Our Children are Good, the System is Bad

By Antranette Scott

“Some of them are just born bad…” Those are the words of Ray Kern, the owner of one of the shops in the French Quarter from which a group of boys (14yrs old, 15yrs old and 2 9yrs olds) stole a tip jar and $500.00. Kern told reporters that the boys “looked like pros” and he did not believe that anything could correct the juveniles. Now I want to get something straight before we even start: I am in no way saying that these youth were not wrong, but I believe that there is power (to elevate or to destroy) in how black youth are portrayed in media and also the criminalizing of youth at such a young age. I know that the majority of our readers have at one time stolen items; this false idea that kids are complete angels is used as justification to inject them into our criminal justice system.

In the city of New Orleans where the school to prison pipeline is ever present, it is important that we take a critical look at youth incarceration. We know that mass incarceration is not a solution to our crime problem, especially for youth, yet we are constantly bombarded with the same narrative of criminalization. This is looking at the symptoms instead the cause for a solution. The cause is a lack of quality public schooling, a lack of after-school and summer programs that are open and readily available to our city’s youth. We need summer jobs that pay a reasonable wage for our youth. We also need mentoring programs that pay mentors a living wage and that foster an interest in seeing our youth succeed.

A lot of folks are wondering where we are going to get the funds to operate these programs, and the workers to implement them… These programs are already paid for by our tax dollars. Looking at the 2018 City budget we know that out of $647 million dollars, 63% goes to cops, jails, and other reactionary measures. Only 3% goes to families and children, and only 1% goes to job development. Imagine what our city would look like if those numbers were reversed; if we divested from mass incarceration and invested in our youth. By making our youth a priority instead of pushing the narrative that ours are born criminals with no hope of becoming whole and healthy members of society, we will be taking concrete steps toward a way of living that uplifts us all.

In Accordance With White Supremacy

By Enigma E

Latoya Cantrell pictured with Miriam Owens of “Forever Lee Circle” and Richard Marksbury of the white supremacist Monumental Task Committee

Abdul Aziz in his SplinterNews article entitled “The Secret, All-White Committee Advising New Orleans’ Black Woman Mayor on the Fate of Confederate Statues” was able to effectively point out how white supremacists always squirm themselves into a seat at the table. His article uncovered the link between confederate monument supporters and racist ideology & big money. It shows how they are validated through political organizations, donations and business ventures. Aziz summed up who the pro-monument people are as “essentially white nationalists masquerading as historical preservationists”. He uncovered their links to White supremacy, but more importantly he summarizes the real tragedy of this city with the line, “white supremacist views have already succeeded in penetrating one of the major institutions of a supposedly progressive, majority-black city”. This line gets at the fact that we are still dealing with identity politics. Mayor Cantrell is the figure in front the curtains, but who’s behind them? Cantrell is supposed to be representing the people that come from systematic generational poverty, which has limited their access to the resources and opportunities in this city, a city that is defined off of Black plight. We know Cantrell voted for a budget that disproportionately favors cops and jails over children and families, several times. We know she meets with white supremacists behind closed doors and concedes to their wishes without public input, even as public property is concerned. So we as the working class people must realize that no one person or position is going to save us, it’s on us to do it. Educate, agitate organize! #AllPower2DaPeople