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Category Archives: crime
On the Brink
Justice in America seems to almost always be on the brink of being realized. More accurately, what we think of as justice. . . . Justice, sometimes, intersects with poetry. At the crossroads of justice and poetry, I met Kathy … Continue reading
I’m Driving as Fast as I Can
Bell Gayle Chevigny is another woman I met through my work with PEN America Center’s Prison Writing Program (PWP). She is also the editor of Doing Time: 25 Years of Prison Writing, an anthology of some of the best writing … Continue reading
Posted in crime, ezwwaters, Justice Chronicles, Lest We Forget, Life Sentences, Murder, Parole, Poetry, Politics, race, raising black boys, Reentry, Relationships, remorse
Tagged American Studies Association, Bell Gale Chevigny, Doing Time, PEN, Prison Writing Program, Vassar College
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Fiat justitia ruat caelum
Today I get to uplift an advocate and an author, Claudette Nurse. I have not met a person more passionate about justice than Claudette. (She causes “good trouble.”) She is an attorney. She worked for the Legal Aid Society, in … Continue reading
A Pearl Comes to Brooklyn
The past month and nearly two weeks I’ve been writing a blog post every day. When I am in writing mode my overly active imagination goes into overdrive. I have eureka moments, and even an epiphany or two! This morning … Continue reading
Let There Be Light!
Prison is a place where there is an absence of light. The little bit of light that exists is generated from and emanates from the people imprisoned there. There is a strange architecture around the design of prisons, beginning with … Continue reading
The Little Giant Comes to Harlem
Yesterday I uplifted my sister, Jeanette, on International Women’s Day during this Women’s History Month. Today I uplift three women I work with. More than 15 years ago I met Dawn Ravella. She was doing amazing social justice work at … Continue reading
Posted in crime, ezwwaters, Justice Chronicles, race, Reentry, Religion, remorse, Shawshank Redemption, Streets of Rage, urban decay, Urban Impact
Tagged Coming Home, Emmaus House-Harlem
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The “new” Jim Crow is as old as the Union
Ever have a “Eureka!” moment? During my legal research in the early 1980’s, I came across something that, beyond a reasonable doubt, confirmed what people had been talking about without much evidence, beyond the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, … Continue reading
Posted in Black Shadows and Through the White Looking Glass, crime, ezwwaters, Lest We Forget, Martin Luther King, Politics, Slavery
Tagged Alexis de Tocqueville, Brown v Board of Education, Democracy in America, Emancipation Proclamation, Gustave De Beaumont, hyperincarceration, Mass Incarceration, Michelle Alexander, On the Penitentiary System in the United States and Its Application in France, Slave Codes, The New Jim Crow, Thirteenth Amendment
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Ida B. Wells: The Black Woman Crusader Against White Knights
Ida B. Wells was born into slavery on July 16, 1862. She was “freed” by presidential proclamation and executive order (the Emancipation Proclamation) issued by President Abraham Lincoln on September 22, 1862, during the American Civil War. Ida B. Wells … Continue reading
The Three Pillars of American Society: Slavery, Segregation, and Hyperincarceration
America stands on three pillars: slavery, segregation, and hyperincarceration (incorrectly referred to as “mass incarceration”). These “pillars” implicate and impact mostly Black people, but also all people living in America or dreaming about coming to America. In fact, the U.S. … Continue reading
Posted in Black Shadows and Through the White Looking Glass, crime, ezwwaters, Justice Chronicles, Lest We Forget, Life Sentences, Politics, race, Slavery, Sometimes Blue Knights Wear Black Hats, Streets of Rage
Tagged Angela Davis, Are prisons obsolete?, Brown v. Board of Education, Charles E. Silberman, Confederacy, Criminal Violence Criminal Justice, Declaration of Independence, George Jackson, George Wallace, hyperincarceration, Jessica Mitford, Kind & Usual Punishment: The Prison Business, Loic Waquant, Mario Cuomo, Plessy v. Ferguson, Segregation, Slavery, Southland
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