the country. The CIA has allegedly murdered threats to “america” such as the leaders of the Black Panther Party, Bob Marley, and many other influential black figures with strong voices and large platforms. I use the term conspiracy lightly because I believe there are a lot of truths in these conspiracies. If you’re reading this please look up the origin and who may have coined the term “conspiracy theory” and form an opinion on your own. You’re very ignorant if you believe everything in the media and that the government tells you…
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I found this paragraph to be one of the most striking of the entire piece. Larger percentage of our black population than South Africa at the height of apartheid? That is absolutely ridiculous. That fact alone should convince all naysayers of Alexander’s argument. In reading this in the context of so many of our other readings for this class, particularly the Goffman piece from last week, it is difficult not to simply see certain heavily policed areas as holding pins; areas where the police know they can find someone to arrest if need be. I do not want to take away the vibrancy and depth of many of these neighborhoods in that description, but law enforcement is doing just that. The descriptions in Goffman of the boys running and hiding from the police, but never really being able to leave the neighborhood; in the Wire, the discussions of “getting out”, but no one ever really leaves Baltimore itself. The systems of inequality in the criminal justice system work hand in hand with those in housing and urban development.
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This paragraph reminded me of our class discussion of cocaine and alcohol in the Moskos reading. By noting the consistency of drug use across racial lines, Alexander contrasts the differences in incarceration rates even more sharply. The statistics in this paragraph versus the realities of mass incarceration and police relations further underscore the ways in which white youths feel protected and insulated from legal consequences. Alexander’s observation about drug use among all races also made me consider the portrayal of drug users and dealers on The Wire through a different lens; while including some white dealers and users, Baltimore’s drug-related institutions on the show are predominantly black. Maybe that reflects the racial composition of the city or the specific institutions that the show wanted to tackle?
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Wilson’s idea of structural factors, from last week’s readings, seems to parallel or at the very least augment Alexander’s assessment of legalized discrimination regarding black males. Personally, it’s quite a sobering thought that the particular legalized discrimination a black male faces after being classified as a felon compounds the weight of the facilitating facets working to hold the same individual, who is already positioned at the very bottom of the occupational hierarchy according to Wilson, down.
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The idea of prisons creating crime was particularly powerful to me. Those who make it out of prison are likely to return to the circumstances that pushed them into crime in the first place, only worse because they have been so degraded by the prison system and branded to be unfit for hire that there are even fewer opportunities as before. For instance, those imprisoned for selling drugs who did so because of a lack of job opportunities, are going to have an even harder time finding a job after serving jail time. The low quality of life for criminals after serving jail time makes the threat of serving additional jail time less threatening. There needs to be a tangible means for former criminals to live a positive life after prison or there is no incentive to give up a life of crime.
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There is also the belief that prisoners learn how to be better criminals in prison. I don’t know how true that actually is but I remember hearing it before. Regardless focusing on punishment instead of legitimate reform seems like a waste of time to me. Additionally, I think you’re right that having fewer options once you’re labelled a felon likely does lead to more crime.
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Alexander argues that the position of the freedmen in the 19th century is not much different from that of felons freed from prison today. Prisons are not helping prevent crime and they make situations worse for felons freed from prison. Ex-offenders often return to prison and while they are out they are seen as second class citizens. They face intense stigma when they are released from jail and and face many impediments to entering back into society.
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I agree with both your and Alexander’s point of prisons lack of improvement and instead cause more issues than solutions. In past readings they pointed to the lack of improvement from rehabilitation facilities, which led to prisons as the now forefront option. What should the government have in place if both prisons and rehabilitation facilities both don’t prevent crime or help lower the rates? Is it purely increasing the quality of these programs or should they work to build new programs from scratch?
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I agree with Kaitlin’s commentary about the parallel between the freedmen of the 19th century and felons freed from prison today. I was also intrigued about Lacy’s question on how the government should respond to the problem of prisons and rehab facilities failing to lower the crime rates by failing to support ex-convicts. I wonder if the government could support a program that would give released prisoners choices for housing, employment, and education opportunities despite their restrictions. In addition, I wonder if there is a way in which the government can offer extensive programs for released prisoners so that they can earn their right to vote back.
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I’m not sure I’d support a society without any prisons. Violent crimes, especially murder, might necessitate locking someone up. I do think drug offences could be handled without need for incarceration and could take many forms. We could legalize it nationwide or on smaller scales in specific districts like Hamsterdam in The Wire. Other crimes that don’t hurt people could also be settled without prison time. Theft should carry a fine or some other form of renumeration, but at the same time whatever socio-economic circumstance that drove the person to theft needs to be addressed. Basically, as long as no one gets hurt intentionally I think prison time can/should be avoided. Violent crimes are a bit trickier, especially if they’re repeat offenders, but there might be a way to handle the cases fairly without locking people up.
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I do agree with your point that society may not want to completely eliminate prisons. The focus thus far in Alexander’s piece has been on drug-related crime and punishment and your suggested solutions make sense. Violent and fatal crimes are very serious and yes, might necessitate the isolation of the perpetrator. However, I believe there should be extensive systems of support in any of the institutions that lock up individuals. Some murders occur by accident, some murderers feel no remorse. But many murderers have a lifetime to reflect on their crimes and may regret their actions. Some murders occur because of the mindset and environment individuals are born with and into. If we accept that humans have the capacity and willingness to change be it with drugs (ie getting “clean”), I think this can be applied to a certain extent even to murderers (emphasis on to a certain extent).
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Since this book’s release, I have seen the conversation around racial inequality shift dramatically from affirmative action to examining the structural inequalities in our criminal justice system. For example, the 2016 presidential primary on the Democratic side focused on this issue of the prison-industrial complex, especially given Secretary Clinton’s relationship to and support for her husband’s harsh punishments for minor drug offenders in the 1990s. Similarly, the film 13th which became immensely popular built on ideas raised in this book. When we discuss the impact of media such as this book or The Wire, we have to look at it not only as a singular product but in context of the broader conversation and how they shift the way we talk about real world issues.
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I really liked how Alexander drew attention to the media’s role in dominating the racial justice discourse. This is not something I had previously considered when thinking about what matters of racial justice are discussed and what issues the nation focuses on. This makes me wonder how the mainstream media of the 21st Century, comprised of polarized news sources, could be exacerbating this issue. If people can choose specific news channels and websites, might also influence what matters of race relations are addressed and to which audiences.
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I also agree that the conversation about racial inequality have evolved into more structured discussion about the institutions that perpetuate these problems, and I think that is one of the things that makes The Wire so memorable and remarkable. Its insistent view of institutions in Baltimore, from the gangs to the cops to the stevedores, is a comprehensive and complicated view of society in general, and really captures how those institutions operate before anyone was talking about that.
