3 Hots & a Cot
Well, apparently, some folks may be trying to break into prison these days…
Yeah, you heard me right… break into prison… At least, that’s what a new study suggests, albeit indirectly…
Let me explain… a recent study of North Carolina inmates suggests that Black men, unlike their white counterparts, are half as likely to die if they are IN prison than if they are on the outside…
It also suggests that black inmates are more protected against alcohol and drug-related deaths, as well as lethal accidents, certain chronic diseases, violent injuries and murder…
According to the study, these results are largely and ironically due to the relative stability prison provides by way of medical care, daily regimen, and quote-unquote “3 hots and a cot…”
This is tragic… for a number of reasons…
The first, is that if this study is right, it’s a pretty dismal commentary on our society when jail becomes a more viable option for black men than the larger society we live in…
…and while I’m not one to buy into ‘doom and gloom’ media scenarios, it is not a stretch to imagine that our current economic woes have a much harder impact on black males than most other groups…
Second, prison is certainly not a cakewalk… It is a caged, dangerous and dehumanizing place, commonly with poor food, poor medical care and crowded conditions…
…and if this represents a “better” option for our young brothers, but not for white inmates, then it speaks to the truly dismal inequities in our society…
…and third, the findings of this study play right into the hands of the people-eating engine known as the ‘prison-industrial complex…’
You’ve probably heard the term before as it speaks to how U.S. prisons have to be fed, largely with young black bodies, and how they profit from the cheap labor they supply to private companies during their incarceration…
Sadly, some refer to this complex as the Black “workforce of the future” given the rapid expansion of our inmate population in recent years and the growing lack of jobs outside the prison gates…
This sick scenario gives purpose and even encouragement to inequities in society and law enforcement since, again, our prisons now become engines of profit that have to be fed and maintained…at great cost to Black lives…
As inmates, these workers have little to no rights (at least not ones that matter), so it’s a corporation’s dream… and politicians can play their role to perpetuate this process via draconian ‘lock ‘em up’ and ‘no tolerance’ policies that keep the engine oiled…
One question… Whatever happened to the term “rehabilitation..?” Remember that one…?
Well, we need to be aware of these trends and how they affect our community in profound ways… A number of folks, from Angela Davis to, more recently, Michelle Alexander have spoken and written extensively about the prison industrial complex…
You might want to check out Alexander’s book, The New Jim Crow… I’ll link it at my Facebook page at Stephanie Robinson speaks…
I’ll leave you with this quote by prison reform activist, James Bell:
“We live in a country addicted to incarceration as a tool for social control… justice systems are expensive, do not rehabilitate and have no evidence based correlatives to reducing crime. Yet with that track record they continue to prosper and are seen as an appropriate response to children in trouble with the law. Only an addict would view that as okay.”
Until Next Time, this is Stephanie in Love and Hope.
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