07
Mar 14

Institutionalized Racism in the United States? NO WAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

More like No duh!

While appalling, what it is shown in The New Jim Crow is hardly surprising. The United States is a country that decided Segregation was not okay only 60 years ago in 1954 and implemented the thought into society much later. Obviously, the war is not over.

I agree wholeheartedly with Michelle Alexander’s thought on mass incarceration in the United States being the new Jim Crow. I’d even argue that it is worse. There are more black men behind bars or under the watchful eye of the criminal Justice system than there were enslaved in 1850 and those numbers didn’t inflate like that after the start of the war on drugs by accident.

For example, Crenshaw High School in California in a middle class black community lost its accreditation in 2006. A black person can play by all the rules and follow the Horatio Alger script to success: study hard get good grades and once they get their diploma, it doesn’t mean a single thing. Black people can look at things like this happen in society for so long before they can ask what is the rational thing to do? Should I go to school and not get anything out of it or can I get in on this drug dealing business the CIA is pushing to urban citizens?

In a society that praises monetary value is it really a surprise that African-Americans try to attain personal respect the American dream by being a successful drug dealer? This is an economical decision, not a wicked and evil decision. These people aren’t selling drugs because they’re evil, they’re selling drugs so they can survive. Instead of helping offer African Americans other opportunities, they deem them immoral and evil and throw them in jail. Why is that? It’s because the government doesn’t care what happens to the African-Americans. They’d rather have them in jail and never have them vote again. The less African Americans that are capable of voting, the less resistance every year White supremacy has to deal with.


07
Mar 14

The New Jim Crow: How Racism Began

I found the reading for this week to be insightful, eye-opening and thought-provoking. Michelle Alexander constructs an argument around the idea that the system of mass incarceration in the United States today serves as a transfigured form of slavery or the Jim Crow laws, designed to oppress and control black people. Her claims were indeed sensational at first, but disturbingly real as she went on to present her evidence. While many of my fellow students have focused specifically on Alexander’s thesis in their responses, and how it made them feel, what struck me most in the reading was a particular excerpt that had nothing to do with incarceration, quoted from historian Loic Wacquant on page 26:

“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.”

I found this quote to be incredibly important and profound because it provided a small distinction in the history of slavery that makes a huge difference- slavery came before racism. Racism was simply a means created to justify the institution of slavery. I hope I’m not betraying my own ignorance by focusing on this quote; maybe this concept is obvious to most people. But the fact that slavery came before racism is so important, in my opinion, because it underscores the utter falsity of what it means to be a racist. I had always understood racism as a horrible concept that just existed, that began when white people came into contact with foreigners and genuinely believed that they were superior. But that is not the case, at least according to Wacquant and Alexander- the people who created racism didn’t even believe in it. Racism was created, it didn’t simply exist, and it was understood as a tool to justify the cruel enslavement of so many people. But racism spiraled and blossomed and spread to such a degree that its origins were forgotten. I perceived the idea of discriminating against others to be as old as time itself, but the specific concept of racism, according to this reading, has a concrete beginning, a concrete group of creators, and a concrete reason for being created.

We must remember that there is no original ideological basis for racism. I think that is a very important fact to highlight, for everyone, in order to fully understand the absurdity of what it means to be racist. And Alexander would argue that the absurdity of racism is something to highlight very heavily in our day and age, where we dangerously believe that racism is on the decline when it is simply being expressed through other outlets.


07
Mar 14

Jim Crow Response

The New Jim Crow reading was incredibly interesting and enlightening. It also calls for a drastic perspective change that is becoming increasingly pertinent to our society. However, many American’s are too trusting in the legal system since it was, after all, designed to protect us, right? This is the story the media has portrayed for far too many decades, and the American public has fallen for the ploy over and over again. However, what if what is designed to protect us IS obviously segmenting and destroying huge percentages of our population. As is the case with the African American male population in large cities. They are becoming quick targets for police searches (with the implementation of stop and frisk) and are paying the consequences after release from the legal system by being completely marginalized from many pivotal rights as an American citizen. So I completely agree with the  conjecture that the legal system in this country is a newer and far more well hidden form of slavery. This fact is disturbing, yet the ignorance to the fact is even more disturbing. It’s time more articles and books come out addressing this fact.