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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When I started thinking about the history of voting restrictions in the same context of mass incarceration I couldn’t help but think of the issue of prison gerrymandering. Basically, the Census counts incarcerated people as residents of the towns where they are imprisoned, causing distortion in representation. Prisoners in 48 states they are denied the right to vote while in prison. Also, with a large percentage of the prison population being African American, it seems extremely problematic that their bodies are being used as numbers while they are still being denied the right to vote.
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Lauren, I think your point is spot on. I’m a politics major and I’ve never thought about redistricting as it relates to prisons. I also think that there’s a change on the horizon as the courts have started to take action against these sorts of practices.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/virginia-politics/court-throws-out-virginia-congressional-map/2014/10/07/97fb866a-4e56-11e4-8c24-487e92bc997b_story.html
http://www.scotusblog.com/2014/05/petitions-of-the-day-17/
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I know that this is fiction but I had seen a clip from another HBO show, The Newsroom, that reminded me a lot of this (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hxK8h0mp0ZI).). Like he says, “Republicans have a hard time getting certain people vote for them, so life would be a lot easier if certain people just weren’t allowed to vote at all.” I think this is also a problem when it comes to voting. Many disadvantaged people do not drive, therefore have no need for a driver’s license. Without this driver’s license, they cannot vote and again are stripped of their most basic freedom.
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I believe it is imperative for current political, social, and economic institutions to recognize the historical context of slavery and that the enslavement of black bodies was the foundation of this country. When we try to understand the idea of “The Rebirth of Caste”, we can acknowledge that the hegemonic paradigm we live in has perpetually excluded black bodies through systematic racism that has disabled American people from identifying that race is still a predominant and underlying issue in the United States. Alexander says, “This process, though difficult to recognize at any given moment, is easier to see in retrospect”. African-Americans have been enslaved to the system through various institutions that are able to legally justify slavery, Jim Crow, and now the prison industry that disproportionately incarcerates minorities. This new system of “racialized social control” that unequally promises rights and freedoms to certain groups of people is defended by legal institutions that are then defended by the American public. In “The Wire”, there are many instances where scenes will capture the juxtaposition of the ghettos in close proximity to wealthier neighborhoods. Privileged individuals and communities are able to isolate themselves to the realities of the apparent disparities and never really have to acknowledge it unless it becomes a danger or threat to their reality. Through various institutions that not only disadvantage minorities but also protect other groups of people, both individuals and larger systems perpetuate inequalities.
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I had never heard the drug war described as genocide until I read this article. Curious as to how prevalent the idea is now, I Googled “the drug war is” and the first result was a quote from David Simon himself: The drug war is “a holocaust in slow motion” (article link: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/may/25/the-wire-creator-us-drug-laws). He argues that while the drug war has involved racial profiling since opium was criminalized, it mainly has to do with eradicating the poor. He goes on to say, “We do not need 10-12% of our population; they’ve been abandoned. They don’t have barbed wire around them, but they might as well.”
This clip from the documentary The House I Live In makes a case for the drug war eating away at the effectiveness of the police force and increasing mistrust between citizens and police: http://video.pbs.org/video/2328459017/
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Not only are many unaware of the “new racial caste system” but many also don’t care to be aware of it. Typically, if a system’s set up works for someone, he/she wants to be able to say he didn’t know about the injustice in order to justify not fighting it and consequently allowing it to exist. In The Wire, although Jimmy goes about it in the wrong way, he recognizes the injustice in allowing murders to be dismissed and a violent drug operation to continue to run, so he takes action. Many other police officers idly sit by, complaining about the lack of overtime pay but ignoring the unattended crimes taking place in the community.
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It’s interesting how the higher ranking police chairs in The Wire view the situation. I’d say that, because they are never in the field interacting with PEOPLE, they try to plead ignorance of the injustice and say they are fighting statistics. Now, of course, no city wants a high rate of crime, but throughout season three the higher up don’t care about the people in their districts. They relentlessly work to lower percentages.
I think this ignorance of other people, and the focus on numbers, perpetuates the racial caste system.
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This was one of the most frightening aspects of this piece for me. Further in the chapter, Alexander states that the racial caste doesn’t require bigotry or hostility, it only requires racial indifference. If you look historical trends in overt racism, you can see that white Americans are much less likely to believe that African Americans are biologically inferior or anything outrageous like that. However, it has been found that there is still considerable implicit racial discrimination. This is concerning since there is the trend of thinking we live in a “colorblind” society and I personally feel that society has no idea how to talk about race. It is interesting that we see some of the same glossing over of racial issues in The Wire, such as within the police department.
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I think this point relates to Wilson’s “laissez-faire racism” in that, because we live in a society of equal rights, African American’s in unfortunate positions are responsible for their situation. This allows you to “gloss over” an issue without feeling any sense of responsibility or empathy towards others and without feeling the need to create dialogue.
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It is like the idea of Meritocracy. People see the ideal "family’ or “American” and have these notions of how a person should be and when it comes to African Americans who break the law, society thinks that there is no reason why African AMericans couldnt be “law abiding citizens” , but they also don’t understand that African Americans have had a long standing fight against racism (Jim Crow) etc and most white Americans have not had to go through that.
It is easy to blame African Americans for their own misfortune, but is that right?
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I found this paragraph especially interesting. I feel like the idea of an African American man becoming President was historically used as an example to symbolize the time when color no longer mattered and there was equality between blacks and whites in American society. However, this would be a false observation. This again exemplifies how it is easy to see African American leaders in the spotlight and forget that their situation is not representative of the situation of the greater population as a whole. While the election of Barack Obama was a monumental moment in history and a sign that we are moving in the right direction, it is still evident by statistics (such as 1 in 3 black children in America are living under the poverty line), that America still has a lot of work to do in an effort to truly become equal for all.
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This reminds me of what we were talking about a few lectures ago concerning race and the cover of Time Magazine. Picking out a handful “exemplary” cases gives the illusion of equal opportunity and representation. We as a society tend to point to this same handful of people over and over when we need a rebuttal for claims that Alexander—and others—make. Conservative white culture still holds aloft Bill Cosby’s infamous “We Can’t Blame White People” speech as evidence that racial equality has been reached and all of the hurdles black individuals face are a result of them simply not trying.
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As this paragraph mentions, when criminals are reintroduced into polite society and the great world, they still even free find themselves trapped. Stringent restrictions focused on punishment over any sort of rehabilitaion back into society and the unofficial social stigma of a criminal background effectively push these people into the margins of society. They cannot reintegrate themselves and earn an honest living. Because who will hire them and where are their resources? This sort of desperation can prompt people to reenter a life of crime, because society has pushed them out and this can cyclically reinforce itself.
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This description of the degree to which convicts are excluded from mainstream society fits well with the metaphor of the “racial caste system”. The caste system refers to the Indian social structure in which there are distinct social groups with different ranks. The system is characterized by it’s complete lack of social mobility or interaction between ranks. Much like the lowest ranks in the Indian caste system, convicts have no social mobility and little interaction with other areas of society. Having no access to employment and housing, convicts are unable to even interact with members of the mainstream society. This is the reason for the lack of awareness for the “new racial caste system”. These convicts are excluded to the point where the injustice is completely out of eyesight of mainstream society. This degree of exclusion from mainstream society is demonstrated in The Wire by Cutty, who is released from prison in Season 3. Cutty is unable to conform to mainstream society, because he is treated like a convict. Not wanting to return to the illegal drug trade, Cutty finds employment managing a gym in the inner city. Although he may have the skills to succeed in mainstream society, he remains in the margins because he has no social mobility.
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It’s almost counterintuitive to infer that people are too uninformed to believe something as dubious as a racial conspiracy, but Alexander here unintentionally makes a disturbing point. The taboo of conspiracy paints belief in a concert of subversion an exercise for the ignorant; people will believe they are too smart to entertain these kinds of theory. But this very assumption is the bridge underneath the feet of this retooled racist institution.
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The author defines the War on Drugs as the new form of legalized discrimination. Though it’s easy to argue against this claim, The Wire supports this idea in so many ways. Though I don’t remember exactly who said it and when (I think it was Hurk) one of the police officers is dismayed by the futility of hand-to-hand arrests because it’s no way to tackle the “war on drugs.” Hurc responds by saying, “It’s not a war. Wars end.”
Here, Hurc takes the point of view of those who might say the legal and justice system is simply too heavy a problem to tackle. He recognizes that the black men on the corner are not enemies. The author goes further by arguing that they are victims. What makes mass incarceration such a controversial topic is that criminal acts are strictly right or wrong, and by arguing that black men have been shuffled into a second-class racial caste via the justice system, pulls the conversation in two different directions. It doesn’t make drug dealing okay, but it does challenge the way drug dealing is approached and penalized.
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I agree with multiple points Allision has made. First, I believe that the so called “War on Drugs” will never end. Second, I agree that many,not all, black men are victims of the whole “War on Drugs” notion. If inner city youths of any color were given the same or at least decent opportunities as suburban youths, I believe several inner city youths would not have to resort to selling drugs to help support themselves and/or their family. Selling drugs is often the only way out for many youths, and its unfortunate that the government and justice system spends so much time and money focusing on corner/block kids when there are so much more important things to focus on in the country.
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Alexander’s argument that the crack epidemic in inner-city neighborhoods is only exacerbated by the War on Drugs. High incarceration rates undermine the possibility for socio-economic improvement and trap inner-city residents (predominantly African-Americans) into a cycle of drug use, drug dealing and incarceration. If drugs were legalized it would pull the rug from under organized crime (that use drug dealing as its primary source of revenue). Violent crime would diminish (as it did in Hamsterdam) and inner-city neighborhoods wouldn’t have to be war zones.
Furthermore, I think Alexander’s connection between Reagan’s tough-on-crime policies had a racial undercurrent. The language of “states’ rights” and “tough-on-crime” are implicit ways of tapping into racial resentment and enacting policies that disproportionately hurt African-Africans. As Alexander writes: "the media was saturated with images of black “crack whores”, “crack dealers”, and “crack babies”" to get the public on board with the War on Drugs while heroin and finely-powdered cocaine received far less attention.
