Mass Incarceration Has Become America鈥檚 Answer to Social Problems, Says Speaker Donna Murch

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Galloway, N.J. - 鈥淎merica has become a prison nation鈥 as civil rights rebellions in the 1960s led to 鈥渢he elevation of punishment as the solution to all social problems,鈥 said Donna Murch, an author and associate professor of History at Rutgers University, in her keynote speech today at 番茄社区app鈥檚 13th Annual Fannie Lou Hamer Human and Civil Rights Symposium.

Fannie Lou Hamer 鈥渨as always the great hero of the civil rights movement for my mother,鈥 Murch said. 鈥淪he was a child laborer and a sharecropper who was beaten so badly by police鈥 while fighting for voter registration that she suffered permanent injuries.

For the generation who came up during the civil rights movement of the 1960s, seeing Emmett Till鈥檚 14-year-old body in a coffin was a catalyst, Murch said, much as the police killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. and other such killings led to the Black Lives Matter movement and renewed civil rights struggles.

鈥淧olice left Michael Brown鈥檚 body in the street for five hours, immersed in his blood,鈥 and that was shown on social media, forcing the mainstream media to pay attention and galvanizing protesters 鈥渨ho will not stop until they have attained justice for Michael Brown and others,鈥 she said.

鈥淎 new national collective memory was forged鈥 by Ferguson, she said.

The events in Missouri 鈥渞epresent the culmination of longstanding repression and resistance,鈥 she said. The roots of the United States imprisoning more of its population that any other country grew out of the 鈥渓aw-and-order鈥 political backlash to 鈥渦rban rebellions鈥 in Watts, Calif. and elsewhere, Murch said.

In response to urban unrest 鈥渁nd its political expression, Black Power,鈥 two things happened, said Murch, whose teaching and research focuses on historical studies of mass incarceration/the war on drugs, black power and civil rights, California, social movements and postwar U.S. cities.

State spending on poverty programs increased and the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) was created.

But 鈥渢he war on crime and the war on poverty were intertwined,鈥 Murch said. In California, where Ronald Reagan was elected governor as a law-and-order candidate, 鈥渘ew and more repressive forms of policing鈥 were instituted and 鈥渋t created a template for the rest of the country.鈥

Policies of mass incarceration begun when Reagan became president have continued through both presidents Bush, as well as Clinton and Obama, she said.

鈥淢ass incarceration is the new Jim Crow,鈥 Murch said.

She said the challenges for today鈥檚 generation include downward mobility, state violence, mass incarceration, climate change and a sense of scarcity.

But there are also exciting possibilities ahead, she said, including young people鈥檚 openness to gender and sexuality and different roles; political activism, the Occupy and Black Lives Matter movements, non-acceptance of state-sanctioned violence; and a pushback against austerity and neoliberalism.

Donnetrice Allison, associate professor of Communication Studies and coordinator of Africana Studies, organized this year鈥檚 program. She noted that Stockton is 鈥渢he only institution of higher education鈥 to consistently honor Hamer, who fought for the right to vote.

鈥淲e must exercise our right to vote this November,鈥 Allison said. She thanked Patricia Reid-Merritt, Distinguished Professor of Social Work & Africana Studies, for instituting the symposium.

Deanna Jackson, president of the Unified Black Students Society (UBBS), said: 鈥淚 now have the right to determine the fate of this country鈥欌 because of the rights for which Hamer fought. She challenged her fellow students by paraphrasing Hamer鈥檚 most famous quote: 鈥淲hen will you be sick and tired of being sick and tired?鈥

President Harvey Kesselman also cited Reid-Merritt for establishing the symposium. 鈥淗er extraordinary leadership has been most inspirational,鈥 he said, congratulating her on celebrating her 40th year at Stockton.

More than 50 years after the passage of the Civil Rights Act, issues such as vote suppression are still plaguing the nation, Kesselman said.

鈥淲e too have promises to keep,鈥 he said, referencing the poet Robert Frost and talking about the need to continue the ongoing struggles for freedom and equality.

鈥淎s Fannie Lou Hamer said, 鈥楴obody鈥檚 free until everybody鈥檚 free,鈥欌 Kesselman said.

Christina Jackson, assistant professor of Sociology, moderated a discussion on civil rights with panelists Murch and Adam Miyashiro, associate professor of Literature; John O鈥橦ara, associate professor of Critical Thinking and First Year Studies; and Pastor William Williams of the Asbury United Methodist Church in Atlantic City.         

In response to a question from Mahalia Bazile, vice president of the UBSS, about how to respond to 鈥渃overt racism,鈥 such as when a white student said she might be interested in attending a UBSS meeting, but that her husband is 鈥渒ind of racist鈥  and might object.   

鈥淯se your voice,鈥 Williams told Bazile. 鈥淓xplain how you鈥檙e feeling and don鈥檛 be afraid.鈥

Murch added, 鈥淩ace is not just about blackness, race is about whiteness.....Ask her to explain herself and her husband as white supremacists.鈥

The program also featured a video about Hamer鈥檚 life and performances by the Stockton Vocal Jazz Ensemble led by Beverly Vaughn, professor of Music, and Afro-One Dance, Drama and Drum Theatre, Inc., founded by Reid-Merritt.