Historically,
it has been posited that "all men are created equal."
That simple phrase holds basis for the hope of all Americans
born in this country over the past half century. With the
flurry of legislative leaps of the 60s and the improbable
implementations of executive enforcements of the 70s, that
basis for hope catapulted the country forward 100 years.
Unfortunately, the masterful mauling of those gains by the
likes of The Moral Majority of the 80s provided fuel for
covert coalitions, making way for Christian conservatives
to crash the hopes of inherent equality for all men.
How many of us have misused the "all men are created
equal" phrase? We use it as if it’s an application
rather than an ideal. We, in our honest examination of empirical
evidence know better; we know truth. Factually speaking,
the penalties for misconduct are delivered unevenly - racially
unevenly - even after decades of statistical data confirming
this fact.
I sat back, listened, and pondered the trial and conviction
of longtime baseball great Barry Bonds, baseball's all-time
home run king. Though he was not convicted of using steroids,
he was convicted in pursuit of steroid use. The vast
majority of Americans
believe that many major leaguers, like Bond, used steroids
during the 90s. Marian Jones, who also became embroiled
in a federal probe of steroid use, was ultimately convicted
of perjury. Jones was sentenced to six months in jail, and
stripped of her Olympic medals.
Here's
the question: Why weren't players like Mark McGwire pursued
and prosecuted? Why weren't McGwire and Jose Conseco—both
visibly swollen by steroids—adjudicated by the long arm
of the law? My answer: They avoided the scourge of disgrace
because of the skin they’re in; their skin color is just
the right hue.
Aside from the baseball incident, I've observed entertainers
and compared their crimes and punishments. What I see is
parallel prosecution for Blacks and whites. The verdict:
dissimilar and unequal disposition.
Look at Wesley Snipes' case. Snipes was convicted for non-payment
of income taxes, and was speedily sentenced to three years
in federal prison. I think about the scores of Wall Street
brokers and financiers who diverted their earnings into
offshore accounts—with government knowledge. In an August
12, 2008 article, the Associated Press reported that two-thirds
of U.S. corporations paid no federal income taxes between
1998 and 2005. The data, according to a Government Accountability
Office report, also noted combined sales of $2.5 trillion
dollars for the companies cited.
While
that article highlighted government-sanctioned corporate
welfare through 2005, fast forward five years later to the
report released by Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, the sole
Socialist Party member in the U.S. Congress. The updated
report named ten giant U.S. companies that paid little or
no income tax for the 2011 IRS tax-filing season—Exxon Mobil,
General Electric (whose CEO Jeffrey Immelt leads the President’s
Council on Jobs and Competitiveness), Chevron, Boeing, Goldman
Sachs, and others.
How
many of those corporations were headed by Blacks? One? Two?
You get my point? Those “white collars” received no prison
sentences—let alone prosecution! I think about the numerous
executives who did what Wesley Snipes was convicted of doing.
Guess who is not going to jail?
Remember,
Martha Stewart? What awaited her release from prison? A
reality show, of course, more money and a job! And then,
there’s Michael Vick. Two years in prison?! You’ve got to
be kidding me!
I
contend that even the lowly, infantile antics of celebrities
such as Lindsay Lohan seem to be tolerated by the courts.
Sentenced to a 90-day jail term for probation violations
that stipulated attendance in drug education classes - not
treatment but education classes—hardly seems too harsh to
bear. Thousands of Black males currently languish in U.S.
prisons for the crime of marijuana possession - for amounts
less than the threshold amounts states establish for distribution
or trafficking charges.
I
don’t know the whereabouts of a study to confirm my empirical
evidence, but suffice it to say, you (Black people) cannot
do what they (white people) do. The consequences for
you [us] are often life in prison or along the margins of
society through lifelong probation (e.g., exclusion from
access to federal college financial aid, public housing,
job opportunities, and disfranchisement). More empirically
sound than I [am] is Michelle Alexander who, in her book,
The
New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of ColorblindnessAfrican-American
Studies Books)
, eloquently and outstandingly expounds on why you can’t
do what they do.
BlackCommentator.comColumnist, PerryRedd,
is the former Executive Director of the workers rights advocacy,
Sincere Seven, and author of the on-line commentary, “The Other Side of the
Tracks.” He is the host of the internet-based talk radio
show, Socially Speaking inWashington,DC.Clickhereto contact Mr.Redd.
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