'White Men Getting Rich From Legal Weed Won't Help Those Harmed Most By Drug War'
Huffington Post
A lot has happened in the two years since the publication of Michelle Alexander’s The New Jim Crow,
a landmark book that showed how the “war on drugs” and the mass
incarceration of black Americans has undermined much of the progress
achieved by the civil rights movement.
States around the country
have downsized their prison systems. Washington and Colorado legalized
recreational marijuana for adults. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder has
promoted a less punitive approach to the prosecution of drug crimes.
And
yet, in a press call on Thursday sponsored by the Drug Policy Alliance,
a group that advocates for the decriminalization of drugs, Alexander
warned against complacency. She called for the U.S. to not just stop the
war on drugs, but to pay “reparations” and give a public platform to
the communities of color most harmed by the drug war.
“When I see
images of people using marijuana and images of people who are now trying
to run legitimate marijuana businesses, they’re almost all white," she
said, noting she supports legalizing pot.
“After 40 years of
impoverished black men getting prison time for selling weed, white men
are planning to get rich doing the same things," she added. "So that’s
why I think we have to start talking about reparations for the war on
drugs. How do we repair the harms caused?"
She added that the
government should pay reparation money to families that have been
destroyed by the drug war. “You can’t just destroy a people and say,
‘It’s over, we’re stopping now,'” she said.
The United States
incarcerates more than 2 million people, mostly for drug offenses.
Blacks make up more than 40 percent of the prison population, despite
comprising less than 15 percent of the U.S. population as a whole,
according to U.S. Census data.
In
recent years, states around the country, including conservative places
like Texas and North Carolina, have slashed prison budgets by investing
more heavily in less expensive alternatives to incarceration, like ankle bracelets that allow people to serve time at home and at centers that treat drug addiction.
“We
see politicians across the spectrum raising concerns for the first time
in 40 years about the size of our prison state,” said Alexander, “and
yet I worry that so much of the dialogue is driven by financial concerns
rather than genuine concern for the communities that have been most
impacted and the families that have been destroyed” by aggressive
anti-drug policies.
Unless “we have a real conversation” about
the magnitude of the damage caused by the drug war, “we’re going to find
ourselves, years from now, either having a slightly downsized system of
mass incarceration that continues to hum along pretty well,” she said,
"or some new system of racial and social control will have emerged
again, because we have not learned the core lesson that our history is
trying to teach us.”
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