Pubdate: Fri, 4 Apr 2008 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2008 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Author: Suzanne Wills SLAVERY AND DRUG SENTENCES Regarding Monday's Outlook article "No more excuses: Let's talk candidly about slavery / Response to Obama speech makes plain the race divide": By 1807, the British had abolished the slave trade. In 1833, they abolished slavery. In the United States, a strong abolitionist movement was well-established. Andrew Jackson was president from 1828 to 1836. In the midst of this, Jackson chose to enslave 140 humans for his personal convenience. My great-grandfather and his brother could afford only 40 human beings but made the same choice. "Evil," "mean" and "vicious" are strong words but appropriate. Those who say it is unfair to judge slave owners by modern standards choose to ignore that the standards of abolitionists were much the same as ours. It's good for those like Carl Byker and historian Bobby Lovett - and Barack Obama - to ask us to face our history. Perhaps we should ask whether we are repeating racist blindness today in more subtle but significant ways. One major example: African-Americans use and sell about 14 percent of the illegal drugs and do about 74 percent of the prison time for drug law violations; the impact of the drug war on African-American families has been catastrophic. Whites do the crime, but blacks do the time. Suzanne Wills Drug Policy Forum of Texas, Dallas - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake