Pubdate: Mon, 10 Nov 2003 Source: Florida Times-Union (FL) Copyright: 2003 The Florida Times-Union Contact: http://www.times-union.com/aboutus/letters_to_editor.html Website: http://www.times-union.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/155 Author: Tonyaa Weathersbee, Times-Union Columnist Related: Drug War Casualty Graphs http://november.org/graphs/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) JAIL AS A GROWTH INDUSTRY SHOULD CONCERN EVERYONE I'm going to talk about responsibility today. I thought I'd delve into the topic this week for the people who believe that simply embracing the idea of personal responsibility is all it takes to counteract the epidemic of black males who are winding up in the nation's prisons instead of on its college campuses. It ought to be. Black males, who are bound to be treated more harshly by the criminal justice system once they're caught up in it and even harsher by society once they're out of it, would do themselves a big favor by shunning criminal activity. For that matter anyone, regardless of race or ethnicity, should embrace the simpler route of not committing crimes if they don't want to get swept into a system that will chew them up and spit them out. I never say so in columns, because I see it as such a given that it doesn't bear repeating. But now that I've cleared that up, I'll also say this: For far too many people, that simple responsibility of avoiding crime is becoming tougher to live up to. We know this is true because if it wasn't, then the United States wouldn't be the world's top jailer. If it wasn't true, then there would be no markets for private prison profiteers. The fact that incarceration has become a growth industry in this country should concern everyone. It points to more far-reaching failures in our society -- failures that most of us ought to feel a collective responsibility to at least try and combat. And when it comes to the dismal situation with black males who disproportionately fill the nation's jails and prisons -- many of whom come from environments in which personal responsibility is defined as doing whatever it takes to survive day-to-day -- sanctimony and slogans ring hollow. What is needed is understanding. We can begin by trying to understand what happens in communities where the drug trade has usurped legitimate opportunities. We can also begin to try and understand how unfair drug sentencing laws have not only sent more black males to prison longer for minor drug crimes, but have also made it tougher for them to start over once they are released. For several years now, the U.S. Sentencing Commission has been fighting for more fairness when it comes to drug sentences. The average crack cocaine sentence is, for example, 120 months. That's greater than the average 103-month sentence for robbery or the 31-month average sentence for manslaughter. Sentences for crack offenders are roughly two to three times as great as sentences for powder cocaine offenders -- most of whom tend to be white -- who distribute equivalent quantities of drugs. And yeah, I know that black men should just say no to anything having to do with drugs. Many of them do. But if those who succumb to the temptations of the drug culture get caught, that doesn't mean that they don't deserve to have justice applied equally. Right now that's not happening. One high-profile example: When authorities in Palm Beach County were closing in on conservative commentator Rush Limbaugh for allegedly trying to buy illegal quantities of OxyContin and other painkillers from a black-market ring, the furor died down after he admitted his drug use and announced that he was checking himself into a rehab program. That was that. Contrast that to former Washington, D.C., Mayor Marion Barry who, after being caught smoking crack in an FBI sting operation in 1990, was treated as a criminal rather than as a sick man. He was convicted on a misdemeanor possession charge and served six months in jail. And crack is just as addictive, if not more addictive, as prescription pain killers. True, everyone has a personal responsibility to be law-abiding citizens. But people -- even people like Limbaugh -- do make mistakes. And when black males -- many of whom may be vulnerable to making bad choices through being influenced by the cultures that are spawned in neighborhoods struggling with unemployment and poor education -- face harsher punishments for the same crimes committed by those who may have had an easier time of it, then that's wrong. It is also the thing that has caused too many black males to view incarceration as a certainty, rather than an aberration, in their lives. I hope that all changes one day. Soon. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake