David A. Love's Blog

David A. Love

David A. Love
Location
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Birthday
June 18
Bio
David A. Love is a human rights advocate and journalist based in Philadelphia. He is a member of the editorial board of BlackCommentator.com, where his Color of Law column appears weekly. He is a contributor to the Huffington Post, the Progressive Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, theGrio, News One, In These Times and Philadelphia Independent Media Center. He contributed to the book, States of Confinement: Policing, Detention and Prisons (St. Martin's Press, 2000), and is a former producer of the radio news magazine Democracy Now! Love is also a former spokesperson for the Amnesty International UK National Speakers Tour, and organized the first national police brutality conference as a staff member with the New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights. He served as a law clerk to two Black federal judges. Love is a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Pennsylvania Law School. He also attended Harvard Business School, and completed the Joint Programme in International Human Rights Law at the University of Oxford.

AUGUST 27, 2009 11:49AM

Second Chance For Michael Vick and Other Ex-Felons

Rate: 10 Flag
Vick and dog 
 
Much has been said about Michael Vick’s return to the NFL after serving 18 months in a federal prison for dog fighting.  And I don’t have too much more to add to the discussion.  As a pet owner, I cringe at the thought of someone torturing puppies.  At the same time, there are many people in this world that are not treated as well as dogs.  And not so long ago, this country used dogs as a weapon to torture other people.

I’d imagine that Vick has had more than ample time to ponder over his poor life choices, and the stupidity and cruelty that cost him a $130 million contract with the Atlanta Falcons.  The Philadelphia Eagles are giving him a second chance, and I guess that’s their decision.

But there are thousands, no, millions, of everyday people who have served their time and paid their debt to society, yet they can’t get a minimum wage job flipping burgers.  They need a second chance just to survive.  

This army of lost men and women is unable to support their families and become productive members of society because society will not let them.  They wear a scarlet “F” for felon on their shirt.  And they are punished not only for the crimes they committed.  They receive extra punishment above and beyond their sentence, in the form of life, career and educational opportunities from which they are forever barred.  A person with a criminal record cannot work in certain occupations, is ineligible for certain college tuition loans, and may not qualify for public housing and other public welfare benefits.  That is the sign of a society built on vengeance and retribution, rather than rehabilitation.  It is what some observers call a public banishment or civil death.  Society has cast out the individual in a sense— unable to fully participate in a free society after regaining freedom, remaining a virtual prisoner even after the bars are removed.

And what has all of this punishment for punishment’s sake actually done for America?  The tough on crime approach has helped the careers of some politicians, but surely it hasn’t made us any safer.  I suppose there are some crimes that merit prison time, and people must be held accountable for the harm they do.  But there are few creative, constructive forms of alternative punishment that make the community whole and make the prisoner a better individual.  

At the same time, the U.S. has an overdependence on incarceration, if not an addiction to it.  The nation uses prison bars as its primary method of social control, and as a way to earn profits, too.  The so-called “land of the free” has the most prisoners— in absolute numbers and per capita—in the world.  One in four of the world’s prisoners are locked up in a nation with only 5% of the world’s population.  Brutal dictatorships and repressive communist regimes don’t even come close.  

Broken schools, poor healthcare and early childhood development, and the disappearance of jobs prepare many poor children for little else than a cradle-to-prison pipeline.  Prison walls do not create nurturing environments, but more proficient criminals, who during their lives walk through a revolving prison door.  Many are imprisoned for nonviolent, drug-related offenses for longer and longer periods of time.  Three-strikes laws and other draconian sentencing schemes are way out of proportion to the crimes committed.

The consequences of over-punishment are seen across the country, as states in need of cash cannot afford their ballooning prison budgets.  In California, a federal court has ordered the state to reduce its overcrowded prison population by 40,000 inmates.  If so many inmates are to be released, it makes you realize that many of them probably shouldn’t have been in there in the first place.

America’s reliance on punishment only serves to break up families and communities, rarely helping to rebuild them or those who have served their time.  Many would be surprised to know that the right to vote, a cherished right of citizenship, is denied to 5.3 million Americans with felony convictions.  These felony disenfranchisement laws are a holdover from the Jim Crow era, a time filled with all sorts of bad intentions.  This madness must stop, and Senator Russell Feingold (D-WI) and Representative John Conyers (D-MI) have introduced legislation to restore voting rights in federal elections to millions of disenfranchised people.  How do you expect ex-felons to become productive citizens when they can’t find a job, can’t afford to better themselves through education, and can’t even vote?       