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I agree with Marcus that the opportunity to sell drugs in an environment that hinders social and economic mobility can be the only option. I also agree that people involved are not only victims to the War on Drugs but also the entire system that put them in such a vulnerable situation. The author’s definition of War on Drugs as the new form of legalized discrimination shows how the drug trade has become an alternative economy that minorities have become dependent on allowing institutions to legally punish those involved.
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The idea of the “War on Drugs” has always been strange to me. Just as Hurk said, “It’s not a war. Wars end”, I’ve always though the US legal system has gone about combating the rise of drugs in the wrong way. How they should do it? I don’t know, but I do know that throwing them in jail and causing people to question the motives of the legal system is not working out very well. Most of these individuals incarcerated are black, this is because where the police target for this cause is in impovished areas which mostly are filled with black people. Not saying the “Hamsterdam” idea was the best, seeing that it only encouraged the addicts to get high, but it did indeed get crime to go down. This is where the question comes in does the legal system care more about addicts getting off the drugs or the streets seemingingly being cleaned up?
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I’m currently taking a class on the history of genocide, in which recently we studied the mass killings that were a response to Stalin’s policies. Reading this passage created links in my mind to the mass killings that took part in Russia during the former half of the 20th century. First off, Stalin never “intended” for the persecution (ie killing) that happened as a result of his policies. To fund his war effort (link), Stalin enforced grain requisition policies to then export that grain to fuel the war effort. To accomplish such ends, the incrimination of anyone seen hoarding grain, or thus hindering the war effort, was labeled as a drain on society. The tricky bit with genocide is to be considered as such mens rea (or intent) must be present. Stalin’s atrocities were not considered genocide as there was no intent. The systematic disenfranchisement of blacks in America meets all of the requisites for genocide – a protected group: race(blacks), destruction in whole or part/separation of family/mental or physical harm(prison industrial complex, police brutality, etc.) all that is missing is specific and wholehearted intent.
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This reminds me of recent events that occurred in France. The country had an increasing issue with the arrival of a gypsy population, and the government didn’t want them around-they weren’t good to look at and they scared tourists. Unfortunately, whereas Germany had eliminated the issue by enforcing strict shoplifting laws, France simply wanted to outlaw a population. It was ultimately ruled a human rights violation, but the difference is apparently the US seems to have targeted a specific population.
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This paragraph baffled me. I would never have guessed, based on the information about black male incarceration rates, that white youth are more likely to engage in drug crime than blacks. The statistics at the end of the paragraph are particularly horrifying. I can’t imagine having to worry that I could be part of a huge group (80 percent) that would end up with a criminal record. The fact that the police and government can discriminate like this is saddening and unjust. If these people were really doing their jobs, the incarceration rates by race would correlate with the stats on which race is more likely to use and sell illegal drugs, and the fact that it doesn’t clearly shows there is something wrong here.
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With the sensationalism surrounding the war on drugs focusing on inner city, black offenders, that is what the face of the issue is and where they look. I believe this can be seen in the recent and somewhat analogous new war on prescription drugs. Since the frame has been set for bored house moms taking copious amounts of Xanax and valium, we’ve seen far more of those roles in popular media. Weeds (although has nothing to do with those types of drugs) brings this to mind, as well as the stereotypical loopy rich suburban mom who is constantly “on her meds”. If the police were to go after drugs for drugs sake the suburbs would be ripe for the picking as like Herc said, white people are stupid about drugs. They are allowed to be relaxed in their dealing with such illicit substances because they are aware that scrutiny is not on them.
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I agree with Adam here that people find what they are looking to find. I recently studied abroad in Australia—an extremely well-off country and extremely white—and the attitude toward recreational drug use there seemed the same if almost more enthusiastic than here in the US. I would argue that people (particularly youth) in stable situations are more likely to take risks than people (youth) in a less secure situation but yet still have the opportunity to break out of it. If someone is in a situation that they think won’t change regardless of their actions, they will engage in all sorts of thrill seeking and risky behaviors simply because they can, want to, or lack the impulse control. I would say preexisting psychological factors and family life have much more to do with drug use than economic or racial ones, but that’s just a guess.
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I was equally shocked by the data presented in this paragraph, but am very much in agreement with Caroline. It’s pretty easy to skew “results” to favor whatever you’re looking to find. In an article from Time Magazine, there’s actually a point that says not only are African Americans less likely to do drugs than white youth, but also than that of Hispanics, Native Americans, and Asians. (http://healthland.time.com/2011/11/07/study-whites-more-likely-to-abuse-drugs-than-blacks/)
I think that she also had a point when she said how well-off adolescents aren’t as fearful of getting in serious trouble. Those are the people who can afford lawyers and are “connected” in a way that gives them protection.
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This particular paragraph made me think of things that I have never deeply thought of or about before. To be honest, I never thought about a world without prisons and have definitely naively believed that prisons helped instead of hurt America. However, this paragraph and this work as a whole has definitely made me rethink these assumptions. Anderson goes as far as to say “the American penal system has emerged as a system of social control unparalleled in world history.” America is supposed to represent fairness, equal opportunity, and the idea of “innocent until proven guilty” however it seems as if our current institutions relating to crimes represent the opposite.
In the wire it is common for the characters to be in and out of prison frequently. Once they have been in prison, it is more likely that they will end up there again. Because of this, the show does make you question the effectiveness of the prison system. After all it seems as though characters are able to stay influential even if they are in prison, whether through others in prison or through outside sources. I immediately think of Wee-Bey in season four. Although in prison, he is still an influential character.
So would our lives, and our America be better without these prisons and juvenile facilities that seem to be hurting us instead of helping us? Alexander makes this question, which I would have immediately answered no to before reading this piece, hard to answer. She makes me rethink everything and brings up very strong and provocative arguments.
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I agree with Campbell that for the most part I have viewed the prison system as a helpful to America not hurtful. The sentence “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” really got me thinking. When people go to prison it is usually people who have very little social and economic resourcesto begin with and prison certainly doesn’t change this. They come out pretty much the same people with the same resources that they came in. When Poot gets realized from prison in season 4 he goes right back out to the streets. As William Julius Wilson mentioned in his article," More than just Race" young African American males have very little economic job opportunities and therefore they have very limited options for a source of income and resort to the streets. Serving time in prison certainly doesn’t make this better so when they get out they have to get right back to work whatever that may be.
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I think it’s wrong to assume that people do not change after being in prison. There is certainly room for personal growth and change but the systemic imprisonment, both in prison and after prison, makes changes difficult. The Wire shows that individuals are just cogs in the machine. Kaili makes a great point that before someone goes to prison, there is most likely social and economic challenges to begin with.
Prisons should start reform programs that allow inmates to obtain GED degree and job-skills so that once released, there is more incentive to leave behind the drug trade and they are not reliant on the corner.
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I actually volunteer at the Albemarle County Regional Jail as a tutor with the GED program. This jail actually has one of the best educational programs in the area and they have seen a lot of behavioral changes since they first implemented the program. As Alexander mentions, everyone leaves with the “prison label” regardless of how long they served. However, that label is going to be that much more constricting if you also don’t even have a high school diploma. When young boys in The Wire end up in prison before they have even finished school they are that much more disadvantaged when/if they are eventually released. It is programs like GED and re-entry programs that can decrease the rate of recidivism in these cases. We cannot expect people to change if we do not give them the tools.
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As a Black young woman, I was definitely aware of the disproportionate number of Black males involved with the prison system before reading this. I also knew that blacks, especially black males, were not subject to a completely just trial. However, I attributed these injustices primarily to the judicial system and individual biases without even considering that the laws themselves targeted Blacks. I too would have agreed that the prison system did more good than bad. However, I am curious as to whether my SES plays a role in my naivety about this matter. Even though I am Black, I also identify as a member of the upper middle class, which has exposed me to and reinforced values of higher education and hard work. I am meant to believe that with those values, my family arrived at its current position (an enactment of the American Dream). In order for that to be true, society would have to be structured in a way that made it possible. Therefore, in a slightly subtle but key way, I am encouraged to believe in our nation’s systems more than someone of a lower class, especially those in poverty. I’m very inclined to believe that without being educated on the issue, persons of a lower SES background would already hold views similar to Alexander’s.
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I don’t think that getting rid of prisons is the answer, but I do believe that our current system of prisons is entirely flawed. A world without prisons is dangerous. We need a place to put those who are unchangeable. The one’s who have committed crimes beyond the stretches of the basics and show little to no remorse. They, arguably and unfortunately, cannot be fixed. Though, that is where the benefits of our current prison system ends.
I have a close friend who spent 5 days in Charlottesville county prison for a stupid decision he made. He was a normal student with a good family life, so for him, prison wasn’t life-changing in either direction (positive nor negative). What was interesting was what he did in prison; according to him, absolutely nothing. He brought text books to read and planned to have a good workout regimen, but he said the environment of the institution just made him want to do absolutely nothing. He also said that this was not unique to him. The other prisoners just sat around and complained about “the system” or other things that made them unhappy. Of course, he was in prison with men that had committed crimes with much greater penalties and men who had no support system to return to when they finished their time.
It seems to me that this is about the worst thing you can do for society: take someone out of society for doing something wrong, trap him for a couple months to a couple years and release him back into the world. No rehabilitation, no improvement. What good is that going to do? As Allison said below, there needs to be some incentive to not return to a life of crime. Otherwise, what is the point?
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I agree with Austin’s point about the elimination of prisons not being the answer. However, I do think “the system” needs to be reviewed about what crimes and acts constitute one to be thrown in prison. There are several cases, some which I have seen personally, where kids and adults are put in prison over like a few grams of weed, when there are people committing much more harsh and violent crimes (assault, rape, etc.). If “the system” reevaluated what constituted as a crime, prisons would not be over flooded, and the real criminals would be off the streets and in prison.
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For most violent crimes I think that prison is an appropriate punishment, but like Marcus said why are we throwing people in jail who do not pose an imminent threat to other people. I wish that there was an alternative punishment and rehabilitation strategy for these type of offenders. Similar to Austin, I also have a friend who went to jail for a few days for a very minor crime and he also said that he did absolutely nothing. This leads me to ask is part of the reason that imprisonment leads to repeat offenders because those in jail are not learning anything? I like what someone said earlier about GED programs for inmates.
