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MICHELLE ALEXANDER: If we are going to build a movement, it's
going to have to be a movement that begins in our churches, in our faith communities,
in our neighborhoods, in our schools. One where people really wake up and say, "We are
going to build a kind of democracy that we deserve."
BILL MOYERS: And...
SUSAN BURTON: This house is the beginning of "A New Way
of Life." I got it in 1998 and fashioned a house for women who had been incarcerated
and that's where I started. I didn't know I was on my way to creating something that
would have the ability to change lives.
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BILL MOYERS: Welcome. Last month in Sydney, Australia,
they threw an annual event called the Festival of Dangerous Ideas. One of the main speakers
was David Simon, the writer and producer who created "The Wire" and "Treme," two television
series that vividly portray the vast gap between rich and poor. Nothing drives that great divide
home, he said, like our prison system.
DAVID SIMON: You're seeing the underclass hunted through
a war on dangerous drugs allegedly that is in fact merely a war on the poor and has turned
us into the most incarcerative state in the history of mankind, at this point. In terms
of just the sheer numbers of people we've put in American prisons [...]. No other country
on the face of the earth jails people at the number and rate that we are.
BILL MOYERS: He's right, of course. During the past 30
years, the number of inmates in federal custody has grown by 800 percent, and half of them
are serving sentences for drug offenses. According to The Sentencing Project, an advocacy group
dedicated to changing how we think about crime and punishment, "more than 60 percent of the
people in prison are now racial and ethnic minorities." This book woke people up. "The
New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness," by Michelle Alexander.
She was my guest more than three years ago when the book was first published.
An outstanding work of scholarship on how our war on drugs, our harsh mandatory minimum
sentencing, and racism have converged to create a caste system in this country very much like
the one under Jim Crow segregation laws. None of us at the time anticipated the powerful
impact her book would have.
It became a best-seller, spurred an even wider conversation about justice and inequality,
and transformed Michelle Alexander from attorney and professor to an activist and advocate for
an end to our dehumanizing penal system.
Michelle Alexander, welcome.
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Thank you. Thanks for having me.
BILL MOYERS: When the book came out one reviewer called
it the bible of a social movement. Have you seen the apostles and the disciples and the
church spreading? Have you seen the signs of a movement?
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Yes. And it has me so encouraged. As I travel
from city to city, and I've been speaking in churches and at universities, I've been
speaking inside prisons and reentry centers, just an incredible range of venues, I see
over and over again people who are dedicating their lives now to ending the system of mass
incarceration, to raising consciousness. People of faith who are organizing their church communities,
organizing within mosques, holding study circles, holding film festivals and then organizing
and mobilizing their memberships. Or their congregations.
I'm especially encouraged by formerly incarcerated people who are finding their voice and organizing
to man the restoration of their basic civil and human rights. Organizations like All of
Us or None which has successfully, you know, achieve Ban the Box legislation.
BILL MOYERS: Ban the Box?
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Ban the Box on employment applications, the,
you know, box on employment applications that asks that dreaded question, "Have you ever
been convicted of a felony?" And of course it doesn't matter whether you've been convicted
of a felony a few weeks ago or 40 years ago, for the rest of your life, you're labeled
a felon and then subject to legal discrimination, for the rest of your life.
BILL MOYERS: What do those ex-felons, what have they been
telling you about what it's like to come out and try to get back into the society to which
they have paid for their sins?
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: I think it's just an extraordinary challenge.
And I think most people have this sense that when you're released from prison, well, yeah,
life is hard. But if you really dedicate yourself, pull yourself up by the bootstraps, you know,
knock on enough doors, you'll get that job, you'll get your life back together. It may
be hard but if you really try, you can do it.
But what I've learned, you know, over the years from working with many formerly incarcerated
people, and forming close friendships with many people who have been released from prison,
is that it's not just hard, it's often impossible. You're released from prison, often with, you
know, maybe $20 in your pocket. Have nowhere to sleep.
You try to return home, maybe to your family who lives in public housing. Your family risks
eviction in many places if they just even allow you to come home. Felons can be excluded
from public housing. Whole families can risk eviction if they allow people with felonies
to come home to them.
Trying to get a job can be next to impossible. You know, people say, "Well, they could get
a job at, you know, Burger King or some, you know, minimum wage job." No actually, you
know, many low-wage jobs are, for all practical purposes, off-limits to people who have felonies.
Hundreds of professional licenses are off-limits to people who have felonies.