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Of course, media influence is a double-edged sword. Media can bring attention to issues to a wide audience, but it can also instill complacency. Media allow people unaffected by an issue to understand it, which spreads awareness but does not necessarily instill change. After watching 13th or reading this book, some may be motivated to become activists for this issue but most will be content merely understanding it. I don’t think there is a solution to this problem, but it can be combated by passionate individuals and particularly compelling media texts.
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I agree with you that the media can have a large impact. I think it is important to note how once we shift the way we talk about real world issues it is our duty as citizens to take action. It is simply not enough to just talk about and raise awareness for structural inequalities.
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I think that affirmative action is the focus of so many civil rights groups because its goals are so easily identified, quantified and achieved. Heartfelt stories of inner city kids overcoming insurmountable obstacles and getting into Harvard or diversity statistics at top universities are uplifting and promising, and allow Americans (even those working to fight racism) to ignore the more systemic, institutionalized forms of racism imbedded in our society. Because it would require an entire overhaul of our political system, judicial system, laws and fundamental social structure to mitigate the racial caste system, and because so many of the issues are not easily quantifiable, even civil rights activists are attracted to instead protecting affirmative action, which has a fairly insignificant impact (compared to other changes that could be made), but easily achievable goals. The strong focus on affirmative action highlights the concept of ignorance is bliss, as focusing on affirmative action allows activists and policymakers to suggest that America is overcoming racism without actually having to make major changes.
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You bring up a good point, Anna. Affirmative action is a relatively simple issue to comprehend. While people can debate how it should be treated, the answer can be summarized in simple statistics. While mass incarceration is clearly not effective, civil rights groups are probably less likely to address the issue of crime because making a proposition for an effective way to handle it is very difficult.
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After reading this section regarding criminal justice reform, as well as analyzing the drug bust that imprisoned “15 percent of the black population of the town”. With the large amount of individuals arrested in the same day, it is easy to assume that the black community is targeted and often caught because they are being watched/seen. This, however, is an invasion of the Civil Rights policies because black individuals are slowly losing their human rights as well based on the tone of their skin. This makes me wonder whether or not minority individuals, such as black people, hispanic people, etc. are more likely to be targeted by the police even though the have not provided suspicion to the police officer. How does this constant surveillance of black individuals lower their ability to succeed in America?
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Reading this sentence reminded me of some of the themes that came up in the Netflix documentary “13th.” Specifically, many of the experts who were featured discussed how once people go away to prison, people in the outside world simply forget about them— as if they almost cease to exist in our world. I remember thinking about how shocking and true that seemed, that once people go to prison they essentially have no voice, power, and are cut off from society. I think this is one of the causes for the lack of attention and urgency surrounding the criminal justice system.
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This particular paragraph was eye-opening and I felt like it accurately described the misconceptions present in our nation today. Alexander mentions how the “popular narrative” that emphasizes the death of slavery and Jim Crow and the “triumph over race” as misguided. I completely agree that the popular narratives that we accept lead us to overlook many instances institutional disadvantage and prejudice. Another popular narrative in our nation today seems to be “education as an engine of upward mobility.” This idea that working hard in school, getting into an elite university, and starting a career will help one succeed out of poverty is not the case for many. As we noted in class, this has also been used as a means to justify economic inequality. This popular narrative does not account for institutional barriers that individuals face, due to their race and social class. Just as Alexander states, believing that race no longer matters blinds us from how racial inequality persists.
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I agree that this paragraph was eye-opening. It made me consider how The Wire challenges other narratives that we tell ourselves about our society. One example is the one you brought up is the example of working hard in school as a means of getting ahead in society. As we see in Season 4, for Michael Lee this narrative simply is not true. He has to care for Bug, and get them into a new living situation. His problems are so urgent that the benefits of staying in school are far outweighed by his need to earn the kind of money that can buy him safety from his home life.
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This comment reminds me of the popular narrative about “the American dream.” If you dream it you can achieve it and as long as you work your hardest you can achieve everything you have ever wanted. The American dream is an inaccurate vision of a life that is not possible for so many becuase of the barriers in place in our society. Barries which Alexander speaks about in her article and we see throughout The Wire.
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I found this final sentence interesting because it accurately described the way that society reacted towards having a black president. Although I am honored to have had Barack Obama as my president, I believe that there was some sort of belief that his presidency was proof of the end of racism as a whole. I do believe that Obama’s presidency was a step in the right direction towards the establishment of policies and reforms that were equally tailored towards the black community. This final sentence is important to analyze because it is pertinent that individuals understand that making strides in a negative situation does not mean that the situation is fixed. Racism has continued to be an issue in America, even during Obama’s presidency. People’s view of Obama as the end to racism is a representation of the colorblind issues that currently exist within America.
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This paragraph made me think about what I can do. If it took over 10 years for Alexander to understand this racial inequality and bias, what can I do? Where could I start? I don’t believe that I’ll have the same career path as Michelle Alexander, so is there any other way that I can get this experience? I believe that for many Americans, it is impossible to interact with people of different races and backgrounds. In my hometown of Mechanicsburg, PA, I was one of the most ethnically diverse people in the town. And I’m half white. So what would it take to bring diversity to a town like that?
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I think there are many different areas of the country that are diversely populated, I just don’t think that there is much attraction for them in small rural towns. Historically, they do not move to small southern cities because of the underlying racism in these towns. People do not want to live in an area where they are going to be discriminated against or do not have people who look like them. In major cities, it is much more comfortable for them to live in these places because they are able to get jobs, housing, and make friends in more ethnically diverse areas.
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Your issue about racial interactions gets to a larger point, that America is still deeply segregated. As Samantha points out, people of color are not likely to move to a small Southern town that is predominantly white where they would face some form of discrimination, be it open or secret. This segregation is rooted deeply in the housing situation that we talked about earlier this semester. In addition to many other needed reforms, there is a need for new housing reforms to combat this historical inequality. There is another issue that I was hoping we could discuss and this is the issue of Gentrification. This is important as Samantha mentions people moving to major cities for their diversity. Gentrification is essentially the process of revitalizing a city with young new people and more privatization. The downside is that it often expunges or pushes out older citizens, both in physical age and length of residence, out of the city. Often those are people of color and lower class, and they are pushed to the other poor quality portions of cities that aren’t being targeted for revitalization. Another aspect of Gentrification is that it often targets white young adults, and thus can become yet another aspect of segregation. Finally, Samantha makes a point to note “ethnically diverse areas” which can also be destroyed by the privatization and overall mass branding that comes with Gentrification. This process can be seen in so many cities, including Richmond where VCU begins to buy up more and more land, thus gentrifying parts of the city. The only aspect of The Wire that hints of this process for me was in Season 2 when the docks were being built over by Condos. I hope that we get a chance to discuss this at some point in class.
