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Why So Many Black Women Are Behind Bars

By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, AlterNet. Posted December 5, 2006.


Black female inmates outnumber white female inmates three to one, and their punishments don't always fit their crimes.

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Some years ago I briefly worked as a social worker. Occasionally I would visit clients in jail to determine their eligibility for continued benefits. They were all men -- with one exception. She was a young black woman serving time for theft. She had two small children.

She entered the visiting room handcuffed to another woman and dressed in drab prison garb. We talked through a reinforced glass window. The guards stared hard and barked out gruff commands to the women.

The idea of a woman in prison then was a novelty. It isn't anymore. According to a recent Justice Department report on America's jail population, women make up about 10 percent of the America's inmates. There are now more women than ever serving time, and black women make up a disproportionate number of those women. They are twice more likely than Hispanic, and over three times more likely than white women, to be jailed.

In fact, black women have almost single-handedly expanded the women's prison-industrial complex. From 1930 to 1950 five women's prisons were built nationally. During the 1980s and 1990s dozens more prisons were built, and a growing number of them are maximum-security women's prisons. But the prison-building splurge hasn't kept pace with the swelling number of women prisoners. Women's prisons are understaffed, overcrowded, lack recreation facilities, serve poor quality food, suffer chronic shortages of family planning counselors and services, and gynecological specialists, drug treatment and child care facilities, and transportation funds for family visits.

Female prisoners face the added peril of rape, and insensitive treatment during pregnancy. A United Nations report in 1997 found that more than two dozen states permitted pregnant women to be shackled while being transported to hospitals for treatment. A report by the National Corrections Information Center revealed that the U.S. is one of only a handful of countries that allow men to guard women, often unsupervised. Author Donna Ann-Smith Marshall, who served several years at Central California Women's Facility, California's top maximum security prison, in her new book, Time on the Inside, tells in shocking and graphic detail the callous, often brutal treatment many women are subjected to in women's maximum security jails.

Unfortunately, the tepid public debate over the consequence of locking up so many women is riddled with misconceptions. One is that women commit violent crimes for the same reasons that men do. They don't. Women are less likely than men to assault or murder strangers while committing crimes. Two-thirds of the women jailed assaulted or killed relatives or intimates. Their victims were often spouses, lovers, or boyfriends. In many cases they committed violence defending themselves against sexual or physical abuse. Women's groups and even the more enlightened governors have recognized that women that kill abusive husbands or lovers have acted out of fear and have loosened parole standards. The governors have granted some women earlier release from their sentences.

More women, and especially black women, are behind bars as much because of hard punishment than their actual crimes. One out of three crimes committed by women are drug related. Many state and federal sentencing laws mandate minimum sentences for all drug offenders. This virtually eliminates the option of referring non-violent first time offenders to increasingly scarce, financially strapped drug treatment, counseling and education programs. Stiffer punishment for crack cocaine use also has landed more black women in prison, and for longer sentences than white women (and men).

Then there's the feminization of poverty and racial stereotyping. More than one out of three black women jailed did not complete high school, were unemployed, or had incomes below the poverty level at the time of their arrest. More than half of them were single parents.

While black men are typed as violent, drug dealing "gangstas," black women are typed as sexually loose, conniving, untrustworthy, welfare queens. Many of the mostly middle-class judges and jurors believe that black women offenders are menaces to society too.

The quantum leap in black women behind bars has had devastating impact on families and the quality of life in many poor black communities. Thousands of children of incarcerated women are raised by grandparents, or warehoused in foster homes and institutions. The children are frequently denied visits because the mothers are deemed unfit. This prevents mothers from developing parenting and nurturing skills and deeply disrupts the parent-child bond. Many children of imprisoned women drift into delinquency, gangs and drug use. This perpetuates the vicious cycle of poverty, crime and violence. There are many cases where parents and even grandparents are jailed.

There is little sign that this will change. The public and policy makers are deeply rapped in the damaging cycle of myths, misconceptions and crime fear hysteria about crime-on-the-loose women. They are loath to ramp up funds and programs for job and skills training, drug treatment, education, childcare and health, and parenting skills. Yet, this is still the best way to keep more women from winding up behind bars.

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See more stories tagged with: race, women, prison, poverty

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is a political analyst and social issues commentator, and the author of the forthcoming book The Emerging Black GOP Majority (Middle Passage Press, September 2006), a hard-hitting look at Bush and The GOP's court of black voters.

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Black Women Behind Bars
Posted by: hole11 on Dec 5, 2006 5:49 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not sure if it sounds exciting but I also hear that there has been an increase in incarcerating women compared to earlier years.

You said it right there in this post that many are there for mandatory sentencing reasons.

I think it goes beyond that. I think many are there because they plead guilty.

What are the statistics of people pleading guilty and those put on trial declared guilty or innocent?

Guessing it may look like 84 percent plead guilty, 14 percent were found guilty in a trial and maybe two percent were found innocent in a trial. Another two percent got their convictions overturned.

Any guesses for federal prison compared to state prison? Surely the Justice Department would have those statistics readily available.

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Added peril?
Posted by: lamar on Dec 6, 2006 9:57 AM   
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The drug war has certainly affected all communities, especially black women. However, one small bone of contention: "Female prisoners face the added peril of rape." I thought that rape was the primary reason a man wanted to avoid prison. I even knew a client once who required plastic surgery on his derrier. I don't think this is an "added" peril. It's just a peril of prison for both sexes.

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» RE: Added peril? Posted by: Arianna
what are we thinking?
Posted by: cacky on Dec 6, 2006 12:57 PM   
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We've got to stop locking up everyone who's ever done dope. Such policies are especially hard on the people with the fewest choices. Education, life skills, family planning, drug and alcohol treatment, and economic empowerment are enormous tasks, but the results of treating systemic problems with punishment only are intolerable.

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Why do we do it?
Posted by: mwildfire on Dec 7, 2006 5:44 AM   
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this has nothing to do with race, but I can testify as a mental health worker to how difficult it is to get help for people with substance abuse problems. My agency has a facility for addicts which has a waiting list about 6 weeks long. Yet there are plenty of prisons to throw these people into. Why is that?
Why is it that progressive programs within prisons, proven to reduce recidivism, are nonetheless terminated if they're humane?
Why is that politicians have found that being "tough on crime" is an important piece of getting elected virtually anywhere in this country?
I believe it's because Americans have a deep need to punish. We love to divide people into "good guys" and "bad guys," and we then imagine that harsh punishment for those we've defined as bad will destroy the heart of evil--that is, the evil within our own hearts. It's an example of projection--like whipping boys for untouchable royal brats, or sin-eaters, or the original scapegoats, actual goats that were loaded symbolicly with all the sins of the community and then driven out into the wilderness, thus supposedly purifying the community. We use people as our scapegoats. This is why I feel we are a deeply dishonest people, constantly lying to ourselves. Perhaps it's our Puritan heritage...and perhaps our Saturday-morning cartoons don't help either.

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» RE: Why do we do it? Posted by: DaBear
usa #1
Posted by: insulaparadigm on Dec 7, 2006 11:22 AM   
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#1 United States: 715 per 100,000 people
#2 Russia: 584 per 100,000 people

these #'s might be old but we're #1. But so far not as much TB in our prisons...let's hope that keeps up.
for more facts : http://www.prisonactivist.org/women/women-in-prison.html

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It's Past Time For Change
Posted by: NoPCZone on Dec 7, 2006 2:27 PM   
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We now lack up more people than any (de)industrialized democracy in the world- no other even comes close. This isn't a symptom of a nation full of opportunity and freedom- it's a symptom of generations of repression and under-investment coming home to roost. It's also a symptom of a horribly broken criminal justice system.

A drug addict needs a doctor- not a jail cell. Non-violent offenders do not need to be locked up for long periods, especially in high security facilities. Not only is it wrong- we simply cannot continue to sustain the costs.

Someone needs to call the social conservatives and the fiscal conservatives on the costs associated with the current state of our criminal justice system.

Social conservatives claim that the punishment should fit the crime, but few sentences in our country follow that formula. The prisoners are also not being rehabilitated while in custody. Fiscal conservatives should be confronted with the simple fact that we could send every prisoner to college for far less than the total cost of locking someone up.

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are the schools friend or foe?
Posted by: edith on Dec 8, 2006 3:36 AM   
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do schools provide an environment that young men and women feel comfortable in, or are they all college "prep" classes with bad facilities compared w/private schools. Most of our kids may not need a college education, bureaucrat propaganda to the contrary. Who cares about the kids instead of how many teachers can be added or computers bought or AP courses taken?

Ask these young women for starters what should have been done to make school more interesting.

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"Birth of a Nation" syndrome
Posted by: itzamirakul on Dec 8, 2006 5:00 AM   
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A few months ago, a young white female student at New York University (NYU) went on trial for having a thriving drug business which she conducted out of her dorm room. Despite the fact that it is against the law to sell drugs within the immediate area of an educational institution, she was given a slap on the wrist and released. Just imagine if all the facts were the same except that the student was a black female. It is grossly unfair, but these young white women are portrayed by the media as "unsullied, virginal, purer-than-the-driven-snow" mistake-makers" whose lives should not be burdened with arrest and prison records.