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Prisons are a necessary evil to keep order. You know not to do certain things because you will end up in jail (a place you do not want to be). This is not supposed to be a picnic in the slightest. That being said, our current penal system is definitely flawed. Like we’ve talked about, they should focus on helping their inmates make good use of their time and educate themselves. Sadly, you cannot force someone to read or study and if that person is not dedicated they will not do the work. Thus, not being able to climb out of the hole that prison has put them in.
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This paragraph as a whole had me immediately thinking back to a class I took last semester, Criminology. In Criminology, we learned that once someone is incarcerated, its is extraordinarily difficult to break out of a life of crime once released due to the lack of opportunities that are awarded to people who are labeled as “felons” or “criminals.” This lack of opportunity leads them down the same road that got them in trouble in the first place. It truly is a vicious cycle and one that seems as though there is not a solution. In The Wire, we see Cuddy get released from prison and attempt to go back to the game to get his feet on the ground. The ability for him to reject the game and get his boxing gym opened is a rare occurrence according to the studies that we looked at in Criminology. While i think that there are many individuals who change during their time being incarcerated, sometimes it is just too difficult to find a legitimate source of income on the outside and in order to support themselves and their families these individuals are left with little choice but to return to their old ways.
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This vicious cycle is further evidence that the penal system is not one built to “rehabilitate” inmates at all: if so, why would the rehabilitated continue to bear the scarlet letter of conviction on their background records for life? Why are they barred from voting? The penal system doubles as a self-sustaining farm system, cementing the likelihood that released prisoners will inevitably return, given the truncated options afforded to them upon their release.
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I, along with both Campbell and Kaili, found this notion of a world without prisons to be very interesting. Not only are The Wire characters in and out of prison constantly, but they also do not especially fear prison. In season one Stringer and Avon have many conversations in which they say things like, “he will take the 5 no problem,” assuming that someone in their crew will be sent to jail and be fine with it. We rarely see opposition to, or fear of, jail time. Most characters accept that it is part of the game. However, if it is not even feared among those who are so susceptible to it, how influential is it in making people abide by the law? Interesting to envision a world without prison, would it look any different?
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I think Virginia brings up a very interesting point. Many characters on The Wire take jail time as a blessing, and are more than willing to do their time and get back to the game. In the prison system today, many drug dealers can still control their business from inside the prison so when they get out they have something to go back to. We see an example of this in how Avon Barksdale control his empire from inside prison. He even rises to the top of the food chain inside the prison and makes the other inmates fear and respect him. This is in complete contrast to when Ziggy goes to jail in Season 2. He gets abused by the other inmates and looks completely scared of everyone. This can be seen as commentary on how the different races handle prison. Does anyone think there are stereotypes about how African American v. Caucasian men fair in prison, and are these stereotypes true?
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After reading this paragraph and comments on effectiveness of prison, I think is important to realize that correlation does not equal causation. Every person is going to react differently from being in prison. Some will learn for the better and some will not. However, I think it is important to realize that in The Wire based on the society that these humans live in it is difficult for them to come out of prison without acting out again. They are placed into an environment that is very harsh/strict and is not easy for them to just step out of the game after they are released from prison. They don’t have much choice when they get out of prison. I agree with what Allison said about reform programs, however, believe that it would still be difficult for these males to stray away from the drug trade.
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When reading this section, I was reminded of the discussion we had in Tuesday’s lecture about prisons and their ineffectiveness in destabilizing gangs, crime, and violence. As demonstrated in The Wire, when Avon is sent to jail, Stringer takes over and the game continues. If people believe that incarceration reduces crime or really does anything to help problems of these sorts, they are mistaken in my opinion. Even if you topple the heads of organizations, others will form; the game and drug trade is inevitable. In addition, there is a plethora of crime and corruption inside of prisons as well. The idea of a world without prisons is an interesting prospect I hadn’t thought of before this reading. I think society today dumps many black males in prisons, as demonstrated by stop and frisk, which just act as holding facilities for people until they are either released back into the game or left there to die. I do not think that there should be no prisons, but I do think it is interesting to consider what could come out of a more effective and racially neutral criminal justice system that reassesses crimes punishable of jail time. Yet, society will likely be faced with racial inequality in the eyes of the police for a long time, and I think it would take a structural readjustment of our criminal justice system to decrease racial stereotypes and incarceration.
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This concept of a “world without prisons” is an idealized model of how to reform the justice system. From the standpoint of reforming criminals, it is apparent that prisons do more harm than good. Therefore to maximize the amount of criminals whose behavior is reformed, it would be optimal to minimize the amount of criminals spending time in prison. A less ideal and more realistic application of this policy is the drug policy in Portugal, which treats drug possession as a health issue rather than a legal issue. By minimizing the amount of “criminals” imprisoned for petty drug possession, the government is able to minimize the amount of “criminals” that are created through the penal system.
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I recently read a great article about a potential new form of corrective justice (which is used in one of the Scandinavian countries). This new method, instead of providing jails lump sums of tax dollars to provide for jails, receive a prorated amount based on the recidivism of said convict. For example, the first time the person went to jail tax dollars would cover 100% of their costs while in jail. The next time, 80%, and the next, 60%, so on and so forth. The current economic incentive scheme is to lock as many people as possible, and in the most cost efficient (read: inhumane) way possible. However, this new one would instead incentivize prisons to better help their inmates reintegrate into society once they leave.
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The sort of blanket way the US deals with criminals reminds me of the way Marlo seems to have just one way of dealing with anyone that crosses him. The government seems to lock people up with as little discretion as Marlo knocks them off. The only difference is, people have a lot more respect for death than for serving time, thus the government is rendered ineffective and looks “weak.”
I also agree with what Campbell says about looking at crime in a different way—we should rethink how to punish our criminals and whether to consider them criminals at all and offer more support to help them change their lives.
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The problem of mass incarceration, especially of the African-American community, is inextricably intertwined with the War on Drugs. 31 million Americans (almost one in ten) have been arrested on drug-related charges while African-American women’s incarceration rates have increased by 800% since 1986 (approximately the beginning of the War on Drugs). How can African-Americans improve their economic condition when the penal system appears to discriminate, perhaps intentionally, against them? If drugs were decriminalized, far more inner-city African-Americans would be able to finish education, gain employment and show the next generation that there are realistic alternatives to prison time.
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I agree with Ben’s comment that the penal system and the War on Drug’s discriminatory nature crippling any any ability for many African Americans to increase their economic situation. In contrast to the proposition of decriminalization that Ben offers, there is a catalyst on the other side of the spectrum heightening the crippling effect of these institutions. In addition to the amount of African Americans imprisoned on this massive scale, there is also the question of the hefty amount of time they are serving in sentences. Mandatory minimums for drugs are also seen very racially biased in nature and in effect take away power from the judge to offer any sort of leniency from extenuating circumstances or gray situations. To try to fight against the policy makes a politician look weak on crime, terrible to the majority public.
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I agree that these rates of incarceration for African-Americans is ridiculous and wrong. However, I’m not sure if simply decriminalizing drugs could be the answer to changing this. It could definitely go a long way in preventing these mass incarcerations because police would have less reason and suspicion and drug arrests could decline. But would it be enough to end street culture and violence? I think these things are more difficult to put an end to and would prevent anyone from completely solving a problem like this so easily. But I do agree decriminalizing some drugs could be a great place to start decreasing these abominable rates of incarceration.
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This seems to be an interesting point.
When looking at the our criminal justice system from a non-biased, unlimited resources, and perfect world point of view – on paper it looks fine. Right, we are a smart country, our founding fathers were smart – etc.
But in reality – the system does not work like this. Members of our judicial system, law enforcement are racist. Why you think? Too many questions.
But because of this innate inequality that stems back to slavery, and even before so in all parts of the world – it creates this messed up system of black and minority kids in jail. It creates this system where while in paper minorities may seem to be free, in reality it is wrong. It is not just a legal change that needs to be done, but a cultural shift as well.
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With regards to civil rights advocates devoting their time to affirmative action rather then the issue of mass incarceration, I wonder if the reason for this is that civil rights advocates are using their time and resources to further enhance opportunities for minorities instead of fighting what unfortunately seems to be a losing or uphill battle. Today, it does not seem as though they are going to stop using the prison system like Anderson mentioned previously, and it does not seem that we as a society have a clear cut solution to ending mass incarceration. However, these civil rights leaders do have the opportunity to fight for increased opportunities for minorities. By fighting for affirmative action instead of against mass incarceration, it seems as though civil rights leaders are picking a battle that can produce positive results rather than a battle that may take decades to produce any result at all.
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In light of the war on drugs, anyone who attempts to mitigate mass incarceration will be seen as motioning to legalize drugs, which is still political suicide. I think that even if this racial discourse was brought to the mass population, many (white culture) would have little interest in listening. This might be the reason that civil rights leaders are directing their efforts to increasing minority opportunities; I’m sure they are fully aware of laws behind mass incarceration as a deeper root of the problem, but are unable to attack it head-on.
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Michelle Alexander defines the New Jim Crow as the composition of racial caste, criminal justice system, and mass incarceration in an era of colorblindness. This represents a new method of legal discrimination. By identifying mass incarceration as a “racial caste system,” the realities of this new legalized discrimination come to light. This notion of racial caste applies to The Wire in that it holds a racial group in a second-rate position by the law and practice. The issue of social mobility arises when discussing the constraints of the racial caste system. In The Wire, the issue of social mobility is apparent, yet almost nonexistent because the opportunity to exhibit upward mobility is fictional. The system of control literally imprisons African Americans from mainstream society. Upward mobility is a fundamental aspect of the U.S., and education is seen as the force behind that mobility. However, the public education institution in The Wire does not provide poor inner-city African American kids with this opportunity. As a result, poor inner-city communities are not beneficiaries of government provided education. Alexander helps remind us that the institutions we find ourselves in have varying degrees of consequences and impacts on the people within. The caste system, similar to prison and poor inner-city public education, prohibits upward mobility, a necessary component of the U.S.
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I agree with much of what katie said here, but would like to expand upon it just a bit. With regard to upward mobility and education being the driving force behind it, I think that the problem in The Wire and in urban America starts before the schools are even involved. Similar to a comment I made on last week’s reading, I believe that the upward mobility of these underprivileged kids is severely limited by the environment they are raised in. Many of these kids are raised in households where there is great economic strain and in response to this economic strain many parents are left to turn to illegitimate means of making ends meet. This sets an example for the kids that this is an acceptable way to do things and before kids are even in school they have this false idea of what is right and wrong. With this mindset, they enter school and like we saw in The Wire, they are not concerned at all with school and are only concerned with life in the streets once school ends.
