News (Media Awareness Project) - US NC: Column: Will The World Condemn US War On Drugs? |
Title: | US NC: Column: Will The World Condemn US War On Drugs? |
Published On: | 2001-08-25 |
Source: | Charlotte Observer (NC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-25 09:58:42 |
WILL THE WORLD CONDEMN U.S. WAR ON DRUGS?
The Impact Of Our Policies Has Become Profoundly Racist
The United States, rarely shy about condemning other nations for human
rights abuses, will get a dose of its own medicine when the World
Conference Against Racism opens in Durban, South Africa, on Aug. 31.
The target: America's "war on drugs" and the charge that it is inherently
racist because black men are being imprisoned for drug offenses at 13 times
the rate of white men.
A team of U.S. lawyers, clergy, drug policy and alternative incarceration
experts, organized as the Campaign to End Race Discrimination in the War on
Drugs, will assert that America's criminal justice system has been turned
into an "apartheid-like" device.
"We don't want to see the United States continue to get off the hook on
this," says Deborah Small of the Lindesmith Center-Drug Policy Foundation,
one of the U.S. delegates. "There has been a lot more attention about
racial profiling and to the death penalty internationally than to the drug
war. But there is no other public policy in the U.S. that affects so many
people detrimentally."
The campaign last week also released a letter to U.N. Secretary- General
Kofi Annan calling on leaders in Africa and the international community at
large to speak out against the United States for allegedly racist pursuit
of its drug war.
What are we to make of this attempt to make an international cause celebre
of our drug and incarceration policies?
I'd like to say it's based on exaggeration, oversimplification and
half-truths. But I can't.
The motivation behind our drug wars, our mandatory minimum sentences, our
willingness to let our incarceration rate balloon to the highest in the
world, was not race but "law-and-order" politics. Yet the impact of our
policies has become profoundly racist. We know it. We just do precious
little to correct it.
According to the Washington-based Sentencing Project, African Americans are
13 percent of drug users but represent 35 percent of arrests for drug
possession, 55 percent of convictions and 74 percent of prison sentences.
And there's little mystery why. First, there's location: Poor black city
neighborhoods - not calm white suburbs - are the scene of massive street
sweeps, buy and bust operations.
And then, there's class. Jenni Gainsborough of the Sentencing Project
notes: "If you're white middle-class and your kid is on drugs, you call the
treatment center. In the inner city there's no treatment. Your first port
of call is the criminal justice system - and it escalates. Once you have a
record, every interaction leads to a stronger sanction."
States fed these fires with tough laws. The federal government is worse.
Under a 1986 federal law, it takes only one-hundredth the amount of crack
cocaine (generally more popular in black neighborhoods) to trigger the same
mandatory minimum sentence as powder cocaine (more popular among affluent
whites).
In 1995, one of three American black men between 20 and 29 was either in
jail, prison, on parole or probation. In many city neighborhoods, more than
half of young black men spend time in prison. As ex-felons, jobs are rare.
Official policy, says James Compton, president of the Chicago Urban League,
is leading to "incapacitation of future generations crime, addiction,
poverty, hopelessness and despair in the black community."
There are a few shreds of hope. Justice Department figures show the count
of Americans behind bars (over 2 million) is starting to level off after
its explosive growth in the '90s. And California's reform Proposition 36,
passed in 2000, means nearly 40,000 non-violent drug users each year will
receive treatment rather than being slapped in prisons.
But rolling back the incarceration tide may be tough. During the '90s
states added 528,000 new prison beds, costing $26.4 billion. Many rural
areas scrambled to get the prisons and their payrolls. Today, thousands of
rural white men guard black city convicts.
Try to close such prisons and localities will likely fight as fiercely as
when military bases are threatened with shutdowns, says the Sentencing
Project's Marc Mauer. And not just for the jobs. The census counts
prisoners where they're incarcerated, not their home cities. Result: The
prison towns get extra political clout and government grants; the desperate
inner cities lose both.
"Drug prohibition has become a replacement system for segregation," says
Ira Glazer, director of the American Civil Liberties Union. "It has become
a system of separating out, subjugating, imprisoning substantial portions
of a population based on skin color."
