Two years ago, I went to the Rainbow/Push Coalition Convention as a guest of Rev. Jesse Jackson. I was there to discuss the state of African American male athletes and how they are continuously used by the NCAA. When asked about the NCAA, the only system I considered to be more exploitative is the prison industrial complex. Judge Mathis (aka Greg Mathis) was one of the speakers on prisons, and I was impressed. During that speech, he gave the kind of bold, empowered and intelligent message that will resonate with every black male athlete, entertainer, politician, businessman and power broker in America.
Mathis challenged the prison system head on, linking it with the sad state of the American educational system. Mathis reiterated his comments this week on BET's '106 & Park,' stating that the prison system is modern-day slavery. When I heard his comments I was taken aback.
Why would Judge Mathis, a man who earns a living off the very system he has critiqued, make a statement that might seem to be an alarmist exaggeration? It's simple: He made the statement because he is right. America has committed itself to mass incarceration, having more of its citizens behind bars than any other nation in the world. Out of those citizens who are in incarcerated, the majority of the males are African American. In fact, one in nine black males between the ages of 25 and 34 is behind bars. This is unacceptable.
To make matters worse, our nation has decided to utilize cheap labor from the prisons to allow corporations to make products at an inexpensive rate. The competition produced via globalization has led to America abandoning its ethics in favor of its economic prosperity. So, similar to the NCAA, who earns more than a billion dollars per year with low-priced labor on the basketball court, the prison system is doing the same thing to black men in jail.
While incarceration is not quite the same institution as slavery (as we know it), we must remember that personal liberty lies on a continuum. A person does not have to be completely stripped of all human rights in order to be enslaved. Instead, prison is a system that opens the door for most of your rights to be stripped if you are labeled a criminal. By leaving black men in the street uneducated, jobless and without adequate legal counsel, we are opening the door for them to receive the "criminal" label, which is an effective loophole to allow others to exploit them. Joseph Stalin did this in the Soviet Union, telling police to label their political enemies as criminals so he could force them into labor camps. The same thing is happening here in the United States, where black men have long been the political enemies of those in power. They have no use for your black sons, so you must take every precaution to protect and educate them.
Judge Mathis and other men like him need to continue their work. As my respected colleagues, Rev. Al Sharpton and Tavis Smiley, vigorously debate a black agenda (I'll be meeting with Sharpton in New York later this month), I am under the assumption that the prison, economic and educational systems will be at the top of the list. When the black man struggles, the black family struggles. So if we do not aggressively and radically confront the problems of the black male, we will remain in this socioeconomic abyss.
Good job, Judge Mathis, we need more like you. This fight is not going to be won without the willingness of some of us to make sacrifices and take stands. Perhaps it's time for a new day.
Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition. To have Dr. Boyce's commentary delivered to your e-mail, please click here. 


Comments: (109)
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By: Chas on 3/02/2010 11:25PM
The true problem here is that we are expecting the correctional institutions to educate, rehabilitate and to give a damn. This is not their function, their function is "saftey", and they could really give a damn about anything else, and this is what is sad. We currrently incarcerate more people than any other country in the world. We have, depending on who's statistic you are reading at that moment and time, about 2.3 or 2.5 million adults currently incarcerated, with another 5 million on probation and parole, and this is not even talking about juveniles.
We need to seriously start asking the quesion, "how can we expect rehabilitation, that is to relearn something that you have already learned, when you haven't learned it from the start". We need to first "habilitate". If we are going to save our communities, then we need to do it ourselves and stop waiting on "funding". It has never been the funding that has made a difference, and besides,funding "always" ends. It's the people that make a difference. It's the funding that divides the people needed to make a difference.
We need to wake up, this issue we are losing, no matter what anyone says. Don't care if they have a thousands of letters after their names, it's not makeing a difference. The recidivism (people going in prison, coming out of prison and then going back in again)rates are "out of control" here in the United States.
What is enslaving people are labels, such as "offender", "ex-Offender", "convict", "inmate", and the umbrella that covers them all is "Felony". This is how the slave master controls the slave.
What I am finding out, and I have been involved in this social plague for a long time, and that is, that no one really cares, or should I say that the "true" ones on the front line of this issue care, they just don't get that funding to make a difference, and again, this is sad.
When these individuals are released, there are truly no services for them, especially if you have a felony conviction. The few resourses out there are not nearly enough to make a difference. In comparison, "it's like giving a tic tac to a whale".
I will end now, I could go on and could debate this issue with anyone at anytime, but I am tired and going to bed.
