Racial Discrimination In Michelle Alexander's The New Jim Crow

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"Someone call 911! Call the police!" Sonia cried as she watched her fiancé Steve bleed out from a gunshot wound in our apartment building hallway. My brother was standing over him, shaking, with the gun still in his hand. I was six, and hardly aware of what had transpired, but called 911. My brother was later sentenced 25 years to life for committing manslaughter in the second degree. Since then, it's just been my mother and me together. My mother’s determination to make sure that I did not fall victim to the harsh environment in which I was raised was the driving force that led me to become the first person in my family to not only graduate high school, but also college. She inspired the continuous evolution of my career, by fostering the …show more content…

It has affected the thinking of people and enforced some obscene practices such as slavery into the American social sphere. Slavery was the source of America’s great fortune and has left a lasting imprint that has made it difficult to implement the unified and integral codes and policies of development for people of color. Michelle Alexander’s “The New Jim Crow” brings forward this racial disparity in the American society. In fact, Ms. Alexander’s approach provides a rationale on to why the social advancement of black Americans is not yet …show more content…

She notes, “Challenging mass incarceration requires something civil rights advocates have long been reluctant to do: advocacy on behalf of criminals. Even at the height of Jim Crow segregation—when black men were more likely to be lynched than to receive a fair trial in the South—NAACP lawyers were reluctant to advocate on behalf of blacks accused of crimes unless the lawyers were convinced of the men’s innocence”1. Alexander rightly argues that if this bias in advocacy is allowed to persist, the injustices and oppression that are perpetuated in the name of “fighting crime” cannot be resisted in a meaningful way. “Criminals, it turns out, are the one social group in America we have permission to hate. In ‘colorblind’ America, criminals are the new whipping boys. They are entitled to no respect and little moral concern”1. Advocates who would fight against mass incarceration must be willing to openly show respect and concern for the people who have been caged, literally and metaphorically, as

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