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by: Michelle Alexander
As the United States celebrates its “triumph over race” with the
election of Barack Obama, the majority of black men in major urban areas
are under correctional control or saddled with criminal records for
life. Jim Crow laws were wiped off the books decades ago, but today an
extraordinary percentage of the African American community is warehoused
in prisons or trapped in a parallel social universe, denied basic civil
and human rights—including the right to vote; the right to serve on
juries; and the right to be free of legal discrimination in employment,
housing, access to education and public benefits. Today, it is no longer
socially permissible to use race explicitly as a justification for
discrimination, exclusion, and social contempt. Yet as
civil-rights-lawyer-turned-legal-scholar Michelle Alexander
demonstrates, it is perfectly legal to discriminate against convicted
criminals in nearly all the ways in which it was once legal to
discriminate against African Americans. Once labeled a felon, even for a
minor drug crime, the old forms of discrimination are suddenly legal
again. In her words, “we have not ended racial caste in America; we have
merely redesigned it.”