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I agree with Michael here. Even if the public schools in the Wire were the best in the country, I still wonder whether inner-city kids would stay in school or continue to be drawn to the drug trade. Incentivizing school means more than just hiring better teachers and having better facilities. It means demonstrating that the option of staying in school is better than the options lying outside. How do we go about changing these schoolchildren’s perspectives that it is worth it to invest the time and energy into education today rather than making the quick and easy buck doing illegal activities?
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Katie brings up a good point in her argument that education is also at play in the lack of upward mobility in America. The irony that I think must be noted here though is that these institutions are supposed to be ones that promote the greater good of society. I wonder too then how the privatization of prisons has complicated this caste system.
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As Western pointed out in the other article, school and prisons are all too similar in their role in lower class life today. In The Wire they make the comment that the kids teach school as a prison where the teachers are the guards. If schools do not provide upward mobility, then how are they any different from prisons which essentially create a space where a group of people can be controlled?
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I agree with Katie that what is supposed to be a stepping stone to, but in reality is a huge limiting factor to, the upward mobility Alexander talks about is education. Season 4 of The Wire critically analyzes the education system in Baltimore. While the show gives viewers glimpses of hope in the characters as a result of the school system, the system ends up failing them. A huge scene that comments on the somewhat uselessness of the school system is when Prez drives by his former student on the corner. The message being, in the end, the school system accomplishes nothing for the kids and they end up the same places they would be without it. Because of the limited opportunities and resources they are provided with, they are stuck in a certain caste system, and unable to move upward in society.
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I think if we’re going to use the wire as an example – from my analysis of season 4 here is what I think.
There is a combination of two things that really affect the students. The quality of their school system and the commitment of their mentors (teachers). We see this with Namond, who evidently broke that cycle.
However, this is not universal. Even though Prezz was an awesome passionate – he ultimately couldn’t touch his students. Its not just a problem with the school, but with the idea of street culture in general, and how it perpetuates this culture within its area.
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All of these issues are related to one another—parents’ inability to obtain sustainable jobs, children attending insufficient schools, lack of opportunities to escape illegal drug activity, etc. Even if one of these issues were to change for the better for example providing better education facilities, it does not automatically change the stark reality that other institutions perpetuate the cycle of unequal and sometimes nonexistent opportunities that can affect an individuals life. Public education will not give every child the financial resources needed to overcome the challenges they face at home with their parents like having enough food on the table. Sometimes these kids take on adult burdens because their parents do not have social institutions to rely on like their children do if they happen to go to a good school. These institutions do not work independently from one another.
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Too often, there is a stigma surrounding ex-convicts that they will go back to their old ways at some point following their release. A study done by the U.S. Department of Justice states that 67.8% of the state prisoners released in 2005 were arrested within 3 years of release and 76.6% were arrested within 5 years of release. These numbers are skewed a little however because they are not the statistics for new offenses. Many of these people go back to jail after violating parole or something similar. To me, this is should not be punishable by jail time and should be addressed.
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After being sentenced to prison, a person is permanently affected for the rest of their lives. Despite whatever the good the person did before going behind bars, there livelihood is already depreciated and their options for the future are drastically minimized. Do we no longer value forgiveness? Do we no longer value the idea of a second chance?
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This reminds me of what we discussed in class about how public defenders oftentimes aren’t even close to being an effective form of defense. If they’re nearly impossible to access, are people being denied their right to due process?
Sherri Moore, while giving a lecture on the ineffectiveness of the Sexual Assault Panel, shared with the class how she thought that public defenders in the system should be paid more by the government in order to increase the amount of people willing to take on cases. This way, there isn’t that looming gap between the rich and the poor in terms of quality of defense.
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The author earlier mentions the “virtual bars” of incarceration as defined by parole sentencing and lack of rights after being released from prison. While mass incarceration obviously hints at the black men in jail, behind real bars, the author illuminates the real meaning of mass incarceration. In the Wire, several of the characters involved with drug dealing have worked the corners since their youth and racked up quite the criminal record. Characters like Dennis Cutty, who have just been released from jail, have no other job options because they have only known the corner and jail. Cutty defies the norm by removing himself from drug dealing and establishing himself professionally as the manager of a boxing gym, aiming to get kids off the streets. But Cutty is the exception in the Wire and even then, faces massive challenges at city hall.
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I like Allison’s use of Cutty as an example of someone trapped behind ‘virtual bars’. He struggles to find a place in society as someone who still is restrained in many ways. While Cutty is the exception in his eventual success, it does call attention to the fates of numerous other men who aren’t so lucky. I think that’s a strength of the show, it emphasizes Cutty’s exceptionality while reminding viewers of the commonality of his situation.
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One of the things that makes the Wire so rewarding to watch is its subtlety. It certainly doesn’t beat the viewer over the head shouting ‘symbolism!’ too often, and this makes the show more rewarding for the audience. However, I think it’s certainly not coincidental that the one area where Cutty is able to find a passion/career is through boxing. The ring is somewhere where you’re continually knocked down and must keep bouncing back. No matter how hard you are hit or how many times you’ve been punched, staying down will only makes things worse. This reflects Cutty’s larger post-prison plight.
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Allison’s example of Cutty, as someone who struggles to find employment outside of drug dealing after being released from prison, is an insightful one. The problem of incarceration rates intensifying in poor inner-city neighborhoods only perpetuates the cycle of systemic poverty and joblessness since people who have been locked away for non-violent drug-related offenses have little choice but to go straight back into crime (and perhaps, jail again).
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I agree with the comments above. Cutty has few options when coming out of jail. He tries to work a legitimate job as a lawn worker but is soon told by his boss that the job is essentially very hard work, day after day, for little reward. He turns to the gang essentially because it is his only financial option. Cutty has limited mentorship, job advice, and gets back into gang life because due to his environment, it the only thing he really knows
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Yes, Oprah and Obama have made leaps and bounds in their careers, and thus help combat the idea of a new racial caste system, but these are only two people out of a race. Not to take away from their hard work and success, but two people do not represent a race. The significance of a race’s status lies in the majority of a race not the few people who are the rare exception. It would be different if there were more Oprah’s and Obama’s of the world, but the fact that there are only a handful should demonstrate how the African American race is still at the bottom of this new racial caste system. For example, there are many white people in power and it is not an anomaly for people to see, thus until the African American race can get to a point where being in a high position such as Obama or Oprah is not “one in a million”, then one can validly argue against the racial caste system. On the other hand, one might try to counter argue and say that “Obama and Oprah are just the first step, progress is being made”; this doesn’t matter. Despite the fact progress might be being made the fact of the matter is that we are not at the end point which shows how African Americans are still trying to fight out of their current position at the bottom of the racial caste system. African Americans are the majority in jails and prisons, the majority on welfare and the majority who are unemployed. Thus, to praise Oprah and Obama and then try to apply it to the entire African American race is an invalid and close mind argument.
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I totally agree on your point. Funny thing is actually this is the same argument Bill O’ Brian used on the Daily Show a few episodes back. He literally said, white privilege doesn’t exist – the most powerful man in the world and most powerful women in the world are black – Obama and Oprah respectively.
Sure the fact that two African Americans could reach this pinnacle of success says something. But this simply brings up the idea of being a token, which by the way is so real in college.
Anyway, back on point. I agree with your point. Its not a step, in my opinion and with the article no steps have been taken. Racial prejudice still exists, it just isn’t as obvious as before.
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I understand that viewing Oprah and Obama as an end to an era of racial hierarchy is completely wrong, but I wonder how we are supposed to interpret these success stories. In many ways these success stories are like winning the lottery because the likelihood of them happening according to the given statistics are so unlikely. Yet at the same time don’t many African American youth look up to these black exceptionalism character? By glorifying them do we make the problem worse? I guess what I am asking here is that should we even give these success stories any attention at all if they are actually just hiding the underlying problems?
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I think Garrett raises a really interesting point here. Though Oprah and Obama are unlikely statistics, I think they are utilized as representations of possibilities of success for other minorities. Similar to The Cosby Show, these figures act within the media to give hope to minorities despite the racial caste. I think these success stories are therefore worth glorification in that they call attention, for whites and blacks alike, to naturalize the success of an African American. Though I do agree glorifying them may give youths unrealistic expectations, I think it is positive in that it inspires some youth to recognize their potential and try to break free from racial barriers to upward mobility.
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I think there’s definitely a balancing act here. You don’t want to overemphasize the success stories of a few African-Americans, but you still want to give these children hope that things can get better. In the article, “Days of Destruction, Days of Revolt,” we read about one of the community leaders who worked with children in the city of Camden, NJ. The leader basically said that hope is one of the only things left for these children to hold onto before slipping into the drug trade and other violent activities.
I’m also a huge sports fan so I think one more realistic and positive success story is that of the professional athlete who comes from a very underprivileged neighborhood. Obviously, not everyone can grow up to become the next Richard Sherman (who grew up in Compton), but these athletes can be role models for young people nonetheless. If a child is more likely to go to a basketball court after school than to a drug corner, than that is definitely a positive thing, and I believe those kinds of success stories should be publicized.
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I have to go against Sara’s idea here of the positive nature of underprivileged African American kids looking up to professional athletes as role models, and show that this also poses a danger. While yes, playing sports is better than selling drugs on the corner, that is not much of a threshold for comparison. Sports can be a great and extremely positive activity for kids, especially those at risk, getting them off the street and kept busy while teaching them valuable lessons about hard work and leadership. But, in so many of these communities of poor African American kids the only ways out are not seen at in the frame of someone like Obama or Oprah, but in the Richard Shermans. coming from a great documentary “Hoop Dreams,” about two kids trying to get out of street life with college basketball scholarships and dreams of the NBA, these kids as well as their families and peers continually bring up that the only ways out are through sports or music. If your kid is not an exceptional football player or an aspiring rapper, there is no real hope of economic advancement and getting out of the old neighborhood. Kids in these situations need more realistic role models, which could hopefully inspire them to stay in school
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It’s very interesting that Kristin and Garrett both raised these questions because I had the same thoughts while I was reading Alexander’s chapter one. It’s almost like a double edged sword. On the one side by holding up and glorifying famous or successful african americans we also erase the unequal footing between most black and white americans by establishing their success as a common and easily accessible feat. On the other side, however, by labeling such successful and famous individuals as outside the norm, do we not reinforce the fact that they will only be considered a phenomenon. In other words, by declaring their extremity do we not further condemn the african american race’s fate as not normal to be successful and famous?