In my state in Ohio, until just recently, you couldn't even get a license to be a barber
if you'd been convicted of a felony. Food stamps may be off-limits to you if you've
been convicted of a drug felony. You know, what are people released from prison expected
to do? Apparently what we expect them to do is to pay hundreds or thousands of dollars
in fees, fines, court costs, accumulative back child support, which continues to accrue
while you're in prison.
And in a growing number of states you're actually expected to pay back the cost of your imprisonment.
And paying back all these fees, fines and court costs may be a condition of your probation
or parole. And then if you're one of the lucky few, the very few who even manages to get
a job straight out of prison, up to 100 percent of your wages can be garnished to pay back
all those fees, fines, court costs.
BILL MOYERS: How do you explain this, given the fact that
this is a society that celebrates second chances, for politicians in particular, a society that
is built around the theme of renewal, born again and yet, doesn't extend that same act
of forgiveness to people who have paid for their sins.
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Well, we say we're a society that supports
second chances. But in reality, we're not. And I think the reason-- to fully understand
what's happened in this country, with respect to mass incarceration, you have to look back
at least 40 years to the law and order movement that was born in the midst of the Civil Rights
movement.
You know, when Civil Rights advocates were beginning to violate segregation laws and
sit-in at lunch counters and desegregate trains and busses violating what they believed were
unjust laws-- segregationists said, you know, "This is leading to the breakdown of the respect
for law. We need law and order in this country." And the call for law and order was in direct
response to the Civil Rights movement and the non-violent, civil disobedience the protesters
were engaged in.
But this law and order movement began to take on a life of its own as crime rates began
to rise in urban areas and some politicians began to say, you know, "This rise in crime
is a symptom of this attitude of lawlessness that is spreading through the nation. We need
to get tough. We need to crack down. We need law and order."
And as I've documented at great lengths in the book, and many other political scientists
and historians have as well, the get tough movement and the war on drugs really is traceable
to a backlash against the gains of African-Americans in the Civil Rights movement and a radical
shift in mentality that occurred where as a nation we ended the war on poverty and declared
the war on drugs. A wave of punitiveness really swept the nation on the heels of the Civil
Rights movement. And this attitude-- has infected not only our criminal justice system but our
education system that now has a zero tolerance policy for school discipline infractions.
And has led to this prison building boom unlike anything the world has ever seen.
BILL MOYERS: How have mandatory minimum sentences contributed
to that?
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Well, mandatory minimum sentences ensures
that you will get the harshest possible sentence under law. The mandatory minimum sentence.
And so it shifts power to the prosecutor so the prosecutors can then say to you, "Well,
you take this plea or else you're going to get this harsh mandatory minimum sentence."
And it gives prosecutors the power to, you know, encourage plea deals, you know, in a
federal system. I think 97 to 98 percent of all, you know, charged cases result in a plea,
not a trial because people are terrified of facing these harsh mandatory minimum sentences.
And it ensures that it's up to the prosecutor, not the judge, you know, what kind of sentence
you receive. And mandatory minimum sentences has a lot to do with the exponential increase
in our prison population in the United States.
And today, you know, even in this era of Obama, in this time of supposed-color blindness,
we now have created a system of mass incarceration, a penal system unprecedented in world history.
We have the highest rate of incarceration in the world, dwarfing the rates of even highly-repressive
regimes like Russia or China or Iran. And the majority of the increase in incarceration
in the United States have been among impoverished people of color who, once they're swept into
the system, are then stripped of the very rights supposedly won in the Civil Rights
movement. And yet, the topic of mass incarceration has been one, you know, that has been rarely
raised.
BILL MOYERS: Is there research that confirms that the backlash
is against black criminals or against criminals, just crime?
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Well, there is. There's an enormous amount
of research that suggests that the backlash and the punitive impulse was not simply in
response to crime but was much more deeply connected to racial attitudes, racial fears
and anxieties. And in fact, you know, the political strategist who conceived of the
get tough movement and the war on drugs quite deliberately used not so subtle racial appeals
and racial code language with the purpose of trying to exploit both conscious and unconscious
racial biases and stereotypes for political gain. The Southern strategy.
BILL MOYERS: By which Richard Nixon was elected president.
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Yes, yes. The basis of the Southern strategy
was using these kind of racially coded get tough appeals on issues of crime and welfare
to appeal to poor and working class whites particularly in the South who were anxious
about, threatened by, resentful of many of the gains of African-Americans in the Civil
Rights movement.
