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Culture War Roundup for the week of December 12, 2022

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Honestly, you seem to be making this all up.

First, you assume that issues of disparate impact had any legal relevance to the operations of the criminal justice system; outside the narrow issue of jury selection, I know of none, The closest is claims of selective prosecution, but those claims almost never work, and are limited to claims that a specific prosecution of a specific defendant is racially motivated, not that a prosecution is invalid because prosecutions have a disparate impact in general.

More importantly, the disparate impact of prosecution actually increased in the wake of the Civil Rights Movement, as is made clear by the data on page 5 here -- blacks made up 30% of prison admittees in 1950, 32% in 1960, and 39% in 1970.*

Finally, northern cities were largely governed by Democrats long before the "white flight" of the 1970s: [New York[(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mayors_of_New_York_City) was, Chicago was, [Philadelphia]9https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mayor_of_Philadelphia) was, Detroit was, Cleveland was.

*Note to the inevitable person who will misconstrue what I just said. I am not saying that that is good, or bad, or evidence of improper discrimination, but only that it demonstrates the dubious nature of OP's claim.

More importantly, the disparate impact of prosecution actually increased in the wake of the Civil Rights Movement,

Isn't disparate impact only increasing if actually criminality is constant, declining, or increasing at a rate slower than the prosecutions?

Otherwise is just an increase in crime and prosecutions by a criminal class.

Also something, something sexual revolution, something something marriage, family formation.

But the whole point of OP's bogus claim rests on the fact that African-Americans commit a disproportionate pct of crimes. Disparate impact by definition refers only to outcomes, regardless of cause: "disparate impact theory prohibits neutral employment practices which, while non-discriminatory on their face, visit an adverse, disproportionate impact on a statutorily-protected group." E.E.O.C. v. Joe's Stone Crab, Inc., 220 F.3d 1263, 1274 (11th Cir. 2000). In OP bizarro legal world, criminal laws violate civil rights laws because they disproportionately affect African-Americans. If OP's legal claim were true (it isn't, of course), then authorities would have been powerless to put a disproportionate pct of African-Americans in jail, regardless of rates of offending. Indeed, that is precisely what he claimed happened. The fact that the opposite happened demonstrates that his claim is wrong.