In another case of a couple years ago, a young white woman sold drugs out of her Times Square area apartment, with the knowledge of the police. Two black men went to the apartment and in the course of a robbery, the female drug seller and several of her customers who were using drugs in her apartment at the time, were shot. She was killed, as was at least one other drug-user. Another "customer" claimed that he was just in the drug house to "play his guitar." This was a day-time crime. The media painted the drug-selling female as an innocent princess and glossed over her crime rather than admitting that her chosen style of earning a living had placed her in a position of getting killed.

This behavior reflects the ideology of the old racist movie,
"The Birth of a Nation" in which the Ku Klux Klan defends the supposed "honor" of the pure white woman. Nothing has changed other than the fact that even more black women are punished just for the sake of being punished.

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True Confessions
Posted by: hotlipsin61 on Dec 8, 2006 12:25 PM   
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What was written in Hutchinson's article is true. I once had a girlfriend in an Los Angeles area jail and whenever I went to visit her she was one of the few whites in the facility and most of the inmates were Black women.
It's scary and worrisome why we lock up so many women. I believe most of them aren't hardcore criminals or very violent like some men. As one person remarked in this post, it's America's need to punish people. Pure and simple. That's a true confession. She said most of the women who were in the slammer were Black and they'd try to make her "their bitch." The Latinas ignored her. Even the White inmates looked at her with scorn.
She wasn't an "Ugly Betty" type, really attractive but ran afoul of the law for a minor drug offense. She received a six-month sentence. She had no prior arrests up to the moment.
Life behind bars was harsh. It was cruel. Needless to say she was frightened and had no allies.
Women prisoners need access to better health care and should be allowed basic hygenical products. As I said, my girlfriend complained on how hard it was to get toothpaste, toilet paper, shaving cream, tampons (that was an item which caused fights), she said, and any kind of personal care product found in one's possession caused envious looks.
She had to fight to keep hold of her supplies and she was beaten up by three other women because of that. She suffered lacerations to her left eye, had two front teeth knocked out and had bruises on both arms and chest. It's just as hard for women in jail as it is for men. Only the strong will survive. A gang mentality is born. They seek out the new inmates and assess superiority and subject them to numerous indoctrinations. Most of the times the new arrivals are thrown in with the hardcore inmates. They're not the kind of women you'd date, believe me.
In our zeal to lock people up, we're creating more problems than solving them. It's an epidemic.

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What A Jerk!!
Posted by: faultroy on Dec 8, 2006 5:54 PM   
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I think this author is on crack. He begins by saying that more black women are unjustly incarcerated, and they do not commit violence for the same reason that men do. The very next sentence he talks about the fact that 66 per cent of the women in jail are there for comitting violence against their spouses, boy friends, significant others etc. Now lets be clear that " violent crime" here means assault and battery, murder etc. Now if a man did these things, would we be wringing our hands and asking for mercy? He then implies that all of these cases are as a result of "women being afraid of their men?"
Huh? Did any of these women call the police? No, they did not, because if they did, it would be listed as "mitigating circumstances." This guy talks from both sides of his mouth.
According to FBI Statistics, women--regardless of race spend less time in prison than their male counterparts. This is a fact. Juries are always more lenient with female prisoners than they are with their male counterparts for the same crimes. Why? Because of the inherent societal bias that women are naturally not as dangerous as men. Furthermore again according to Criminologists, women do not do jail time as much as men, and usually receive probation as opposed to actual jail time.
In regards to the potential lethality of women, the most effective assassins the Japanese feudal system ever developed were female Ninjas. They were considered the most dangerous by far, simply because they did not look formidable.
As a matter of fact, the FBI and almost all criminologists believe that the significant disparity in murder rates between men and women--again regardless of race--is simply the fact that women kill their significant others by less violent means (i.e. poisoning) and therefore they are not caught as readily.
The real reason that more women are spending more time in jail is because women are now more violent than they have ever been in this nation's history.
They are taking a lesson from feminists in asserting their "feminine right to viciousness."
I've noticed this author usually gets his facts either completely wrong or does not properly research his topics. He really needs to spend more time at the computer getting his story straight.

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Imprisoning Americans
Posted by: Dianka on Dec 9, 2006 7:35 AM   
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Yet we are so afraid to recognize the impact of shredding the social safety net (a.k.a., welfare reform)! For the past quarter century, America has demonized the poor and criminalized poverty, calling it "reform". If we think at all of what we have today, we envision some benevolent social/government policy that ensures that the poor have the means to become self-sufficient because we do regard poverty as a matter of choice. Somehow, we imagine that America's poor don't REALLY suffer from poverty. I mean, people aren't left to die here in America, just because they're poor, right? Wrong. They can and do die from a degree of deprivation of fundamental needs that can't be found in more modern nations.

