CiG
Coming of Age in the Milky Way
I'm fairly certain there are studies which demonstrate that, but I'm at home and can't pull anything up right now.
I can say with complete confidence, however, that plea deals make up the majority of convictions in America (apparently 95% per Google), and that the primary motivation for plea deals is due to excessive caseloads by public defenders and local judges. The main reason this is the case is because if every person sentenced got to argue their case, have all evidence laid out, expert testimony called, and be heard by a jury, the entire justice system would immediately crash from overload. Keep in mind that many people having taken plea deals were eventually exonerated, either through DNA evidence or proof of over-zealous prosecutors or other factors. Obviously, some, probably a majority of those 95% actually committed a crime, but it doesn't change the fact that you're SOL if you didn't and can't afford great legal representation.
Sure, I see nothing here to disagree with, I just don't see how this explains the claim that the system is racist in its sentencing when what I'm seeing here is that actually the system favours those with more money, not less.
Which is why I said I think comparing the sentencing of blacks vs whites from similar backgrounds will give us a much more accurate view of the racial differences in sentencing. I'm using a subpar cellphone until my PC is back from the shop so I'm unable to look it all up myself.
I thought Obama's policy was a good move. We're moving backward--but then, what else did we expect?
My wife just got back from Cuba a week or so before this happened. It's not a happy place, people standing in long lines for bread and soap. Castro's communism hasn't been an answer, that much is certain. But pulling out of potential trade negotiations will do nothing to help Cuba's economy. Ever since the embargo by Kennedy, the country has been begging for scraps. Was Castro a dictator who hoarded shit for himself? Sure, but that's not much different from other national leaders, many of whom the U.S. has supported.
Americans like to blame communism for Cuba's economic crisis. The truth is, it's a combination of communistic economic policies and trade embargoes that have been catastrophic for Cuba on the global stage.
I agree with you completely on this one, but I am seeing some articles not only supporting Trump but even criticizing him for being soft on Cuba. Hilarious.
Also, I don't think we can lay all the blame on Castro, considering the regime continued to fuck Cuba post-Castro. The whole government needs to be gutted basically.
How is it not an accurate description? Equal representation under the law is a cornerstone of our judicial system. It shouldn't make a difference whether it's a poor black man or a wealthy white one--but it does.
Sure, but all I'm saying is - you're using this reality to claim it is a racial issue, I'm merely questioning how one comes to that conclusion when it clearly has more to do with money.
I think it is unfair that the dichotomy always follows the 'rich white male' being compared to 'poor black folk'. Poor white kids get booked because they couldnt afford lawyers as well, but the view of white people is always that of the upper-middle suburbanite. I think HBB summed it up when he said that the differences are economic. Possible disparities (if someone links an article that connects the two) between white and black (or other minority) sentencing given economic equality may even be due to gang activity, which makes people unaffiliated with gangs less of a public threat, and therefore their sentencing may be less severe.
Otherwise I agree with you that not everyone is guaranteed equal representation under the law. I just think it is a class issue, and that making it out as yet another race issue just creates further resentment.
Yes this is what I was essentially trying to get at. It's as if all criticisms of race totally ignore poor whites, probably because most of these criticisms come from a certain group of people who are obsessed with power politics. The we must have more female CEOs types.