And to be fair, I think we have got to acknowledge that poor and working class whites really
had their world rocked by the Civil Rights movement. You know, wealthy whites could send
their kids to private schools, give their kids all of the advantages that wealth has
to offer. But poor and working class whites in the South, many of whom were themselves
struggling for survival, who are desperately poor, often illiterate. They were the ones
who might have to ship their kids across town to go to a school they believed were inferior.
It was they who were suddenly forced to compete on equal times for limited jobs with this
whole group of people they've been taught their whole lives to believe were inferior
to them. And this state of affairs did create an enormous amount of fear, resentment and
anxiety and an enormous political opportunity.
BILL MOYERS: What about now? How do you see that playing
out?
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Well, I see it most obviously in the immigration
debate. Today we see that this fear of immigrants coming across the border to take jobs and
to take educational resources and who are going to drain the tax base of your county.
These fears that they are coming to take from you is leading and has led to another for
get tough movement. Get tough on them, those immigrants who have violated the law by crossing
over. And this wave of punitiveness now directed towards immigrants is leading to the same
kind of indifference towards their basic humanity that we have seen in the war on drugs and
the get tough movement that led to the rise of mass incarceration. I mean, race has been
used as a wedge again and again throughout American history to divide the lower classes,
if you will. And to create an environment in which poor and working class people are
pit against one another.
But that does not mean that, you know, all or even most poor or working class white folks
are harboring any conscious racial resentments. I know that there are those folks out there,
for sure. But I think much of it lies in the unconscious, stereotypes and fears and biases
that we all have within us that get exploited in these moments where groups are scapegoated
and fears are stoked, resulting in, you know, the emergence of these new systems. I mean,
we are having mass deportation today at the same time as we are having mass incarceration.
BILL MOYERS: Mass deportation, I must say, by a black president.
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Absolutely. It's one of the great ironies.
Just as it's, you know, an irony that the greatest escalation of the drug war was under
President Clinton who, you know, many African-Americans called our first black president.
BILL MOYERS: I remember that.
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: And it was President Clinton, you know, a
Democrat, who escalated the drug war far beyond what President Reagan or President Nixon had
even dreamed possible. And it was the Clinton administration that championed laws banning
drug offenders even from federal financial aid for schooling upon their release. Banning
drug offenders and people with criminal convictions from, you know, public housing. You know,
to a large extent many of the rules, laws, policies and practices that now constitute
this caste-like system were championed by a Democratic president administration desperate
to win back those so-called white swing voters. The folks who had defected from the Democratic
party in the wake of the Civil Rights movement.
BILL MOYERS: I was going to ask you what do you think is
the dynamic that drove Clinton and now drives Obama? Is it to satisfy the base they think
most hostile to them?
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: I think so. And, you know, what I find most
unfortunate though, of the politics that have developed over the years, the politics of
trying to appease, you know, poor and working class whites not by building explicitly multiracial,
multi-ethnic, you know, coalitions and alliances that encourage solidarity across racial and
class lines. But instead by kind of tossing these symbolic bones, you know, saying, "Well,
we're escalating the drug war. We're getting tough on them. Don't you feel better now?
We're willing to get tough by deporting even more immigrants than ever have been deported
before. Don't you feel better now?"
We fall into the trap of really playing to people's, you know, baser fears and instincts
rather than risking perhaps some short-term losses, but building the kind of unity and
the kind of solidarity across race and class lines which I believe would help to ensure
a much more stable foundation for the kind of multi-racial, multi-ethnic, inclusive democracy
that I would hope for. Which is why my great hope does not lie with President Obama or
our elected politicians no matter how well-meaning or well-intentioned they may be.
BILL MOYERS: You have talked recently in a way different
from how you were talking three and a half years ago. You've been talking about moving
out of your own lane. What are you suggesting?
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Yeah, well, you know, right around the anniversary
of the march on Washington I found myself doing a fair amount of internal reflection
about my own role at this time in building the kind of movement that I would hope for,
for social justice.
And what I had to admit to myself is that for the last few years, you know, I have spent
all of my working hours talking about mass incarceration and trying to raise consciousness
about what has happened in this country, how we've managed to birth a caste-like system
again. You know, that there are more African-Americans under correctional control today, in prison
or jail, on probation or parole than were enslaved in 1850.
That we've created this vast new system again. And to try to raise consciousness so that
people would wake up to this reality. And I realize that as well-intentioned as all
that work was it was leading me to a place of relatively narrow thinking.
That I wasn't connecting the dots between other kinds of social injustices that are
occurring here in the United States and abroad to the work that I was committed to and the
cause that I had been committed to over the years.
