On that
long-ago day of Alabama's great shame, Gov. George C. Wallace (D)
stood in a schoolhouse door and declared that his state's constitution
forbade black students to enroll at the University of Alabama.
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Discrimination in Public Services
The fact that he had stayed out of trouble, and that his parents were strict, and that he'd graduated from high school in three years and was serious about his college work - none of that afforded him any protection . . ."He was laid down with his eyes open and his mouth open, like he was saying, 'Oh, God!' " said Ms. Thompson. . .: 'Yes, that's my son. That's my son. He's dead.' " . . .. .The big shots have other things on their minds. In New York there's a football stadium . . . In Washington, the focus of presidents of the United States, past and present, has been on who would get to go to the pope's funeral. In Los Angeles the other day, the black celebrity elite turned out en masse to profile at Johnnie Cochran's funeral. Youngsters dead and dying? Nobody of importance is much interested in that. Bob Herbert, NY Times, 4/8/05 MORE
The ballots left uncounted, and that will never be counted, are so-called spoiled or rejected ballots -- votes cast by citizens, but never tallied. This is the dark little secret of U.S. democracy: Nationwide, in our presidential elections, about 2 million votes are cast and never counted, most spoiled because they cannot be read by the tallying machines. . . Cleveland State University Professor Mark Salling analyzed ballots thrown into Ohio's electoral garbage can. Salling found that, "overwhelmingly," the voided votes come from African American precincts . . .A U.S. Civil Rights Commission investigation concluded that, of nearly 180,000 votes discarded in Florida in the 2000 election as unreadable, a shocking 54 percent were cast by black voters. . .In Florida, an African American is 900 percent more likely to have his or her vote invalidated than a white voter. Jackson & Palast, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 1/26/05 MORE
Alabama Approves Segregated Schools in 2004
On that
long-ago day of Alabama's great shame, Gov. George C. Wallace (D)
stood in a schoolhouse door and declared that his state's constitution
forbade black students to enroll at the University of Alabama.
A dive into the electoral dumpster [of spoiled ballots] reveals something special . . .In a careful county-by-county, precinct-by-precinct analysis of the Florida 2000 race, the US Civil Rights Commission discovered that 54% of the votes in the spoilage bin were cast by African-Americans. . . .Ohio Republicans, simul-taneously in charge of both the Bush-Cheney get-out-the-vote drive and the state's vote-counting rules, . . . insured the spoilage pile would be as high as the White House. . . Add to the spoiled ballots a second group of uncounted votes, the 'provisional' ballots, . . .Over 155,000 Ohio voters were shunted to these second-class ballots.. . . the direct result of the national Republican strategy that targeted African-American precincts for mass challenges on election day. Greg Palast, 11/12/04 MORE
Individual Freedom Does Not Matter to Ashcroft
In the 2000
presidential election, 1.9 million Americans cast ballots that no one
counted. "Spoiled votes" is the technical term. The pile of ballots
left to rot has a distinctly dark hue: About 1 million of them -- half
of the rejected ballots -- were cast by African Americans although
black voters make up only 12 percent of the electorate.
This year, it could get worse. . .It is about to get worse. The
ill-named "Help America Vote Act," signed by President Bush in 2002,
is pushing computerization of the ballot box. California
decertified some of Diebold Corp.'s digital ballot boxes in response
to fears that hackers could pick our next president. But the known
danger of black-box voting is that computers, even with their software
secure, are vulnerable to low-tech spoilage games: polls opening late,
locked-in votes, votes lost in the ether.
Greg Palast, San Francisco
Chronicle, 6/20/04
Tribal Prison Scandal
New Research from The Civil Rights Project at Harvard University
The state of Mississippi is scrambling to make changes in its juvenile
justice system. Federal investigators found unsafe and inhumane living
conditions and evidence of abuse at two residential training schools. . .
ELLIOTT: Girls, sometimes on suicide watch, were stripped naked and put in a
windowless isolation cell with no lights, no toilet and no running water. Former
Columbia student Makia Palmer(ph) says they called it the hole. . .
Ms. BROWNSTEIN [Southern Poverty Law Center]: They hog-tie children, which means
that they handcuff their wrists and their ankles and then they chain them
together behind them. All of this is the kind of things that you would hear
about in some torture chamber in a Third World country, not how we treat our
children in the United States, one would think.
ELLIOTT [NPR Reporter]: For rule breakers, there was what they called lockdown.
Randy, who didn't give his last name, says kids would be locked in a bare cell
with only bars covering the windows.
RANDY: They'd take your clothes from you, have you sleeping on the slab naked,
and it's cold and freezing outside and you'd be balled up trying to get warm.Ms.
MAKIA PALMER: It's a dark room. You can't see nothing. When they put you in
there, you don't have nothing on. Only way you can use the bathroom is through
the hole in the floor. . .
ELLIOTT: Girls, sometimes on suicide watch, were stripped naked and put in a
windowless isolation cell with no lights, no toilet and no running water. Former
Columbia student Makia Palmer(ph) says they called it the hole.
Ms. MAKIA PALMER: It's a dark room. You can't see nothing. When they put you in
there, you don't have nothing on. Only way you can use the bathroom is through
the hole in the floor.
In 1999, fewer Blacks ages 12 to 17 than Whites or Hispanics had used alcohol in the past month, the past year, or ever in their lifetime. In addition, a statistically significantly lower percentage of Blacks than Whites or Hispanics had used any tobacco products, and more specifically, cigarettes, in the past month, the past year, or in their lifetime. Apparent differences among Blacks, Whites, and Hispanics in the use of any illicit drugs were not statistically significant; however, fewer Blacks than Whites had used marijuana in the past year and in their lifetime. Status and Trends in the Education of Blacks, p. 84 U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, NCES 2003–034 September 2003
Data from the Uniform Crime Reports and the United States Census Bureau are used to characterize racial disparities in marijuana and other drug offense arrest rates in 700 metropolitan area counties. National drug arrest rates for blacks and whites are compared from 1991 to 1995, showing dramatic and consistent disparities. The disparity between black and white arrest rates for marijuana offenses has grown during this period
Appendix 2. Racial Disparities in 1995 Arrests
|
1995 Uniform Crime Report Data |
Arrest Rate Per 100,000 |
|
||||
|
Offense |
All |
black |
white |
Am. Indian |
Asian/ Pacific |
Ratio of black: white |
|
Possession of Marijuana |
192.84 |
429.22 |
165.64 |
102.83 |
23.10 |
2.59 |
United States Marijuana Arrests, Part Two: Racial Differences in Drug Arrests, Copyright © 2000 by Jon Gettman and the NORML Foundation
Discrimination in Public Services
The map below shows the sewer lines
(green lines) in a small
town in North Carolina. The white areas indicate a place with 20% or fewer
African-Americans. Darker areas
indicate higher percentages of African Americans. Notice that the green
sewer lines are primarily in white areas and make sharp turns to avoid areas
with high concentrations of African Americans. 
Map fromThe Cedar Grove Institute for Sustainable Communities