Posts Tagged ‘Youth’

Imprisoning our youth…for life

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

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The United States currently has 2,500 people under the age of 18 serving life sentences in prison without parole. We are the only country in the world to mandate life sentences for children. 59% of juveniles sentenced to life in prison are first time offenders; 26% were aiding or abetting felony murder but did not commit the murder themselves.

We are sentencing people to spend the rest of their lives behind bars for murders they committed when they were 14 years old. 14. how many of us have done things we aren’t proud of when we were that age? one of the great things about humans is their ability to learn and adapt over time. When I was 14, I was a girl. I’m a man now. My point is not to make light of crime or murder, but simply point out how much people can change and what a tragedy it is to mandate that that opportunity be denied to so many young people.

What does it say about our country that we are willing to sentence young people to die in prison? Do we really care so little about our own freedoms that we willing to uniformly rob 50 plus years of life from a young person before they’re old enough to drive? Do we really lack the guts to take responsibility for the generations of young people we are helping to create?

Luckily, the State of Michigan has a chance to end its juvenile life sentences with out parole. Tomorrow, Wednesday, May 6th, a public hearing will take place before the House Judiciary Committee on second chance bills to end Michigan’s juvenile life without parole sentences. To speak out, send a quick email or make a phone call to House and Senate members or contact Michigan’s Governor Granholm. Contact information for state representatives can be found at house.michigan.gov. For state senators, go to senate.michigan.gov. Granholm can be contacted at http://www.michigan.gov/gov, or by calling 517-373-3400, or writing her at P.O. Box 30013, Lansing, MI 48909.

efren1Want to help free a man who has been imprisoned in Michigan since he was 15 for a murder he did not commit? Click here to find out more about Efren Paredes, Jr and support his bid for freedom.

If we the people are expected to follow the law, we have to be able to trust the system governing us and the people holding us accountable. Sentencing people to die in jail for commiting crimes during a time in their lives when their decision making and moral reasoning capabilities are still developing undermines our ability to trust our government and law enforcement agencies.

The fact that this law targets juveniles is knowingly raising a generation of people who have a legitimate reason to distrust the government and police force, the very institutions that must be trusted if our society is to flourish. This is what Dwight Furrow argues in Reviving the Left: The Need to Restore Liberal Values in America. We need to teach our youth that we care about them and that we see in them the potential to grow and change and to make positive contributions. It is this approach that will enhance social trust and encourage our youth to care about each other and society as a whole.

Lets take the first step and demand an end to Juvenile Life Sentences without Parole!

“Justice” and the War on America’s youth

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

Action Alerts: Free Efren Paredes, Jr.! /  Justice for Oscar Grant!

In many ways, America is experimenting with introspection and self-criticism. As a country, we are rethinking the role we play in the “war on terror” and the “war on drugs,” and in general, we’re coming to the opinion that war sucks and its better to be at peace than at war.

But America’s justice system continues to wage a war on youth of Color, gender-nonconformists, and migrant communities across the country. Law enforcement disproportionately profiles low-income, mostly Black and Brown communities, and far too many officers abuse their power by harassing and humiliating Transgender and migrant peoples. 

But the injustice doesn’t stop with the way profiled youth are brought into the “justice” system; it continues with disproportionately high incarceration rates  youth of color and a continuing decline in funding and general health and safety conditions within prisons.

This issue hits home for many in the form of the unjust conviction and continued imprisonment of Efren Paredes, Jr. Efren was taken from his family at the age of 15 and was convicted and sent to prison for life without parole despite a deplorable lack of evidence for a murder he did not commit. His continued imprisonment is not only a crime against himself and his family, but a tragedy to everyone who knows him. Thankfully, his courage, intelligence and strong support system enable all of us to benefit from his personal warmth and wisdom, which he thankfully shares through is poetry and activism.

Efren’s incarceration has inspired world-wide outrage and action on his behalf; in February the Berekely City Council voted to condemn Efren’s sentence as a human rights violation. But, Efren is still waiting for the results of his December 2008 hearing in front of the Michigan Parole Board. In April, they are expected to deliver a recommendation to Governor Granholm to commute his sentence or deny his plea for justice. Please join the movement to Free Efren Paredes, Jr by visiting Efren’s website and supporting his bid for freedom.

 The recent murders of young African American fathers Oscar Grant and Adolph Grimes III by police officers in Oakland and New Orleans tragically provide further visiblily to the viral way that racism has taken hold of our justice system (talkleft has an interesting analysis of the debate about racism, crime and police). Campaigning for social justice, decreasing our destructive effects on the environment and bringing an end to corporate greed and free-market fundamentalism are essential in our continued quest for democracy, justice and liberation, but we must not stop there; it is essential that we continue to expand our advocacy to focus on the health and well-being of our brothers and sisters in prison and the criminal justice system at large and that we include demands for systemic prison reform in our continued effort to restore just and caring values to America.