May 15, 2015

Who's crazy?

As part of my master's degree in social work, I recently finished a class on assessing and diagnosing mental health disorders. I had some familiarity with mental health disorders from a year spent working with families who were homeless, learning about the effects of trauma on human trafficking victims, and a 496 hour practicum at a school for children with emotional disturbances. Yet, I was still a bit confused about schizophrenia and mostly thought of it as multiple personality disorder, aka "A Beautiful Mind." I learned that schizophrenia is a mental illness centering around psychosis, which means that you don't understand or acknowledge reality. Sometimes the psychosis is ongoing and other times psychotic episodes come and go between more lucid stretches. People with schizophrenia have delusions (false beliefs such as thinking that they are secretly Russian royalty) and hallucinations (false sensory experiences that are like hearing voices or seeing people who are not really there). It turns out that having "multiple personalities" is a different disorder entirely.

My teacher shared about a sensitivity exercise she experienced in which she put on headphones playing recordings which mimicked the negative and condemning voices often heard by people with schizophrenia. The voices told her what a terrible person she was, cursed her, and threatened her harm. While listening to the voices, she was instructed to fill out some forms and do a couple of other simple tasks while a staff person stood by and expressed frustration that she was "taking so long" to complete what she had been requested to do. It was terrible.

Most of us focus on the "mental" part of mental illness and not the "illness" part. There is an undeserved stigma attached to any impairment of mental processing. How foolish to think that we are "better" than someone simply because they are unhealthy. I don't think I am better than someone with cancer or Lyme disease or a broken femur--though the contrast makes me grateful for my health.

In class we learned about an incredible woman who lives with schizophrenia and helps break the stereotypes associated with it. She attended Yale and is a legal scholar and law professor at USC. Her story is told best in her own words. Here is a 15 minute TED Talk. You can read the interactive transcript here

May 8, 2015

Connect 2 Ministries

I have blogged about my 2012 and 2013 trips to Haiti in the past: learning about identity and contentment through Peter, picture updates of Peter, and depending on God's strength instead of self


About a third of the kids who attended
My life circumstances changed so dramatically over the past two years that I did not keep up with the ministry in Haiti that hosted my trips, although I continue to reflect on the people I met and the lessons I learned. As part of merging our lives, Ben and I began attending a new church together in April of last year. I was surprised and gratified to find out Conejo Church sent members to the same host ministry in Haiti. Similarly to my experiences, God used the heartbreak and hardship of Haiti to change and grow these people from our church. One of the men decided to host a fundraising lunch for Connect 2 Ministries. It just so turns out that the founder of the Haiti ministry lives 20 minutes away from our church and was able to come and share between his frequent trips. We were able to attend and support through money and prayer. (Let's get real: good wishes don't buy food or diapers.)

This kid used the googly craft eyes to become "four eyes"
Usually when you give money to an organization working internationally you are putting your trust in that organization's leadership and reputation without having the chance to see the projects on the ground. I think it's really cool that 1.) I was actually able to be onsite and meet the orphans and churches supported by this ministry and 2.) Even though resigning from my former job meant no more trips to Haiti, God actually brought the head of the ministry to my church for the very first fundraising lunch he's ever attended!

The kids got pretty comfortable after three days. 
Here are some pictures from my second trip. Most of them are from a VBS in a newly built church that is essentially the host of social services in the town just outside Port au Prince. I have also attached the flyer I made for our church's fundraiser. After visiting orphans and people in tent cities, I can share that a little really does go a long way, and I challenge you to forgo a luxury this week (dinner, movies, Starbucks, new dress) and give that money to Connect 2 Ministries or another organization that is helping people living on the margins.


Our team visiting a tent city


Another four eyes

Three friends

May 1, 2015

People for Sale and Harm at Home

What is human trafficking?
Where is it happening?
Who are the victims?
Who are the bad guys?
What can I do to help?