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Generally, gateway has a positive connotation as an entrance or means of access, but Alexander explains the concept brilliantly when analyzing the prison system. This path that is opened for convicts is detrimental to their success and escape from this marginalized position. People don’t understand the ideology that once a person is classified as a prisoner, there life immediately falls, sometimes indefinitely, in the hierarchy of society. From this new entry into America’s undercaste, this “gateway” is opens a path to detain and prevent the mobility of minorities.
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In this portion of Alexander’s book, her emphasis on why conversations about race and class are so often avoided made me reflect on the understanding and view of productivity in American society. Alexander describes how it is largely held that an individual can pull themselves up by their bootstraps and find success through hard work and that if they don’t, this is deemed a personal or character failure. I think the idea of productivity is highly valued in our society and has been ingrained as an American ideal over the history of this country (from pilgrims to pioneers to heartwarming “success” stories told throughout the media). Yet, these notions of productivity and the example that Alexander lays out here in her book, do not account for the fact that in many cases people may appear un-productive because of things like discrimination and oppression, not of any fault of their own. This was further evident later on in chapter one when Alexander touches briefly on vagrancy laws implemented after the Civil War (p. 28). These laws essentially criminalized those who did not hold a job, targeted particularly at black individuals. This to me further heightened the disparities between the ideal of productivity and the discrimination and oppression that keeps people from being productive. Furthermore, as Alexander’s whole work showcases, this is something that is perpetuated today because of mass incarceration as those who have been criminalized face discrimination in the job market (as well as in other areas).
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Emily, I completely agree with your point of how Americans view success as easily attainable through the “American Dream” and upward mobility, yet many fail to recognize the obstacles of our institutions for minorities. As a nation founded on the principles of equality, and with the hope of opportunities for all, it seems ironic that we see so many examples of the national institutions, like law enforcement and education that seem to restrict minority individuals. However I think that the point you make is one that our government still struggles to address today. It makes me wonder how our government can begin to change the narrative on this issue to their citizens in a more effective way?
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After talking a little bit about the merit of The Wire’s second season last Thursday, this sentence has me wondering at what intersection does the frustration of the disenfranchised, poor white community come into play with this system of control predominantly affecting the African-American community. An obvious dichotomy between the two is the rate of incarceration. And more importantly this, coupled with Season 2’s emphasis on socio-economic class structure, makes one realize the virtual two-step process/obstacle course (the two impediments: race and economic class) a young African-American male must overcome in order to simply be on an even playing field in comparison to, say, a middle-class white peer.
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Alexander’s use of the word “caste” also made me think of the strict caste system that “was” in place in India. I placed “was” in quotation marks because the caste system was actually outlawed in India, but it is still culturally very much present and a part of everyday life. There is a similar dynamic going on with Alexander’s argument that while discrimination based on race is technically outlawed, it is still very alive in the US (although perhaps in different ways than the caste system in India operates today with regard to mass incarceration).
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I think your comparison between the caste in India and the new caste system in the US are very on point. To further support your point, one thing that makes the Indian caste system distinctive is the inability for individuals to shift from one caste to another. Generations and generations of individuals are forced to live in the same caste because everyone observes the system, and perhaps “plays the game.” This parallels with inability for people of color to escape the physical markers of their difference which leads to the positively reinforcing cycle of incarceration to barring from mainstream society.
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This paragraph touched on a topic that I believe is not discussed as much as it perhaps should be. A common thread among those who argue that a modern- day civil rights movement or restructuring of the criminal justice system is unnecessary is the claim that if a black man can be present, then surely such injustices are a thing of the past. In reality, all systems of oppression rely on at least a few of the oppressed “rising above” the circumstances and appearing to operate outside of the constraints of their marginalized group’s oppression. During the era of chattel slavery, there were free black men, those who “rose above” their circumstances and gained liberty. But just as these free black men were still not regarded as equal to white men, neither has Barack Obama been viewed as equal to his white predecessors. On the contrary, Obama was met with opposition and hostility throughout his entire presidency.
This topic vaguely reminds me of the tired remark “MLK Jr. didn’t die for this- he wanted peace” from people hoping to silence modern black movements. MLK Jr. did not die for anything, he was murdered (and also a widely hated man while he was alive, the Head of the FBI could not stand him and saw him as a national threat!)
There is a false and dangerous narrative that black exceptionalism signifies the ending of racism and white supremacy that must be debunked before any real progress can be made.
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I had highlighted this section as well for similar reasons as to the ones you discuss. I appreciate how you showcase how even black individuals who are deemed “exceptional” are still not equated with their white counterparts. I also think that black exceptionalism can be problematic as it perpetuates the idea that only a select few individuals of color can be successful. Additionally, I think all of these issues tie into what Alexander means when she states that “the current system of control depends on black exceptionalism”. That is, the new Jim Crow she discusses depends on racial hierarchy as much as it tries to state otherwise via colorblind rhetoric.
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I think this is such a good point, and something that I had been thinking about throughout the reading. I think this idea is perpetuated through many of the films and media that we consume. The idea of the “magical” black character is featured in films like The Green Mile, Shawshank Redemption, and Forrest Gump — plots that are centered around white people, with the black characters selflessly helping them succeed. This films often serve much the same purpose that Alexander describes, distracting from the deeper, systemic forms of racism by allowing for certain instances of success.
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The idea of “black exceptionalism” propagating the racial caste system was manifested by the election of Trump. Prior to Trump’s election, the election of Obama was framed by many as the definitive end of racism in America. While Michelle Alexander (writing in 2010) spends a significant amount of time convincing the reader that Obama’s election did not have any impact on the racial caste system, Trump’s subsequent election very clearly proves her point. I think if she wrote this book now she wouldn’t feel the need to emphasize this point so strongly, as many more Americans today innately recognize its validity. In a way, Obama’s election justified a rise in racist sentiments and discrimination – if America could elect a black president, there clearly were not any underlying racial issues, and thus claims of systematic description were seen as unfounded, and people’s personal racial prejudices could be ignored, since they did not reflect the views of the majority of the nation. Trump’s elected highlighted that this assumption was inaccurate, and revealed the rampant racial prejudices (or at least racial indifference) running through rural America.
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I think this is a really thoughtful extension of Alexander’s argument about Obama. I was definitely struck by how often she mentioned him in the introduction, and how urgently she seemed to want to decentralize the symbolic meaning of his election. I think you’re totally right to integrate Trump into this conversation, since his election – and the birther movement – points to a white identity politics grounded in xenophobia and antiblack racism and clearly demonstrates that Obama’s election did not end either.
