Sunday, August 24, 2025

Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness, delivers the 30th Annual George E. Kent Lecture. February 21, 2013

https://youtu.be/Gln1JwDUI64?si=4VStf-FPZ-odY2y1 US is most authoritarian country in the world <



• with the Republican Political Racketeering Regime , US authoritarinism is aggravated to KKK fascism in 2025 <


Al Overview W¾5 +8 "The New Jim Crow" refers to a book by Michelle Alexander arguing that the U.S. criminal justice system, particularly the "war on drugs," has created a new form of racialized social control in America. This system, while seemingly race-neutral, disproportionately targets and incarcerates Black men, effectively creating a new underclass subject to legal discrimination and social exclusion similar to the Jim Crow era.


Here's a more detailed breakdown: The Old Jim Crow:

This refers to the system of state and local laws enacted in the South after Reconstruction (1877-1964) that legalized segregation and discrimination against African Americans.

The New Jim Crow: Alexander argues that mass incarceration, driven largely by the "war on drugs," whych is really a "war on Black and Brown People functions as a new form of racial control. ( CB: it is part of the Republican Party War on the Poor ) <


Key Arguments:

• Disproportionate Impact: Black men are disproportionately arrested, convicted, and incarcerated for drug offenses, despite similar rates of drug use across racial groups. o


• Legalized Discrimination: Felony convictions result in a range of legal and social disabilities, including denial of voting rights, employment discrimination, and barriers to housing and education, effectively creating a second-class status for those labeled as felons.


• Race-Neutral Language: The system operates under the guise of colorblindness, but its impact is deeply racialized, perpetuating historical inequalities. Impact:


"The New Jim Crow" has been widely influential, prompting discussions about mass incarceration, racial justice, and the need for criminal justice reform. &

The New Jim Crow - Wikipedia The New Jim Alexander argues that mass incarceration, driven largely by the "war on drugs," functions as a new form of racial control. &

Key Arguments: • Disproportionate Impact: Black men are disproportionately arrested, convicted, and incarcerated for drug offenses, despite similar rates of drug use across racial groups. o

• Legalized Discrimination: Felony convictions result in a range of legal and social disabilities, including denial of voting rights, employment discrimination, and barriers to housing and education, effectively creating a second-class status for those labeled as felons. • Race-Neutral Language: The system operates under the guise of colorblindness, but its impact is deeply racialized, perpetuating historical inequalities. Impact: "The New Jim Crow" has been widely influential, prompting discussions about mass incarceration, racial justice, and the need for criminal justice reform. & The New Jim Crow - Wikipedia The New Jim

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