Forever Found has recently launched our two free trainings on human trafficking: People for Sale (Human Trafficking 101) and Harm at Home (Commercial Sexual Exploitation in California). I have developed both of these trainings. The distinction is that People for Sale covers all types of trafficking both internationally and domestically whereas Harm at Home focuses on sex trafficking in California. They are excellent for anyone wanting to learn more about trafficking and especially for anyone in social services, law enforcement, or children's programs. So far we have completed four trainings and are looking for more hosts. We are receiving positive responses in person and on our surveys. If you are interested in hosting one in Ventura County, let me know! Here is an article from The Acorn talking more about our nonprofit: "No Longer Alone."









Pictures courtesy of Forever Found

April 24, 2015

Life in the fast lane

This blog has declined in output ever since I ...

Married this guy
Started grad school for social work
Started working at Forever Found

My new series of blog posts will focus less on musings and more on the projects and lessons from these pursuits.


March 2, 2015

The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness

Review of The New Jim Crow
Caged. Locked up. Jailed. Imprisoned. Incarcerated. The English language has many words to describe the forcible segregation and confinement of a human. The number of people in American prisons has soared in past few decades, a phenomenon Michelle Alexander attributes to an insidious and largely unidentified form of race control which she terms “The New Jim Crow.” Indeed, this is the title of her controversial book published in 2010: The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. Despite the recent election of the nation’s first black president, Alexander’s work insists that racism is not only alive but thriving in the United States. Her research sheds light on a population literally hidden from society, and her provocative arguments boldly call for a complete overhaul of the entire criminal justice system.
Criminalized by Color
            The main argument of The New Jim Crow is that the criminal justice system in the United States has evolved into a mechanism of racial control rather than a response to crime. Indeed, the author asserts that instead of preventing crime, the system actually makes it more likely that people of color will be incited to crime because of discriminatory hurdles to living a stable life. The most convincing evidence for this argument is the grossly disproportionate rates of “black” and “brown” men currently incarcerated throughout the nation’s prisons[1]; “1 in every 14 black men was behind bars in 2006, compared with 1 in 106 white men” (p. 98). Alexander draws parallels between the current criminal justice system and overtly discriminatory practices against African Americans in the period between the Civil War and the Civil Rights movement. This system of racially targeted laws commonly known as Jim Crow successfully controlled the environments and quality of life of African Americans in the South.
            The book’s introduction claims that the number of prisoners in the United States dramatically increased from roughly 300,000 to over 2 million in the past thirty years (p. 6). The majority of these convicted criminals are black and brown men. The number of prisoners is just the tip of the iceberg, as the control of the criminal justice system extends to people who are currently on probation and parole. Alexander claims that “one in three young African American men” in the United States today is in one of these three categories (p. 9). Even after leaving the direct control of the criminal justice system (and regardless of the severity of their crimes) ex-convicts face discriminatory practices in housing, voting, public assistance, and job-searching similar to those experienced by African Americans under Jim Crow laws. Alexander succinctly describes: “The system of mass incarceration is based on the prison label, not prison time” (p. 14). Current prisoners and ex-convicts are “relegated to a permanent second-class status upon their release,” creating a sub-class of citizen or racial caste system (p. 14).
Alexander contends that throughout the history of the United States, powerful white men used race to secure their power, pitting poor white men against minorities so that they would not ally to overthrow the top class. After slavery was legally outlawed, powerful white men enacted convict laws that essentially re-enslaved freedmen in appalling working conditions. Vagrancy laws made it a crime to be unemployed. Of course, these laws were aimed at and applied to blacks (p.28). Incredible barriers such as poll taxes and unintelligible literacy tests impeded blacks’ ability to vote. Beginning in the Reconstruction Era, segregation laws begin developing and controlled where blacks could live, work, eat, and even sit on public transportation. The discriminatory practices looked eerily similar to those faced by men in the criminal justice system today. Once again, powerful white men were using race to control the poorer classes, assuaging the anger and frustration of poor white men further impoverished by the Civil War by lifting them just slightly above blacks—the absolute bottom class.
