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Effects Of Mass Inarceration In The New Jim Crow

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When we think about the policies, laws and institutions that make up the criminal justice system we do not really think they could harm any one individual, they are there for all our good. However, when you think about it who made most of these laws? Wealthy white men. What else did wealthy white men control? Black slaves back before the Civil War. It is no wonder, then that there are many comparisons between mass incarceration and slavery. In her book The New Jim Crow, Michelle Alexander brings up the fact that “We have not ended racial caste in America; we have merely redesigned it” (p.2). I think that quote by itself explains how one becomes entrapped in this sticky web that is that the criminal justice system- that there are circumstances that put us a more risk than others to becoming stuck in this system.
While it is difficult to tell who exactly will be One of the major risk factors of becoming entrapped in this web is, unfortunately, you race. Of course, that is not something that should be a factor in you becoming imprisoned, as just like being white, it is not a choice. Yet here we are, in a nation where, in our capitol Washington, D.C, “it is estimated that three out of four young black men (and nearly all those in the poorest neighborhoods) can expect to serve time in prison” (p. 7). There are so many reasons for that, whether it be racist cops or a racist system, it is a fact that being black is practically a prison sentence in itself. Take the case of Erma Faye

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