BILL MOYERS: It was a larger breakdown of democracy that
affected more people than African-Americans in prison or immigrants being deported. You're
saying that the system has broken down.
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Absolutely. The entire system has been broken
down. And it's really I think, at its root about a failure on our part to develop a moral
consensus about how we treat one another. You know, for me, I have to care. If I care
about a young man serving, you know, 25 years to life for a minor drug crime. If I care
about him and care about his humanity, ought I not also care equally about a young woman
who's facing deportation back to a country she hardly knows and had lived in only as
a child and can barely speak the language? And ought I not be as equally concerned about
her fate as well?
Ought I not be equally concerned about a family whose loved ones were just killed by drones
in Afghanistan? Ought I not care equally for all? And that really was Dr. King's insistence
at the end of his life. That we ought to care about the Vietnamese as much as we care and
love our people at home.
So, I think we ought to commit ourselves to building a human rights movement in this country,
a human rights movement for education, not incarceration, for jobs, not jails. A movement
that will end all these forms of legal discrimination against people released from prison, discrimination
that denies them basic human rights to work, to shelter, to education, to food.
BILL MOYERS: You don't think practical politics leads you
where you want to go?
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: No. I think that the system, as it is designed
today, with the amount of money that influences who gets elected and who even has a shot of
holding office in the United States today. I think that the way the system is currently
designed does not allow for that kind of policy change to occur. We're going to have to build
a movement that changes the nature of politics itself, that takes money and the profound
influence of money out of politics and is one that is not, you know, a win/lose, winner
take all kind of system. Today we have Democrats and Republicans battling it out with people
joining camps and thinking that somehow through this war demonizing the opposition we're going
to come up with solutions that genuinely benefit all. I think that's deeply misguided. We're
going to have to become more creative about how we do democracy in the United States.
But it begins I believe, with people in their communities organizing around the issues that
matter most to them
BILL MOYERS: Aren't you talking in some instances about
ghettoized communities that, where unemployment is high, families are in distress, schools
are falling apart and there are very few life support systems. How do they organize?
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: It's incredibly difficult. Incredibly difficult.
But it's not impossible. I'm inspired by people like Susan Burton, for example. She's executive
director of an organization in Los Angeles called A New Way of Life. And Susan is an
African-American woman who became addicted to crack-*** after a Los Angeles Police
Department Officer ran over her five-year-old boy. And if Susan, you know, had been middle
class, upper-middle class, she might have had a good health care plan and might've been
able to get good legal drugs to help her cope with her depression and her grief.
But things were different for Susan. She became addicted to crack-*** and spent 15 years
cycling in and out of prison and jail. Every time, tossed out onto the street, unable to
get work or even access to drug treatment, cycling in and out for 15 years. Finally she
gets access to a private drug treatment program, becomes clean, is given a job and decides
to dedicate her life to ensuring that no other woman would ever have to go through what she
has gone through.
And now Susan runs five safe homes for formerly incarcerated women in Los Angeles, providing
them desperately needed shelter, support, finding work, reunifying with their families.
But beyond that, she is part of All of Us or None and is organizing formally incarcerated
people in California and nationwide to demand the restoration of their basic civil and human
rights.
BILL MOYERS: So they--
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: And what's happening is phenomenal.
BILL MOYERS: So they could become full citizens again.
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: And with the leadership of organizations like
All of Us or None, they've succeeded in banning the box on employment applications in the
entire state of California. You know, there're enormous victories that are being achieved
precisely because the people who we have written off and viewed as disposable are reclaiming
their voice, standing up, speaking out, organizing even as they struggle to survive.
And so, you know, my own view is that in building this movement we've got to be able to do a
number of things simultaneously. We've got to be able and committed to building an underground
railroad for people who are released from prison, people who need desperate help finding
shelter and food as they try to make a break for real freedom. But we've also got to be
willing to work for abolition at the same time. Abolition of the system of mass incarceration
as a whole.
And I see people like Susan Burton and so many others miraculously managing to do these
things at the same time. And so I hope that, you know, people will donate generously to
these organizations which often don't receive the level of funding from foundations they
deserve and also find ways to donate their time and their energy to this work and be
part of this movement in a direct way.
BILL MOYERS: Aren't there some signs of progress on the
issues that concern you?
Attorney General Eric Holder has begun to advocate for some reform of our mandatory
minimum sentences. Here he is speaking to the American Bar Association. Take a listen.
