Eugene Jarecki's documentary on the drug war, "The House I Live In," won a top award at Sundance in 2012. Here Jarecki talks about some things he learned while making the film. Among them: 90% of crack arrestees--but only 13% of crack users--are Black. Drug laws, always a means of race control, are now also a means of class control, with poor whites increasingly targeted. And the original "War on Drugs"--launched by Nixon in 1971--devoted 2/3 of its budget to treatment programs.
Jareckis remarks are taken from an interview by Michael Slate, broadcast on "The Michael Slate Show" on KPFK, Los Angeles. The hour-long program is available here: http://www.radio4all.net/index.php/program/59346 . Many thanks for permission to rebroadcast. More from Slate at www.redfuture.com .
New World Notes originally broadcast this program (as NWN #220) in May 2012.
"New World Notes" is produced under the auspices (Latin for "radar") of WWUH-FM, a community service of that beacon of light in darkest Connecticut, the University of Hartford.
Introductory & concluding remarks by K.D.
New World Notes's Web site has information, photos, interesting links, and a free archive of past shows. http://newworldnotes.blogspot.com . Also, radio4all.net has each show from May 2008.
You can download this program (as NWN #220) also from The Internet Archive (www.archive.org).
SERIES OVERVIEW -- Political and social commentary in a variety of genres. Exploring the gap between what we want ... and what they're trying to make us settle for. "Date recorded," below, = date of first scheduled broadcast.
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NOTE: Audio files downloaded from the links, below, are identified as NWN #220.