During the Civil Rights movement of the 1950’s and 1960’s, “conservatives systemically and strategically linked opposition to civil rights legislation to calls for law and order, arguing that Martin Luther King Jr.’s philosophy of civil disobedience was a leading cause of crime” (p. 41). According to Alexander, this wide-spread media portrayal of the black man as a criminal was “the birth of mass incarceration” (p.40). A couple of decades later, sneaky conservatives (aka powerful white men) once again enacted a “strategy of exploiting racial hostility or resentment for political gain without making explicit reference to race”—the War on Drugs, designed for racial control (p. 47). Evidence for racial motivation of the War on Drugs is not clearly described by Alexander, but the effects are well-researched, including the obscenely large payments the federal government bestowed to state and county governments who prioritized arrests of drug offenders. Federal spending skyrocketed: “Between 1980 and 1984, FBI anti-drug allocations increased from $8 million to $95 million” (p.49). Alexander goes on to provide multiple stories, statistics, and legal cases establishing that this campaign disproportionately targeted and ravaged communities of color. Incessant patrols, stops, and searches (and the enticement of asset seizures) ensured a steady supply of arrests. The Supreme Court has upheld these practices in a series of unrelated cases, raising the burden of proof of racial bias so high that even the sharpest lawyer could not clear a defendant—and most rely on public defense.
Once in the criminal system, people unknowingly face incredible restrictions on movement, behavior, voting, jury service, housing, and employment. People on probation and parole must also make payments to several government agencies, even for their own mandated drug testing (p.150). These restrictions and required payments are horribly similar to those existing against African Americans under Jim Crow. Another notable parallel is the physical segregation of people in color in prisons—an even harsher segregation than the racially segregated neighborhoods of Jim Crow. These prisoners are not included in poverty and unemployment statistics but are included in local population count, generally bringing more per capita allotted funding to rural, white communities (p. 216).
Aligning with Alexander
Although repetitive, Alexander’s arguments are compelling. She is strongest when describing the Supreme Court’s support of the New Jim Crow. Some of her other points are too thinly researched to be convincing, such as her claim that “The concept of race is a relatively recent development” (p. 23). She cites scant evidence for this extraordinary claim (one book and two pages of second book). More disappointingly, her description of the motivations behind the War on Drugs was not well-fleshed. Explanations of Reagan’s policies border on ludicrous and seem to depend on the near impossibility of proving a negative:
His ‘colorblind’ rhetoric on crime, welfare, taxes, and states’ rights was clearly understood by white (and black) voters as having a racial dimension, though claims to that effect were impossible to prove. The absence of explicitly racist rhetoric afforded the racial nature of his coded appeals a certain plausible deniability (p. 48).
Another area of disagreement came early in the book when Alexander compared the rate of incarceration in the United States to that of other countries and found that few other countries even came close. Without analyzing any reason for this phenomenon other than the racist-motivated War on Drugs, Alexander boldly declares “for reasons largely unrelated to actual crime trends, the American penal system has emerged as a system of social control unparalleled in world history” (p. 8). This statement is unnecessarily hyperbolic and distracts from her primary (and worthy) focus on the disproportionate incarceration rates of black and brown men. It is important to remember that most other countries do not have a responsive criminal justice system. Perpetrators can plunder, kill, and rape with impunity in many—if not most—countries It is plausible that the tremendous size of the United States penal system could be due in part to a just success in containing harmful people as opposed to countries where law enforcement is corrupt or nonexistent. Also, stating that the social control existing in the American penal system is unparalleled throughout history is simply false. One only needs to consider Soviet Russia, modern China, North Korea, or ancient Egypt. Surely a country such as China which institutes a “one child” policy over billions of people is more than a match for American prisons.
Despite these criticisms, I found myself aligned with Alexander’s ideology, if not her evidence. In particular, I resonated with her repeated emphasis of Dr. Martin Luther King’s warning: “…racial caste systems do not require racial hostility or overt bigotry to thrive. They need only racial indifference” (p 14).  Race neutral policy (or “colorblindness”) can easily turn into a default excuse for apathy. People’s hearts are more difficult to change than systems, but lasting change will be accomplished when men treat each other as having inherent value because of their humanity instead of race, gender, or even accomplishments. The myth that a person’s value is the sum of his or her actions is beguiling but deadly. As Alexander sagely notes:
