Too Short for a Blog Post, Too Long for a Tweet 188
Here are a few excerpts from a book I recently read, "The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness," by Michelle Alexander.
What has changed since the collapse of Jim Crow has less
to do with the basic structure of our society than with the language we
use to justify it. In the era of colorblindness, it is no longer
socially permissible to use race, explicitly, as a justification for
discrimination, exclusion, and social contempt. So we don’t. Rather than
rely on race, we use our criminal justice system to label people of
color “criminals” and then engage in all the practices we supposedly
left behind. Today it is perfectly legal to discriminate against
criminals in nearly all the ways that it was once legal to discriminate
against African Americans. Once you’re labeled a felon, the old forms of
discrimination—employment discrimination, housing discrimination,
denial of the right to vote, denial of educational opportunity, denial
of food stamps and other public benefits, and exclusion from jury
service—are suddenly legal. As a criminal, you have scarcely more
rights, and arguably less respect, than a black man living in Alabama at
the height of Jim Crow. We have not ended racial caste in America; we
have merely redesigned it.
Once
again, vagrancy laws and other laws defining activities such as
“mischief” and “insulting gestures” as crimes were enforced vigorously
against blacks. The aggressive enforcement of these criminal offenses
opened up an enormous market for convict leasing, in which prisoners
were contracted out as laborers to the highest private bidder. Douglas
Blackmon, in Slavery by Another Name, describes how tens of thousands of
African Americans were arbitrarily arrested during this period, many of
them hit with court costs and fines, which had to be worked off in
order to secure their release. With no means to pay off their “debts,”
prisoners were sold as forced laborers to lumber camps, brickyards,
railroads, farms, plantations, and dozens of corporations throughout the
South. Death rates were shockingly high, for the private contractors
had no interest in the health and well-being of their laborers, unlike
the earlier slave-owners who needed their slaves, at a minimum, to be
healthy enough to survive hard labor. Laborers were subject to almost
continual lashing by long horse whips, and those who collapsed due to
injuries or exhaustion were often left to die.
Convicts
had no meaningful legal rights at this time and no effective redress.
They were understood, quite literally, to be slaves of the state. The
Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution had abolished slavery but
allowed one major exception: slavery remained appropriate as punishment
for a crime. In a landmark decision by the Virginia Supreme Court,
Ruffin v. Commonwealth, issued at the height of Southern Redemption, the
court put to rest any notion that convicts were legally distinguishable
from slaves:
For a
time, during his service in the penitentiary, he is in a state of penal
servitude to the State. He has, as a consequence of his crime, not only
forfeited his liberty, but all his personal rights except those which
the law in its humanity accords to him. He is for the time being a slave
of the State. He is civiliter mortus; and his estate, if he has any, is
administered like that of a dead man.
Criminals,
it turns out, are the one social group in America we have permission to
hate. In “colorblind” America, criminals are the new whipping boys.
They are entitled to no respect and little moral concern. Like the
“coloreds” in the years following emancipation, criminals today are
deemed a characterless and purposeless people, deserving of our
collective scorn and contempt. When we say someone was “treated like a
criminal,” what we mean to say is that he or she was treated as less
than human, like a shameful creature. Hundreds of years ago, our nation
put those considered less than human in shackles; less than one hundred
years ago, we relegated them to the other side of town; today we put
them in cages. Once released, they find that a heavy and cruel hand has
been laid upon them.
Arguably
the most important parallel between mass incarceration and Jim Crow is
that both have served to define the meaning and significance of race in
America. Indeed, a primary function of any racial caste system is to
define the meaning of race in its time. Slavery defined what it meant to
be black (a slave), and Jim Crow defined what it meant to be black (a
second-class citizen). Today mass incarceration defines the meaning of
blackness in America: black people, especially black men, are criminals.
That is what it means to be black.
The
temptation is to insist that black men “choose” to be criminals; the
system does not make them criminals, at least not in the way that
slavery made blacks slaves or Jim Crow made them second-class citizens.
The myth of choice here is seductive, but it should be resisted. African
Americans are not significantly more likely to use or sell prohibited
drugs than whites, but they are made criminals at drastically higher
rates for precisely the same conduct. In fact, studies suggest that
white professionals may be the most likely of any group to have engaged
in illegal drug activity in their lifetime, yet they are the least
likely to be made criminals. The prevalence of illegal drug activity
among all racial and ethnic groups creates a situation in which, due to
limited law enforcement resources and political constraints, some people
are made criminals while others are not. Black people have been made
criminals by the War on Drugs to a degree that dwarfs its effect on
other racial and ethnic groups, especially whites. And the process of
making them criminals has produced racial stigma.
