today in black history

March 28, 2024

Poet Countee Cullen wins Phi Beta Kappa honors at New York University on this date in 1925.

Vantage Point

POSTED: June 16, 2011, 12:00 am

  • POST
    • Add to Mixx!
  • SEND TO FRIEND
  • Text Size
  • TEXT SIZE
  • CLEARPRINT
  • PDF

Some time ago I wrote an article titled -- Black America: A State of Emergency Without Urgency. I suggested that millions of Black people are imprisoned in America’s “dark ghettos,” “catching more hell” than ever before as Malcolm X would put it. There has been a deafening silence in the media and an amazing lack of concern by policy-makers in Washington to address this devastating crisis. Even in Black America, the efforts by civil rights/human rights leaders have been episodic and largely ineffective. There are those who suggest that the silence by the mainstream media and inaction by policy-makers is due to the fact that there is a Black family in the White House, that the election of President Obama and the presumption of a post-racial society make it difficult to forcefully raise and address racial issues. But, Black leaders, activists and organizers must not equivocate while millions of our sisters and brothers suffer in urban inner-city neighborhoods across this country. It is imperative that we raise our voices and mobilize/organize to transform the conditions of those among us who are left out and in far too many cases locked up. And, as we address the State of Emergency in Black America, we must confront and combat one of the most damaging dimensions of the crisis, the War on Drugs!

Forty years after President Richard M. Nixon declared a “War on Drugs” under the guise of halting trafficking in drugs in the United States, the evidence is clear: The War on Drugs has been a “war on us,” a politically motivated, racially biased strategy which has disproportionately targeted African Americans and other people of color. The truth is, faced with a growing “White backlash” against the “gains” of the civil rights/human rights movement of the 60s and 70s, political demagogues seized upon the misplaced frustration of segments of White America to advance policies calculated to win elective office. Social and economic programs perceived as beneficial to Blacks, vast numbers of whom reside in urban inner-city neighborhoods, were slashed in the name of reducing the burden of government on taxpayers. In effect policy-makers of both political parties turned their backs on urban America, ushering in an era of massive disinvestment, virtually assuring even greater social and economic deterioration of neighborhoods that were already underdeveloped.

In lieu of policies and programs to advance social, economic and racial justice, the War on Drugs became the “order of the day” complete with prescriptions for “zero tolerance,” paramilitary policing strategies, “get tough” laws and mandatory sentencing to pacify crime ridden, “out of control” Black communities.

The unwarranted mass incarceration of millions of mostly young Black males that resulted from this ill fated decision has disrupted families, decimated communities and rendered America’s “dark ghettos” zones of desperation, desolation and despair - neighborhoods where persistent poverty, unemployment, underemployment, inferior education, crime, violence and fratricide abound – conditions borne of decades of blatant neglect of the social and economic needs and unfulfilled aspirations of urban inner-city residents. It must be understood that the “War on Drugs” was a choice, a policy decision to impose a discriminatory law enforcement and judicial strategy on Black communities rather than focus on social, racial and economic justice.

The casualties of the War on Drugs are mindboggling: African Americans make up an estimated 15% of drug users, but account for 37% of those arrested on drug charges, 59% of those convicted and 74% of all drug offenders sentenced to prison; federal prison sentences for Blacks average 41% longer than those of Whites; at the end of 2007 1 in every 9 Black men in their twenties -- the prime age for marriage --was in prison or jail, 1 in18 adult Black men was under correctional supervision control, and Black adults are 4 times more likely as Whites and nearly 2.5 times more likely as Hispanics to be under correctional control and 6 times more likely than Whites to be incarcerated. But, perhaps the most damning indictment of the War on Drugs is that the “badges and indicia” of incarceration can be permanent. A jail/prison term is now equivalent to a life sentence because formerly incarcerated persons are often denied access to jobs, social services, and housing and prohibited from voting in a number of states. Having been victimized by a racially biased policy, the formerly incarcerated person bears the mark of prison/jail for a lifetime!

After trillions of dollars misspent, the rise of a prison-jail industrial complex largely constructed and sustained by the mass incarceration of Black people and the devastating dislocations caused in America’s dark ghettos, it’s time to declare war on the war on drugs! As the prestigious Global Commission on Drug Policy recently declared, “Political leaders and public figures should have the courage to articulate publicly what many of them acknowledge privately, that the evidence overwhelmingly demonstrates that repressive strategies will not solve the drug problem, and that the war on drugs has not, and cannot, be won.” Black leaders, activists and organizers must act with a renewed sense of urgency to address the State of Emergency in Black America, and this cannot be done without an all-out counter-offensive against the War on Drugs.


Dr. Ron Daniels is President of the Institute of the Black World 21st Century and Distinguished Lecturer at York College City University of New York. His articles and essays also appear on the IBW website www.ibw21.org and www.northstarnews.com.




This is the first part of a two-part commentary. Part II will run on Friday.

Related References

NorthStarNews.com on Facebook