From Descendants of Slaves to Mass Incarceration
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Tabitha Ellis
Tabitha Ellis was born on a farm where she grew up with her parents and three siblings. She attended the public schools and graduated Valedictorian. Tabitha has a background as teacher and librarian with a B.A degree from her beloved HBCU and a M.A.T. from Purdue. She was a Pastor’s wife, grateful mother of 3 children and Granny to many.
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From Descendants of Slaves to Mass Incarceration - Tabitha Ellis
Copyright © 2024 Tabitha Ellis.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the author except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
WestBow Press
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Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
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models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Getty Images.
All Scriptures are taken from King James version of the Bible, public domain.
ISBN: 978-1-6642-9717-3 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-6642-9718-0 (e)
ISBN: 979-8-3850-1116-2 (hc)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2023920860
WestBow Press rev. date: 3/5/2024
CONTENTS
A Note to the Reader
Preface
Chapter 1 Blacks in Colonial America
Chapter 2 Groundwork for Mass Incarceration
Chapter 3 Derailing a Bright Future
Chapter 4 My View of the Criminal Justice System
Chapter 5 The Trial
Afterword
Acknowledgments
References
This book is
dedicated to my beloved children, my beloved grandchildren, to all my kindreds, and to all the other Black and Brown kindreds’ of those young lives that have been interrupted—and many destroyed due to the War on Drugs.
And to you.
We feel the pain.
For how can I endure to see the evil that shall come unto my people? Or how can I endure to see the destruction of my kindred?
Esther 8:6 (KJV)
A NOTE TO THE READER
Michelle Alexander, one of the authors I’ve quoted, has three books I used as sources.
All three books have the same title The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. All three have different publications dates.
To go straight to the specific book and page where I found the quote, check the two publisher dates on the back side of the Title page as printed here.
(Alexander 2010, 2011, page)
(Alexander 2010, 2012, page)
(Alexander 2020, page)
PREFACE
I’m sure there are many, many, many Blacks like me who had never imagined a loved one or a friend being entrapped in the criminal justice system. This is my personal belief regarding The War on Drugs. The drug war is just a continuation of premeditated intentions to put droves of young Blacks behind bars. That’s what has happened. My belief is from several happenings in my past. It’s from life-long experiences as a Black female; from stories I heard from my parents and other older relatives; from studying Black history; and from observing the legislation of many laws and policies that have resulted in the capture of Black and Brown men as "the favorite whipping boys.’
From all that mentioned above, I agree with Michelle Alexander’s report that, Since the days of slavery, Black men have been depicted and understood as criminals
, Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness (The New Press, 2020) 208. That criminal nature,
in the minds of former slave holders and some of their offspring, has continued throughout centuries in many minds to justify their criminal treatment. The criminal justice system is just the institution now designed to continue that trend from slavery. That so-called criminal nature
, in my opinion, is still in the minds of some former slaveholders and some of their offspring. To repeat, that attitude has continued throughout centuries in many minds.
My analysis is that running away from the massa
was a crime, back when police were appointed to catch runaway slaves early in the Republic. It was a crime to cause white men economic loss. Slaves were their property. Running away affected the master’s bottom line.
In the War on Drugs, that criminal nature
is still the trend of thinking for many who want to put young Black descendants of slaves behind bars now. Police target young Blacks for drug crimes now, since there are no more runaway slaves. Many still assume that the young Black man is just bad, a natural villain in whatever context, but that’s not so. It maybe the subconscious bothering some because of how the Black man has been treated in the past.
In my view, not much has changed. Millions of dollars are being legislated for the War on Drugs, just like slavery was well-funded by the government. Making a profit off the misery of others is still a high priority, whether the administration in power is Republican or Democratic. Blacks have always been the overwhelming inmates represented. According to Michelle Alexander, (2010, 2012, 180), More black men are imprisoned today than at any other moment in our nation’s history
. Why? Where’s the progress? Either somebody can’t count or has a strange way of measuring progress. Going to a court hearing for the first time at age seventy-nine to support a loved one, Sherman, who was arrested, convicted, and locked behind bars; then visiting with him once as an inmate, stirred me passionately to write about what I saw and heard with my own eyes and ears in the criminal justice system. It’s quite different when this happens to someone you love and it’s not to someone else you’re watching on the news. My research uncovered what I saw to be blatant, biased, unequal enforcement of justice under the laws and policies legislated and funded by the United States government. It is not much like the only criminal justice TV show, Perry Mason, I ever watched in the late 1950s. I can’t remember seeing all those cells mostly full of Black young men.
My views in this project are through my own lens, those of a just-turned-eighty-year-old high-functioning African-American who loves all her family, and Black people in general. I am beyond angry at the government’s entrapment process that has captured so many of our young Black men with all these racist laws, then taking my tax dollars to pay for keeping my loved one behind bars due to the very unjust, evil, racist War on Drugs for which he was arrested. I believe the program was advanced because research notes that crime was declining. There weren’t as many murders and other crimes bringing in much money. Murder charges brought in no federal dollars, but drug charges did. Sherman’s imprisonment was said to keep the streets safe, though the crime was categorized as non-violent. To me, a violent person could be a villain. If the act is non-violent and there’s no physical injury, why all the heavy tanks and guns to protect someone from non-violent behavior?
I believe in the Bible. That’s my compass—where I get my directions for living and the courage to be.
It is my motivation. Others might get theirs from their whims, imagination, or from whatever they feel or have heard. I know that when God made humans in his own image, that included Black folks, too. God said what he made was good. I do not believe I came from sludge or evolved from apes with the mind I have. I don’t believe an ape thinks like a human being. Surely, God, with his omniscience (knowing all things) knows if he wants to make a horse or a man or a chicken or an ape.
Yet, so many (but not all white folks outside or within the reigns of power) seem to have the same imagination to discriminate against Blacks. It seems like there’s a master mindset plan to hinder, stop, or make it hard for Blacks to do much of whatever they desire in any area. To the contrary, I am unaware of another race trying to hinder or place hurdles in the path of white folk because of the color of their skin, and telling them what they can’t do. They don’t have to think about being chased by biased law officers and shot sixty times in the name of law and order. I’ve never heard of a white male being shot sixty times before he’s captured.
I heard on the news that the United States has only 5 percent of the world’s population but 25 percent of the world’s prisoners, most of whom are Black. You can visit most any U.S. prison and see for yourself who’s locked up.
According to Alexander, nothing has contributed more to the systematic mass incarceration of people of color [especially Black] in the U.S. than the War on Drugs
(Alexander 2020, 60). My view is that crimes were created explicitly for that massive program, so law enforcement could capture young (especially Black) men and take them away with guns and handcuffs, undermining their right under the Declaration of Independence for the pursuit of happiness just because they can. This is done so this country can continue to profit off the misery of people of color, especially Blacks. The only reason is that a lot of white leaders have that outrageous greed for money and power. That desire to legislate against and punish primarily Blacks just because you can, is ill-natured and cruel, akin to Hitler, just as in colonial times.
This country was built by putting people from Africa in chains in slavery, mostly without paying them for their labor. Now this system is still being maintained in large part, overwhelming by young Black men subsisting on next to nothing because handcuffs backed up with guns forced them into captivity under the cover of the War on Drugs. In my opinion, this is just as unjust and racist as slavery, when chains were used to take away slaves’ freedom.
It seems that our legislators feel that young Black men, among all