English 2100 x 90: Fall 2020

Jim Crow

“we have not ended racial caste in America; we have merely redesigned it.” This statement made by Alexander introduces the specifics as to how the criminal justice system is flawed, and that racism still continues to exist and in a variety of ways. He depicts how the system has changed and that instead of the blatant racism that existed, it has changed into forms of employment and just moving about themselves in society. He later explains how the criminal justice system is flawed and that it unfairly eliminates the possibility that the African American man can be not guilty. This depiction has been made that it is a flaw in the criminal justice system, rather than the racial caste system that it is actually a part of. He also states that the mass incarceration that African American people face is not due to the lack of unemployment or moving up in society, but rather due to the law that prevents African American people from ever escaping this loop hole. Throughout society, they are just denied, through law, to obtain housing and other public benefits, which makes it nearly impossible to become a higher social class than what they originally were. Racism still exists in our society today, and Alexander just explains the variety of ways that they are just unable to escape this hole, due to laws and regulations that are set in place. These laws and regulations are just unfair towards the African Americans as it creates a racial hierarchy and allows for racial injustice in different forms.

Jim Crow

In the introduction to The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander, the author wrote “we have not ended racial caste in America; we have merely redesigned it.” Alexander explained that in today’s society it is legal to discriminate against criminals in almost all of the ways that it was legal to discriminate against African Americans in the past. My understanding of this quote is that a racial caste system still exists in the United States, even though the Jim Crow Laws and segregation were outlawed decades ago. Rather than targeting African Americans, this caste system targets criminals. Even though the caste system targets criminals, the majority of the people in our nation are incarcerated. Therefore, it is simply just a redesigned caste system that still targets people of color. 

Alexander uses research to back up this statement, which sets us up to read the rest of her book. One piece of information the author incorporates into her research is that the United States has the highest incarceration rate in the world. It surpasses Russia, China, Iran, and Germany. This demonstrates how overall there are far too many inmates in our nation. Furthermore, she points out that the United States imprisons a larger percentage of its black population than South Africa did at the height of the apartheid. By providing this piece of information, Alexander shows just how many blacks are incarcerated. She also mentioned that in Washington D.C. it is estimated that three out of four young black men can expect to serve time in prison. This information can be used to explain how in one city, an extremely high percentage of black men go to prison.

 

Jim Crow

The quote “we have not ended racial caste in America; we have merely redesigned it” resonated with me in that it shows how racism is still present in our country and that people found loopholes to racially categorize certain groups of people. In the introduction, Alexander describes how in each generation, there were changes. However, people “adapted” to the laws and found different ways to keep racial groups in a hierarchy. Just how Jim Crow was a law, in name, to protect Africans and African Americans and failed to do so, the released criminals in present day America are denied “the right to vote, excluded from juries, and relegated to a racially segregated and subordinated existence”. Alexander specifically addresses the issue of crack. The American media publicizes the black community and the uprising issue of crack, calling people “crack whores”, “crack babies”, and other nasty phrases. This allowed for the black community to be a target of racism and discrimination. The media is powerful in that it makes it clear for people to target the specified group and encourages people of racial views already  to come to light and act upon their racial beliefs. These information in the introduction allow the readers to foreshadow the more detailed cases of racial categorization and discrimination later on in the book.

The New Jim Crow

The statement “We have not ended racial caste in America; we have simply redesigned it” is one that Michelle Alexander embeds in her introduction to her book. this statement is a very powerful one that holds true in many aspects. Michelle Alexander uses the example of the way the Jim Crow Laws oppressed the black community. She states that the new system uses merely just different ways to achieve the same oppression since the actual Jim Crow Laws have been deemed not a law. With the prison system having a large percentage of black felons, it is the new way to keep the black voices from being heard or represented in the government of the U.S. just as the Jim crows had denied generations of black families to vote back then, the same tactics are uses but this time disguised as “democratic ideals”. In this way, the jim crow laws have not been abolished, yet “redesigned” into a new form such as the prison systems and the unjust treatment of felons who are mainly black. In other words, racial systems in the nation have not been ended, they have simply been installed into different aspects of life, allowing racism to live in the core of the nation ages after the issues had been addressed initially.

The New Jim Crow

“we have not ended racial caste in America; we have merely redesigned it.” A statement made by Michele Alexander illustrating the immutability of racism within the structures of American society. Alexander begins with an anecdote of an African American’s male family members and their inability to exercise their right to vote, from several generations back to the present, calling out how America utilizes different tactics to legalize discrimination. Each method used to initiate racism correlates to that era, for example, in the past it was slavery and now in the present it is the criminal justice system. African Americans as well as people of color are vulnerable to the systematic racism that is deeply in rooted in the foundation of America, creating what Alexander says a “racial caste system”. This system allows for mass incarceration and social control over minorities, deflecting their natural rights. America’s redesign of racial caste makes it easier for African Americans as well as people of color to fall prey to this incriminating system by ripping away their bill of rights and completing America’s picture of a perfect society filled with white collared workers.

