“New Slaves” With laws implemented to create an intranational drug war, a “new slave” system has ultimately been a way to keep the status quo. As Howard Thurman believes, everyone should treat each other as equal children of God and love one another. By the deceit of a “colorblind” legal system, the inequality of whites and colored, rich and poor, remains. I believe all of us, as voters, must put effort into becoming educated on principles of love and equality, so we can bring about new ideas…
conditions of a given society. That being said, one would think that America’s justice system would be one of the most progressive in the world. However, looking at the overwhelming evidence, the it is actually to the contrary. As the book The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness outlines, it has been proven that the American criminal justice system is in fact, inherently racist. The first example of how this is true is that the War on Drugs is really…
After the Civil War, black people were freed and became citizens, but they did not have the same rights as white people. “The Jim Crow Laws were statutes enacted by Southern states, beginning in the 1880s that legalized segregation between African-Americans and whites” (American Historama). “The Jim Crow Laws were not just a law that separated whites and blacks, but it was also “a way of life” (David Pilgrim). These laws made life for African-Americans extremely difficult; the next paragraph…
The New Jim crow: Mass incarceration in the age of colorblindness by Michelle Alexander breaks down the role that Mass incarceration has played in keeping legal racial discrimination, which we once called Jim Crow laws alive. Throughout the book Michelle Alexander explains the history behind Jim Crow laws and the American criminal justice system as they relate to each other. Alexander uses detailed history and hard facts to support her thesis that the Mass incarceration of African Americans is…
The Land of the Free?: Mass Incarceration as the New Jim Crow By Rosie Kereston What were the Jim Crow Laws Before a comparison can be drawn between the phenomenon of mass incarceration in the United States and the Reconstruction-era Jim Crow laws, it is important to note what these laws were, what effect they had on citizens, and why they were instituted in the first place. The term “Jim Crow” is actually a direct reference to a racist, traveling musical act from the 1830s. Blackface was…
Americans were oppressed, dehumanized, and treated unfairly. Jim Crow Laws was a system of segregation that prohibited African Americans from being equal to white Americans. It made the lives of African Americans much more rigorous. To combat the Jim Crow segregation, African Americans had to established their own identity and organized themselves by joining unions, educating themselves, and involving in political issues. The Jim Crow system, each laws was put in place to disrupt the chance of…
Americans. Since majority of felons are of colored people the system of mass incarceration depicts that racial discrimination remains as powerful as it was during slavery and the era of Jim Crow. In this paper, we will discuss Michelle Alexander’s viewpoints and relate the connection between mass incarceration and the –isms (classism, sexism, racism). Also, we will we argue how discrimination still exists in housing, education, employment when labeled as a “felon”, and give possible…
Jim Crow Experiences in Georgia Jim Crow laws were enacted between the late 1800s and the early 1900s. The Jim Crow Laws remained in place up until 1965. Jim Crow Laws were recognized and blamed for enforcing the popular term known as “segregation”. Jim Crow gave whites permission to segregate themselves from blacks. Segregation was a serious issue that caused a major uproar among blacks especially. When one thinks of segregation, they think of two things kept separate, however the extent of…
white which allow the white to be in control. The Jim Crow was a way to discriminate on African American when slavery had ended, “ racial segregation had actually begun years earlier in the North, as an effort to prevent race-mixing and preserve racial hierarchy…Even among those most hostile to Reconstruction, few would have predicted that racial segregation would soon evolve into a new racial caste system…that came to be known simply as Jim Crow” (Alexander 30). This racial caste system…
color? Take this situation except the supposedly identical resources were significantly worse for those with colored skin and it accurately represents the state of the United States for the century following the Civil War. Due to long standing discrimination towards blacks as a result of slavery, many efforts were made by political figures to disrupt and halt the ability of blacks to integrate seamlessly into society. One of the key methods in which this was achieved was through the separation…