The New Jim Crow Book Review

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When asked whether African Americans are still under a system of racial and social control, many Americans will argue that the abolition of slavery and the Jim Crow laws, through the civil rights movement, brought an end to systemic racism. Therefore, African Americans are now free. However, according to Michelle Alexander, this is far from the truth. She addresses the issues of African Americans being in a system of racial and social control in her book, The New Jim Crow. Published in the year 2010, The New Jim Crow is a non-fiction book that informs readers of the American history of slavery, Jim Crow laws, the War on Drugs, the criminal justice system, and the prejudices that black people still face in America. In her book, Alexander argues When telling his story, she explains that cotton’s family tree is that of several generations of black men who were born in the United States but were denied their voting rights due to different reasons. For example, Cotton’s great-great-grandfather was a slave and therefore forbidden from voting. When his great grandfather attempted to vote, the Ku Klux Klan beat him to death, and his grandfather did not vote because he was intimidated by the Klan (Alexander, 1). This shows that black people in America were denied their voting rights in the past due to the system and forces that existed, and are also denied those rights through the criminal justice system immediately they have been labeled as felons. It is, therefore, similar to the Jim Crow Era since, during Jim Crow, African Americans were denied freedom of voting due to laws such as poll tax, which required them to pay taxes, literacy tests that required blacks to prove that they were intelligent enough to vote, and the grandfather She does this by showing readers that America is a racist culture. She does this by illustrating the racial bias that exists in the War on Drugs even among citizens. As evidence, Alexander (2012) refers to a survey that was conducted in 1995 asking people to close their eyes for a second, envision a drug user, and describe the person you envisioned. The result of the survey was that ninety-five percent of people envisioned a black drug user, while only five percent envisioned other racial groups. Alexander explains why the results have racial bias. She explains, “These results contrast sharply with the reality of drug crime in America. African Americans constituted only 15 percent of current drug users in 1995, and they constitute roughly the same percentage today. Whites constituted the vast majority of drug users then (and now), but almost no one pictured a white person when asked to imagine what a drug user looks like” (Alexander, 106). There is a high probability of receiving the same results if the respondents were law enforcement officers. It, therefore, provides more evidence that the criminal Justice system uses the War on Drugs as a tool to oppress black people. I believe that showing the racist culture, which is America, is important in

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