![]() As Harvard Law professor Randall Kennedy has said, “No one has been more committed to struggles against impoverishment and its cruel consequences than Peter Edelman.” And former New York Times columnist Bob Herbert writes, “If there is one essential book on the great tragedy of poverty and inequality in America, this is it.” Kennedy and senior official in the Clinton administration, Peter Edelman has devoted his life to understanding the causes of poverty. The homeless are arrested for sleeping in the park or urinating in public.Ī former aide to Robert F. Women are evicted from their homes for calling the police too often to ask for protection from domestic violence. Schoolchildren are sent to court for playground skirmishes that previously sent them to the principal’s office. ![]() Nor is the criminalization of poverty confined to money. The anti-tax revolution that began with the Reagan era led state and local governments, starved for revenues, to squeeze ordinary people, collect fines and fees to the tune of 10 million people who now owe $50 billion. As Peter Edelman explains in Not a Crime to Be Poor, in fact Ferguson is everywhere: the debtors’ prisons of the twenty-first century. Department of Justice didn’t just expose racially biased policing it also exposed exorbitant fines and fees for minor crimes that mainly hit the city’s poor, African American population, resulting in jail by the thousands. For example, in Ferguson, Missouri, the U.S. ![]() ![]() In one of the richest countries on Earth it has effectively become a crime to be poor. ![]()
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