(Note:
The following commentary was originally written for the Progressive
Media Project)
America is failing its most vulnerable children.
The United States does not provide a level playing field for
all children and does not protect all young lives equally,
says a recent report by the Children's Defense Fund.
Poor children and children of color, in particular, "already
are in the pipeline to prison before taking a single step
or uttering a word," the report states. Many youth in
juvenile detention facilities have never been on the track
to college or a successful life. "They were not derailed
from the right track; they never got on it," the organization
says.
Much of the problem is due to poverty, and children of color
are more likely to be afflicted. One-quarter of Latino children
and one-third of black children are poor. Black children are
more than three times as likely as white children to be born
into poverty, and are more than four times as likely to live
in extreme poverty, according to the report.
For millions of poor children,
failed by their families, the child welfare system and the
juvenile justice system, a life of prison awaits them. Prison
is the only universally guaranteed program for children in
America, the study notes, as America increasingly criminalizes
its youth, and spends nearly three times as much per prisoner
as it does per student. This, in a country with 2.3 million
prisoners, the world's largest inmate population, and more
prisoners than China, a nation that has four times as many
people as the United States.
And those who are incarcerated are disproportionately of color,
products of a society that has neglected and marginalized
them. Children of color are more likely to be placed in programs
for mental retardation, placed in foster care, more likely
to be suspended, left back a grade, and drop out of school.
And youth of color, 39 percent of the juvenile population,
are 60 percent of incarcerated juveniles, according to the
report.
A black boy born in 2001 has a one in three chance of going
to prison in his lifetime. A Latino boy has a one in six chance.
Today, as a result of unfair drug laws and draconian sentencing,
failing schools and a lack of opportunity, 580,000 black men
- many of them fathers - are doing time in state and federal
prisons, while only 40,000 graduate from college each year,
an astonishing statistic.
All of this comes down to a lack
of commitment by our society, misplaced priorities and squandered
resources. The Children's Defense Fund makes a number of recommendations
for dismantling the cradle-to-prison pipeline, including full
funding of Head Start, making sure that children can read
by the fourth grade, ensuring health insurance for all pregnant
women, eradicating child poverty by 2015, eliminating hunger
and providing jobs with a living wage.
The
money is available. These and other recommendations are estimated
to cost around $75 billion, with $55 billion to eradicate
child poverty, the Children's Defense Fund says. Repealing
the tax cuts for the top 1 percent richest people would provide
$57 billion. And to put things in perspective, the war in
Iraq has cost more than $450 billion through 2007, about $100
billion a year.
The price - $500 billion - that America must pay in lost productivity
because of its 13 million impoverished children should give
all of us sticker shock. America cannot afford the cost of
allowing these children to suffer.
A nation is best judged by the manner in which it treats its
children. America's treatment of children is shameful. Now
is the time to clean up our act and give all kids an equal
chance in life.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial
Board member David A. Love, JD is a lawyer and prisoners’
rights advocate based in Philadelphia, and a contributor to
the Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune
News Service and In These Times.
He contributed to the book, States
of Confinement: Policing, Detention, and Prisons.
(St. Martin's Press, 2000). Love is a former Amnesty International
UK spokesperson, organized the first national police brutality
conference as a staff member with the Center for Constitutional
Rights, and served as a law clerk to two Black federal judges.
His blog is davidalove.com.
Click
here to contact Mr. Love.