This attitude towards blacks has seen hundreds of innocent boys ganged down by rogue police officers. The Black Lives Matter movement is the testament to the dire need for reforms in the police force especially when it comes to racial profiling of…
That just shows the spree of arresting African Americans for any little incident that occurred was over blown and needs to be corrected. The United States is known to be diverse but with missing half of the population of other races it’s not…
The biggest crime in the U.S. Criminal Justice is that it is race-biased. Where African Americans are targeted and punished in a much more aggressive way than white people. From the use of drugs, police stops, jury selection, getting out on bail, trial and sentencing. According to “What’s It Like To Be Black in the Criminal Justice System,” police arrest black Americans for drug crimes at twice the rate of whites. As a matter of fact, that is why blacks are more like to be held while awaiting trail.…
Although the media covers a lot about the arrests of non-White people, it is surprising to find out that the majority of the arrested people is White. It is not hard to find an article in the newspaper or a report on a news channel about controversial arrests of non-Whites, especially African Americans. With the widely and frequently covered topic of arrests, readers and audience are getting used to relying on the journalists for the facts and details of incidents, making them become indifferent and incapable of looking up information and analyzing details based on authorized sources. In fact, White people made up the majority of the arrested in the US.…
The growth of African American’s going to jail What is the number of African Americans going in the system? The crime rate has gone up by the time. Our jail system has grown by the years not just by different raise but also with African American. Another thing is that police officers see an African American walking in the night and they stop them, and maybe arrest them.…
In the summer of 1963, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his “I have a Dream” speech. He dreamed for a nation. He dreamed that America “would rise from the dark and desolate valley of segregation to the sunlit path of racial justice.” America, however, never reached that “sunlit path of racial justice.” And the American legal system is where many of the racial injustices still perpetuate.…
It takes a lot to fathom the events happening between police and people of color. As the author of article stated, “to fully understand the people and the events we must use science and develop a sociological imagination.” Looking at the pieces of social and historical evidence all is required to fully understand the whole picture of why this event was an effect of a much deeper cause. The most important to me is the expanding U.S. inequality and the war on drugs. Palmer described the expanding U.S. inequality as started after the economic boom after WWII.…
1. What is your overall reaction to this article? In the article The black family in the age of mass incarceration, was overall and amazing article. A lot of people see the “blacks” as drug dealers or murder or look at them in a different way then they look at white.…
In Alice Bliss by Laura Harrington, Alice Bliss is a teenage girl who goes through the regular day struggles in the life of a teenage girl. But once the war comes along, her father, Matt Bliss, decides that it is his duty to go into the war and serve the country. This may seem like a good thing to do in his perspective but for his family, it was one of the worst things that could have happened to them. Alice has a strong connection with her father so to have him leave in this time to something so dangerous affects her so much. But through this time, Alice experiences new things and learns how to overcome not having her father not in the picture with the help of others.…
I believe that justice system has not been biased to African Americans people. As it says in the last paragraph of the Heather Mac Donald article says “black prison rates result from crime not racism.”. The other side says that the justice system is biased to African Americans, they say “black Americans are more likely to serve longer sentences than white Americans for the same crime. Black American are also more likely to have their cars searched I believe that the Justice system does not look at race when in a case.…
Once arrested, blacks are likely to remain in the prison. They are harshly treated, sometimes even for crimes not properly investigated and crimes they did not commit. The biggest crimes in the United States criminal Justice system is that it is a race-based, institution where African American are directly targeted and punished in a much more aggressive way than white people. Without question racism is still extremely present, fixed in a society that fails to understand it and buried in a badly damaged judicial system. An analysis of black history reveals that blacks often serve higher sentences than whites for the same crime because of inequalities such as racial profiling, bias in police department across the country and unfair criminal justice…
Police Brutality and Racial Disparities Introduction Police brutality against African Americans is a widely discussed topic across the states. However, what cause the police to be so? Why do they use excessive and deadly force against them? And is it really only about African Americans or does the other ethnicities encounter the same problem?…
Driving while black has an effect on many people whether they are young or old and any race other than white. Driving while black is racial profiling and this is a big problem in the black community and it needs to be fixed. The definition of racial profiling according to ACLU it is “the discriminatory practice of targeting individuals for suspicion of crime based on the individual’s race, ethnicity, religion or national origin.” This means that someone discriminates solely because they are different from him or her. Being stopped because he or she is black is something that hinders communities from growing.…
"The clock has been turned back on racial progress in America, though scarcely anyone seems to notice." (Alexander 2012: 180) Criminal justice inequality has a toll on every possible chance given throughout future lives. The chances of getting a home and having a family may vary. Most importantly criminal justice affects the amount of wealth someone can accumulate to achieve these future goals. It is a scary thought to think that young black men being trapped in the criminal justice system has just become a "norm" in society.…
Prejudice or racial tensions have become a fore fronting scapegoat for police brutality. Individuals have accused police officers and vice versa of being racists and treating them of lesser quality as other races. “Although black men make up only six percent of the U.S. population, they account for forty percent of the unarmed men shot to death by police this year.” (Kimberly, Fisher, Tate, Jenkins) That means that African-American males create a little over half of the population shot by police officers this past year.…