ATTORNEY GENERAL ERIC HOLDER: I have today mandated a modification of the
Justice Department's charging policies so that certain low-level, non-violent drug offenders
who have no ties to large scale organizations, gangs or cartels will no longer be charged
with offenses that impose draconian mandatory minimum sentences. They--
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: It's a very encouraging sign. It suggests
that at least for a small category of cases, mandatory minimum sentences will no longer
be automatically sought by federal prosecutors. And it's a positive step in the right direction.
It doesn't go all the way. Mandatory sentences are still on the books and will still apply
to thousands of people who, you know, may be dubbed as having some kind of gang-related
connections and of course those kind of connections do not have to be proven beyond a reasonable
doubt.
And, you know, in a number of states across the United States in recent years mandatory
minimum sentences for drug crimes, non-violent drug crimes have been reduced. And we've seen
for the first time in 40 years state prison populations beginning to decline. The federal
prison population is still rising. And most of the people who are incarcerated in federal
prisons are there due to drug offenses and immigration violations.
So we still see, you know, the federal prison population rising. But the state prison population's
beginning to decline. And that is reason for hope. But my concern is that the primary reason
that legislatures have begun to ease up some of their harsh mandatory minimum sentences
is not because of genuine concern for the people whose lives have been destroyed or
the communities that have been decimated by the drug war. But instead these changes have
been motivated largely because of the fiscal crisis.
BILL MOYERS: They can't afford these prisons anymore
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Yes. These states find that there's no way
to maintain these massive prison systems without raising taxes on the predominately white middle
class. So they've been willing to downsize a bit.
BILL MOYERS: Well, take California. Former Governor Schwarzenegger
said they had been investing too much in prisons and not enough in schools. But ultimately
it turns out that what he was proposing wasn't altogether downsizing. It was privatizing
the prison so that the responsibility for them was transferred to for-profit corporations.
And I ask you what happens when there's a profit motive to send people to prison?
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Well, when there's a profit motive it ensures
that more and more people will be locked up and remain locked up in order for companies
to maintain their profit margins. You know, the largest prison company, private prison
company in the United States, The Corrections Corporation of America, sent a letter to 48
governors basically with an offer: we will buy your state-run prisons in exchange for
a promise, a guarantee, that you will keep these prisons filled at least 90 percent capacity.
You know, these kinds of agreements and incentives are not in the public interest. You know,
what would be in the public interest is, you know, a commitment to reducing crime so that
our prison's empty. But instead, private prisons want a commitment from state governors that
these prisons will be kept filled by any means necessary which virtually ensures a high-level
of commitment by politicians to these get tough measures, mandatory sentences, war on
drugs, to keep prison beds filled, so.
BILL MOYERS: In fact, Arizona, Oklahoma, Louisiana and
I believe Virginia all have privatized prisons that are kept at 95 to 100 percent occupancy
because they have guaranteed that occupancy to the private industry. Even if the crime
rate falls.
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Absolutely. Absolutely. And, you know, that's
what's most worrisome is that they will insist and have insisted on keeping their beds full
even if crime rates are relatively low. And today, you know, crime rates nationally are
at historical lows. But incarceration rates are higher than they ever have been
BILL MOYERS: Well, some people argue, as you know, that
the crime rate nationally is down because we've been locking up the people who commit
the crimes.
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Yes, which has been proven to be demonstrably
false. You know, if you look at the data it shows that, you know, states that have been
on an incarceration binge do not necessarily have lower crime rates than states that have
incarcerated people at a lower rate. There is no clear connection between incarceration
rates and crime rates. And in fact, in cities like Chicago and in New Orleans, New Orleans
is the incarceration capital of the world, you know, they have some of the highest violent
crime rates in the country as well.
And the same can be said for Chicago. In fact, you know, a growing number of researchers
and sociologists now believe that incarceration rate, high levels of incarceration, actually
can be a contributor to high crime rates because you're incarcerating such a large percentage
of a community or a population, you're ensuring that people are going to be locked out of
work and locked out of housing and living, you know, in a state of desperation for the
rest of their lives.
So I would hope that as we build this movement to end mass incarceration, we will not be
tempted to make purely fiscal arguments about the need for reform but ensure that the way
we engage in our advocacy helps to inspire much greater care, compassion and concern
for the very people who have been locked up, locked out and that we have been taught to
despise.
BILL MOYERS: But when you look back historically at slavery,
condoned by many people who quoted the bible, when you look at what happened after the Civil
War. It took the Civil War to free the slaves and then they were put back into a form of
slavery with a coerced labor, forced labor.
