Since 2004,
former Democratic presidential candidate, John Edwards, campaigned across
the U.S. with a simple message: that there are essentially
“two Americas,”
separated by a chasm of inequality, defined largely by race and class.
It was a truthful message that the vast majority of Americans didn’t want
to acknowledge, or even hear. Yet the larger meaning of Edwards’ message
may be more significant to the future of U.S. politics, than even the historic presidential
campaign of Barack Obama.
Americans are reinforced to believe
that individuals are largely in control of their own destiny. Hard work,
sacrifice, and personal effort, we are told, determine what happens to
us. But increasingly, the fundamental institutions of American society
function unfairly, restricting access and opportunity for millions of
people. The greatest example of this is the present-day criminal justice
system.
Let us start with the basic facts.
As of 2008, one out of every one hundred American adults is living behind
bars. According to a December 2007 study of the American Civil Liberties
Union, “Race and Ethnicity in America,”
in the past thirty years there has been a 500 percent increase in the
number of Americans behind bars, amounting to 2.2 million people, which
represent 25 percent of the world’s prison population. This prison population
is disproportionately black and brown. As of 2006, the U.S. penal population was 46 percent white, 41
percent African American, and 19 percent Latino. In practical terms, by
2001, about one out of every six African-American males had experienced
jail or imprisonment. Based on current trends, over one out of three black
men will experience imprisonment during their lives.
There is overwhelming evidence that
the overrepresentation of blacks in prisons is largely due to discrimination
in every phase of the criminal justice system. According to the 2007 ACLU
study, for example, African Americans comprised 11 percent of Texas’ population, but 40 percent of the state’s
prisoners. Blacks in Texas are incarcerated at roughly five times the rate of whites. Despite
the fact that blacks statistically represent fewer than 10 percent of
drug abusers, in Texas 50 percent
of all prisoners incarcerated in state prisons and two-thirds of all those
in jails for “drug delivery offenses” are African Americans.
A similar pattern is found within the
juvenile justice system. According to the 2007 ACLU study, African-American
youth amount to 15 percent of all American juveniles. However, they represent
26 percent of all juveniles who are arrested by the police nationwide.
They are 58 percent of all youth who are sentenced to serve time in state
prisons. In California, Latino youth are two times
more likely than whites to be sentenced to prison; for African-American
youth in California, it is six
times the incarceration rate.
What are the practical political consequences
of the mass incarceration of black Americans? In New York State, for example, the prison populations play a significant role
in how some state legislative districts are drawn up. In New
York’s 45th senatorial district, located in the extreme northern corner
of upstate New York, there are thirteen state prisons, with 14,000 prisoners,
all of whom are counted as residents. Prisoners in New York are disenfranchised – they cannot vote
– yet their numbers help to create a Republican state senatorial district.
These “prison districts” now exist all over the United
States.
The most obscene dimension of the national
compulsion to incarcerate has been the deliberate criminalization of young
black people, with the construction of a “school-to-prison pipeline.”
Under the cover of “zero tolerance”
for all forms of “disobedience,” too many school administrators are aggressively
and unfairly removing black youth from schools. Statistically, African-American
youths are two to three times more likely than whites to be suspended,
and far more likely to be corporally punished or expelled. According to
the ACLU’s study, “nationally, African American students comprise 17 percent
of the student population, but account for 36 percent of school suspensions
and 31 percent of expulsions. In New
Jersey, for instance, black students are nearly 60 times more likely to
be expelled than their white counterparts. In Iowa, blacks make up just 5 percent of the statewide public school
enrollment, but account for 22 percent of suspensions.” Too many black
children are taught at an early age that their only future resides in
a prison or jail.
Meanwhile, state after state is reducing
its investments in education, while expanding its expenditures in correctional
facilities. According to the Chronicle of Higher Education
(March 14, 2008), between 1987 and 2007, states spent an average of a
21 percent increase on higher education, but expanded their corrections
budgets by an average of 127 percent. Today, for the first time in recent
history, there are now five states that spend more state money on prisons
than on public colleges – Connecticut, Delaware, Michigan, Oregon, and Vermont. The ugly tradeoff not to educate but to
incarcerate continues.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Manning Marable, PhD is one
of America’s
most influential and widely read scholars. Since 1993, Dr. Marable has
been Professor of Public Affairs, Political Science, History and African-American
Studies at Columbia
University in New York City.
For ten years, Dr. Marable was founding director of the Institute for Research in African-American
Studies at Columbia University, from 1993 to 2003. Dr. Marable is
an author or editor of over 20 books, including Living Black History: How Reimagining the African-American Past
Can Remake America's Racial Future
(2006); The Autobiography of Medgar Evers: A Hero's Life And Legacy Revealed
Through His Writings, Letters, And Speeches
(2005); Freedom: A Photographic History of the African American Struggle
(2002); Black Leadership: Four Great American Leaders and the Struggle
for Civil Rights
(1998); Beyond Black and White: Transforming African-American Politics
(1995); and How Capitalism Underdeveloped Black America: Problems in Race,
Political Economy, and Society (South End Press Classics Series)
v:shapes="_x0000_i1030"> (1983). His current project is a
major biography of Malcolm X, entitled Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention,
to be published by Viking Press in 2009. Click
here to contact Dr. Marable.
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