Analysis Of Pull Up Your Pants Laws

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On June 11, 2007, Delcambre Louisiana introduced the first ‘Pull Up Your Pants’ law in America to include a penalty of six months in jail or a $500.00 for weary pants sagging below the waist and revealing a person’s buttocks covered only by an undergarment (Koppel, 2007). This public indecency campaign, directed primarily at African American youth, continues to show intolerance and contempt for this social faction 's form of fashion and cultural expression of low-slung pants. However, Laurel’s city attorney Deidra Bassi of Laurel Mississippi’s 2015 Pull Up Your Pants campaign is concerned this could be perceived and challenged as a violation of civil rights (Howell, K. 2015). A good portion of young African Americans feel this law is racist, …show more content…

Young African American males are burdened with a significant disconnect between their enthusiastic display of adolescence and the intransigence of authority. Below the surface of the Pull Up Your Pants laws is the lack of hope the black youth feel about their future and place in American society. African American children were not yet born when their parents and grandparents did all the heavy lifting in the preliminary stages of social reform. Reform is slow to embrace today’s society and stories continue to surface of African American youth being subjected to harsh and sometimes unfair treatment. Stories such two Tennessee black teenagers arrested at Bolivar Central High School and jailed for 48 hours for indecent exposure because of their sagging pants (Deutschmann, 2015). In, 2008, then Senator Barak Obama had a unique point of view regarding the Pull Up Your Pants argument during an MTV interview, ‘The saggy pants law is a waste of time…having said that brothers should pull up their pants (Sirianni, 2012 P. 762). Obama went on to speak about wanting to see African American males presented in a respectable manner. There is push back from the confrontational versus conciliatory points of view comes from the African American music industry influence over black youth and promoting Baggy/Saggy Pants as a major social statement. America’s apparently are unwilling to accept the uniqueness of African American street culture and are clearly without viable alternatives to offer these young

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