April 24. 2013 ¡Tl¡e $ìortlanò (Obseruer Page Opinion articles do not necessarily represent the views o f the Portland Observer. We welcome reader essays, photos and story ideas. Submit to news@portlandobserver.com. Time to Get Smart on Crime We must do better for the sake of our families and future by B enjamin T odd J ealous The United States has five percent of the world's people but 25 percent of the world's prisoners. For the sake of our families and future we must do better. Our nation leads the world in the incarceration of our own citizens, both on a per capita basis and in terms of total prison population. The problem stems from the decades-old tough on crime" policies from the Nixon/Reagan era. We are stuck in a failed "tough on crime mind state that is character- ized by converting low-level drug addicts into hardened criminals by repeatedly locking them up when they should be sent to rehab for drug treatment. More than 500,000 of the 2.3 million people behind bars in the U.S. are incarcerated for nothing more than a non-violent drug of- fense. And over 40 percent of them are people of color. Although rates hoping to attend college. not fit the crime. It is encouraging to form is not just limited to civil rights There is no question that violent see a bipartisan effort on criminal activists. This month, the NAACP, criminals must be locked up. Unfor­ justice reform, based on the notion hip-hop pioneer Russell Simmons, tunately, the "tough on crime" strat­ that mass incarceration is draining Dr. Boyce Watkins, and coalition of of drug use and selling are compa­ egy of the last four decades has state budgets and national prison over 175 artists, actors, athletes, rable across racial and eth­ become a dangerous distraction for capacities. elected officials and advocates nic lines, blacks and Latinos law enforcement, diverting atten­ Meanwhile, President Obama re­ brought national attention to this are far more likely to be tion and resources away from vio­ leased his budget proposal this issue by presenting an open letter criminalized for drug law lent offenders and onto non-violent month and called for the largest to President Obama, urging him to violations than whites. One acts that require counseling, not increase in drug treatment and pre­ double down on his efforts to move in nine black children has incarceration. vention funding in at least a decade. to a criminal justice model based on an incarcerated parent, The fact is that so called "tough This is a promising sign that key prevention and rehabilitation. With com pared to one in 28 on crime" policies have failed our players in the White House are look­ signers like Will Smith, Scarlet Latino children and one in 57 white nation and its families. It is time to ing at drug addiction as a public children. Johansen and Richard Branson, the move to "smart on crime" policies health issue, instead of an issue of This failed approach to criminal letter has expanded the movement that reduce sentences for drug of­ crime and punishment. justice has both a direct and indirect to bring an end to the failed ""tough fenses - most notably mandatory Progress is also being made in impact on our children. Immediately, on crime" policies. minimum sentences - and focus on statehouses, where rising prison many children are faced with foster If we allow the current trends rehabilitation and prevention rather costs are straining state budgets. In care as their parent is locked away continue, one in three black males than punishment. Encouragingly, Georgia, South Carolina and Texas, for a non-violent drug offense. In bom today can expect to spend time this kind o f reform is being sought the N A A C P and p ro g re ssiv e our report, "Misplaced Priorities: in prison during his life. The time on the state, local and national lev­ groups have teamed up Republican Over Incarcerate, Under Educate", has come for all of us to do all that els. legislatures to reduce mandatory we found that situations like this we can. The future of our families, In the U .S. Senate, Chairman of minimum sentences and increase lead t0 achievement gaps as early as states, and nation demand it. If we Judiciary Committee, Sen. Patrick options for parole. In Texas, the grade school in communities that are going to find our way back to Leahy (D-Vt.), and Sen. Rand Paul NAACP worked with Tea Party lead­ have high incarceration rates. The first in education and job creation, (R-Ky.) have introduced the "Jus­ ers and a coalition of activists to report also shows that mass incar- we must first decide to stop leading tice Safety Valve Act of 2013." The pass 12 "smart on crime" reforms ceration siphons funds from our the world in incarceration. bill would allow federal judges to that