Introduction of the New Jim Crow

In “Introduction to The New Jim Crow“, author Michelle Alexander states “we have not ended racial caste in American; we have merely redesigned it.” using the mass incarceration system in America to keep people of color in a permanent second–class status. She is trying to show that through the story of Jarvious Cotton and how through generation and generation there are constructs in place to keep African Americans from voting. It isn’t a secret that neighborhoods with predominantly POC populations are over-policed and the image of the black man is always made out as thug-like in America and there is direct criminalization of a skin tone. The racial caste system is very much prevalent in America, and now rather than Jim Crow laws enforcing literacy tests to prevent African Americans from having any civil influence in their country, a judicial system that targets people of color is present to keep people as subordinates. Alexander uses her first-hand experience working for the ACLU in order to back her claims and reasoning for why the system has just been redesigned to mask it’s true intentions.

Intro to The New Jim Crow

“we have not ended racial caste in America; we have merely redesigned it.” – Michelle Alexander

Through this quote Michelle Alexander is trying to convey that even though times have changed and the Jim Crow era is long gone, the racial caste system still exists but takes on a different shape. The “New Jim Crow” involves and affects the African American male community of the United States. That is because they make up a majority of the mass incarceration in the country’s criminal justice system. As a result, they are revoked of some of their most basic rights, and without their most basic rights, Michelle argues, the African American male community loses its power in contributing to the nation’s politics and society. Michelle defends her claim by reciting her experiences while working as a lawyer and using evidence such as “people of all colors use and sell illegal drugs at remarkably similar rates’ – to prove her point on the racial discrimination involved in the criminal justice system which in turn disempowers the African American male community.

Racial Caste

“we have not ended racial caste in America; we have merely redesigned it.”

Its obvious how the prison system is just a front to continue racially profiling black people, and by labeling them as “criminals” it makes it legal to discriminate against them. “Today it is perfectly legal to discriminate against criminals in nearly all the ways that it was once legal to discriminate against African Americans.” As proved in this article, the prison system sets criminals up for failure, it is not proven to work yet is still enforced.  My understanding of this quote is how the racial caste is more present then ever, but has just been redesigned in order to make it seem less racist. The system as a whole throughout the whole country is not in favor of black people, take the crack cocaine issue as example. As the author states, the media only showed black families, women, men and babies, and labeled them as crack women, crack men, etc. The media pushed this idea that black people are criminals and should be identified as such in order to give a solid reason to enforce racial caste. An important idea brought up is how Jim Crow and slavery are examples of racial caste, and it may seem dramatic to compare that to today, but mass incarnation is racial caste, and it important to recognize and acknowledge that.

“Once released, former prisoners enter a hidden underworld of legalized discrimination and per- manent social exclusion. They are members of America’s new undercaste.” Lastly I want to bring up this point the author addresses, which is the main way the author backs up the statement at the top. Addressing them as the “undercaste” is upsetting but true, the criminal justice system has no intention of bettering a criminals life after they have done their time. But only creating a reason to legally discriminate them, and exclude them from society just as it was during Jim Crow times.

New Jim Crow – Michelle Alexander

The first law of thermodynamics states that energy cannot be created or destroyed, rather it can only be converted from one form to another. Similarly, racism in America has simply changed from labeling by race to labeling people of color as felons, albeit the part about whether it could be created or destroyed. Now instead of outright excluding and discriminating against African-Americans, they can achieve the same effect through disenfranchisement and racial profiling. In “Introduction to The New Jim Crow“, Michelle Alexander writes exactly that, that “we have not ended racial caste in American; we have merely redesigned it.”

And the worst part is that, we don’t see the criminal justice system as something comparable to Jim Crow. It’s flawed, yes. But Jim Crow-esque? That’s hard for us to wrap our mind around, especially for those who live in an era where Jim Crow laws haven’t been enforced since 1965 (on paper).

In her research, Alexander notes on the Drug War as a particular instance and a propagator of the New Jim Crow. The media enforces and spreads the idea that African-Americans were predominantly crack addicts and dealers, while our criminal justice system incarcerates them. And while studies do show “that people of all colors use and sell illegal drugs at remarkably similar rates”, our country imprisons more black youth than white youth. With this stereotype that our black population are more susceptible to drug use and distribution, we are dulled to the idea that there’s something wrong with the racial disparity among mass incarceration. We begin to think it’s normal. Moreover, even when felons are released, they still face series of challenges during their re-entry into society. They are barred from job opportunities, from voting, and from various other public benefits. This is a problem that goes further than just the system being flawed, it’s a problem with hidden sentiment towards people of color. Even in today’s time where there is overwhelming support for movements like BLM, there’s still a long way to go before we’ve rid ourselves of the ingrained racial caste that’s been in place generations before most of us were even born.

The New Jim Crow

“we have not ended racial caste in America; we have merely redesigned it.”

The author of this reading is trying to convey to the audience how social divisions still exist in America today and have not been eradicated, rather they have been modified to seem less strict. Reality can often be misleading and this is what Michelle Alexander is trying to show us. The social systems in the U.S. were made to seem equal but when looked at closer actually resemble and perform many aspects of the Jim Crow time period in South Africa. This quote also shows the corruptness within the powerful officials of this country.

Alexander uses research to back up this statement by using her experience from being a lawyer who had dealt with several class-action employment discrimination-cases. She quickly understood how this form of racial stereotyping had subjective effects on cases and unfair consequences for victims. Alexander also mentions how during her time at ACLU that people who have been incarcerated are denied the right to vote due to the web of laws from a biased social system. Alexander does a good job in setting up the conversation about the role of the criminal justice system for the rest of the book.