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I agree with Chase’s point here. This brings up the idea of black exceptionalism that Alexander discusses. In an era of colorblindness, Alexander argues the irony of the election of Barack Obama in a country where a racial caste system exists. This current racial caste system exists only because of racial indifference. This component of racial indifference and Chase’s double edged sword can be applied to the current status of the racial caste system in a country with an African American president. Unfortunately, we tend to avoid conversations dealing with race and class in our society. However, Alexander argues that in order to form a new social consensus a dialogue is necessary.
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Here Alexander talks about how racism is highly adaptable. Therefore it can come in many different forms, some more obvious than others. When I read this I thought about The Wire, and how it rarely depicts racism straightforwardly. Many African Americans have powerful leadership roles within the show. Some examples being the former mayor of Baltimore, and many people within the police department. Racial tensions aren’t really present in the workplace. In the streets racism isn’t really seen either besides the fact that most of the people living in these poor neighborhoods are African American. Alexander refutes the claim that racial caste system no longer exists in America, and explains how racism has just been transferred into a different form. This form being mass incarceration. Racism is at the root of the war against drugs. Now I realize that the racism in The Wire exists within the structure of the institutions, rather than with the individuals. The police who are making the drug arrests are not necessarily racists, rather they are working for a racist cause.
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What a great point-racism is rarely if ever explicitly shown in The Wire. It is hidden, engrained into the institutions that govern Baltimore. In politics and particularly in unstable states, there is the concept of ‘institutionalized violence;’ that is, the violence that is the result of a set of economic, social, and political structures. I would argue that mass incarceration is a form of institutionalized violence, as the violence that erupts in the streets of Baltimore on The Wire can be traced institutionally to the police, education, etc., and historically to Jim Crow laws and slavery.
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I think that’s a really interesting point. Baltimore being in the Mid-Atlantic/ North really does shape the coverage of racism in the Wire. With how much Alexander talks about Jim Crow being a systematic approach in southern states I think it’s interesting to think about how different this show would be if it were in a place with historic race violence like New Orleans or Atlanta or Montgomery. Alexander does note that it’s not that the North wasn’t racist, and she makes it clear that it’s a national system but the historic legacy of slavery in the South has shaped it’s culture in a way that’s just not really represented in the Wire. The Wire is so deliberate in the restaurant scenes or the scene on the boat or countless other scenes of society where they include African Americans and white elites. In many ways the specificity of Baltimore is one of the most powerful drivers behind the Wire’s success: it really does show what life is like in baltimore. I just wonder if in achieving specificity, the wire lost the opportunity for some larger statement about the state of the African American experience in inner-cities across the country.
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Following Annie’s comment: Baltimore is especially interesting because of it being right on the mason-dixon line, where during the civil war some people in maryland fought for the union and some for the confederacy. In Baltimore County, there is a lot to remind African American’s of pre-civil war times: there are some large farms that used to be plantations, a few of the private schools were former plantations and the founders of the schools owned slaves. There has been a deep history in Maryland of slavery so it is definitely different than a Northern city, but also very different from the deep south. It is cheaper to live in Baltimore than Washington DC, Richmond, or Philadelphia, which may be a cause for the dense inner-city population.
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Also, remember Professor Williams’ point from class on Tuesday. The segregationist voting block in Congress quickly adapted to becoming the “tough on crime” voting block. This idea of racism as adaptable really intrigues me.
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Racial microaggressions – comments and actions that are well intended, but spark negative interpretations – is another way that racism has adapted to modern times. Microagressions reveal latent biases that are difficult for people to control. Because microaggressions are not overtly racist (as Anderson discuses elsewhere in the article), they are able to seep into the workplace, classroom, and government, and other social settings.
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Alexander’s language is interesting in that it captures how totally this new discrimination controls lives. ‘Mass incarceration’ and ‘systems of control’ calls to mind a repressive regime, not liberal democracy. The overwhelming imprisonment and stigmatization of black males indicates that there are indeed two sets of laws which govern white and black communities separately and unequally. The Wire presents this division in a myriad of ways: in the scene where D’Angelo and his girlfriend dine at an upscale restaurant, it is as though he enters an alternate universe even though he is still in Baltimore. Clearly the restaurant’s other patrons—white and black alike—do not have the same concerns as D nor did they likely grow up with the realities of poverty, incarceration, and violence. D’Angelo is effectively confronting another world whose inhabitants manage the systems of control which define his life.
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Mary’s reference to D’s experience at the restaurant with his girlfriend is a prime example of a challenge against the systems of control that have permeated our society, and continue to be strengthened. I think that despite his background, his race in itself marks a confrontation of two worlds when dining at the upscale restaurant. Even after all the progressions over the years in multi-racial acceptance, racism is still a clear issue that minorities, despite their wealth, will have to face, which is unfortunate. D’s anxiety during the dinner represents the pressure of our society’s racial caste system, and I wonder if there will ever be a day in which all races can feel equality in social situations.
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I agree with Kristin in Mary, and I think that what makes this system so powerful is the subtlety of its enactment. This system gives those outside of it the cover to be able to deny its existence. The upscale restaurant can be said to be inclusive, but for a myriad of reasons, all of which are defensible to the average upscale white patron, it is a system of social control.
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I think the points that Kristin, Mary, and Will bring up are extremely relevant. In our capitalist society, people of all races have this imaginative view that if you have money you can have upward mobility. This just isn’t true in our society because of the systems of control that continue to separate people of different races. The scene with D’Angelo and his girlfriend in the restaurant is a perfect example of this phenomenon. There is something to be said about how society views those people who make their money through illegitimate means and are a minority. You wouldn’t see this same scene with Bunk or Greggs because they are view different in society as African Americans who make an income through legitimate means.
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This leads exactly into the system of social control. Native American’s were in their own territory, with organized structures of power. These structures allowed them to create a separate sphere, and remain outside the modes of mobility of the white settlers. With the concept of “modern day” Jim Crow, the methods of control are of the same mold, they try to draw in blacks into the system of upward mobility, and then use oppression and violence to control those who try to get there, in this case the prison system.
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Will, I think that is incredibly well said. I also think that the American Indians connection to the land and identity with the territory is what gave them the ability to confidently defend themselves against the colonists. Through urban renewal initiatives during the days of Jim Crow, members of the African American community in the lower socio-economic bracket were often displaced due the destruction of their neighborhood unit and faced with the instability of resettlement.
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Will, I think that is incredibly well said. I also think that the American Indians connection to the land and identity with the territory is what gave them the ability to confidently defend themselves against the colonists. African slaves were completely uprooted and placed in a totally new environment and forced in a position on a social hierarchy that they were never a part of. This instability leads to a lack of identity which led them to be taken advantage of by European immigrants.
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When I read this paragraph, I started to think about the different social hierarchies in the Wire. I considered the addicts and the drug dealers. Addicts in the Wire are depicted as both black and white: Bubbles and Johnny. The drug dealers are almost entirely black, however (there are a few white drug dealers depicted in Season 2). It’s interesting to consider which group is higher on the chain in terms of social hierarchy. In my opinion, I think the addicts are “lower” on the chain than the drug dealers are – and I think drug dealers use this fact to their advantage. Even though they do refer to the addicts as “customers,” they can be extremely rude, misleading, and generally corrupt when dealing with addicts. It’s almost as if the racial divide has actually flipped in the drug trade, with white addicts below the black dealers. The addicts are the true “slaves” to these extremely debilitating, addictive drugs whereas the drug dealers are the “indentured servants” who make their living on the selling of these drugs but could get out of the business if they saw another way to out to make money.
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I certainly concur that we see a heavy majority of black drug dealers. Viewers learn the name and at least some background of dozens of dealers. I feel that it’s very different to make racial assumptions about the customers or addicts because the viewers are so rarely exposed to this group. Bubbles and Johnny recur in the series, but that’s the viewers largest exposure to addicts. Hamsterdam is littered with addicts but we see that this chaotic area is dotted with all races and all manners of illicit activities, not just drug addicts. I don’t mean to disprove your point of the inverted social hierarchy, it just made me realize that it’s a little surprising how rarely we as viewers have insight into the actual customers that drive the entire core of the show (the drug trade & turf wars.)
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Here Alexander makes a point that bugs me everyday when people talk about “the good old days” or how things were better the way they were.
The language people use when problem solving often points back in time to some imaginary date when things were “better.” Alexander is pointing out that this time never existed and that our most amazing country has been broken from the very start.
In light of this, can we move forward with creativity, then, instead of continually trying to use methods and laws that have yet to contribute to a perfect nation?
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I find the way that Wacquant presents the idea of racial division as a “consequence and not a precondition of slavery” as a very important perspective to think about. Although Wacquant is referencing slavery, the idea is widely applicable to racial discrimination as a whole. Being black, poor, and involved in the drug trade is not a prerequisite for living in inner-city Baltimore, but rather it comes with the territory. Now that the association between black youths and inner city violence has been formed, its taken on an identity all of its own.
Yesterday in class when we were talking about past group projects that posed questions about what a drug dealer looks like or what Charlottesville city kids think about UVA police, made me curious as to what other stereotypes we form based off historical circumstances that have effected a certain cohort of people. For example, Western mentions a “welfare queen.” It would be interesting to ask students how they would describe “an inner-city welfare queen” versus say a “white, single-mother living on welfare”. The connotations that have formed with racial divisions and inner-city lifestyle in American society are ingrained in many citizens minds subconsciously.
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I very much agree with Page in that the the perspective of thinking about racial division as a consequence of slavery not a precondition to slavery is a very important one. I think that a lot of people automatically assume the opposite, that racial division and discrimination, in a way, lead to slavery. To be honest the causal relationship of slavery and racial division is one that includes many factors, and Wacquant’s starts to unfold and suggests some of the them.