That said, we know that the majority of those in prison are poor. We know that since welfare "reform", the number of women in prison has skyrocketed, and the number of children left to the foster care system has skyrocketed. We know that poverty is usually the result of a complex range of factors. Yet we can't seem to put all these things together, seeing a correlation. As a nation, we collectively merely turned our backs on the poor, calling it "welfare reform". And we haven't even begun to examine what a grave, tragic failure these policies are.

Those who are left in desperate circumstances do desperate things to get by. When you have nothing left, you have a choice of crime/prison or death. That, folks, is the reality for a large portion of America's poor today.

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Education is the cure-all for what ails black women
Posted by: esmith334 on Dec 9, 2006 4:49 PM   
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The most salient paragraph of Mr. Hutchinson's article has to do with the education, or the lack thereof, of black women who end up in jail. Specifically: "Then there's the feminization of poverty and racial stereotyping," said Mr. Hutchinson. "More than one out of three black women jailed did not complete high school, were unemployed, or had incomes below the poverty level at the time of their arrest. More than half of them were single parents."

What this tells me is that black women who do not get good educations or don't go to college are more likely to end up in jail, land on poverty rolls, or commit crimes. I am sure that Mr. Hutchison, like me, does not know of a single educated woman who is in jail because of racial stereotyping or poverty.

The remedy, then, is for more black women to get good educations, like so many white women, Indian women, Arabic women, Chinese women, and Hispanic women do.

It is no secret in the Black Community that, since the social upheavals of the 1960s, blacks in genral have frowned on education. Prior to that time, getting a good education was norm, not the exception, and fewer black women--and men--were incarcerated. It is the responsibility of each of us who calls him-or herself African American to promote a return to those glory years, where pursuing a good education was a noble goal.

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Jim Crow reasserted
Posted by: aahpat on Dec 20, 2006 4:39 AM   
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First the drug war did its job of destabilizing the Black male community with criminalization and disenfranchisement. When black women came to the forefront of holding the Black community together as single Black parents the Jim Crow motivated drug warriors wrote tougher conspiracy laws to drag into the system the spouses and relatives of drug market participants. This targeted Black women because the drug war targets Black men. Actually urban minorities who, if empowered by our electoral system, can move America away from the right wing Jim Crow culture of pre-1950's America.

Drug Busts = Jim Crow by Ira Glasser goes further into the racist anti-democratic aspects of prosecuting the drug war.

My personal theory is that Richard Nixon, who won the presidency in 1968 riling against the communities that were being empowered by the 1965 Voting Rights Act, came together with the Wallace wing of the Dixiecrats in congress to impose the drug war.

"[President Nixon] emphasized that you have to face the fact that the whole problem is really the blacks. The key is to devise a system that recognizes this while not appearing to." H.R. Haldeman's diaries.

The drug war was and is that "system".

The Jim Crow dominated U.S. government knows for absolute fact that, in any given year, they have NEVER been more than 20-30% successful at interdicting the hundreds of tons of drugs that cross America's borders to feed the $ 144 billion annual U.S. retail drug market. That is a 70-80% failure rate but still they continue to prosecute after more than three dozen years. They prosecute with this failure rate because they know that drugs feed amassive economic black market that disproportionately entices poverty oppressed people. The drug war is a money trap to snare poor people who are more inclined to question the established economic system. Trap them and get them out of the electoral process.

This is what the drug war has always been about in America. It is how Jim Crow reasserted itself after the Voting Rights Act and how it continues to destabilize poverty oppressed and minority communities today.

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NEW BOOK ABOUT THE CRISIS LEVEL OF BLACK MEN IN PRISON
Posted by: minging on Dec 22, 2006 11:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
NEW BOOK ABOUT CRISIS LEVEL OF BLACK MEN IN PRISON!!!!


Get the book "WHY ARE SO MANY BLACK MEN IN PRISON? A Comprehensive Account Of How And Why The Prison Industry Has Become A Predatory Entity In The Lives Of African-American Men, And How Mass Targeting, Criminalization, And Incarceration Of Black Male Youth Has Gone Toward Creating The Largest Prison System In The World." by Demico Boothe AT WWW.BLACKMENINPRISON.COM , WWW.AMAZON.COM , or WWW.BARNESANDNOBLE.COM!!!


