HRC at Columbia
Praises former mayor Dinkins, who introduced her. Calls him a good sounding board for her as a new Senator in early 2000s This is a time when our collective efforts to devise solutions to the problems that afflict us is more important than ever. Yet again, another young black life is cut short, streets of an American city are marred by violence, bonds of trust and respect frayed. What we have seen in Baltimore should tear at our soul—Ferguson, Staten Island, Baltimore— patterns are undeniable. Tells stories of Walter Scott, Tamir Rice, Eric Garner, Freddie Gray. “Not only as a mother and a grandmother, but a citizen, a human being, my heart breaks…we have to come to terms with some hard truths about race and justice in America.” There is something profoundly wrong when young black men are more likely to be stopped, charged, sentenced for longer than white counterparts. A third of all black men face the prospect of prison—black men are missing from communities because of incarceration or premature death, nearly 1 in 3 in Baltimore cannot find work. These recent tragedies should galvanize us to come together as a nation to restore that balance to our criminal justice. Baltimore rioters are “compounding the tragedy…setting back the cause of justice.” Links respect for the law with respect by the law—that is what we have to work towards. We must restore trust across our society—in politics, in the press, in markets. It truly is about how we treat each other and what we value, making it possible for every American to each God-given potential. The inequities that persist in our justice system undermine our shared vision of what our country can be. Talks up work at Children’s Defense Fund, teenagers and preteens incarcerated at adult jails, work as director of Legal Aid Society at University of Arkansas Law. “I know these are not new challenges by any means…today they demand fresh thinking and bold action from all of us.” Praises Rand Paul, Mike Lee for bipartisan work. Two areas in particular o We need smart strategies to fight crime that help restore trust, says police departments across the country are already deploying effective and creative strategies. Hits military program: “Weapons of war have no place on our streets” Obama’s task force on police a great place to start Every police department in the country should have body cameras—it will help protect good people on both sides of the lens We should match funds for body cameras everywhere—go beyond Obama program We should measure success by working with communities, not just more arrests We have to be honest about “the inequality that stalks our streets” Better education chances for young people, more support to families. [pulls out USA Today front page and reads from it] o Only 6 miles separate two Baltimore neighborhoods, but there is a 20 year difference in the average life expectancy. Life expectancy for women, black men and women too low. We need to start understanding how important it is to start caring for every child as if that child were our own. The conversation needs to be much broader o We need to change how we approach punishment and prison Cites 25% of prison population statistic. Numbers today are much higher than before despite historic lows of crime Significant percentage of low-level offenders and pre-trial detention. Keeping them behind bars does little to lower crime 1 in every 28 children in our country has a parent in prison
HRC at Columbia Page 2