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I agree with page and Wacquant that racial division is a “consequence” and not a “precondition” of slavery. Racial division is not a natural existing world condition but rather a very much man made one through the conditions of slavery. The characters in the wire are not poor, black, and slinging on the corner because that’s just who they are it’s because that’s the world they were born into not the world they chose. These cultural forces are the consequence of the family and the world they were born into. Namond is an example of someone who is definitely not “preconditioned” for this world yet is forced to exist within it.
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The idea that social conditions shape beliefs (which are considered “truths”) is very interesting. I’m interested if this is the same mechanism at work that produces modern stereotypes. For example, in the 1980s the belief that AIDS was a “gay virus” that only homosexual men could contract was extremely pervasive, as the the belief that AIDS came from gay men. Both of these (false) stereotypes were based on the prevalence of AIDS in the gay community. It seems very likely that the huge spike in the incarceration rates of black people during the war on drugs is responsible for the stereotype that black people are criminals.
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Interesting tie to people’s assumptions of what a drug dealer or person on welfare looks like. This image has been created of the ‘natural born killer,’ the drug dealer, the hood, etc. The humanity has been erased from these figures, much like the clip of the teenager Prof. Williams showed us from The Shield. To take this a step further, I think it is necessary to tie this dehumanization to the mass incarceration Alexander examines in The New Jim Crow. Mass incarceration is yet another byproduct of racial division.
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With the end of slavery, this perceived loss of control over former slaves and the threat of insurrection highlights that the country was founded on a social order which depended on the subjugation of African Americans. Further, the US economy depended on slavery to function and the economic uncertainty following the civil war shows just how close the ties between the two were (and still are). What is interesting is that the onus was placed on African Americans for lacking “the proper motivation to work.” This has clearly continued to this day, with stereotypes of the hood, the drug dealer, the criminal pervading the media and often public opinion. This image dehumanizes African Americans—creating an “us and them” divide— and justifies a system which economically and socially oppresses them.
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The heavily reliance of white people upon the free labor of black slaves would’ve caused the economy and perhaps the reconstruction of the country to falter. There has been many anthropological studies dissecting African Americans from skull inspecting and nose measurement into a foreign beings that is so separate from whites to justify this claim of lacking “proper motivation to work.” But with the Wire, and I’m thinking of the dock workers in season 2 and Ziggy. What system are the white ethnic displaced workers under when they are unable to successfully prosper and cross socio-economic lines?
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I think Alexander’s piece is very intriguing after reading it, but I think she is too critical of historical Civil Rights efforts because she looks at them through the lens of the now. This paragraph is a great example. She criticizes the 15th Amendment as insufficient, but these mechanisms to disenfranchise black voters were created in response to the 15th Amendment, not because of it. I wish she would remember her point from earlier in the article about racism as adaptable and not criticize those who did have good intentions
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I mentioned this antagonism earlier in another comment. Alexander’s version makes poor white’s hatred of black americans out to be a calculated result of the planter class. I’ve learned that the reaction was a more visceral reaction that was an outgrowth of slavery and a quest for some semblance of status as a poor white. I’m interested to hear what you all think/have been taught. Based on racial attitudes toward blacks in the South during the civil war, it seems unlikely to me that abolition would necessitate any pot-stirring on the behalf of white people.
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I’ve never heard of this hatred being attributed to the efforts of the planter class to maintain control over the lower classes before. I agree with Elizabeth in that I am more familiar with the reaction stemming from slavery and abolition. My understanding was that poor whites opposed abolition because slavery separated poor whites from the bottom of the totem pole. However, I think that Alexander’s description makes perfect sense because segregation policies directly benefitted the poor white people more than any other demographic. Poor white people did not have the influence or power to promote such a policy, so it makes sense that the white elite would promote these policies in an effort to maintain their superior social position.
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I think this is one of Alexander’s most important paragraphs in the reading. She brings up the point that no matter what reform is happening socially and politically, economic reform is the only thing that will jumpstart equality between blacks and whites. As Alexander, and numerous other authors we have read over the semester point out, economic opportunity is limited for poverty stricken African Americans. I think that The Wire provides a critical analysis of certain institutions, but it could have focused more on economic reform. Carcetti tries to reform the black community in Baltimore physically, educationally, and safety-wise, however economic reform is what is the most needed. Particularly in season 4, we see that options for making money are limited and so the kids are forced into dealing drugs. If the show took the same stance Alexander does on the importance of economic issues I think it could have made even more of an impact.
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Talking about the success of the civil rights movement as a “brief moment in the sun” I think is a good analogy to the political and social successes we see in the Wire. Often political leaders approach these issues of poverty and race through middle and upper class values and expectations and try to patch them up. However, these successes reamain brief and often temporary we because very little do we ever approach these issues such as race, poverty, discrimination, etc. through the people who are experiencing it perspective and very little do we draw on their life experience. We look from the high branches of the political system down on these people as either victims of their situation or just as America coming undone at the seems instead of placing ourselves in their realm and trying to understand their world from their point of view.
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Kaili’s comparison of the politics in the Wire as going through “brief moments in the sun”, led me to question what specific individual characters have their fleeting moments of success followed by periods of despair. The character who first came to mind was Bubbles – a character who I would argue is inherently good, and supports the cliche that “nice guys [often] finished last”. Bubbles goes in and out of sobriety, in and out of short jobs, in and out of companionships, but throughout it all he still remains positive overall. Its hard to pinpoint the exact characteristic which makes Bubbles so endearing, however I found that he was one of the few characters that I was consistently rooting for from beginning to end.
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It’s interesting that you brought up Bubbles because I was tossing around potential post ideas concerning him.
I was interested in how he interacted with the “War on Drugs” and the “racial caste system.” He’s in a unique situation. He is, of course, negatively affected by drugs because he has an addiction. but by being a police informant, he escapes The New Jim Crow discrimination (incarceration). Police won’t arrest him, even though they are aware that he abuses heroin (paying for it with their money, no less). He’s too valuable to put in jail.
One of our assigned readings earlier in the semester (I can’t remember which) briefly equated him to Mother Courage (the title character from the Brecht play “Mother Courage and all Her Children”). Being a Drama Major that perked my interest. I don’t know if it’s entirely relevant to THIS conversation, but if someone wants to discuss it further, I’m all ears!
(Maybe I should just start a new comment thread?)
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I had similar reactions to the “brief moment in the sun” description. Kaili’s analysis is spot on. The Wire depicts institutions of all kinds (police, government, media, etc.) as highly resistant to change. Even when change does occur, it is often short-lived before it is dialed back.
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This sentence really stuck out to me among the entire reading. The idea that “those committed to racial hierarchy were forced to search for new means of achieving their goals” is just such an intense concept for me to grasp. Slavery was replaced by Jim Crow Laws, but now those were gone as well, and even still, people feel the need to establish some sort of racial hierarchy. What’s even crazier is that this idea is still engrained in some people’s heads even today. However, I think that although it does somewhat reinforce certain stereotypes of poor African Americans, overall The Wire does not seem to overdramatize inequality between the white and black population. Carcetti constantly seems to be intimidated by the black population, and it clearly affects his campaign. It is interesting that in these inner-city, poor urban areas with an overwhelmingly African American dominant population, we see a completely different definition of “racial hierarchy.”
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I agree with Heidi, that it is absolutely absurd that even today people feel the need to establish some form of racial hierarchy. And right now it is coming in the form of the prison system. I also agree that the wire doesn’t over dramatize inequality between the white and black population, but I think this is by default. I think we don’t see an over dramatization of white and black inequality because this show is mainly about african americans. After all, it is set in a primarily african american neighborhood.
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The commitment to racial hierarchy is sad but not surprising to me because, in my opinion, its purpose is more so to keep a certain population on top than it is to keep another population down. American society has simply continued to suppress the same population (African Americans) because it’s easiest. History has proven time and time again that people will do anything, including genocide, to maintain power. In terms of Carcetti, I think it’s important to examine why he is “intimidated” by the Black community and whether intimidation indicates a level of equality. From my perspective, it seemed as though Carcetti was interested in appearing to consider the Black community’s concerns because he wouldn’t get reelected without any of their votes. He has to be reminded to meet with the one Black mayor, suggesting whose advise he really values.
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Alexander makers a persuasive case that the current prison system is a new form of racial hierarchy, and I agree with her. But if this is the case, where does that leave white inmates? Back in the Jim Crow era, it was often impoverished, uneducated whites that clung most ferociously to racial segregation because racial segregation made them “better” than someone else (as opposed to being on the bottom of the social ladder). I’m curious if this dynamic is part of the reason white supremacist and neo-nazi gangs are prevalent in prisons. Or is their presence explained by higher rates of crime among these populations. Anyway, I don’t have any positive answer, but I think it’s worth considering.
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It’s interesting to watch the wire sand see how the racial hierarchy is different in each place. I always found it interesting how Carcetti was intimidated by the black population when in reality (although sad to say) seems to be the one in the “outside world” who holds the power over blacks. However, looking at where he is he has to give into the African American dominant population. Writing this, it sounds so bad to say, but it’s the truth. The more poverished area because they are predominantly occupided by blacks are thus controlled by blacks. However, the white man is still in charge because he has the control over their circumstances in terms of housing and other fundamental things in their life. It is cool to think how African Americans have their own racial hierarchy, but it is sad to know that they only rule when they are in impovished areas.
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This quote made me think a lot about Police Behavior in recent news, namely “Stop-and-Frisk” and how racist of a procedure it is.
And then I thought about Pryzbylewski. In season one he, without reason, bashed that young black man in the face, causing him to go blind in one eye.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V16H46r_fPE
Then later, in season three, he accidentally shoots a black police officer (which could have been avoided had he followed police protocol).
Because we follow Prez throughout the series, we (or at least I) sympathize with him. I haven’t watched past season 3, but I don’t think Prez is, at his core, a racist. That is not to say we condone his actions. It’s extremely hard to get over his unjust police brutality in season 1, but I was able to forgive him.
It seems like his behavior is a product of the system he’s caught up in – a system that is operating under the New Jim Crow Laws. It’s perpetuating racism that might not normally exist within an individual.
So, do we think Prez is a racist? If so, is it possible to argue that the police system corrupted Prez?