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This thought process of reforming prison is important and needs to be addressed in a political context. How can we strategically change the prison-industrial complex and the blatant discrimination against minorities? Philadelphia rapper and social activist, Meek Mill recently went to prison for popping a wheelie, and he was sentenced to two to four years for violation of parole because of a previous probation charge at 19. Other celebrities such as Michael Rubin and Robert Kraft recognized this crisis and provided an immense amount of support to help him in his situation. Rubin, co-owner of Philadelphia 76ers, believed the prison system worked great, but he soon realized is flawed judgment is ignorant to a place that never affected him. Meek Mill asserted to him that there are “two Americas” and this opened Rubin’s eyes dramatically to a prejudicial criminal justice system.
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I know a consistent question asked throughout our class discussions has been surrounding how we can work towards ending these systems of discrimination that we’ve talked about and read about. And it always seems a bit daunting to think about exactly what must be done so that systems such as criminalization via mass incarceration can be dismantled without causing further harm. But I think Alexander raises a good point here that conversation and critical consciousness are required at a large scale in order to move into “effective social action”. This is why I think it is significant that we have the opportunity to think deeply about these issues before we go out into the workplace and into our future careers. Because I think for the grand scale social action that Alexander is referring to here, it will take people from different sectors of the workforce and different social spheres to increase and expand conversations like these. Additionally, as we have started to think deeply about these things, we can take that into our spheres of influence in the future to begin making a change for the better (like if you want to work in the media industry you can continue to promote fair and accurate representations of people and tell stories that may otherwise not be heard). And it really takes change in many spheres to enact a real, grand level change such as the one Alexander discusses.
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Alexander claims here that any new consensus must begin with a dialogue/conversation about the conditions of our criminal justice system and understanding the New Jim Crow. I think that’s great and important. However, the problem with these conversations is that more often than not, the decision to partake is voluntary and many will simply choose to not engage in a seemingly daunting and uncomfortable topic. For so many people in the country today, it is easy to do exactly what Alexander did years ago when she saw the flyer about the criminal justice system being the new Jim Crow; call it crazy and move on with your life.
Even in this class, I would estimate that everyone in the course is interested in social issues and wants to learn and engage with these topics. But again, we chose voluntarily to take this course, and perhaps the people that need to engage with these topics the most would steer away from this course based on the title or course description.
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Hi Emily,
Thank you so much for your comment! I totally agree with your point regarding the importance of this class and of social activism. However, I sometimes think that institutional pressure or backlash is necessary. A good analogue is the energy industry. People for decades have been pushing towards a greener world but with big energy interests (i.e. Dominion Energy is the largest lobbyist in the state of Virginia) these efforts have been largely halted. The only real national change I think we have seen as of late is a number of states and cities pledging to go green in the ensuing backlash after the United States dropped out of the Paris Agreement. I think this situation illustrates two points. First, social activism has its limits and that institutional support is necessary in making major social change regardless of field. Second, backlash to negative policies at the federal level can cause an increase in state and local policies that seek to push back against federal laws. This could illustrate a better path through which to channel activism to make concrete change.
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This passage made me reflect on the future, and specifically how the prison system can be changed. The problems with the current prison system seem to be systematic and, as we see in The Wire, part of a greater problem for our society. What I found interesting here though, is the emphasis on the future. I agree that it would certainly take a very large scale movement to invoke meaningful change within both the prison system and society as a whole because one is a symptom of the other. I think that the question is: how do you change the a system that is so deeply intertwined with our history?
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This paragraph reminded me of our class discussion of incrementalism, in which we addressed how individual institutions change very gradually. In addition policies that are adopted usually reflect those that already exist. This dynamic of incrementalism appears to exist with racism as well. Racial prejudice continues to persist in various forms, despite the end of slavery or Jim Crow laws. To dismantle the embedded racial caste system, a social movement that targets major institutions simultaneously could help. But as Alexander notes, the public support of the status quo must be overturned.
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I feel like the difficulties people associate with overhauling the prison system are valid, but a bit overblown. We seem to forget that the government was able to generate mass support for overhauls to the criminal justice system in the 1980s and 1990s that led to many of the problems we see with young Black people in the inner-cities making up a disproportionate percentage of our prison population. It is truly a matter of whether or not we as an electorate can generate enough support to overhaul the system to reverse these devastating changes.
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The prison system—as it exists today—is not a significant part of our history, as Alexander shows in this reading. It only recently came about in response to the end of Jim Crow and the beginning of the War on Drugs. But the longer that time goes on, the more ingrained it will become in our society (just like with slavery and Jim Crow). Then, it will become more and more difficult to overthrow. That is why Alexander stresses the importance of acting now, before more drastic actions need to be taken.
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I was speaking to my coworker who is from India about what she thought when I said Alexander is describing Black people in America as a caste. At first she was dismissive, saying that in her culture a lower caste is a group of people who are treated worse than other people purely based on the position in which they were born. I described the historical racial discrimination of Black people in this country that Alexander talks about and asked her if that isn’t the exact definition she gave. Then she decided that African Americans are indeed treated like a caste. I bring this up to illustrate the effectiveness of Alexander putting the societal treatment of Blacks in frames such as “New Jim Crow” and “Caste” because they carry such great cultural significance. We want to believe that we are progressing as a society, but when confronted with the facts it appears as though at least definitionally we have not.
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I was particularly interested in this argument that success and examples of black excellence can actually lead to people believing that there is no structural inequality along racial lines in the United States. I think this idea compounds really interestingly by a point made by Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton attorney Enumale Agada in her article “Sidney Poitier, Mike Brown, and the Myth of Black Exceptionalism.” In the piece, she writes “What exactly is the myth of black exceptionalism, you may ask? It’s the notion that black people who are educated, smart, articulate, poised, and basically every other positive adjective you can think of are atypical or rarities among the general black population.” Therefore, examples of black excellence not only allow people to think that racism has ended but also reinforces subconsciously (or, in some cases, consciously) held views of black inferiority to whites or other ethnic groups. This shows that even objectively good things like African-Americans succeeding in the highest levels of society can be tainted by racist worldviews of domineering groups.
Source: http://celluloidinblackandwhite.blogspot.com/2015/01/sidney-poitier-mike-brown-and-myth-of.html
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It is a sad reality when the success of historically oppressed groups is used to further the oppression of said group, or at the very least be used to stymie further progress. This is a thing that we’ve talked about in my Civil Rights class, where after the passage of the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act there was a shift in the American conscious to think racism had been solved. Well we know this from watching 13th, that it was in fact not solved, and the shift politically is highly pointed out from the high level Reagan campaign member explaining their new strategy for racial issues. On that note, it is insane to me that those same things still happen now, but the public as a whole is not aware of such things. Though not surprising as it holds the power structure in place, and feeds the idea of Black Exceptionalism that you mentioned. A connected idea about racism not existing is that a White person can have a person of color as a friend and then they must not be racist. This idea was rewarded and given Hollywood’s biggest honor just a month ago with Green Book winning Best Picture.