And use of Jim Crow laws, you referred to. You look at the racial violence that extended
right on through our time. Where do you get any hope that this ideal of compassion, that
we can create a society, such as you describe, given our conflicted, often savage past?
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: I get my hope from this revolutionary idea
that doesn't seem to die in the United States. This idea that all people are created equal
with certain inalienable rights, including life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
That was a revolutionary idea in the Declaration of Independence. And it was wholly incomplete.
It was all men are created equal and implicitly slaves were left out, you know, poor people
were left out.
BILL MOYERS: Women were left out.
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Women were left out. Right. But it was a revolutionary
idea then and it remains a revolutionary idea today. This idea that keeps changing and growing
and expanding as our consciousness changes and grows and expands that all human beings
are created equal and have certain inalienable rights, it won't die. It didn't die with slavery,
you know, a war was necessary to end slavery. But this idea has continued to survive and
it's continued to grow. And we see now that in the United States we do believe that women
are equal. We have an idea that people of all races are created equal. We are now beginning
to see that depending on, regardless of your *** orientation, you are equal.
This idea itself has not died. And so I think the worst thing we can do is to fall into
a sort of cynicism where we imagine nothing can ever be done. You know, these new systems
of control just keep being born. This is just part of human nature. Well, it may be part
of human nature to fear one another. But there is also a part of human nature I believe that
wants to see the equality, even divinity, in each other and to honor it. And that spirit
remains alive in the United States today. And if we give up on it then I think we're
giving up on the dream of truly thriving equitable multiracial, multiethnic democracy.
BILL MOYERS: Michelle Alexander, thank you very much for
being with me.
MICHELLE ALEXANDER: Thank you for having me.
BILL MOYERS: In our conversation, you heard Michelle Alexander
single out a woman named Susan Burton as an inspiration -- both to her and to the movement
to reform the criminal justice system and reclaim basic civil and human rights for people
released from incarceration.
Because of Susan Burton, many women have found shelter, a job, and camaraderie during that
rocky period after they walk out of prison into what otherwise would be a cold and treacherous
world.
She herself almost didn't make it. Burton served six prison sentences in California
for drug-related felonies. She's never forgotten what she heard a prison guard say as she walked
away for what turned out to be the last time: "I'll see you back in a little while."
After all, 65 percent of the state's parolees do return to jail within three years, and
nearly a third of them within the first six months.
But thanks to treatment and resolve, Susan Burton has stayed clean and free. Today her
Los Angeles organization, "A New Way of Life," runs five houses offering help to women struggling
to rebuild their lives. Her story is told in a film released last year, produced and
directed by Tessa Blake and Emma Hewitt. Here's an excerpt:
WOMAN: This is Susan Burton, she's the founder and
executive of A New Way of Life, and this is Samantha--
SAMANTHA: Jenkins--
SUSAN BURTON: And whatever we can do to help you pursue
your goals, you know, we're here for you. What kind of plans you have?
SAMANTHA: I plan on going to school.
SUSAN: Whatever you need to, you know, get your school
going, you let us know.
SAMANTHA: Yeah, okay.
SUSAN: We want to keep you grounded and connected.
SAMANTHA: Okay.
SUSAN: Okay.
SAMANTHA: Thank you.
SUSAN: All right.
SAMANTHA: Thanks.
SUSAN: You're welcome.
SUSAN: A New Way of Life is a home.
WOMAN: We're going to get you situated and we're
going to clean everything--
SUSAN: It's a home where women can come and feel
accepted and supported and safe.
WOMAN: If you find any problems, just let me know.
We can help you get yourself where you want to be in life.
SUSAN It's home for so many women who have no place
to go.
ANGELA: I was locked up for four years, that's a long
time. I was happy to be out, but still scared because, you know, I guess because we're creatures
of habit and you want to feel secure and safe. They drive you to the bus station and you
know, they give you $200 and they buy your ticket out of your money and put you on a
bus.
And you're just headed to wherever. And so, I arrived downtown L.A. and it was really
scary-- it was really scary. And I looked like I came from prison, you know, I was dusty
looking, you know, with jeans and a paper bag. Everybody knows that you're from prison;
they know, just by the way you look and they know. You get approached by everybody. There
were people asking you if you needed a ride, telling you that you look fine-- drug addicts,
people living that life and you know they are. It's so easy to get lured, especially
if you're scared and I'm going to be honest, I was scared and I felt like I was just standing
there buck naked.