I’ll finish with this quote: He says it to Daniels after killing the black cop in Season 3.
“I didn’t care if he was black, or whatever… Or maybe I did. How do you know if that’s in your head or not?”
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Alex, having seen all of season 4, I agree with you that the unfavorable aspects of Prez’s behavior are definitely a product of the system. I do not think Prez is a racist, nor do I think he is completely corrupted. He has several shining moments when he starts his new career as a math teacher in Season 4, particularly in episode 7:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hIj7Q2mK1W8
In this clip, Prez tricks his students into learning math by using their interest in gambling to his advantage. He and Dukie find dice in a storage closet at the school that Prez ends up using in class to create his own game that captivates his typically uninterested students by thinking they are gambling, but really they are improving their math skills. He explains his strategy: “Trick them into thinking they aren’t learning, and they do.” When classmates tease Randy for not knowing the correct way to play the game, Prez sits down with him to talk him through it and welcomes him back to school instead of reprimanding him for missing class. Overall, I’ve grown attached to Prez’s character, and I don’t get the sense that he is racist—at least not at his core, like you said.
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i think the interesting thing you’re hitting on here is the way the System does seem to teach the police to be racist. Even Carver seems to have instances where he’s racist. The police brutality, particularly in season one, but really throughout the show was really hard for me to watch but I do think it points to the way that police are taught to make these kids their enemies. When it’s described as a “war” there’s no way not to see the inner-city residents as enemies of the police. This gets radicalized when many cops are white and nearly all of the inner-city kids are black. I think the show does a really good job of delineating certain characters like Prez and Carver to show the complexities of the interactions with inner-city people: Carver offers to adopt Randy, and after Prez’s bottle incident in the first season and the shooting in the third, he devotes his life to these kids. Then there’s Officer Colicchio who refuses to try Carver’s methods of getting to know the street dealers to get informants and instead continues to be completely combative and eventually gets thrown off the squad for attacking a teacher. I think the Wire does a good job of showing the complexities of the job. You sympathize with a black cop like Carver but he seems most of the time to have the same attitude as Herc. I don’t get a sense that any of the characters are complete racist bigots, I think they’re conditioned by their job to see a group of people who are almost entirely the same race as their enemy and that has profound implications for incarceration rates.
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I think you hit on a great point, Annie. The way a situation is framed is crucial to the way that people act within that space. If you define something as a “war” then you have your allies and your enemies. We do this all the time in our society, the war on drugs, the war against boys, the war against Jews. It is a simple way of othering the people or thing that you want to change. But it leaves out all of the complexities of the matter and misses the interrelationships of both sides of a conflict.
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I completely agree with Heidi after watching season 4. At first when Prez committed both these acts I was a little taken back by his actions, however did not think that he was a racist at all. Season 4 further showed me the true person that Pryzbylewski is and how sympathetic he can be at some points. For instance, he even gives the kids his credit card number so that they can buy candy offline to sell. Even though he did not really know what they were doing with this candy, other teachers in the school system most likely would not have done this for them. Seeing him teach these kids in a different way than usual just shows the time and effort that he put into trying to help these students. It showed me that he really cares about these students no matter how difficult they would be with him. For example, Prez shows care and is angered by the lack of protecting for Randy by the cops after “snitching”. I think that when placed into a job, as Annie said, sometimes these cops see the race as a whole as their enemy. So I definitely agree it is not that Prez is racist himself, it may just be that the way the police are taught to act in this show a certain way towards the people of the drug trade and that just so happens to be almost entirely black people.
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All great points! Especially the talk about “sides” and “allies and enemies,” and how those notions can potentially breed racism among the police.
And to clarify, I never thought Prez was a racist, but his moment of self doubt was interesting to say the least [refer to the quote I posted].
I can’t wait to continue watching and see how he interacts with the kids.
But, another question: Suppose there was media coverage of either of those events (the police brutality and the accidental killing). Without the amount of context or back story that we have access to, would an viewer watching a brief news story about the incidents assume Prez was a racist? How would the news cover such an event?
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I think this is an interesting thing to consider, and I think it is touched on a bit after Prez’s second violent incident when he shoots and kills the African American cop. The other police officers realize that this story could be blown out of proportion if Prez says the wrong thing or if the press gets a hold of it. I don’t remember what ends up happening there, but it did not seem to get media attention. I think today if that had happened it would have been framed as potentially racist. The first incident, in season 1 when Prez blinds the African American teenager, I think that definitely could be depicted as a racist act if the news had found out. In season 1 I thought Prez was racist for sure after he did that even though Carver participated as well. After watching all 5 seasons I no longer think he is racist. I agree with the comments above that perhaps it was being part of the police force that made him think and act the way he did. His role in the education system sharply contrasts his behaviors in the beginning of season 1.
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Wow what an interesting idea to think about what would have happened if the media somehow captured either of these awful events. How would it be portrayed? First of all, I think saying that the media and viewers would assume Prez was racist is an UNDERSTATEMENT at the very least. The scene in Season 1 where Prez takes on the African American kid’s eye is brutal regardless of the victim’s or attacker’s race. It would be covered in the news everywhere if that happened to anyone, so if you add in the racial factors, it’s hard for me to even imagine how dramatic the story would be. I’m sure Prez wouldn’t be able to show his face anywhere ever again, that is if he even had the chance and wasn’t imprisoned for that act. Funny how now that I’m thinking about it from a media perspective how much more intense that attack seems than before when I talked about my view of Prez in Season 4.
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It is super interesting when you look at Prez’s arc as a character. I think it highlights what Annie said and what all the previous comments have really been hitting on. Someone also mentioned this in class — that their brother feels himself becoming more racist after joining the police force. I don’t think that the cops intend to be racist, but when the system is forcing them to bring up their stats in such a way, the racism almost acts as a coping mechanism to deal with what they have to do to keep their jobs. In other words, in order to justify blatant acts of aggression and incarceration toward a socioeconomic group of people these policemen subconsciously develop a racist outlook on their job and in life to justify in their minds that what they are doing is not only necessary for their work but morally ok.
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It is also interesting to note that Reagan was all about loosening up government control of industries so the economy could flourish. In a sense, the prison-industrial complex now reflects this with most prisons being privately ran, accountable to shareholders and hoping to drive a profit. Furthermore, incarcerations bring in a lot of money to the government, from seized property to free labor in the prisons. What I’m trying to bring at maybe the racism is a product of Reagan economic styles — not to say Reagan may not have been racist, the “Chicago Welfare Queen” is a pretty appalling story.
Tying this to The Wire, we can see the statistical way the law enforcement works. They need x number of arrests to fill their quota, rather than making arrests that need to be done.
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I’m not sure why this paragraph really shocked me. I know that the government paired with media coverage can make a story out of anything and hyperbolize a situation to it’s peak, but I never considered the War on Drugs to be a part of that. It is still mind boggling for me to understand that societal decisions are made for political gain, not overall social justice. In the Wire, the officials skewed the crime rate numbers to reflect better on the city of Baltimore so that they mayor could get re-elected. How else do institutions falsify information for personal/political gain?
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I thought the shift of FBI funding and attention from white-collar crime to street crime and drug-law enforcement in the reading paralleled nicely with the shift of FBI attention away from drug-law enforcement towards counter-terrorism throughout the seasons of The Wire. I think The Wire does a good job of representing what happens when a federal policy influences how local law enforcement operates.
When the federal attention shifts away and local law enforcement is forced to confront those pre-existing expectations with fewer funds, the local law enforcement arrests low-level criminals because that’s all they can do with the resources they have. This creates an environment of large-scale, low-level, drug-related arrests that don’t contribute significantly to stopping drug trade as a whole but do contribute significantly to mass incarceration in poor, urban communities.
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The irony of the War on Drugs is probably seeing Corey Feldman and Corey Haim and other teen starlets of the time become spokespeople for the movement, yet they’re high on drugs when making these speeches and appearances (I really love 80’s pop culture). These new focuses of street crime here and counter-terrorism in the Wire are strategic movements in the political game. The FBI and the government go after the big counter-terrorists and play on our terrorist hysteria, it distracts the public’s attention from the rest of the pieces being moved in the chess game of American life. I can’t help but think the targeting of mostly black drug users have something to do with to shift the public’s attention from the Reaganomics and other events of the time.
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It is interesting to think about the high increase of crack cocaine dealing and use during this time period and the political response to it. Criminalizing crack cocaine to the extents it was carried out is interesting because the punishment is much worse in some areas than powder cocaine. That may be because how cheap crack is and the high amount of addicting qualities it possesses and the drastic ups and down crack brings to the user. It is much more addictive and more drastic of a chemical swing than powder cocaine. Therefore it may have more detrimental health effects. Yet, it also could be related to the demographics using and selling crack vs powder cocaine, with higher violence associated with selling crack and more poor african americans using and selling crack vs the potentially more affluent demographic selling and using powder cocaine
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After reading this part of the article, it makes me reflect on the aspect that these black males in The Wire are in a environment where jobs are very scarce. They were born into areas that were not equipped enough to survive on a regular basis. “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”. It shows me how difficult it is for these men to find jobs in the living situations they are born into. It almost makes me sympathize with them for being apart of the drug trade because they may not have any other option to survive financially. For example, in season 4 Namond is always being pressured to put work in on the corner to follow in his fathers footsteps, even though he seems reluctant to do so. It is sad that people almost every time blame these males for entering the drug trade, when sometimes I feel as if it may not be their choice. I think Namond is a perfect example of someone who was placed into a certain environment that he may not even want to be apart of and is forced to carry out tasks that his parents stress. He shows how difficult it is to go against these environment norms that he is apart of. Overall, without sufficient educational opportunities for these males, they are already at a disadvantage in the job world.
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Going off of what Danielle said, I feel that Dukie also falls into this category. His parents are drug junkies, who use all their money to feed their addiction. Dukie does well in school, but eventually drops out when he has trouble fitting in and does not see a point in staying. Then in season 5 Dukie tries to find an honest job that is not part of the drug trade,and gets denied place after place. Eventually he’s left with no choice but to join the druggie community like his parents. When people blame the victim they are ignoring all the structures that are working against the young black male. Even a smart kid like Dukie couldn’t find his way out of the ghetto. He tried the best he could. He did not have the resources, and could not get the resources because no one would hire him. Eventually he gives up. Alexander talks about how hard it is for these poor African Americans to succeed in the American economy. The Wire shows this well. I wonder if there was any way Dukie would be able to escape from a life of poverty? Because I cannot think of a realistic one.
