Harvard professor Khalil Gibran Muhammad, author of "The Condemnation of Blackness: Race, Crime and the Making of Modern Urban America," walks through the history of policing from the founding of the United States to today. "Going back to the mid-1600s into the early-1700s, colony after colony, from New York and Massachusetts to South Carolina and Virginia, passed a series of Black Codes or Negro Acts, various laws that were designed to empower everyday white citizens with the responsibility - and let me be clear - the duty to serve in an official capacity to surveil, monitor, to track and, when caught, to dispense corporal punishment against enslaved African people in the colonies," says Muhammad. "It was the largest bureaucracy dedicated to a form of policing that we recognize today. It was everywhere in the colonies." The author and historian also addresses the similarly racist foundations of the U.S. Border Patrol.
#DemocracyNow
Democracy Now! is an independent global news hour that airs on nearly 1,400 TV and radio stations Monday through Friday. Watch our livestream 8-9AM ET: democracynow.org
Please consider supporting independent media by making a donation to Democracy Now! today: democracynow.o...
FOLLOW DEMOCRACY NOW! ONLINE:
KZitem: / democracynow
Facebook: / democracynow
Twitter: / democracynow
Instagram: / democracynow
SoundCloud: / democracynow
iTunes: itunes.apple.c...
Daily Email Digest: democracynow.o...
Негізгі бет From slavery to George Floyd: The racist history of U.S. policing
No video
Пікірлер: 184