I didn't have any place to go, I really didn't. And I called Miss Burton and I told her, I
said, "I received a letter from you and you said for me to call you and that you would
pick me up." And she says, "Where are you?" And I told her. She says, "I'll be there in
about 15 minutes."
And she came and picked me up. To come into a place and be able to drink out of a glass
and not plastic, to sleep on a mattress and not metal and to have food, have choices,
it's just-- stuff people take for granted. Miss Burton is so sweet. She's a good lady.
I'm glad she picked me up.
SUSAN: This house is the beginning of A New Way of
Life. I got it in 1998 and fashioned a house for women who had been incarcerated and that's
where I started. When I left prison, I went to treatment and got a job and, you know,
I saved the money and I saved about $12,000. Yeah, and I mean, I saved every dime. Some
months, I didn't spend but $40 a month for anything that I needed.
And everything else, I saved. And I didn't understand why or what I was saving for. I
didn't know I was on my way to creating something that would have the ability to change lives.
I tried to give help in the same fashion that I had received it.
There was a lot of movement in the house, a lot of cooking and TV watching and healing
going on. And a part of it was my healing, also. I relate really closely with the women.
I understand what they're feeling-- I've felt the same thing. I've had the same fears, the
same anger, the same frustration.
I lost my son and he was accidentally killed by a police officer and I just didn't know
what to do. My whole world just spun. The pain of everything was so unbearably present
in my body, I think if you looked at me, you could almost see it or touch it. And it was
all the disappointment, all the grief, all the sorrow that had to be addressed. So I
was able to address it through someone helping me.
STACEY: I am about to go visit with my daughter. I'm
a little bit fearful because of the way my lifestyle was a few years back when I was
in my addiction. I started prostituting myself and that is the worst thing ever, in her eyes.
So I don't know where we're going to go with this or how we're going to get through it,
but I'm going to try talking to her and hopefully, she'll open up and we can get past it.
Dominique has some resentments towards me because of my addiction and I was in and out
of prison. This is a picture of me when I got my GED in prison; I was in prison when
I took this picture.
I went to prison for involuntary manslaughter. I left in 1989. I didn't come home until 1996.
I was happy to come back into my daughter's life, but I didn't know how she would accept
me because I had been gone so long.
You know, I would stay clean and sober and then I'd go back to that lifestyle again,
so I knew that I had to work hard to earn her trust again.
DOMINIQUE: I couldn't trust her. So through her addiction,
as I got older, I knew I couldn't trust her. I didn't trust her with anything; I didn't
trust her with my child, I didn't trust her with me.
She went back to jail a lot. Parole violation after parole violation, repeatedly. I'll never
forget the day that I had to kick the freaking door down to get to my mom who was getting
high in the next room, who stole my son's piggy bank to go buy drugs. I couldn't think--
STACEY: I never stole your son's-- no, I did not,
Dominique.
DOMINIQUE: Mom, there's a lot of stuff that you say you
didn't-- you don't think you did, but I think that you're-- when you were active in your
drug use, you don't remember a lot of stuff. I mean you hurt a lot of people.
STACEY: I know.
DOMINIQUE: And you have a lot of relationships to fix.
You can't hide the things, the mistakes you make. You can't act like they didn't happen
or push them aside and think you can start all over.
STACEY: I'm getting better. I'm not there yet, but—100
percent, but I'm working on it.
DOMINIQUE: You are.
STACEY: Okay.
DOMINIQUE: I guess that's all I can ask for.
STACEY: Okay, and you got it.
DOMINIQUE: Thanks. A long time coming.
STACEY: You're welcome. Give me a hug.
ANGELA: This is my room and this is my bed and I was
right here on the computer. I like the fact that I know how to use it. It's so cool, I
just wish I could use it to get a job. I'm healthy, I'm employable, I'm willing. I've
been out of prison for just about a year and I've been looking for a job ever since I've
been out. I was a nurse before and I had never had a resume and I just walked in and they
would hire me right on the spot. Now I have all these resume, these certificates and all
this stuff, but it doesn't matter because my background is in the way.
SUSAN: We don't get a lot of money here. We barely
make it from month to month keeping the doors open, keeping food in the houses, keeping
the lights on, keeping staff paid. That invoice should've been paid, right? And then do--
how much am I short from payroll? That's still short. Okay. All right. Bye.
It was 1999. I was a few months sober and it angered me that I would be treated so cruel
and caged and chained for a drug charge. And I knew thousands of women just like me who
had been negatively impacted by the War on Drugs, who were incarcerated on a turnstile
going in and out of prison, not able to get help.