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I too thought that what Alexander called a “spatial mismatch of jobs” was quite interesting. I tried to put my self in the shoes of someone in the inner-city ghetto who really wants a job outside of the drug trade.
So, you want more than just a minimum-wage job? All of those have moved to the suburb. How are going to get to the suburb? A car? That’s unlikely considering less than 20% of black fathers have a car in ghetto areas. Why don’t you use public transportation? Unfortunately, the American public transportation is not known for being very well designed nor run since we are such a car dependent society, and if it does run, it rarely goes to the suburbs. There are endless barriers. When I think about all of the benefits I am afforded as an upper-class white kid, and how I still have a hard time finding a job that fits my circumstance, it really makes me think.
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I agree. I think the series finale does a good job in highlighting the difficulties of upward mobility. Michael takes Omar’s place and Dukie takes Bubbles’. There is almost no way to integrate into a society where the opportunities are more fruitful.
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This comment about women in this time period being able to get jobs more easily made me really think about the roles of women on The Wire. They are hardly seen doing the dirty work behind the business, yet reap the benefits. We see women as police officers and strippers, yet they aren’t present in the projects. D’Angelo’s mother in Season 2 represents an interesting figure because she is a woman who isn’t physically present in the projects, but she benefits from the business. This brings up an interesting question about gender in the drug trade and if males are the only ones who participate. Why is it that males are portrayed as the main drug dealers, and is this an accurate portrayal of what occurs in society?
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What are your thoughts on Snoop? Portrayed almost gender-ambiguous but as ruthless as they come.
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I found this piece of the article significant because it demonstrates how racism does not decrease as social and political increases. Although this section focuses on crack and cocaine, it still symbolizes how the the government and the higher officials attempt to separate and people based on color and class. This is what Alexander is talking about when she discusses the whole phenomenon of the New Jim Crow. Over a hundred years after slavery and the government is still trying to separate and discriminate people based on color. In this particular passage, the government flexed their power by cracking down on inner city drug dealers selling crack opposed to locking up the suburban drug dealers who were selling powder cocaine. The equivalent of that today, is like police offers doing stop and frisks on people who look “suspicious” which is really code for stop anybody of color or police just driving around inner city neighborhoods rather than suburban areas where crime does take place as well.
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This article really made me realize how much the media perpetuated the war on drugs. As was written above, when the war on drugs started, only “2% of the American public viewed drugs as the most important issue facing the nation” (49). Only seven years later this number shot up to 64%. Without an incredible decay of the nation’s stability, which wasn’t occurring, a statistic like this is impossible without third-party influence. In this case, that third-party was the media.
Maybe my favorite fragment of this whole argument was the in the media’s eyes, “crack was the hottest combat reporting story to come along since the end of the Vietnam War.” One, because it’s telling of how the media thirsts for violence in some form. Whether it occurs overseas or on our own soil, it sells. And two, how Stutman uses the term “combat reporting.” This wasn’t a war on drugs, that doesn’t really involve combat. This was a war on people. Unfortunately, those people by a vast majority were poor and black. The media as an extension of the federal government not only set this whole thing in motion, but sent it into perpetuity. That is why this so called “war” as Herc says “will never end.”
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I had the same thoughts as Austin regarding media response and contribution to the frenzy surrounding coverage of the war on drugs. When the media talk about drug-law enforcement as a ‘war,’ it pits people against each other as perceived enemies.
Television coverage of the news relies on images, and there aren’t many more compelling images that piles of drugs recovered by police. The Wire plays this up in a few scenes, where the BPD displays the drugs they have confiscated in raids.
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Like Austin, I was surprised to hear it so blatantly expressed how much the media was the catalyst for this “war on drugs” that led to mass incarceration and the formation of the 21st century’s new racial hierarchy.
In season 5 of The Wire, The Baltimore Sun staff seems overall uninterested in reporting on drug related deaths and violence, such as 20+, African American bodies found in the Baltimore vacants. This leads me to question how racial and socio-economically fueled the war on drugs is. It is likely no coincidence that white, conservative presidents like Nixon and Reagan were the main proponents of the need for American society to crack down on drug usage. It is also no coincidence that the main propaganda was about crack cocaine – a drug predominately associated with poor, African American cohorts. The need to create this “war on drugs” when drug usage wasn’t even a massive problem in the US reminds me of a concept I learned about in another class about Malinowski’s theory – the idea that human nature inherently hates chaos, and so they will create outlets to organize chaos, whether they are sensical or not. With all of the volatile events of the 60s/70s, mainly the controversy of the Vietnam War, it makes sense the these Presidents would choose to publicize a war that they knew they could provided successful statistics for and control the outcome of, since the real war waging in Vietnam was unpredictable and going downhill fast.
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As Bunny Colvin says in season 3, “you call something a war, and pretty soon people are going to start acting like warriors.” I agree with Elizabeth and Page about the media proliferation of the war on drugs, but I think the reason that Crack deaths don’t go reported is that wars need enemies to be hated and warriors to be glorified. No one likes to see footage or hear stories about the enemy I dont think it is so much about winning the war on drugs as if it is perpetuating it, and staying in war mode.
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The media, despite all its efforts to create compelling stories at the expense of the black image in America, is not really any sort of extension of the federal government. It is a business just like any other, a business that thrives on juxtaposition and dramatization. This is not to say that the media “could be worse” than it is right now for victims of the drug and crime war. On the contrary, the fact that the media is a private enterprise makes it more insidious and difficult to reform than government sponsored dehumanization of citizens, just as how the United States penal system is like bulletproof and covert Jim Crow.
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Interestingly enough, it is ironic that Reagan declares the war on drugs yet the CIA allow Nicaraguan rebels they supported to continue the drug traffic to the United States. It almost makes it seem as if the war on drugs is a facade to disguise deeper issues. I know there are a lot of people, maybe conspiracists, who believe crack was introduced to the inner cities by the CIA.
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I find it interesting that there is a crack conspiracy (http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/drugs/special/cia.html) that the government purposefully placed the drug within the United States. Then these figures of the government spending $2 billion and the Senate proposing laws into action seems even more…insane (for lack of a better word). The environment that Avon and D’Angelo and the older dealers would’ve grown up in is during this tough on drugs time. Does this theory account for Avon’s constant paranoia and Marlo’s enforcement/ killings?
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There is a movie that is now playing called “Kill the Messenger” that talks about the alleged conspiracy of the government knowingly smuggling cocaine in the US and placing it into poor, urban, black neighborhoods. I am certainly interested in seeing this film. Furthermore, this is definitely the environment that Avon and D’Angelo have grown up in and which also probably has led to Avon’s paranoia and Marlo’s heavy enforcement. All the legislation around this time is very suspicious and quite unsettling.
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I thought this was one of the most compelling parts of Alexander’s argument: that racism doesn’t go away it just evolves. Policies like “Tough on Crime” allow white people to represent their hostility towards African AMerican in a way that is racially neutral. I think one of the most interesting recent examples of this is the controversy over the “stop and frisk” policies in place in New York City. The ACLU has been compiling statistics (http://www.nyclu.org/content/stop-and-frisk-data) about the number of these stops done per year, how many of the people stopped were innocent and the racial breakdown of those stopped. The results are chilling. Cloaked in an entirely race-neutral policy: stop and frisk, was an entirely racist outcome. African American men were/are stopped at unbelievably higher rates than Latinos or Caucasians. This really resonated with me about what Alexander wrote, it’s not that these attitudes are going away but rather they’re hiding themselves in less obvious language and policies.
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You make such a great point Annie. Policies like “Tough on Crime” or “Stop and Frisk” are just policies that redefine racists ideals through the “race-neutral language” used to describe them. These policies allow those people who are “opposed to racial reform” a way out of being deemed as racist. James Baldwin wrote: “the root function of language is to control the universe by describing it.” The “race-neutral” language used in these policies are only means of control. Language plays such a major role in policymaking, as it can function to allow loopholes and often blurred understandings. Within policies like Stop and Frisk, the language of the policy simply reinforces attitudes like those described by Alexander.
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Admittedly, I’ve not spent much time studying politics or media studies in college, but this example frightens me with the power of election ads – especially TV commercials. Being a largely cynical millennial, my first thought about TV political adds is the over-the-top local political races with goofy ads and low production quality. These might be slamming an opponent, but there’s always some level of humor, intentional or not. And I’ve never thought that they can really skew the voters one way or the other besides making more people aware of a certain politicians name (for better or worse). This anecdote surrounding the Bush-Dukakis election is a little terrifying in its supposed effectiveness. Clearly this convict’s rape and murder is an exception rather than the norm. But humans are innately drawn to extreme events and bad news, so the extrapolative power of the situation in a political ad is real. Deep down, I know that elections are built on a structure of biases, game theory, and voter irrationality, but it nonetheless it stings my naivete to learn of a misleading ad with such outsize influence on such an important election.
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I had no prior knowledge of the views of Bush Sr. especially those like “opposing affirmative action and aggressive civil rights enforcement” yet “embracing the drug war with great enthusiasm”. The media played such an important role in forming public opinion in accordance with his political campaign during this time. The media tells us what we should be concerned about and fails to give us any options. It’s interesting that Alexander uses the words “carefully orchestrated” in relation to how public concern was shifted to focus on the war on drugs. I can’t help but believe the crack-cocaine epidemic was indeed also “carefully orchestrated” to fit the needs of those who sought power and those who also had power.
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The bipartisan support of “tough on crime” policies emphasizes to me how embedded our criminal justice system as a mechanism of racial casting. As I was reading through the chapter, I continually associated “tough on crime” policies with modern Conservative Republican stances. The thought that many Democrats (beginning with Bill Clinton) also took up these stances did not initially occur to me, but Alexander makes them quite clear and striking. This bipartisan support nearly eliminates any possibility of an effective political opposition to the system. As Alexander suggests earlier in the chapter, a larger social movement is necessary to topple the regime.
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I am just wondering how a social movement would arise? What is needed to change these policies? Is it even possible?
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