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Mass Incarceration In America

Decent Essays

Mass incarceration has grown and developed so much, that it’s come to define and create fear in America’s minority communities. “America contains approximately 5% of the world’s population, but has 25% of the world’s incarcerated.” (DeVernay, 2016) There’s always been an underlying tension between minorities and authorities, and that’s due to the unjust discrimination they face in the eyes of the law. America has always been a country founded on immigrants, but the immigrants later on changed the very foundation of their economy by the introduction of slavery. Slavery was easy for the economy and for plantation owners. It gave them maximum profit without having to pay for any service provided. The Emancipation Proclamation, the 13th Amendment, destroyed the Southern economy. Suddenly, overnight, everything changed. Free labor was no longer legal, if the South wanted to keep stimulating their economy, they had to find a way to provide free labor legally. …show more content…

By criminalizing the black man, by usage of propaganda and passage of outrageous laws, a multi-billion dollar industry was founded off of labor provided by mass incarceration. Black men were portrayed as criminals in early movies such as Birth of a Nation where the entire plot revolved around a black man raping and terrorizing a white woman. In the end, white men rescue the woman and lynch the blackfaced actor. This early use of propaganda slowly but surely instilled the modern day stereotype for black men: they’re all thugs. Why would the large number of minorities being carted off to jail be concerning when they’re clearly criminals? Anything could get a black person thrown in jail, while a white man was forgiven for any crime

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