Every
racial caste system in the United States has produced racial stigma.
Mass incarceration is no exception. Racial stigma is produced by
defining negatively what it means to be black. The stigma of race was
once the shame of the slave; then it was the shame of the second-class
citizen; today the stigma of race is the shame of the criminal. As
described in chapter 4, many ex-offenders describe an existential angst
associated with their pariah status, an angst that casts a shadow over
every aspect of their identity and social experience. The shame and
stigma is not limited to the individual; it extends to family members
and friends—even whole communities are stigmatized by the presence of
those labeled criminals. Those stigmatized often adopt coping strategies
African Americans once employed during the Jim Crow era, including
lying about their own criminal history or the status of their family
members in an attempt to “pass” as someone who will be welcomed by
mainstream society.
The
critical point here is that, for black men, the stigma of being a
“criminal” in the era of mass incarceration is fundamentally a racial
stigma. This is not to say stigma is absent for white criminals; it is
present and powerful. Rather, the point is that the stigma of
criminality for white offenders is different—it is a nonracial stigma.
An
experiment may help to illustrate how and why this is the case. Say the
following to nearly anyone and watch the reaction: “We really need to
do something about the problem of white crime.” Laughter is a likely
response. The term white crime is nonsensical in the era of mass
incarceration, unless one is really referring to white-collar crime, in
which case the term is understood to mean the types of crimes that
seemingly respectable white people commit in the comfort of fancy
offices. Because the term white crime lacks social meaning, the term
white criminal is also perplexing. In that formulation, white seems to
qualify the term criminal—as if to say, “he’s a criminal but not that
kind of criminal.” Or, he’s not a real criminal—i.e., not what we mean
by criminal today.
In
the era of mass incarceration, what it means to be a criminal in our
collective consciousness has become conflated with what it means to be
black, so the term white criminal is confounding, while the term black
criminal is nearly redundant. Recall the study discussed in chapter 3
that revealed that when survey respondents were asked to picture a drug
criminal, nearly everyone pictured someone who was black. This
phenomenon helps to explain why studies indicate that white ex-offenders
may actually have an easier time gaining employment than African
Americans without a criminal record. To be a black man is to be
thought of as a criminal, and to be a black criminal is to be
despicable—a social pariah. To be a white criminal is not easy, by any
means, but as a white criminal you are not a racial outcast, though you
may face many forms of social and economic exclusion. Whiteness
mitigates crime, whereas blackness defines the criminal.
It
is fair to say that we have witnessed an evolution in the United States
from a racial caste system based entirely on exploitation (slavery), to
one based largely on subordination (Jim Crow), to one defined by
marginalization (mass incarceration). While marginalization may sound
far preferable to exploitation, it may prove to be even more dangerous.
Extreme marginalization, as we have seen throughout world history, poses
the risk of extermination. Tragedies such as the Holocaust in Germany
or ethnic cleansing in Bosnia are traceable to the extreme
marginalization and stigmatization of racial and ethnic groups. As legal
scholar john a. powell once commented, only half in jest, “It’s
actually better to be exploited than marginalized, in some respects,
because if you’re exploited presumably you’re still needed.”
Viewed
in this light, the frantic accusations of genocide by poor blacks in
the early years of the War on Drugs seem less paranoid. The intuition of
those residing in ghetto communities that they had suddenly become
disposable was rooted in real changes in the economy—changes that have
been devastating to poor black communities as factories have closed,
low-skill jobs have disappeared, and all those who had the means to flee
the ghetto did. The sense among those left behind that society no
longer has use for them, and that the government now aims simply to get
rid of them, reflects a reality that many of us who claim to care prefer
to avoid simply by changing channels.
Those
who believe that advocacy challenging mass incarceration can be
successful without overturning the public consensus that gave rise to it
are engaging in fanciful thinking, a form of denial. Isolated victories
can be won—even a string of victories—but in the absence of a
fundamental shift in public consciousness, the system as a whole will
remain intact. To the extent that major changes are achieved without a
complete shift, the system will rebound. The caste system will reemerge
in a new form, just as convict leasing replaced slavery, or it will be
reborn, just as mass incarceration replaced Jim Crow.
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