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Trillion Dollar Failure

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addition, it has turned criminals into the new whipping boys and given the public license to hate and exclude the criminal element with impunity. (Alexander, M., p. 141-143) There are many who would argue that the “War on Drugs” is a well-meaning attempt by the government to rein in the rapidly growing trend of drug use and abuse in the United States. However, statistics do not support this claim. The “War on Drugs” has been likened to Prohibition and labeled a “Trillion Dollar Failure.” (Cable News Network [CNN], 2012) In addition, a recent study by the National Employment Law Project (NELP) found that many employers hedged, or out-right refused, to consider employing people with criminal records. Even though the range of jobs were wide, and in spite of the fact that the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) has warned employers that blatant refusal to hire those with a criminal past is discriminatory, few …show more content…

Also, it is a challenge to those working in the areas of civil rights and social activism to rise up and organize against the system that supports the New Jim Crow. Her analogy of the New Jim Crow and a caste system is also credible in terms of how it applies to the plight of convicted felons. As she examines the long-term consequences of the “War on Crime” and the “War on Drugs” on criminal convictions and the loss of civil liberties, Alexander paints a clear picture of the casual, almost apathetic, manner in which our society has bought into the belief that we require constant police protection in order to live safe. In addition, she’s not afraid to challenge people for their careless disregard for those who have been relegated to the fringes of civil society. The mantra may be, “Do The Crime…Do The Time,” but in today’s era of the New Jim Crow, the “time” appears to be endless for those with a criminal

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