Journalist Chris Hedges writes about the first class he taught in a prison and while the contents of this book remain very important, the badly executed delivery makes it so hard to get through. He suffers from what I call listing, where he fixates on adding unnecessary details that end up creating fluff.
For example, on page 5, he states that "numerous films shot scenes in the prison." That sentence is perfectly credible and doesn't really necessitate supporting evidence. Who hasn't seen a movie set in prison? However, Hedges spends the whole paragraph not only providing names of the movies but also of each director and actor involved in them.
On page 7, he writes: "his books and essays are prophetic sermons," when talking about the son of a preacher. Then, he goes on and writes the names of the books, the names of the essays, the name of his novel, and the name of the chapters that go with them.
After a while it starts getting repetitive. On page 17, in the second paragraph he talks about what they studied saying "genocide of the Native Americans. We examined slavery, the Mexican-American War..." and he continues listing topics. In the next paragraph, he mentions that they looked at the issues through the eyes" of Native Americans, immigrants, those who were enslaved..." and he continues to list issues. As you can see, he is not only listing the same things, he is also following the same sentence structure.
Last example of his writing: "The great theologians, the great philosophers, the great artists, the great novelists, the great musicians, the great playwrights, the great dancers, the great painters, and the great sculptors struggle to honor, to sustain, to impart to us the sacred, not only within ourselves but within others."
But like I said, the contents are important. Part of the purpose of the book is to show the disparity between the treatment of the races by the justice system. While the 13th amendment stated that "Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude ... shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction," it did leave an exception: "except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted."
Taking into account that it leaves punishment as an exception of slavery, it seems a bit unsurprising that even though the United States represented 4.4% of the world's population in 2015, it held the same year 21% of the world's prisoners. Additionally, the United Stated Sentencing Comission has consistently found in their "Demographic differences in sentencing" report that:
1. Black male offenders continued to receive longer sentences than similarly situated White male offenders.
2. Non-government sponsored departures and variances appear to contribute significantly to the difference in sentence length between Black male and White male offenders.
3. Violence in an offender’s criminal history does not appear to account for any of the demographic differences in sentencing.
So who benefits from imprisoning so many people? Weirdly, but unexpectedly, in the US some prisons are for-profit corporations, which benefit from having more people imprisoned and from having them imprisoned for longer. However, private enterprises are not the only ones benefiting from this, the government is as well since prisoners are being used for unpaid or underpaid labor. For example, the University of Florida logged 156,000 unpaid prison labor supplied by the Florida Department of Corrections’ (FDC) workcamp prisoners.
An important point that might go unnoticed is that Hedges has a bipartisan critique of who contributes to this system. Signaling that not only Republicans, but also Democrats (special shoutout to Biden) continue these dynamics. For example, when Kamala Harris was California's attorney general she kept nonviolent prisoners and fought to keep nonviolent prisoners longer than their sentences for their unpaid labor.
Finally, some people might argue that this is ok since these prisoners have been found guilty for their crimes. However, detainees, which are people that haven't been to court yet so they haven't been found guilty or innocent, are also being used for their unpair or underpaid labor. Recently, a judge found private prison operator GEO Group LLC guilty and now owing $17.28 million in back wages to immigrant detainees who received $1 per day for work done while in detention centers since it violated Washington’s Minimum Wage Act.
So while this is an ok first book to introduce racial factors in the justice system to someone who isn't familiar with them, it shouldn't be their last. 3 starts. I liked it.