Part II: Michelle Alexander on “The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the 
 Age of Colorblindness”
 
 
 
JUAN GONZALEZ: We turn now to the second part of our interview with legal  
scholar, civil rights advocate and author, Michelle Alexander. Her book is 
The  New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. A former 
director  of the Racial Justice Project at the ACLU of Northern California, 
she now holds  a joint appointment at the Kirwan Institute for the Study of 
Race and Ethnicity  and the Moritz College of Law at Ohio State University. 
 

AMY GOODMAN: We continued yesterday’s interview with Michelle Alexander  
after the broadcast, and we started with a clip of President Obama’s speech at 
 the NAACP centennial celebration last year. 
 

PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: We’ve got to say to our children, yes, if  you’re 
African American, the odds of growing up amid crime and gangs are higher.  
Yes, if you live in a poor neighborhood, you will face challenges that 
somebody  in a wealthy suburb does not have to face. But that’s not a reason to 
get bad  grades. That’s not a reason to cut class. That’s not a reason to 
give up on your  education and drop out of school. No one has written your 
destiny for you. Your  destiny is in your hands. You cannot forget that. That’s 
what we have to teach  all of our children. No excuses. 
 
 
 
AMY GOODMAN: Michelle Alexander, “no excuses.” Can you respond to 
President  Obama? 
 

MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Well, I think, you know, a major point that is  often 
lost in debates about the so-called underclass, you know, poor African  
Americans who are trapped in racially segregated ghettos, the point that’s 
often  
missed is that huge percentages of the people residing in those communities 
have  been branded felons, and therefore discrimination is perfectly legal 
against  them. You know, employment discrimination is perfectly legal. Most 
job  applications, ranging from Burger King clerk to accountant, ask whether 
you’ve  been convicted of a felony. And studies show that, you know, about 
70 percent of  employers say they won’t even consider hiring someone who’s 
been convicted of a  drug felony. 
 

Public housing is off-limits to you if you have been convicted of a  
felony. For a minimum of five years, you are deemed ineligible for public  
housing 
once you’ve been branded a felon. Discrimination in private housing  market’
s perfectly legal. So here you are, recently released from prison, having  
been branded a felon for engaging in precisely the kind of drug activity that
’s  ignored in middle-class white communities. You’re branded a felon. You 
can’t get  a job. And then public housing is off-limits to you? Where are 
you expected to  sleep? So an aunt or grandmother takes you in. 
 

Now, let’s say you’re one of the lucky few who manage to get a job.  Well, 
up to 100 percent of your wages can be garnished—that’s right, up to 100  
percent of your wages can be garnished—to pay the cost of your imprisonment. 
 Increasing numbers of states are requiring former prisoners to pay back 
the cost  of their imprisonment, pay back court costs, court processing fees, 
even the  cost of their representation, even if they’ve been assigned a 
public defender,  and back child support. You’re required to pay back all of 
the 
accumulated child  support that you incurred while you were in prison. So 
up to 100 percent of your  wages can be garnished, even if you’re one of the 
lucky few who manage to get a  job after being branded a felon. 
 

What is the system designed to do? The system is designed to send you  
right back to prison, which is, in fact, what happens to the vast majority of  
people who are released. About 70 percent of former prisoners are returned  
within three years. And the majority of those who are returned are returned  
within three months, because the obstacles, the legal barriers to just 
surviving  on the outside, are so great. I’m often—you know, people often say 
to 
me, “Well,  I know somebody who is a felon and who managed to get a job. 
You know, it’s  possible to get a job,” they say. 
 

Well, it may be possible, but what kind of job? Why is it that, you  know, 
our young kids, young black and brown kids, are expected to be locked into  
low-wage jobs for life, if they’re lucky enough to get them, but kids in 
other  communities are given the opportunity to go on to college, to compete 
for a full  range of job opportunities? During the Jim Crow era, the problem 
wasn’t that  black people couldn’t get jobs; it was that they were locked 
permanently in a  lower tier of jobs. And that’s the reality. That’s the 
reality. 
 

For us to tell young African American kids in ghetto communities, “Your  
destiny is in your own hands,” that may be an inspirational message, but for  
many of them it may turn out to be a lie, because the rules and laws that 
govern  ghetto communities today and the war that is being waged there ensures 
that a  large majority of black and brown boys in those communities will be 
branded  felons and then relegated to a permanent second-class status for 
life. 
 

JUAN GONZALEZ: Michelle Alexander, I’d like to ask you about Arnold  
Schwarzenegger. Governor Schwarzenegger, at his State of the State address in  
January, called for privatizing some of the state’s prisons. 
 

GOV. ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER: The priorities have become out of whack  over 
the years. I mean, think about it. Thirty years ago, ten percent of the  
general fund went to higher education, and only three percent went to prisons.  
Today, almost 11 percent goes to prisons and only seven-and-a-half percent 
goes  to higher education. Spending 45 percent more on prisons than 
universities is no  way to proceed into the future. 
 
 
 
AMY GOODMAN: Your reaction to Governor Schwarzenegger’s newfound concern  
about the situation with the prison system in his state? 
 

MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Yes, well, many people reacted with glee to  Governor 
Schwarzenegger’s kind of apparent embrace of the Books Not Bars theme  that 
had been a rallying cry for grassroots organizations in the state for more  
than a decade. But if you read between the lines there, what Schwarzenegger 
is  actually saying is not that we should change our laws to ensure that 
nonviolent  drug offenders don’t end up spending years or decades behind bars 
or 
that we  should rethink harsh mandatory minimum sentences or our 
three-strikes laws,  which have been responsible for the prison boom in 
California and 
other states  around the country. His remedy has not been to reduce prison 
populations through  kind of rethinking draconian laws, but instead to 
privatize, try to save money,  make warehousing and caging human beings cheaper 
by privatizing the system. 
 

Certainly, you know, this announcement must have been met with glee on  
Wall Street, where, you know, many companies like the Correctional Corporation  
of America, you know, is making millions of dollars, and it hopes to expand 
its  market of caging human beings for a profit. So, sadly, although, you 
know,  Schwarzenegger embraced the Books Not Bars motto, what he actually 
plans to do  in practice is, or may well be, worse than the system that we have 
today. 
 

JUAN GONZALEZ: I’d like to ask you about another aspect of this whole  
issue, in terms of—you mentioned mandatory sentencing laws, especially in  
relationship to the war on drugs. One of the aspects that rarely gets much  
attention, and you might want to talk about it, is how mandatory sentencing 
laws  
have essentially corrupted the criminal justice system by pressuring many  
defendants to basically cop a plea rather than take their chances through an 
 actual trial, where their guilt or innocence might be decided by a jury. 
 

MICHELLE ALEXANDER: That’s right. We will never know how many innocent  
people are doing time for supposed drug offenses in the United States, but  
there’s good reason to believe that those numbers are higher than they’ve ever 
 been, because of mandatory sentencing laws. Today, for a relatively minor 
drug  crime, you could be looking at five, ten, even a life sentence in 
prison. Now,  if you are arrested and charged with, you know, a relatively 
minor 
drug offense  and told that you will spend twenty-five years in prison if 
you take your case  to trial, but if you cop a plea and get only three years, 
a few months, or even  be willing to be labeled a felon for life, you know, 
you’ll be out in a matter  of months, days or just a few years, most people 
aren’t willing to take the risk  that they could be forfeiting decades of 
their life for a minor drug offense and  will take the deal, whether innocent 
or guilty. 
 

AMY GOODMAN: And then, explain, Michelle Alexander, what— 
 

MICHELLE ALEXANDER: The pressure to plead guilty is overwhelming. 
 

AMY GOODMAN: Explain then what that means, once a person is a felon, in  
terms of the rights they lose for life. 
 

MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Yes, well, once you’re branded a felon, you may be  
denied the right to vote; automatically excluded from juries; and legally  
discriminated against in employment, housing, access to education and public  
benefits. You know, the very rights that we supposedly won for African 
Americans  in the civil rights movement no longer exist for those labeled 
felons. 
That’s  why I say we have not ended racial caste in America; we’ve merely 
redesigned it.  All the old forms of discrimination, the forms of 
discrimination we supposedly  left behind, are now perfectly legal once you’ve 
been 
labeled a felon. And  thanks to the war on drugs, millions of people of color 
have been branded felons  for relatively minor drug activity, you know, in the 
past few decades. 
 

AMY GOODMAN: Michelle Alexander— 
 

MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Our prison population has quintupled. 
 

AMY GOODMAN: To what, in terms of the world, comparing our prison  
population to the rest of the world? 
 

MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Yes, well, our prison population has quintupled.  We’ve 
gone from about 300,000 people behind bars in the 1970s—you know, a time,  
by the way, that many civil rights activists thought that our rates of  
incarceration were egregiously high. But we went from about 300,000 people in  
prison and jails to more than two million today. And the vast majority of 
that  increase has been due to drug offenses. About two-thirds of the increase 
in the  federal prison population is due to drug offenses, and more than 
half of the  increase in the state population. 
 

AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk, Michelle Alexander, for one sec— 
 

MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Now, in fact, if we had to go back— 
 

AMY GOODMAN: I just wanted to ask if you could talk about the jailing  of 
black men often in white, rural communities and what that means in terms of  
bringing federal aid into those communities. 
 

MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Yes. You know, kind of a well-kept secret about the  
way our census laws and redistricting operates in the United States is that  
people who are warehoused in prisons—and the majority of new prison building 
in  the United States has taken place in relatively white rural areas—the 
majority  of the people who are put in those prisons, particularly in a state 
like New  York, are poor people of color. But the people warehoused in those 
prisons are  denied the right to vote, right? But those people behind bars 
are counted  through the census as part of the local population for the 
purposes of  redistricting, leading to a greater number of state 
representatives 
assigned to  those rural communities, even though the people behind bars can
’t vote, and  they’re not accountable to them. And additional federal 
funding flows to those  communities, because their population has been inflated 
because they have such  large prison populations. Meanwhile, the poor 
communities of color, you know,  from which these prisoners came, lose 
representation in their state  legislatures, because their population has 
declined. And 
the funding and support  that might otherwise flow to those communities is 
reduced, because their numbers  have been deflated as a result of the mass 
imprisonment of their community  members in rural white communities. 
 

AMY GOODMAN: Michelle Alexander, we want to thank you very much for  being 
with us. Her new book is called The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in  the 
Age of Colorblindness. Thank you so much. 
 

MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Thank you for having me.
 
_http://www.democracynow.org/2010/3/12/part_ii_michelle_alexander_on_the_ 
(http://www.democracynow.org/2010/3/12/part_ii_michelle_alexander_on_the) 
 

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