Judicial bias simply a fact

It’s always the little stuff that turns around to bite you on the backside.

Case in point: A couple of weeks ago, I observed in this space that there is “different justice in this country for those who are white enough or wealthy enough to afford it.” I said this en route to a larger point, and it never occurred to me that the remark was anything but a self-evident truth, one that required no explanation, much less a defense.

Shows what I know. I’ve since heard from dozens of white women and men wounded by the contention that their skin color might buy them leniency in the criminal justice system. The influence of wealth, they didn’t argue. But about whiteness, they had a conniption. Some even demanded that I produce proof.

From my perspective, it’s not unlike being asked to produce proof that fire is hot. But for the record:

l According to “The Real War on Crime: The Report of the National Criminal Justice Commission,” African-Americans account for 13 percent of all regular drug users, but 35 percent of those arrested for drug possession, 55 percent of those convicted for drug possession and 74 percent of those imprisoned for drug possession.

l Then there’s “And Justice for Some,” a 2000 study whose sponsors include the U.S. Justice Department itself. Researchers reported that black and Hispanic offenders receive harsher treatment than white ones with similar records at every step of the justice system.

To cite just one finding: Among kids who have not been in juvenile prisons before, a black defendant in a drug case is a whopping 48 times more likely to be incarcerated than a white one with the same record.

There’s more, but you get the point.

I offer these statistics, by the way, only because I was asked and not out of any illusion that they will sway those who find it necessary to think race plays no part in the American justice system. I refuse to believe – for the sake of my sanity as much as anything – that they represent the predominant mindset of my white countrymen and women. But it seems sadly obvious to me that, at the very least, they speak for a sizable minority.

And truth to tell, it’s not that such people fail to grasp the racial realities of the justice system that galls me most. Rather, it’s the implication of that failure, what it says about the inability or unwillingness of some white people to accept the simple, obvious fact that, where race is concerned, America is a game rigged in their favor.

For the life of me, I can’t understand why some people find this so hard to see. I mean, where gender is concerned, the game is rigged in favor of men, with the possible exception of men in divorce courts. The point is not that all men are sexists, but that all benefit from a system that is. For a man to pretend otherwise flies in the face of the apparent. Just as it does for a white person to claim, in a nation with a recent history of racial apartheid, that whiteness does not have its privileges.

Fact is, when it comes to making trouble go away, the only color superior to white is green. Ask O.J.

As the kids say, I’m not mad at’cha. Indeed, one reason I’ve grown increasingly ambivalent – not antagonistic, but ambivalent – toward such issues as reparations and affirmative action is that I’ve grown increasingly weary of blacks placing ourselves in positions where happiness depends on persuading white folks to “do” … whatever. I’ll be a happy man the day we decide to place as much of our contentment as possible in our own hands.

But by the same token, I am congenitally unable to pass an absurd contention unremarked. And the claim that race plays no part in justice is precisely that.

It’s funny: White people often rightly complain that for too many blacks, everything is about race, always. But they fail to grasp the corollary truth that for too many whites, nothing is about race, ever.

They are quick to condemn black folks’ blind spot. Is it too much to ask that they display the same readiness toward their own?