Sunday, April 7, 2013

Cradle to Prison Pipeline (Opinion Piece)


Preface: I was asked to write a piece on teaching and the Culture of Discrimination using the "Cradle to Prison Pipeline Campaign" and another video (referenced). This work is what resulted. Though it is riddled with statistics it is an opinion piece and has not been constructed as an educational tool as most of my other blogs have. The content of this piece contains a history of racism and may offend some readers. Please take that into consideration. (However, there are no racial epithets. This piece is "safe for work".)



First I would like to offer my emotional response to the video "Cradle to Prison Pipeline Campaign", from the Louisiana Summit by the Children's Defense Fund in 2012. I realize that I never learned about the period of history talked about in the video. I was not educated on "Jim Crow" laws, though I had heard the term before. The notion that these laws were written and created for the purpose of driving black men into prisons to be rented out to the same jobs they did as slaves, strikes me as so outrageous and ridiculous... by my twentieth century mindset. My first response is outrage on behalf of the black population at the time. Mr. Ronald Mason, President of the Southern University system, teaches that after the Jim Crow laws were abolished the War on Drugs served the purpose of jailing impoverished black men even more effectively (Children's Defense Fund, 2012 Nov 7). According to Mr. Mason 70% of the jailed population of Louisiana is black and 90% of those persons are men. The Children's Defense Fund (2009) states that in America a black boy born in 2001 has a 1 in 3 chance of going to prison in his lifetime; a White boy a 1 in 17 chance. A black girl born in 2001 has a 1 in 17 chance of going to prison in her lifetime; and a White girl a 1 in 111 chance. There is no scientific evidence that black people are genetically predisposed to make bad decisions, so the answer must lie in the American justice system and culture (Children's Defense Fund, 2012 Nov 7).

As a female and a feminist I feel the exclusion of the black female statistic, though I understand that that 90% of jailed blacks are men is significant. In the September/October 2012 issue of "Humanist" it is noted that "despite being less than 9 percent of the U.S. population, black women are the largest segment of the skyrocketing female prison population." "And colorism plays a role in black female sentencing and incarceration rates as well. According to a recent study done in North Carolina prisons, dark-skinned black women were more likely to receive and serve longer sentences than lighter-skinned black women (Hutchison, 2012)." Though feminism and female black imprisonment may seem a separate topic to the Southern University System it is a symptom of the same sickness: the War on Drugs, "suspension and expulsion policies that fuel the school-to-prison pipeline" (Hutchinson, 2012), and a religious culture of negotiated subservience to "morality" in an attempt to offset an overwhelming cultural representation of the hypersexualized black female "role model" (Hutchinson, 2012). I feel that the black female cannot be excluded in this conversation as it seems she has been. All of my following work will be in the view of the "black race", not the "black male", including but not limited to my postulates for solutions.

I asked myself what I, as a future science teacher, can do to protect my students from this culture of discrimination; how can I equip them to defend against a system that seems to be stacked against them? I imagine myself saying "Do cops pull over people of color? Join the police force, be the cop and change why traffic stops happen. Do judges sentence black people more harshly? Be the judge, and sentence people fairly according to the scope of their crime. Be the change you want to see in the world! I felt that people didn't get an appropriate emphasis on science and math in school, so I became a science teacher." Mr. Mason mirrors my sentiment. "What can the Southern University System do for the United States? 1. Increase the number of black [omitted]* bachelor degree graduates. 2. Increase the number of black teachers. 3. Bring truth about the relationships with black [people]** in America. 4. Establish historically black universities as bases for long term systematic change. (Children's Defense Fund, 2012 Oct 7). Immediately curious about why the bases had to be "historically black" if we, as advocates, are trying to bring about racial equality, Mr. Mason says that black universities historically are specifically designed to promote black interest against the system of oppression (Children's Defense Fund, 2012 Oct 7).

School is supposed to be a place to learn how to think critically, to respond instead of react, to prepare to enter academia and the real world with a desire to improve it while enjoying our lives. So many things in the current cultures are stacked against people that are non-white, impoverished, female, disabled, or outside of the local religion... Teachers are the guides of education and end up being the ones that weave global culture through what they permit, omit, and emphasize. If teachers cannot change the parents and their bias, or save the world today, we can equip students with the desire, drive, and tools to change it for themselves and their own children.

End note: I watched Public School Prepares you for Prison Life, by TheAlexJonesChannel and agree that a school throwing children in prison, even for an hour, for minor infractions is a violation of human rights, a striking example of mental torture and abuse, and the indoctrination of the "why bother" mentality associated with the culture of discrimination. However, I could not finish the rest of the video (I stopped at 11:26, and wish I had stopped sooner). I was not dressed appropriately to attend such profound discourse: I forgot my tinfoil hat.


*Omission: The word "male" was omitted in deference to gender equality in education and advocacy.
**The word "men" has been changed to "people" in deference to gender equality.


References:

Children's Defense Fund (2009). Cradle to Prison Pipeline Campaign. Retrieved from http://www.childrensdefense.org/child-research-data-publications/data/cradle-prison-pipeline-summary-report.pdf

Children's Defense Fund (2012). CRADLE TO PRISON PIPELINE® CAMPAIGN. Retrieved from http://www.childrensdefense.org/programs-campaigns/cradle-to-prison-pipeline/

Children's Defense Fund (2012 Nov 7). Cradle to Prison Pipeline Lousisiana Summit. [Video file]. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2eZD0BozS-s

Hutchinson, R. (2012). The “Return” of the Welfare Queens: Feminism, Secularism, and Anti-Racism. /Humanist/ (September/October 2012). 19-20.

TheAlexJonesChannel (2012, Oct 30). Public School Prepares You for Prison Life. [Video File]. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZv0WgV2oMc

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