Modern Day Slavery: Racism and the Drug War

Slavery is defined as the act of keeping a person as a piece of property. If you ask the average American if slavery still exists in America, their answer is likely to be no. After watching this video, many will change their minds.
 
Aug. 5, 2008 - PRLog -- VIDEO LINK: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=znnRONNMDMQ

As the crack epidemic flooded inner cities across the country, in 1986 Reagan's "Anti-Drug Abuse Act" makes the penalty for crack possession a hundred times harsher than that of powder cocaine. The following year new legislation is passed allowing private corporations to own and operate prisons. Twenty years later over a million non-violent drug offenders are imprisoned while corporate stocks are traded based on how many prisoners are in the cages.

A report released in 2008 by the International Center for Prison Studies at King's College London states that the United States has the highest incarceration rate and most people behind bars per capita in the world. Over 50% of these people are imprisoned for drug crimes.  At the same time, prescription drug companies account for over 50% of Fortune 500 profits. All illegal drugs combined kill approx 11K per year while cigarettes, alcohol and pharmaceutical kill almost a million. What's wrong with this picture?

"Modern Day Slavery: Racism and the Drug War" is the second of a series of short-format internet documentaries by Kevin Booth and Sacred Cow Productions.  Booth's award-winning Showtime documentary "American Drug War" (http://www.americandrugwar.com) is currently playing in independent theaters across the country and the DVD is available in stores and online.

To schedule an interview or inquire about a screening, please contact Sacred Cow Productions at (323) 472-7922 or email Kevin Booth directly: kevin@sacredcow.com
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