Pubdate: Mon, 19 Jun 2000 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2000 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: 435 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60611-4066 Website: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Forum: http://www.chicagotribune.com/interact/boards/ Author: Salim Muwakkil, HOW DO WE MEND THE INEQUITIES OF JUSTICE? The criminal justice system is the location of our most grievous social failures. How did it come to be that this democratic superpower imprisons more of its own people than any other nation? What's more, the racial characteristics of these prisoners echo patterns of bias that have changed little since the days of our nation's white supremacist beginnings. We are limping into the new century with the social wounds of racial inequity. The roots of this inequity are so extensive and so deeply embedded in our culture, it seems increasingly clear that only a massive Marshall Plan, justified as a structured system of reparations, can adequately address this country's enduring racial distress. Recent studies that showcase vast racial inequities in the criminal justice system ("And Justice For Some," published by the Youth Law Center and "Justice on Trial" by the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights) help reveal the dimensions of that distress. The latest in an increasing parade of evidence detailing our racial divisions is a report by Human Rights Watch, one of the most respected international human-rights groups, which detailed wide disparities in the way black and white drug offenders are treated within the system that many have come to call the prison-industrial complex. Specifically, the study--"Punishment and Prejudice: Racial Disparities in the War on Drugs"--found that there are five-times more white drug users than black ones, but African-Americans are imprisoned at many times the rate of whites. The greatest disparity is in Illinois, where blacks are imprisoned for selling or using drugs at 57 times the rate of whites, and where African-Americans comprise 90 percent of the inmates imprisoned for drugs. "Black and white drug offenders get radically different treatment in the American justice system," said the group's executive director Ken Roth at a news conference outlining the study's conclusions. "This is not only profoundly unfair to blacks, it also corrodes the American ideal of equal justice for all." It's my impression that reaction to these studies tends to split along racial lines. Many black Americans tend to applaud such reports for documenting their charges about a biased and brutal criminal justice system. Most white Americans seem reluctant to attribute racial disparities in imprisonment to racism. If African-Americans are disproportionately imprisoned, it's because they commit a disproportionate amount of crime. Racism is the cause, say many African-Americans. Balderdash, many whites retort; bad behavior is the cause. And here we remain. Stuck in the great racial impasse. Truth is, both views are right. According to Justice Department's Bureau of Justice Statistics, African-Americans are victims of violent crimes (murder, robbery and aggravated assault) at rates higher than other races. The victimizers also are almost exclusively African-American. In fact, homicide was the leading cause of death for young black men until HIV/AIDS took over first place three years ago. Clearly, African-Americans have disturbingly high rates of crime or bad behavior. But that behavior is, in fact, a product of slavery's legacy. The race-linked disadvantages that predispose African-Americans to social pathology (poverty, poor education, self-hatred, resource-starved communities, cultural isolation) were set in motion by racial slavery and perpetuated by a culture of racial exclusion. This legacy is the target of the call for reparations. Centuries of enforced deprivation have had a residual effect that is clearly evident in the negative statistics that outline African-Americans' life chances. The influence of the criminal justice system is just one aspect of this history, but its impact is powerful. Among the effects of these high rates of imprisonment are devastated families, widespread disenfranchisement of black men (13 percent already have lost voting rights, with 30 to 40 percent of the next generation projected to lose those rights due to felony convictions). The list goes on. Redress of these widespread racial disparities is possible only through large-scale capital and cultural investments in black America, but white Americans seem to lack the will for this ambitious enterprise. A short look back into the past could provide some needed perspective. In 1947, the U.S. instituted the Marshall Plan, which provided grants, low-interest loans and outright currency transfers totaling $13.3 billion (about $92 billion in today's dollars) to help reassemble the remnants of 16 European countries--including former enemy Germany--shattered by World War II. If the U.S. thought that kind of massive aid was essential to Europeans after five years of war, why isn't something similar necessary for those victimized by 245 years of chattel slavery and a century of apartheid? - --- MAP posted-by: greg