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Using a few outstanding examples to prove a sweeping point is an obvious logical fallacy, usually employed with ignorance or ill will. Success stories in America have been used throughout our history to justify capitalism and the existing social fabric, essentially saying, “These people did it, just be more like them!” Unfortunately, these success stories are less common than the tragedies, something The Wire constantly points out. One can imagine a version of The Wire in which Stringer Bell becomes a clean, successful business man and gives lectures about hard work and overcoming one’s circumstances. The media gives us stories like this so frequently because they give us hope, but unfortunately they also misguide us and make us believe in false narratives and faulty reasoning.
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I, and Alexander, agree with your statement that though there are examples of African American success stories, there are far and few. The examples Alexander uses, Barack Obama and Oprah Winfrey, are much more unrealistic than the examples provided in The Wire. The Wire shows more telling stories of Black success in society today. Not many people will have their own TV show or become President of the United States, but some will attend/graduate school and some will work or own their own business. The Wire shows African American success by multiple police officers such as Daniels, Cutty owning his own boxing facility, Poot working at a shoe store rather than on the streets, and children like Namond working hard and becoming a good student in school.
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I find this point very insightful. So often we hear these great success stories in the news. What we often fail to put into perspective is how that one success stories is, like you said, amongst so many tragedies. I think The Wire does do a good job of telling the whole story.
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Your comment very much reminded me of the culture of individualism in the United States. It is very difficult for mainstream American culture to blame anything but the individual for their success or failure, ignoring the role of institutional forces. We discussed this early on in our class with Professor Williams’s emphasis on the role of institutions within The Wire, and I think that your connection to Stringer Bell proves this further. Although he as an individual was driven and a savvy business man, ultimately corrupt institutions led to his demise regardless.
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The lack of success stories, in particular during the final clip at the end of the series, is what made The Wire stick with me after my first viewing. While we are all rooting for Dukie to be successful in school or to become a father figure for Bug, we see him become a drug addict, likely condemned to live a life closer to that of Bubbles. His financial and social struggle that eventually leads him to a criminal life is closer to reality than the success story we see with Namond.
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Despite beating a dead horse- this is an important point that the entire country must hear at the present. The media definitely plays into the face that we unaware of the many sad and premature endings that happen everyday. The media needs to play on our emotions in order to keep themselves in business- they find the unlikely heart warming stories to parade around with, enticing us into the illusion that everything is fine and dandy- despite living in the era of “The New Jim Crow”
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I found this term “adaptable racism” really intriguing because of the message that the term holds with it. The term is defined as a dynamic where “white privilege is maintained through the rules and rhetoric change”. Alexander uses this term to describe the adaptability of racism throughout the years by the changing of racial slurs or depictions to continue racism and maintain a sense of inequality. By adjusting these rules to new rhetoric, the government is able to allow racism to continue without it outwardly persisting because of the outward changes made to the definition of the term.
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This is the perfect example of how supply and demand works in the economy. The supply of land ownership increased, these owners needed workers (demand) and the only way to get workers was to purchase large amounts of slaves. Another strong example of this played out in the introduction of drugs. Whether filtered through the government, obtained through immigrants, or produced in-house, drugs such as cocaine (crack) and heroine caused a large supply in open labor, the selling of these drugs. African Americans had a much higher unemployment rate than whites, leading them to demand these open labor positions simply to make ‘easy’ money. If instead whites were the ones with higher unemployment, it is likely they would have taken these drug dealer roles as well. We see this example play out in The Wire as well. African American characters assumed the roles on the streets because they were vacant, convenient, and provided them a needed source of income. Michael was a strong example of this, needing money since his mother failed to provide for him and his brother, and because he was so young he couldn’t work many other (legal) places, leading him to take an open, but illegal, job on the streets.
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Alexander’s acknowledgment of the demand for plantation labor met by slavery, also reminded me of the shift to the drug trade as a viable source of labor. The large supply of drugs is one reason why African Americans may get involved in the trade. You mention that there were very high unemployment rates and it is important that we understand how this came to be; the globalization and deindustrialization of the 1980s. The institutional barriers that African American individuals experience, such as limited educational opportunity, exacerbate unemployment levels and leave the drug trade as a viable opportunity for income. The impact of jobs shifting away from unionized labor was apparent for Frank Sobotka and Nicky, as the disappearance of work on the docks led them to get involved in illegal foreign drug trade.
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I think this is a really good point about supply and demand. I think it also can extend to the prison industrial complex and the high demand for cheap labor and profit. Because cheap labor is so profitable, there is high demand for workers and therefore prisoners, which further exacerbates high arrest and imprisonment rates particularly for individuals of color.
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This sentence sparked an interesting connection to Darwinism, as I was reading through this chapter. I was surprised to learn through Alexander that slaves at first were not only African or African American, rather there were white slaves as well. Concurrently there were Africans who had been enticed to come to America as indentured servants, and not complete slaves. This paragraph explains that Slave owners found a way- through the help of Darwinism or using it as a horrid reasoning- to create a culture in which only Africans were slaves- as they were distinctly different than all others due to their glaring physical differences. Through a weird and awful twist of Darwinism, slaves overtime evolved to be only black, while whites evolved to steal power. This evolution continues to occur through today- as Alexander is arguing: rather than roles evolving today, laws are evolving to prevent further undoing- evolution- of our preset stratified class of whites living with the power above people of color. Today this has evolved to the era of “The New Jim Crow” or the era of mass incarceration.
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This sentence caught my attention as it seems very reminiscent of the political atmosphere today, especially focusing on poor white Americans. Alexander notes that the system of slavery gained even more power when poor whites realized that they had a slice of power in the fact that they had a ‘superior’ skin color and therefore natural superiority to people of color. This created strife between the two classes, though of course with the help of the white elite there was no way the poor whites would loose this struggle of power. Today the same socioeconomic class of working class whites seem to show similar sentiment, worried that people of color-deserving of a permanent lower class status- are taking over their position and with the help of political figures like Trump this class attacks people of color for seemingly no reason just to ensure they can maintain their fact-free superiority.
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I find Alexander’s claim that the Constitution was based largely on reinforcing slavery to be dubious at best and misleading at worst. Obviously Alexander is stressing the importance of slavery in structuring American government and society as a whole, but there are clearly various other interests that motivated the structure and content of the Constitution, some well-intentioned and others equally nefarious. I do not mean to say that slavery was a non-issue, as Alexander clearly shows that it was, but rather that making such bold statements serves to conceal the truth. Understanding slavery is clearly essential to understanding our nation’s history but it does not entirely define it.
