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Cradle to Prison Pipeline
May 27, 2009
It is a happy talent to know how to play.
-Ralph Waldo Emerson
Marian Wright Edelman's article on the Children's Defense Fund web site, "The Cradle to Prison Pipeline: America’s New Apartheid" opens with...

"Incarceration is becoming the new American apartheid and poor children of color are the fodder. It is time to sound a loud alarm about this threat to American unity and community, act to stop the growing criminalization of children at younger and younger ages, and tackle the unjust treatment of minority youths and adults in the juvenile and adult criminal justice systems with urgency and persistence. The failure to act now will reverse the hard-earned racial and social progress for which Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and so many others died and sacrificed. We must all call for investment in all children from birth through their successful transition to adulthood, remembering Frederick Douglass's correct observation that 'it is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men.'

"So many poor babies in rich America enter the world with multiple strikes against them: born without prenatal care, at low birth weight, and to a teen, poor, and poorly educated single mother and absent father. At crucial points in their development after birth until adulthood, more risks pile on, making a successful transition to productive adulthood significantly less likely and involvement in the criminal justice system significantly more likely. As Black children are more than three times as likely as White children to be poor, and are four times as likely to live in extreme poverty, a poor Black boy born in 2001 has a one in three chance of going to prison in his lifetime and is almost six times as likely as a White boy to be incarcerated for a drug offense."




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Comments (2)

Displaying All 2 Comments
Cathy Paradis · May 27, 2009
21C CCR&R
Claremont, NH, United States


Poverty, drug addiction, and absentee parents knows no racial boundaries. I work with incarcerated parents (Moms and Dads) and believe me, they come in all colors, ages, and with multiple personal issues. Most are in jail for drug problems. We need more intensive treatment for these people. It does no good to lock a heroin addicted mother up for 11 months only to release her back to her family-still addicted! Why can't we get this right? There are so many, many children who are innocent victims of their parents bad habits.

Cindy · May 27, 2009
Raleigh, NC, United States


This is an atrocity! Children of ALL races are our future. This can be stopped. First, of all by helping the adults bringing these precious little ones into this world. Through faith, education, and prevention this can end in our generation. We need to show these adults that there is a better way for their children. I can't help but believe that they truly want what is best for their children: they just need to be led there!



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