Democracy Gone Astray

Democracy, being a human construct, needs to be thought of as directionality rather than an object. As such, to understand it requires not so much a description of existing structures and/or other related phenomena but a declaration of intentionality.
This blog aims at creating labeled lists of published infringements of such intentionality, of points in time where democracy strays from its intended directionality. In addition to outright infringements, this blog also collects important contemporary information and/or discussions that impact our socio-political landscape.

All the posts here were published in the electronic media – main-stream as well as fringe, and maintain links to the original texts.

[NOTE: Due to changes I haven't caught on time in the blogging software, all of the 'Original Article' links were nullified between September 11, 2012 and December 11, 2012. My apologies.]

Friday, September 05, 2014

The Color of Justice

Jon Stewart was on vacation when Darren Wilson, a twenty-eight-year-old white police officer, shot and killed Michael Brown, an eighteen-year-old unarmed black man, in Ferguson, Missouri. But Fox News wasn’t. So when Stewart returned to “The Daily Show,” on August 26th, he made up for lost time, disparaging Fox’s coverage of the event, which, in Stewart’s admittedly selective edit, largely consisted of accusing commentators and activists of “playing the race card.” As one Fox commentator complained, “This mantra of an unarmed black teen-ager killed by a white cop … actually colors the way we look at this story.”

Few issues divide white and black Americans more sharply than criminal justice. A Pew Research Center poll found that eighty per cent of African-Americans thought the Ferguson case raised important racial issues; only thirty-seven per cent of whites felt the same. And while fewer than one in five African-Americans expressed confidence that the investigation of the shooting would be fair, more than half of whites said that they had confidence in the investigation.

A report issued today by the Sentencing Project, a nonprofit advocacy group, confirms the old news that whites and blacks view the justice system very differently, largely because of their different treatment by it. The report’s real significance lies in its further contention that this disparity in perceptions contributes to our astonishingly high incarceration rate, the highest in the world.

White Americans are decidedly more punitive than African-Americans or Hispanics. Sixty-three per cent of whites support the death penalty, as compared to only thirty-six per cent of African-Americans and forty per cent of Hispanics. Whites are also more supportive of other harsh measures, including trying juveniles as adults and “three-strikes” laws. Blacks, by contrast, are substantially more likely to support public investment in education and job training as a crime-prevention measure. Since whites are, for the time being, the majority of the polity, our laws reflect their preferences; American criminal law is dominated by mandatory minimum sentences, life sentences for minor offenses, and the widespread abandonment of parole.

What explains whites’ preference for harsh criminal laws? Crime victims understandably might favor more punitive responses. But whites are considerably less likely to be victims of crime, especially violent crime: African-Americans are six times more likely than whites to die of homicide. Crime has always been a more serious problem in areas of concentrated urban poverty, and blacks more often live in such neighborhoods. Yet despite their substantially lower vulnerability to crime, whites are more likely than blacks to support punitive crime policies.

Some people charge that whites use the criminal-justice system as a continuation of Jim Crow by other means. But the Sentencing Project report makes a more subtle point. It finds that whites support tougher criminal laws at least partly because they overestimate black and Hispanic crime rates. Blacks and Hispanics do commit certain crimes more frequently, per capita, than whites, but not all. But whites consistently overestimate the difference, according to one study, by as much as twenty to thirty per cent. That perception affects attitudes toward offenders and sentencing. Studies show that the more whites attribute higher crime rates to blacks and Hispanics, the more likely they are to support harsh criminal laws. It is less that they are consciously seeking to subordinate racial minorities than that they fail to treat the negative consequences of high incarceration rates as their problem. As the report explains, “attributing crime to racial minorities limits empathy toward offenders and encourages retribution.”

This is a damning indictment. If anyone were to admit that they preferred the death penalty, life without parole, or harsh sentences because they believe the perpetrators of violent crimes are more likely to be black or Hispanic, we would immediately condemn them as the worst sort of racist. If a prosecutor, judge, or juror expressed such a sentiment, any resulting conviction or sentence would be swiftly overturned. No one admits that they feel this way, but the studies recounted by the Sentencing Project suggest that this is precisely what many white Americans feel.

It is no coincidence, then, that the first Attorney General to press for significant easing of criminal sentences is Eric Holder, the first African-American to hold that position, under the nation’s first black President. Holder has directed federal prosecutors not to charge low-level nonviolent drug offenders under laws carrying mandatory minimums, and has put in place policies that reduce sentences for the elderly and for nonviolent offenders. The extraordinary courage and leadership this takes cannot be overstated; as history has long demonstrated, the easy path for politicians and law-enforcement officials is to be tough on crime, regardless of the human consequences.

Thankfully, Americans from all backgrounds are coming to share Holder’s views. Some Fox commentators’ obdurate blindness to the reality of racism notwithstanding, there is emerging bipartisan support for reducing the severity of our criminal-justice system. According to one longitudinal study, punitive sentiment in the United States peaked in 1997 and has been dropping ever since. The nation’s incarceration rate, which steadily and sharply increased for almost forty years, has dropped every year since 2010. California, New Jersey, New York, and several other states have reduced their prison populations significantly—without any increase in crime. And conservatives like Rand Paul, Grover Norquist, Ken Cuccinelli, Newt Gingrich, and Ed Meese have spoken out against the severity of our criminal-justice system. Some are motivated by libertarian commitments, others by a religious belief in redemption and mercy, still others by economic arguments that we are incarcerating far too many people needlessly and at great cost.

But the Sentencing Project study, coupled with Ferguson’s reminder of just how racially divided our perceptions of crime and justice remain, suggests that, if we are to achieve real reform, we must first own up to the racism that underlies our criminal law. Until we acknowledge that the white majority’s often inaccurate association of crime and race contributes to the inhumane policies we maintain, we will not be able to make good on the promise of equal treatment that is essential to the legitimacy of any criminal-justice system.

Original Article
Source: newyorker.com/
Author: BY DAVID COLE

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