In my American Studies class in highschool, we were asked to read and complete the 1965 Alabama Literacy Test. The test was required for legal voters whose grandparents were not citizens. This may seem fair in theory, but in practice it targeted blacks living in the South. We also learned how difficult the test was. I scored a 33/68 on the test, a score that is way below the minimum requirement to be allowed to vote.
One might think America has learned from unfair disenfranchisement of blacks and minorities, but the theme of legal loopholes to convict these same groups of people is still present today.
In fact, I am living just outside of the central hub of this discrimination. Nationwide, blacks are incarcerated at 8.2 times the rate of whites. The book The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness gave me the following information about blacks in Chicago: “The total population of black males in Chicago with a felony record (including both current and ex-felons) is equivalent to 55 percent of the black adult male population and an astonishing 80 percent of the adult black male workforce in the Chicago area” (Alexander 188). The police efforts in cities such as Chicago fall disproportionately on blacks.
Chicago police also often wrongfully convict young blacks. According to Steve Mills of the Chicago Tribune, Daniel Taylor, 17 when convicted of double murder, was actually in the Chicago police lockup when the crime was committed, yet he is still trying to seek justice twenty years after he was arrested.
One main problem is that young black people are vulnerable to the phenomenon of false confessions. While false confessions might not seem prevalent to my community and I, living in a particularly affluent suburb of Chicago, the inner city is, as co-founder of the Innocence Project Peter Neufold says, “what Cooperstown is to baseball, Chicago is to false confessions. It is the Hall of Fame. There are more juvenile confessions in Chicago than any place else in the United States.”
I see the issue of false confessions and wrongful convictions of blacks today as unfair discrimination that needs to be addressed. As the title of Michelle Alexander's book suggests, we are supposedly living in the "Age of Colorblindness," but if we cannot protect these American's rights, not as much progress as possible is being made in my opinion.
I hope this post makes you think about how history is always repeating itself; Or, is it less that history is repeating itself and rather that America has not learned from its past? Let me know in the comment section below.
A high school student at New Trier in Chicago, Illinois offering his take on sports and their role in America, as well as American issues in general.
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
Friday, February 8, 2013
Super Holiday
I remember waking up Sunday morning with much resentment. I had to take a practice ACT, and the only thing on my mind was the Super Bowl later that night. It got me thinking how nice it would be to have this one special annual Sunday as a holiday. It may seem like a fantasy, but I think it could actually be justified.
Aol reports how the Super Bowl broke the previous record for most-watched TV program in history, netting 162.9 million viewers. Now, if an annual event regularly comes in as the year's most-watched TV event, it becomes harder to see how it is not justifiable to have the Super Bowl as a national holiday.
Also, many people view the Super Bowl just as a social event, like a party, rather than the biggest football game of the year, every year. For something that attracts so much attention, it is worthy of a day free of tedious tasks, like a practice ACT for a football-craving teenager such as myself.
The fact that someone like Christopher Columbus attracts so much attention in receiving a national holiday baffles me. The Examiner looks into the question of who should truly deserve the credit for discovering the most powerful country in the world. There is no questions about the Super Bowl on the other hand. It is viewed and enjoyed by the whole country, as well as parts of the world, too.
America would embrace the Super Bowl as a holiday with open arms. I certainly would not complain, and I don't think many others would either.
Aol reports how the Super Bowl broke the previous record for most-watched TV program in history, netting 162.9 million viewers. Now, if an annual event regularly comes in as the year's most-watched TV event, it becomes harder to see how it is not justifiable to have the Super Bowl as a national holiday.
Also, many people view the Super Bowl just as a social event, like a party, rather than the biggest football game of the year, every year. For something that attracts so much attention, it is worthy of a day free of tedious tasks, like a practice ACT for a football-craving teenager such as myself.
The fact that someone like Christopher Columbus attracts so much attention in receiving a national holiday baffles me. The Examiner looks into the question of who should truly deserve the credit for discovering the most powerful country in the world. There is no questions about the Super Bowl on the other hand. It is viewed and enjoyed by the whole country, as well as parts of the world, too.
America would embrace the Super Bowl as a holiday with open arms. I certainly would not complain, and I don't think many others would either.
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