We are not a weak people. We will not allow traps to be set or hostile action, covert or overt, to be taken against us without proper response, and if necessary, proper retaliation. But we do need to be RE-EDUCATED because for so long we have been MIS-EDUCATED.

W.E.B. DuBois

I urge all conscious and truly intelligent Black persons to not only read but study this book. THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM IS BEING USED AS A WEAPON OF MASS DESTRUCTION AGAINST AFRICAN AMERICANS. The United States has the largest prison system in the world because of the number of Black men behind bars. This subject should be the focus of every Black politician that says they have the Black community's best interest at heart. Just a few facts:

* There are nearly 3 times as many Black men in prison in the U.S. than there are in college.

* 85% of African-American households are headed by single females, and Black females are the most unmarried sector of the American populace.

* The U.S. has more Black men in prison out of only 10.4 million Black men in its populace than China has Chinese men in its prisons out of nearly 300 million men in its populace.

* Many American prisons are privately held and traded on the stock market, almost like a modern day slave trade.

* Once a person gets a felony on his or her record in the U.S., he is by characteristic definition no longer considered a full citizen.

* A young Black male born today has a greater chance of going to prison than of holding any other occupation in life.

The list of horrendous and crisis level facts go on and on and are greatly expounded on in this book. WE ARE IN TROUBLE AS A RACE AND SOMETHING HAS TO BE DONE OR 100 YEARS FROM NOW WE WILL BE IN NEAR EXTINCTION IN THIS GREAT COUNTRY THAT OUR FOREFATHERS SUFFERED THROUGH SLAVERY AND OPPRESSION AND DIED IN. GO TO WWW.BLACKMENINPRISON.COM AND GET THE BOOK. UNDERSTAND WHAT THE NEW MODERN DAY SLAVE TRADE IS ALL ABOUT. THIS BOOK IS GOING TO REVEAL THINGS THAT THE GOVERNMENT WANTS TO KEEP QUIET.

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NEW BOOK ABOUT THE CRISIS LEVEL OF BLACK MEN IN PRISON
Posted by: minging on Dec 22, 2006 11:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
NEW BOOK ABOUT CRISIS LEVEL OF BLACK MEN IN PRISON!!!!


Get the book "WHY ARE SO MANY BLACK MEN IN PRISON? A Comprehensive Account Of How And Why The Prison Industry Has Become A Predatory Entity In The Lives Of African-American Men, And How Mass Targeting, Criminalization, And Incarceration Of Black Male Youth Has Gone Toward Creating The Largest Prison System In The World." by Demico Boothe AT WWW.BLACKMENINPRISON.COM , WWW.AMAZON.COM , or WWW.BARNESANDNOBLE.COM!!!


We are not a weak people. We will not allow traps to be set or hostile action, covert or overt, to be taken against us without proper response, and if necessary, proper retaliation. But we do need to be RE-EDUCATED because for so long we have been MIS-EDUCATED.

W.E.B. DuBois

I urge all conscious and truly intelligent Black persons to not only read but study this book. THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM IS BEING USED AS A WEAPON OF MASS DESTRUCTION AGAINST AFRICAN AMERICANS. The United States has the largest prison system in the world because of the number of Black men behind bars. This subject should be the focus of every Black politician that says they have the Black community's best interest at heart. Just a few facts:

* There are nearly 3 times as many Black men in prison in the U.S. than there are in college.

* 85% of African-American households are headed by single females, and Black females are the most unmarried sector of the American populace.

* The U.S. has more Black men in prison out of only 10.4 million Black men in its populace than China has Chinese men in its prisons out of nearly 300 million men in its populace.

* Many American prisons are privately held and traded on the stock market, almost like a modern day slave trade.

* Once a person gets a felony on his or her record in the U.S., he is by characteristic definition no longer considered a full citizen.

* A young Black male born today has a greater chance of going to prison than of holding any other occupation in life.

The list of horrendous and crisis level facts go on and on and are greatly expounded on in this book. WE ARE IN TROUBLE AS A RACE AND SOMETHING HAS TO BE DONE OR 100 YEARS FROM NOW WE WILL BE IN NEAR EXTINCTION IN THIS GREAT COUNTRY THAT OUR FOREFATHERS SUFFERED THROUGH SLAVERY AND OPPRESSION AND DIED IN. GO TO WWW.BLACKMENINPRISON.COM AND GET THE BOOK. UNDERSTAND WHAT THE NEW MODERN DAY SLAVE TRADE IS ALL ABOUT. THIS BOOK IS GOING TO REVEAL THINGS THAT THE GOVERNMENT WANTS TO KEEP QUIET.

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