Some are behind bars for the crimes they have committed.  Others are there for crimes they did not commit.  Either way, when they return to the street, the punishment continues.  Punishment on top of punishment does not work, and we have to build up the formerly incarcerated so they do not fall down again.  We have to ensure that they have the opportunity to contribute as full-fledged members of society.

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Comments

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And still others are being or have been put to death for crimes they never did do. I'm with you. It is a criminal act to give this guy a multi million dollar job back just because he is a football player. I don't know why it is that any sports person gets the high dollars they do. What is so damn special about them?

Vick should have gotten a burger flipping job and then... maybe, I would feel bad for him.
We focus and get all our anger against Vick, cause it's basic: dogs, hurt, pain. Yet the real criminals that cause damage to our nation, get a pass from the public mob of outrage. Instead, we get confused and no one makes the real connections of the damage these guys cause.
Well said. And with or without criminal convictions, it's simply criminal that pro athletes are paid enough to support legions of the unemployed and homeless.

Plus, if I hear one more person carry on about hurting dogs while there are thousands of children in desperate need of rescue, I will scream.
This is a big issue on many lists and boards I frequent, as I am a "dog person". I am no fan of Michael Vick and my mind also boggles at the amount of money that entertainers of all types make. However, Michael Vick isn't being given a high-paying job...he earned it, even if he earned it through his superior genetically-endowed physical abilities. He did his time in prison and lost much in the process -- lots and lots of money, probably all future endorsements, much of his fan-base.

The criminal justice system is just one more broken cog in the American societal machine. We overpunish, underpunish, create career criminals from misguided kids, and ignore common-sense options that would aid in rehabilitation and prevention of some criminal activity in the first place.

It's just one more thing that makes me feel sick to my stomach and my soul if I think about it for too long.
Rated. Belongs on the cover. Here's a link to my related post that received a fair amount of airplay:
Rated. Belongs on the cover. Here's a link to my related post that received a fair amount of airplay:
here
Oh and I agree with Sally -- plenty of criminals who have committed heinous crimes against humans can return to their careers and lives with far less public outcry than Vick has received.

The ASPCA and other organizations who are calling out for further punishment would be better served by using Vick's status to educate kids in the inner-city who think dog fighting is a normal and acceptable pastime.
Should be interesting to see what protests take place at tonight's game where the dog-killer makes his Philly debut. I wonder how Ron Jaworski feels about Vick wearing #7?
Well stated, as always.
Rated
@ noah tall, great analysis. Thanks for passing it along.
I wish I had an answer for that one, David. We seemed to be hell bent on putting every American in jail for one reason or another. A good start would be to decriminalize drugs and spend that prison money on rehab instead.
Are drugs bad? I suppose they are in a lot of ways, but I don't see them as warranting prison sentences. That's a sure way to ruin someones life. Give them that scarlet F and they are screwed for sure. Hell, I don't have any felonies and can't find a job. The people have little recourse than to return to a life of crime. It's a horribly flawed system.
"At the same time, the U.S. has an overdependence on incarceration, if not an addiction to it. The nation uses prison bars as its primary method of social control, and as a way to earn profits, too. The so-called “land of the free” has the most prisoners— in absolute numbers and per capita—in the world."

I think this pretty much says it all. Thanks.

PS: I am someone who has benefited from a big "second chance" in life, and my eart goes out to all who don't get that opportunity. Nicely written David.
Yes, there is no road back to citizenhood from incarceration, no redemption. We have a huge population of banned, internally banished people, mostly men, with nothing to lose. It's frightening. Apart from real crimes, this country insists on making every misstep a criminal offense. You can go to jail for bouncing a check, for getting behind on alimony payments (this happened to a friend, and it was an auto payment and not even his fuckup), or like me and Henry Louis Gates, Jr (whom I do not resemble in any other way) for breaking into your own house. There is a positive fever to incarcerate in this country, and a law enforcement culture that regards everyone as a suspect. Locking people up has come to seem normal.