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In my opinion Alexander was suggesting the Constitution written to preserve racial castes and the separation of the majority/minority. Slaves were in what she considered “undercaste,” but didn’t make direct mention to slaves (used the terms ‘property’). Owning slaves and land were typical of the majority, not of the minority. While the Constitution didn’t work to stop slavery, I think it just skirted around the corners, mentioning as little about the topic as possible since many of the Founding Fathers may have known slavery was wrong but still owned them, themselves. Their specific wording works to provide power to those with property, which very few African Americans had. This works to further weaken the African Americans power/citizenship, but is not fully enforcing they should be or stay in slavery.
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I agree that the Constitution was likely not entirely about upholding slavery, although certainly some of its intent was to preserve the means of wealth creation through capitalism, and because slavery allowed for vast amounts of wealth creation, the two were inextricably intertwined. It is interesting to consider issues that are not explicitly addressed in the Constitution, perhaps our founding fathers gave us too much credit if they assumed we would be able to solve these issues in the future.
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When I read this section, I did not interpret it as Alexander claiming that slavery was the only thing on the founders mind when the Constitution was written, but that it was a major one. In fact, the founders decided to not put the topic in the constitution explicitly because they knew how much of a divisive topic it was, and making any permanent declarations would perhaps jeopardize the future of the nation. I think that the mere fact that slavery and black people were not even fully mentioned within the Constitution goes to prove Anderson’s point to some extent, as it shows that the founders were complicit with the current system and had no desire to alter the oppressive forces that were at work. I have to disagree with your point that slavery “does not entirely define” our nation’s history, because I believe that it largely actually does. When a nation is built on slavery, and quite literally would not exist had forced labor not been used (and as Anderson argues, still is being used), you can not separate its history from slavery.
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I take your point that the Constitution was not built around slavery, but the Founders had to find a way to write it around slavery and the results are no different than if they wrote it with the intent to preserve slavery. There is no way the Constitution would have been ratified without the support of the Southern colonies. Because of this, the Constitution includes horrible pro-slavery clauses such as the 3/5th compromise, which gave greater representation in Congress to the Southern colonies under the guise of recognizing partial humanity for Black people who still could not vote. There is also the clause that says slavery should end in 20 years, but what it really did was preserve slavery during that time, without any penalty to enforce is abolition thereafter. All of this is to say that while no maintaining slavery was not the stated purpose of the Constitution, it was the effect nonetheless.
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The first sentence in this paragraph is extremely important because it points out how the reason the end of slavery did not end racial difference. This continues on to how the Civil Rights Movement did not end it either. As a country we’ve made so many historical advancements, but unfortunately they are not able to put race issues to rest. Our country is experiencing the new Jim Crow because white supremacy remains. In particular white supremacy is linked with mass-incarceration, which is perpetuating the existing racial issues. This shows that the death of slavery was not able to solve problems and that because of that they are still present today.
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This comparison does a fantastic job at drawing attention to how ingrained racism had become in our society, and therefore why racism is such an enormous problem today. Michelle Alexander really nails an important point here when she emphasizes the enormous amounts of wealth gained by slave owners at the expense of the vast suffering of their slaves. This point adds perspective to why racism became so readily adopted by people everywhere: because they needed to try to somehow justify the atrocities they were committing and witnessing.
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I understand your points, but I don’t necessarily understand why racism is even still prevalent at all and why there is a need to blame someone else for one’s own wrongdoings? However, one is human and one doesn’t want to blame themselves for making a mistake. Unfortunately, white people still believe that they are of a superior race and that black people are inferior. But I am wondering when that day will change.
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This paragraph stood out to me too, so I’m glad that you pointed it out and hinted at the ways that race has been constructed to justify certain interests. I am especially interested in Alexander’s description of white supremacy as a “deeply held belief system based on ‘truths’ beyond question or doubt,” because the goalpost of whiteness has moved so frequently (ie Irish ethnicity, the “one drop” rule) that its status as objective is nonsensical and contradictory.
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As Alexander stated earlier in the chapter, Blacks were not the first option for slaves but became the choice because they wanted people who would not revolt/were less aggressive. After slavery was abolished and southern whites specifically were still looking to asset their dominance/race, the black men and women who are now free began to rise up, refusing to be enslaved again. It is shocking that this refusal became equated with Blacks as “aggressive, unruly predators.” That stereotype is still very much intact today and doesn’t look to be diminishing anytime soon. This stereotype is enforced through the media and films, who constantly showcase African Americans as the bad, dangerous guys. I see the media/news as the reason this stereotype is strong and very much alive today. Is that the only reason? Is politics, the Constitution, court rulings, or other forces more motivating?
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I don’t think Alexander’s point in recounting the history of racism in the United States is to show how it is shocking, but rather how it is perfectly logical. Alexander’s story focuses on how racism began as a calculated way of protecting plantation owners’ labor. From there, it became implanted in people’s minds and now it has become a part of our culture, present throughout American society.
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This paragraph and your comment reminded me very much of the documentary 13th, wherein the stereotypes of black men are discussed, and refuted with the fact that the majority of rape cases have actually historically been white men raping black women. It is disheartening to see how intensely that these stereotypes pervade our modern view of the world, even though it is largely unintentional biases. I appreciated your comment because you specifically discussed how as soon as black people were no longer legally required to be submissive, they were painted as dangerous and aggressive, simply because of white frustration over feeling that their supremacy was being challenged.
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I agree with all that each of you have to say on this topic. I think Alexander’s description of how these stereotypes came to be is particularly compelling. In media studies, we talk a good deal about harmful stereotypes such as the ones Alexander describes here, but what would this discussion look like in terms of the Wire? The Wire seems to work hard to ensure that characters are well-developed and carefully constructed, but are there any instances in which we can find evidence of stereotypes at play in the Wire?
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I don’t think that the media is the only factor in the depiction of African Americans as aggressive and dangerous. To do so would be to both give no credit to people’s pre-existing personal biases and let those who produce the media images off the hook. I have been thinking about whether or not “The Wire” is guilty of perpetuating these images of the Black drug dealer and criminal despite its attempts to balance these with images of Black politicians, police officers, and teachers. For all its focus on the institutions causing societal ills in inner-city Baltimore, I wish “The Wire” focused more on good, noncriminal Black civilians in the neighborhoods who earnestly attempt to live their lives in spite of the tremendous danger around them. By avoiding those Black faces not associated directly with the game, “The Wire” does a disservice to the city of Baltimore and runs the risk of perpetuating dangerous stereotypes about people living in poverty.
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Productivity is of the highest importance in capitalists systems and as such, it is easy to see how abuse vagrancy laws and hiring-out of prisoners to plantations could be spun as good for the economy and good for freed slaves. Who doesn’t love lower unemployment, right? It is easy to see how a number of these laws can be dressed up to be portrayed as good for the economy and African-Americans, but in reality, operate as another system of oppression.
