Bryan Stevenson's Speech Analysis

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On February 5th, 2018 Texas State University’s Distinguished Lecture Series hosted their 36th common experience speaker. Bryan Stevenson, the keynote speaker for the evening, is an attorney, social justice activist, founder and executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative. Every year Texas State University gives a book to their incoming freshman class as a welcome gift and to support different individuals who they would advise their student body to learn from. The the book presented to the freshman class of 2021 was Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson, a memoire recounting the story of a young lawyer fighting on the frontline of a country in thralled with extreme punishment and careless justice. Because this book was the 2017 addition to …show more content…

Because of Stevenson’s experience in the social justice field, he was able to educate and inspire his audience on what modern day social justice can look like and why it is important that the younger generation participate in the movement. Stevenson began his speech by sharing some statistics on incarceration in America: in 1972, 300,000 people were in U.S. jails and prisons, in 2017, the number is 2.3 million; 70% of women in prison are single parents of minor children; 30% of the black male population in Alabama has permanently lost voting rights. To many in the audience, these numbers were shocking. Taking into account the legacy of racial injustice in the United States, Stevenson states, “I don’t think we’re going to be free in this country until we challenge all the damage that has been done by our history of racial inequality.” However, in order to challenge a problem, we must first understand what the issue is. “We have to get proximate to the problems we care about,” says Stevenson. We cannot solve problems involving social injustice from a distance; we must get close to the people we desire to help. ‘Proximity’ is what helps us truly understand the issue and create possible solutions. Acknowledging the daunting task social justice can be, Stevenson offers a practical way for everyone to began their journey of …show more content…

Over the years, the American phycology has dehumanized young people, labeling them as ‘super-predators.’ This demonization paved the way for children to be tried as adults – many of them getting life sentences without parole. The evolution of slavery into mass incarceration, is another example provided by Stevenson on how our culture tries to change the narrative of this problem is a thing of the past, when in actuality it has transformed into legacy of racial inequality. In order to enact real change, Stevenson suggests that we must identify and challenge some of the stories society tries to

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