One winces at the harsh words. Few of the legislators who wrote today's
laws anticipated such outcomes. But the results are negative enough to give
strong credence to the charges of racist policy being leveled against our
country. And we have no one to blame but ourselves.
The Impact Of Our Policies Has Become Profoundly Racist
The United States, rarely shy about condemning other nations for human
rights abuses, will get a dose of its own medicine when the World
Conference Against Racism opens in Durban, South Africa, on Aug. 31.
The target: America's "war on drugs" and the charge that it is inherently
racist because black men are being imprisoned for drug offenses at 13 times
the rate of white men.
A team of U.S. lawyers, clergy, drug policy and alternative incarceration
experts, organized as the Campaign to End Race Discrimination in the War on
Drugs, will assert that America's criminal justice system has been turned
into an "apartheid-like" device.
"We don't want to see the United States continue to get off the hook on
this," says Deborah Small of the Lindesmith Center-Drug Policy Foundation,
one of the U.S. delegates. "There has been a lot more attention about
racial profiling and to the death penalty internationally than to the drug
war. But there is no other public policy in the U.S. that affects so many
people detrimentally."
The campaign last week also released a letter to U.N. Secretary- General
Kofi Annan calling on leaders in Africa and the international community at
large to speak out against the United States for allegedly racist pursuit
of its drug war.
What are we to make of this attempt to make an international cause celebre
of our drug and incarceration policies?
I'd like to say it's based on exaggeration, oversimplification and
half-truths. But I can't.
The motivation behind our drug wars, our mandatory minimum sentences, our
willingness to let our incarceration rate balloon to the highest in the
world, was not race but "law-and-order" politics. Yet the impact of our
policies has become profoundly racist. We know it. We just do precious
little to correct it.
According to the Washington-based Sentencing Project, African Americans are
13 percent of drug users but represent 35 percent of arrests for drug
possession, 55 percent of convictions and 74 percent of prison sentences.
And there's little mystery why. First, there's location: Poor black city
neighborhoods - not calm white suburbs - are the scene of massive street
sweeps, buy and bust operations.
And then, there's class. Jenni Gainsborough of the Sentencing Project
notes: "If you're white middle-class and your kid is on drugs, you call the
treatment center. In the inner city there's no treatment. Your first port
of call is the criminal justice system - and it escalates. Once you have a
record, every interaction leads to a stronger sanction."
States fed these fires with tough laws. The federal government is worse.
Under a 1986 federal law, it takes only one-hundredth the amount of crack
cocaine (generally more popular in black neighborhoods) to trigger the same
mandatory minimum sentence as powder cocaine (more popular among affluent
whites).
In 1995, one of three American black men between 20 and 29 was either in
jail, prison, on parole or probation. In many city neighborhoods, more than
half of young black men spend time in prison. As ex-felons, jobs are rare.
Official policy, says James Compton, president of the Chicago Urban League,
is leading to "incapacitation of future generations crime, addiction,
poverty, hopelessness and despair in the black community."
There are a few shreds of hope. Justice Department figures show the count
of Americans behind bars (over 2 million) is starting to level off after
its explosive growth in the '90s. And California's reform Proposition 36,
passed in 2000, means nearly 40,000 non-violent drug users each year will
receive treatment rather than being slapped in prisons.
But rolling back the incarceration tide may be tough. During the '90s
states added 528,000 new prison beds, costing $26.4 billion. Many rural
areas scrambled to get the prisons and their payrolls. Today, thousands of
rural white men guard black city convicts.
Try to close such prisons and localities will likely fight as fiercely as
when military bases are threatened with shutdowns, says the Sentencing
Project's Marc Mauer. And not just for the jobs. The census counts
prisoners where they're incarcerated, not their home cities. Result: The
prison towns get extra political clout and government grants; the desperate
inner cities lose both.
"Drug prohibition has become a replacement system for segregation," says
Ira Glazer, director of the American Civil Liberties Union. "It has become
a system of separating out, subjugating, imprisoning substantial portions
of a population based on skin color."
One winces at the harsh words. Few of the legislators who wrote today's
laws anticipated such outcomes. But the results are negative enough to give
strong credence to the charges of racist policy being leveled against our
country. And we have no one to blame but ourselves.
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