The United States criminal system, specifically in the state of Texas, is considered discriminatory, aligned with the state of Mississippi. Mutually, theoretically and in reality, together as one, the United States was founded as a racist society. Sociologist Joe Feagin states that the “systemic racism includes the complex array of anti-black practices… the continuing economic and other resource inequalities along racial lines, and the white racist ideologies and attitudes created to maintain and rationalize white privilege and power… [meaning] that the core racist realities are manifested in each of society’s major parts [...] each major part of U.S. society--the economy, politics, education, religion, the family--reflects the fundamental reality of systemic
The United States criminal system, specifically in the state of Texas, is considered discriminatory, aligned with the state of Mississippi. Mutually, theoretically and in reality, together as one, the United States was founded as a racist society. Sociologist Joe Feagin states that the “systemic racism includes the complex array of anti-black practices… the continuing economic and other resource inequalities along racial lines, and the white racist ideologies and attitudes created to maintain and rationalize white privilege and power… [meaning] that the core racist realities are manifested in each of society’s major parts [...] each major part of U.S. society--the economy, politics, education, religion, the family--reflects the fundamental reality of systemic