I do apologize for any spelling errors, I am just too tired to proofread. I am sure that you know what I am talking about. If you wish to know more, I have my own site where i work with parents and families of incarcerated men and women and juviniles. I know what I am talking about, do you?
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By: Me'I'adore'yeah on 3/03/2010 8:38PM
I totally agree, with Judge Mathis on this an truth is, I am usually not a fan of his, However this time I can actually relate.
Our system is becoming increasingly slowly bringing back traditional slavery, what's not being recognized enough actually is that, Our one people are being used as the helpers not recognizing themselves as slaves.
In the Philadelphia PA, area the family the juvenile court system has somehow found their mathematical link between education and "Cells".
jail cells that would be conveneint straight from school to slavery now.
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By: Warren D on 3/05/2010 5:49PM
While I do agree that the prison system is set up to wharehouse our BMs- I don't see any change in their willingness to help it enslave them.They continue to do criminal things, trying to be "hard" and "gangsta" instead of earning a degree, or at least a H.S diploma. And they wonder why they can't get a job? Even when jobs are begging, many of them choose to sell drugs, and burglarize, and steal, so don't blame the system - blame the parents who punked out and let them follow those paths to modern day slavery.
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By: agnespower on 3/07/2010 12:58PM
To Robert,Peaches and All Those Who Share Their Belief:
You probably won't believe me when I tell you that there is a disparity in sentencing for the same crime just as Mark L. Brown is suggesting. Peaches, by your son being Black, the very fact makes him a walking beacon light for someone to falsely accuse him of a crime (misidentification)and have it be believed. There is a premium on justice and the price can be high. That helps to explain why the prisons are unfairly overpopulated with Black and Latino men. It is not because they are committing more felonies, it is because they do not have the money to wage a good defense. Don't believe me? Just check out U.S. Department of Justice crime statistics.
By the way, also check out: http://www.giovannireid.com
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By: Imam Shamsuddin Hakim, Rochester, NY on 3/08/2010 12:08PM
13th Amendment
"Amendment XIII
Section 1.
Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction."
The House Joint Resolution proposing the 13th amendment to the Constitution, January 31, 1865
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I agree & disagree with the Judge's statement - this discussion enters the arena of the age old debate whether prisons [i.e. Correctional institutions] should be punitive or reformative? Never-the-less, ever since the year 1865, 1865, 1865! slavery was around, it was just transformed, given a new name, [" same game under a new name"]. All the more reason for you & I to be volunteers going into these "institutions" attemting to educate the incarcerated, with the prayer & hope, that spiritually & intellectually, they would work to return to society better fit & equipt citizens. Or if they are "Life-in-Prison" that they would be able to enlighten those that go through the system. THAT WORK would be to better one's self as a human being. This is a very broad topic but I couldn't resist contributing my meager opinion. Thank you for your attention.
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By: Jenn on 3/08/2010 10:18AM
Wow ...so much said here...tinking about how can black athletes help the black inner city kids when al the see is white once they make it themselves. we are against ourselves...we will continue to fail. We have to start loving ourselves. Stop chasing the whites and go to wrok for ourselves.
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By: Warren D on 3/09/2010 12:46AM
K-Mac - Let me apologize for the really ignorant post about "the enemy".My people sometimes forget that there were countless Whites who braved the attack dogs, and water cannons, and Billy Clubs - and death - to stand with us in the 60's.I was a pre-teen then, and I knew then that not all Whites were racist and evil. Just like I know now that not all Black people have good in them. This discussion of incarceration/race, has many facets, but unfortunately, few answers.I do wish my people would return to the values my age demographic was raised with - We'd be a lot better off today, and so would our kids.Males and females alike.
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By: Marilyn Lowery on 11/16/2010 5:23PM
Dear Judge Mathis,
My name is Marilyn Lowery and I am writing to you because I read your Prison System Modern-Day Slavery. I spent 22 years in prison and I have only been home about6 years. I am in a book and plus I have been on tv new twice since I have been home. I was in the FreeTime when it was out and plus I did a story on once you are release how you cannot find a job. I am writing because I agree with you about what you wrote and I am trying to get a movie about my life to help other people. I will enclose one of my website that I am on and If you want to know more please feel free to e-mail me. I want to be a speaker and share my life. www.westviews.blip.tv The name of this show is Prison Blues. If you cannot help me make my dream come true please pass my name on to someone who can help me. I am also in a book that was wrote by Paula Johnson. The book is Inner Life. I will close for now but I want to thank you for listening. My e-mail address is marilynm5961@att.net
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By: Dorsey on 9/26/2011 9:08AM
Great Article. We need to put are money together to have the top athletes come to one of our African American College.
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