Imagine $70,000 a year to keep us contained, just squandering public funds. And I just
got a notice saying that mental health services have been defunded. Hell, they could've sent
me to Yale. For all those years and got so many degrees. You know six prison sentences.
You know, six degrees, right? If it's not one is two, or three.
ANGELA: There's a chicken in the backyard. Hi, there.
Are you thirsty or do you want something to eat? I think he's hungry. He's looking for
food. I had a big tax bill and I just panicked. I did. And started talking to a friend and
said, "I can help you out, you can make some quick money selling drugs." I was selling
crack, crystal, marijuana, Vicodin, ***, everything I could get my hands on. I was
just going to do it for a little while, pay my bills and be done.
But that didn't happen. I got four years. I went to see a social worker to sign up for
food stamps. She asked me if I had a conviction or anything like that on my record and of
course, I told her the truth, you know. I said, "Yes, I have."
And she said, "What?" And I said, "For sales of you know, narcotics." And she says, "Oh,
you're not eligible for food stamps." They won't give me food stamps because of my conviction;
they won't give me low-income housing because of my conviction and trying to find a job,
it's like, they throw your application in the trash. I feel like I'm drowning. I could
call up a drug dealer right now, somebody that knows me and I don't have to have any
money.
They would give me something to sell and I would pay them back and then I would be on
my way. Very easy to get back into that lifestyle.
ANGELA: Here's another one, isn't that one pretty?
They are cute. We have a yellow one; there's a yellow one, too, I shouldn't say we, we're
not allowed pets, but oh well. I really like sitting here. It's a good place.
STACEY: Well, it was pretty deep, but I believe she
got a chance to say a lot of things that, you know, she had been holding in.
SUSAN: Yeah.
STACEY: And a lot of it was hurtful.
SUSAN: The pain that our children incur, we just
don't know how deep and how far it goes. It's taken me over ten years to receive some forgiveness
for the character I was through my alcoholism and addiction. And I did the same thing that
you were doing-- that you're doing now.
STACEY: Yeah, you are very inspiring and I consider
you to be my mentor. I've never told you this, but I admire you.
SUSAN: Thank you.
STACEY: And I'm staying under your wing. You are not
getting rid of me and I want to learn from you and I want to be like you.
SUSAN: Yeah, yeah.
STACEY: And give back and help others that come behind
me.
SUSAN: Yeah, well, I don't know if I told you, but
I admire you, too, and I think about you and where you're headed and it makes my heart
very, very happy, because you are the reason I do what I do.
ANGELA: I got blessed with a job. I'm working in the
laundromat. The lady that owns the laundromat is an acquaintance of Miss Burton and she
gave me two days a week part-time, at $8 an hour and I am thrilled. It's keeping the washers
and dryers clean and giving people change and she gave me the keys and I count money,
she trusts me. I'm happy to have a job. Just awesome.
I wouldn't be able to survive on the money that I make here if I left A New Way of Life.
So I need some more hours, I need to have my own housing and I need transportation.
But anyway, I'm happy I have this. This is a start. One step at a time, you know?
WOMAN 1: It's chicken, ribs, sausage.
WOMAN 2: There's greens in there.
WOMAN 1: I'm starving.
WOMAN 2: When did you start?
ANGELA: I started last Wednesday.
WOMAN 2: Wow.
ANGELA: So it's just two days a week.
WOMAN 2: Chasing bubbles.
ANGELA: I do. I'm this bubble chaser, which is okay.
It's a job, you know what I'm saying? I'm thankful. You know what?
WOMAN 2: You never gave up looking for a job, never.
ANGELA: And I'm still not giving up.
STACEY: I want you guys to meet my daughter, finally.
Her and my grandkids will be here.
WOMAN 2: Uh-huh, that's good.
WOMAN 1: And things are good.
WOMAN 2: That's good Stacy.
STACEY: Yeah, things are good.
BILL MOYERS: That's from the film, "SUSAN," by Tessa Blake
and Emma Hewitt. Not only is Ms. Burton's work the subject of the movie, she's also
been recognized far and wide for her leadership and courage. She was a member of California's
sentencing reform commission; she serves on the board of the Los Angeles Sober Living
Network; and she received the Citizen Activist Award from the Kennedy School of Government
at Harvard University.
At our website BillMoyers.com, we'll link you to more of her story and more about Michelle
Alexander and her extraordinary book, "The New Jim Crow," acclaimed as the bible of a
social movement. That's all at BillMoyers.com. I'll see you there and I'll see
you here, next time.