Additionally, the laws that allowed plantations and corporations to hire out prisoners are very much alive and functioning today. This reminded me of sequences in the documentary 13th that demonstrate how big corporations use prison inmates as essentially free labor.
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I think you’re totally right to underscore the relationship between vagrancy laws and capitalist rhetoric here. American capitalism – including Northern banks, which invested historically in material goods that required slave labor – is so historically tied to racialized chattel slavery that I think it’s really valuable to acknowledge the rhetorical relationship with vagrancy laws. I also think the enforcement dynamic is important to emphasize here, since Alexander observes that vagrancy laws were “applied selectively to blacks” and inconsistently to poor or unemployed whites.
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These facts on progress for African Americans during reconstruction and Alexander’s contrasting points in the next paragraph on how this largely wound up being symbolic is strikingly similar to a point she made about the modern day issue of our prison system previously. She stated that while some might point out that large progress has been made because we’ve elected an African American President and have prominent figures in our society such as Oprah, the mass incarceration of black men remains a huge problem. This thought is similar to the fact that although blacks were elected to government positions and literacy rates went up during reconstruction, prominent whites still went out of their way to make it very hard for blacks to be allowed to vote.
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I agree. I think there are many more strides we need to take in order to give black people more of a voice. There are still racists and bigots who hate black people in this country and our current president gives them a voice to air such concerns. Obama was not fully able to fight for equality for black people because he would have been talked about as a racist towards white people. However, so many people disagreed with Obama’s thoughts and ideals, that they ended up electing someone the total opposite of Obama. This resembles Lincoln’s presidency because many southern democrats hated Lincoln because he freed the slaves and after Lincoln, politicians shifted their mindset after Lincoln was killed.
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The issue of court and its associated cost is glossed over in The Wire, thanks to the gangs keeping an in-house lawyer for all their needs. Perhaps that is why this passage particularly stuck out to me or maybe it’s because the issue was also raised in Goffman’s reading from last week. In this article the failure to pay results in African-Americans essentially being sold into slavery, a worse slavery than before the Civil War in fact as the new foremen cared even less about their health. In Goffman’s article failure to pay court fees would result in a new crime police could charge them with. In both cases black men are left in a dangerous situation due to court fees and costs. This whole situation is terribly unjust and it literally occurs in and because of our justice system. I think that forgiving or possibly having the state cover the courts fees of poor and otherwise disadvantage groups would be a good step in reforming our justice system. Surely the government can find the money to reduce the burden of court costs for people living in poverty.
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Hi Alex,
Thank you so much for your post. I totally agree in the sense that I also did not think about court costs as a major cost or burden to disenfranchised people since other elements of incarceration are more highly emphasized in the media. This portion reminds me of an article I read about payday loan lenders. Obviously, without access to capital, lower income people disproportionately have to turn to payday loan lenders who may loan shark them and cause them to fall into a further debt spiral. However, this economic prejudice has recently been furthered with the advent of social media and leaky data. A number of payday loan lenders (Wonga.com is the most prominent) use freely given data from potential applicants (i.e. IP Address, web browser, device, etc.) to gauge applicant creditworthiness. Some of these firms even ask for access to Facebook where they are able to scrape data from an applicant’s profile and the profiles of his or her friends. This privacy invasion is in the name of being better able to give lower income people loans but I (and many others) suspect that this level of privacy invasion would not be condoned and would be talked about more if it was for traditional mortgages or housing investments that affect the wealthy or middle class.
This generates a number of interesting and terrible questions regarding why disproportionately lower class people face more scrutiny from payday loan lenders than rich ones from mortgage lenders. Should lower income people have to burden deeper invasions of privacy compared to the wealthy? Does this generate a sort of “credit led” society where people structure their actions around their ability to receive credit and change their usage patterns on publicly available applications?
Court costs and other “fees” associated with being poor lead to payday loans and these subsequent invasions of privacy. It seems important to address that connection and try to fix it at the source.
Source: http://www.charisma-network.net/finance/leaky-data-how-wonga-makes-lending-decisions
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This insightful point takes me right back to Professor Williams comment about the current state of local politics in Florida-concerning allowing previously convicted felons, who have sufficiently served their sentences to be allowed to vote again. I was surprised when I leaned that in Florida of all states the governing body had successfully passed a piece legislation that allowed felons who had completed their sentences or their paroles to be allowed to vote in elections again. I was too quick to be surprised in this instance- as in fact as we are talking here Florida republicans are doing anything they can to prevent convicted felons- i.e. people of color, who morally deserve less for some reason- maybe skin color who knows- to change the definition of what it means to have completed ones sentence. They are attempting to pass legislation so that a convicted felon has only completed his sentence if he has paid off fees equal to the amount the government spent on him while he was systematically forced to be confined to prison. Because one such person is very likely to have that money…
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This is a very telling paragraph as it highlights how early the criminal justice system began to target African Americans. It is not shocking that this early on following Reconstruction that there were efforts to re-institute slavery in a legal way. The paragraph even highlights the fact that “neoslavery was evolving not disappearing.” This is such a critical comment as it is still seen today, and is highlighted by Alexander’s larger argument on the mass incarceration that does this. On a different note, it is also interesting to see that Mississippi was the state that did this. In my Civil Rights class we learned about the “Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission” which was created by the Governor with the sole purpose of perpetuating segregation and keeping tabs on Civil Rights activists in the state. This shows a way in which there was a focus on repressing access to equal rights for African Americans that we see denied from the moments highlighted in this paragraph. Even more, in the recent 2018 Senate Special Election, Republican Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith was noted for comments on lynchings, and the history that Mississippi and the nation has with them in regards to the overwhelming usage against African Americans. I say all of this to show how the targeting of and racial prejudice against African Americans has just evolved, but not necessarily changed since the end of Reconstruction.
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Johnson’s hope of “the full assimilation of more than twenty million Negroes into American life” strikes me as particularly broad stroke political rhetoric. Comprehensive civil rights legislation was obviously passed. Yet even before reading paragraph 275, I feel this class specifically left me predisposed to read a quote like President Johnson’s and surmise that there are complicating factors,like those in the economic realm discussed in 275, actively working to undermine such a vast goal. The quote just left a bad taste in my mouth, especially regarding what is deemed a veritable “American” life.