resulted in Texas scheduling its schools, leading to skyrocketing Benjamin Todd Jealous is presi­ bypass federal mandatory minimum first prison closure in state histoiy. public education costs for students dent and chief executive officer of sentences when the sentence does Support for criminal justice re­ the NAACP. Let’s Lace Up and Keep Running We can’t let bombings close down the world by C hris S chillig I started running about four years ago to lose weight. At first I hated it. My lungs burned and my head hurt and every footstep felt like sledge hammers pounding on my calves. I persisted out of stubbornness. I'd bought a good pair of shoes and I didn't want to waste them. A few months later, everything still hurt, but not as often and not as long. I grew to tolerate running and, eventually, to love it. The solitude o f the open road spoke to me, giving me a place to sort out my thoughts, to plan my day, or just unwind. When solitude grew too, well, solitary, I started running races — 5Ks, lOKs, even a half-marathon. I was never going to be the fastest runner— not overall, not even in my age group — but that didn't matter. Camaraderie was a new experi­ ence. Imagine me, shunner of every­ thing athletic, bonding with other athletes, encouraging and being encouraged, crossing the finish line government officials, the courts — with a feeling of euphoria while fam­ to protect us 100 percent o f the time. ily and friends looked on. We wouldn't want to live in a world Crossing the finish line. w here they did. A p o ste r by That's one of the things I pon­ comicbook m aster Frank M iller dered after I learned of the bomb shows a young woman with her explosions at the Boston Marathon eyes, ears and nose covered by — that the rat bastards responsible Band-Aids. A pair of hands reaches had corrupted yet another place that toward her mouth to place another should be associated with victory Band-Aid there. "Just one more and and joy. you'll be safe," the caption reads. First, terrorists stripped Americans The post-Boston 2013 world is of our sense of security on 9/11. Since one we know too well already. Races then, it's been one reduction after will now begin with totally appropri­ another. Shooters in schools, in malls, ate moments o f silence for lives lost in airports, in churches. Some with in Boston, another painful reminder guns, some with bombs, one crazy in of innocence lost. Runners will cross Texas with a knife. finish lines and remember images of And now the Boston Marathon, another finish line, one choked in probably the Super Bowl of races, smoke and raining blood and body one that runners dream of qualify­ parts. They will wear T-shirts and ing for, if not competing in. At least ribbons in colors yet unchosen to three dead, more than 100 injured. mark lives senselessly lost. Where are we safe anymore? Another moment of joy will be The answer, of course, is every­ tainted by the unfathomable actions where and nowhere. of a person or people who consider Everywhere because, despite the decency to be just a word and for horror and tragedy, the loss of life whom life is cheap. and the injuries, most places are And yet we soldier on. Ameri­ perfectly safe, at least from the kind cans still fly, despite 9/11. We still of homicidal cruelty that took place send our kids to school, despite in Boston, because the bad guys Columbine, Texas A&M, Sandy still are few and far between. Hook and too many others. We still Nowhere because it's impossible go to the movies, despite Aurora. for anybody — police, volunteers, And now we will still run, despite Boston. We will persist out of stub­ bornness, to lose the weight of the world, despite the burning in our lungs and the pain in our hearts. Because we can't stop congregat­ ing. We can’t close down the world and huddle in our houses, and we can't teach our kids to do that either. Just one more and you'll be safe. We've got to lace up and keep running. But are we running toward the future or away from the past? Sadly, that answer isn't as clear. Chris Schillig is an English teacher in Alliance, Ohio. 1 ■ 4747 NE Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd., Portland, OR 97211 P ublisher : E d ito r : Mark Washington M ichael L eighton E xecutive D irector : Rakeem Washington C reative D irector : P aul N e u feld t O ffice M anager /C lassifieds : A dvertising M anager : Lucinda Baldwin Leonard Latin P ostmaster : Send address changes to Portland Observer, PO Box 3 1 3 7 , Portland, OR9 7 2 0 8 C A LL 5 0 3 -2 8 8 -0 0 3 3 F A X 5 0 3 -2 8 8 -0 0 1 5 Q & ’5®pprtlqndrisfrvfr.wrn ads@Dortlandobserver.com SubscriDtion@portlandobserver.com The Portland Observer w elcom es freelance submissions. 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