People In Prison Sociology

856 Words2 Pages

Although violent crime fell and poverty was on the rise a few key distinctions must be made here. Firstly, the result of the United States having the highest prison population in the world can be partly attributed to crime rising dramatically in the past 40 years (NeyFakh 1). Now, the Bureau of Justice reports that prison population fell 1% at the end of 2014 with its population at its smallest since 2005. This is the largest decline in more than 35 years (BJS 1). However, John Pfaff argues that even though we are having fewer arrests we are actually putting more people in prison. As mentioned, even though crime has fallen more people are put in prison even though arrests are low. Also, statistically speaking, it is very difficult to compute …show more content…

Growing up oppressed and in poverty I hated society and myself because I was not born into the right family. Maybe not all oppressed people feel that way but when millions of youths share a similar story, they must develop some consciousness about the nature of oppressive systems because they feel its pressure. When there is nothing that protects the rights of people of color but demonizes them for being “criminals” how can we not see a society that only serves the elite? Removing the tools of success and being a certain shade sets up people of color for social failure and systematic …show more content…

In other words, I begin to suffer from not being a white man to the degree that the white man imposes discrimination on me, makes me a colonized native, robs me of all worth, all individuality, tells me that I am a parasite on the world, that I must bring myself as quickly as possible into step with the white world, “that I am a brute beast, that my people and I are like a walking dung-heap that disgustingly fertilizes sweet sugar cane and silky cotton, that I have no use in the world.”

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