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From Paragraph 340 to the end of this one. The focus on Reagan and how he is seen in the American public eye is an interesting one, especially in the South. He is often regarded as one of the best Presidents with an appeal to all, but it in reading this it reminds me of the prior negatives about him I had learned and the new ones (to me) in which we are discussing. Reagan’s usage of “colorblind rhetoric” has now become common place like the article says, and this reinforces much of the larger influence Reagan had over our politics. It is quite interesting to place him next to Trump, who as we discussed in class is very overtly leaning into white resentment, and seeing the blatant racism that rolls off his tongue. While Reagan had room for deniability, the current President holds none by anyone who is truly being analytical. It also speaks to the fact that that the Republican base at large still buys into “the emotional distress” that the article points out. I was also shocked by Reagan’s decision to launch his campaign on the issue of “state’s rights” which we know is aligned with the Civil War and the reframing of the issue it was fought over by the Lost Cause movement. There is lots of nuance and very lightly phrased statements often present that I have not necessarily paid much attention to due to my lack of knowledge, but am much more likely to pay attention to now.
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I also found the focus on Reagan’s rhetoric to be fascinating. I’ll admit that I bring my personal biases to the table when discussing Ronald Reagan (not a fan) so reading this only went on to confirm my previous opinion of him. That being said, I think your comparison of Trump and Reagan is interesting. I agree that Trump’s rhetoric more overtly plays into white resentment and racism, yet Reagan’s 1980 presidential campaign slogan was “Let’s make America great again.” Though less up front about it, Reagan clearly played into the same fear-mongering and nuanced prejudices that are in politics today. It’s also so blatantly hypocritically how Reagan launched his campaign on the promise of “states’ rights”, then proceeded to mount one of the most centralized fights against “crime” in America’s history…
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I found these statistics particularly shocking and these are matters that need to be acknowledged today. These massive increases in funding to federal law enforcement agencies to “crack down” on drugs seem unreasonable when little is being done to address why and how addition is occurring and how it can be stopped. If greater resources were available to educate individuals about the drugs on the streets, it is possible that fewer would get involved in using or dealing. In addition prevention and treatment programs could offer the resources they need to get better, rather than governmental punishments. I was interested in learning more about how many individuals who get arrested for drug possession or dealing go back to these practices once released from prison. Searching on Google, I came across the US Sentencing Commission statistics of recidivism among drug trafficking offenders, which reports that, 8 years later, 50% of federal drug traffickers are rearrested (https://www.ussc.gov/research/research-reports/recidivism-among-federal-drug-trafficking-offenders). Sending individuals to jail doesn’t solve the root of the issue here. It appears that other approaches need to be taken to address the issue of drug dealing and use, rather than just punishing those who have engaged in these practices. Increased funding to supportive institutions, such as the Department of Education or National institute on Drug Abuse, could help.
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One missing aspect of the evident increase in funding for federal agencies focused on the criminal side of the drug war is a breakdown of where the funding obviously went once allocated to a specific agency or bureau. Hopefully good police-work was generated as a result of this influx. However, the punitive nature of the criminal justice system and your findings on re-incarceration rates for drug trafficking offenders, paints a gloomy picture. The concurrent budget cuts in the 80s to agencies responsible for treatment and prevention serve to augment this outlook.
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This is an interesting point. I think a lot of the funding and direction of resources to vamp up things like the war on drugs has a lot to do with politics and elections. Politicians make promises all the time and are usually punished or rewarded at the ballot box for their ability to fulfill those promises. A politician can claim a victory in fighting the war on drugs by showcasing the amount of resources it directs towards the movement, which voters recognize.
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Hey Caroline,
Thank you so much for your post. I completely agree with your idea that mass incarceration is not actually productive to the ends of stopping drug use. From an economic perspective, I would like to add that drug rehabilitation programs (which are shown to be more effective than incarceration) would actually end up saving state and federal governments several billions dollars a year as well. The study found that “If only 10 percent of drug-addicted offenders received drug rehabilitation instead of jail time, the criminal justice system would save $4.8 billion compared to current costs. If 40 percent of addicted offenders received treatment instead of jail, those savings would rise to $12.9 billion.” These savings stem from gains in economic work from then non-incarcerated individuals and lower costs in the operational end of the prison system. Not only are alternatives more responsible socially but fiscally as well!
Source: http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0011128712461904
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Alexander’s mention of “sensational media coverage” piqued my interest in the introduction, so I was glad that she delved into the topic later in the passage. The types of reporting errors – erroneously attributing deaths to crack – and disproportionate coverage are shocking to me. The fact that media so uncritically picked up and propagated this political and racist narrative is extremely striking, and I was unfamiliar with most of these examples beyond Willie Horton. Alexander focuses on news stories in this section, but I am curious about whether/how other forms of entertainment media also contributed to the spread of these narratives.
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I think that the media sensationalism is sadly something we still see today in lots of issues. Another important thing to note is how The Post attempted to offset the blame onto Politicians for the reason why there was such a focus on crack. This is a tricky issue as politicians do set narratives, but the media has the option to cover what they would want to. It is very much similar to what we are seeing today with Politicians complaining that the media doesn’t cover certain issues or that they give disproportionate amounts of focus to one group over another.
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This section reminded me of the quote by one of Nixon’s aides in played in “13th”. The aide explains that the Nixon White House had two major opponents: antiwar protesters (“hippies”) and black people. By targeting marijuana and crack, the War on Drugs was able to suppress these groups without mentioning the specific groups. While many people during the Nixon-era were uncomfortable with blatantly racist language, the War on Drugs allowed Americans to reformulate their same discomfort towards blacks in a way that they could accept. As immoral as this is, it is an interesting political tactic to be able to appeal to the racist desires of Americans at the time without explicitly bringing up race.
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This is a very important insight for this reading- as this is the underlying thesis of Alexander- that we are still implementing the culture of the Jim Crow era today in the 21st century though rather than doing so through separate but equal laws and regulations, we are doing so with “race neutral language” that can’t offend anyone and qualifies as politically correct, though it allows us as whites to keep our superiority to those who just by the pigment of their skin are to be treated less than human. Through this book, Alexander unveils this truth of neutral languages that empowers a horridly horrendous cultures of incredible inequality.
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It is ironic when thinking about the War on Drugs and how white rural people are more likely to be punitive than black people. However, black people are more likely to be incarcerated for committing much less heinous crimes. This is an ongoing problem for our country and is evident of modern slavery. We are still treating black people the same way we treated them 200 years ago. We are just filling up our prisons with black people as a way to “enslave” and “control” them. While it may not be blatant slavery or racism, there is a blurred line there between mass incarceration of black people and owning them as slaves.
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I agree that the War on Drugs is very unfair. Just look at the injustice of the opioid problem, which is presented as a national crisis whereas activities involving crack cocaine were/are considered criminal. The difference is largely just which populations they effect, with crack effecting poorer black communities and opioids effecting whites. In fact, even the way the different forms of cocaine were handled show the racial biases in drug enforcement as pointed out early in the article: “including far more severe punishment for distribution of crack- associated with blacks- than powder cocaine, associated with whites”.
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