Conversations about class are resisted in part because there is a tendency to imagine that one’s class reflects upon one’s character. What is key to America’s understanding of class is the persistent belief—despite all evidence to the contrary—that anyone, with the proper discipline and drive, can move from a lower class to a higher class (p. 13).
For African American men, the stigma of crime is a racial stigma in addition to a social stigma (p.193). It is easier to believe that they are somehow personally inclined towards crime than to admit the structural set-up that makes it nearly impossible for them to avoid it. In one of many examples of “blaming the victim,” an examination of juvenile sentencing reports in Washington State showed that prosecutors described blacks as having “internal personality flaws” causing them to commit crimes but described whites as committing crimes because of external conflicts in their lives (p.115). This bias is sad but not surprising.
Policy Practice
            The New Jim Crow reinforced my belief that racism is alive and thriving. Alexander’s call for changed hearts resonated with my priorities and the NASW Code of Ethics. This was how the book strengthened me. The two ways it changed me were introducing the concept of a racial caste system based on criminal history and softening my opinions on drug use.
            My library includes books on gangs and pimping—two crimes associated largely with minorities. Thus, I had some understanding of the barriers for people with a criminal history—barriers that increase recidivism rates. The social stigma of time in prison causes deep shame and pervasive hopelessness. Yet, I saw these barriers as social problems. After Alexander’s explanations of parole and probation, I agree that the system sets up convicts for failure. Her statistics were shocking: “About as many people were returned to prison for parole violations in 2000 as were admitted to prison in 1980 for all reasons” (p. 93). Alexander also educated me by listing an inexcusable number of rights that are stripped away from prisoners—practices more reminiscent of Les Miserables than imaginable in a modern country. My views on crime and punishment and effective methods for reducing recidivism rates have changed significantly.
            Prior to reading this book, I had no idea of the rates of people who were imprisoned for drug offenses and imagined that most people were imprisoned for violent crimes. Statistics such as a 1,100 percent increase in the number of people incarcerated for drug offenses since 1980 (up to half a million people!) completely changed the way I viewed incarceration (p. 59). Yes, the ravages of addiction on the user and his or her family are tragic and terrifying. Yet, I now know that the overwhelming majority of people in prisons are there not only for distributing drugs but also for simply using them (p.99). The contrast between the War on Drugs and the campaign against drunk driving (arguably a more lethal crime and committed primarily by white males) was insightful (p. 200). Alexander’s description of harsh mandatory sentences for even first time offenders was disturbing and sobering, especially her account of the harsher penalties inflicted for drugs culturally preferred by African Americans. The statistic that marijuana possession accounted for nearly 80% of the arrests in the 1990s is appalling (p. 59)! During the time I was reading this book, the (white) brother of a close friend was arrested and incarcerated for methamphetamine use. His time in prison was brief, and I wondered what the difference in sentencing would have been if he was black in the American South or an urban area. Although I believe The New Jim Crow would have benefited from acknowledging more of the harm committed by drug-funded gangs, this knowledge has made me more sensitive towards people who were convicted for drug use, an understanding I will carry in my social work practice.
Conclusion
            Describing the end of the Civil Rights movement, Alexander discerns: “Instead of a moral crusade, the movement became an almost purely legal crusade” (p. 213). In defaulting to lawyers, who admittedly drove major wins such as Brown v. Board of Education, people lost a sense both of urgency and of personal efficacy. We are still in this lull today and arguably in a worse state since most people do not realize or acknowledge the prevalence of racism. As another challenge, Alexander notes that even civil rights activists have been reluctant to advocate on behalf of criminals (p. 214). She concludes with a call to advocacy rather than concrete solutions. It is my belief that the most effective—though certainly not the most rapid—solution to deconstruct a racial caste system is a firm individual commitment to the value of every human being. As perhaps the most famous civil rights activist entreated: “Love your neighbor as you love yourself.” Alexander would agree with this, and I end with her words:
We should hope not for a colorblind society but instead for a world in which we can see each other fully, learn from each other, and do what we can to respond to each other with love. … That is a goal worth fighting for (p. 231).



[1]Throughout the book, Alexander uses the words “black people” and “brown people” to indicate African Americans and Hispanics. She gives no explanation for this habitual choice of phrase.