Tue, 20 October 2009 ![]() A Black Agenda Radio commentary by Glen Ford The
Sixties and the decade's aftermath remains a fertile field of study.
Researchers conclude that the end of Jim Crow medicine “provided the
health care basis for southern Black advances on standardized testing
in the 1980s.” But change also brought social disarray, massive school
dropouts, and a national public policy of mass Black incarceration. Two Studies: Drop-out or Push-out, and the Consequences of Jim Crow Medicine A Black Agenda Radio commentary by Glen Ford “The
first wave of Black southern kids born and raised under integrated
medicine did dramatically better on standardized tests than older
children born into Jim Crow.” You
can’t wrap up the Black experience of the Sixties and put it in a box.
Events that seemed like defeats at the time turned into victories,
while what appeared as a glorious triumph might actually be a prelude
to disastrous defeat. In many ways, the Sixties story is still
unfolding. Two new studies shed additional light on those tumultuous
times. Three Chicago-based economists have
concluded that integration of southern hospitals in the mid-Sixties
provided the health care basis for southern Black advances on
standardized testing in the 1980s. In the 1950s and ‘60s South, Black
children died before age 5 at many times the rate of white children.
Under Jim Crow, public medicine was anything but equal. Blacks were
often made to wait until all whites had been treated before seeing a
doctor, or were barred from hospitals entirely. Then came the 1964
Civil Rights Act, which outlawed segregation in hospitals, and the next
year the new Medicare program forced hospitals to obey the law or lose
federal funds. According to the Chicago study, the first wave of Black
southern kids born and raised under integrated medicine did
dramatically better on standardized tests than older children born into
Jim Crow. Northern Black kids, who had long had access to integrated
medical care, did not register such dramatic gains. The southern
children made bigger leaps, because they had so much farther to jump.
One of the researchers summed it up, this way: “If you were born in
1962 in the South and you are Black, you did much worse on
[standardized tests] than if you were born in 1969 in the South and are
Black.” But if you were born in the North, “it doesn’t matter when you
were born.” So,
from a health care perspective, one can call the Sixties a great
success for a certain cohort of southern Black children. And there are
myriad other clear victories. “Blacks have been over-policed, over-arrested, over-charged and over-sentenced.” But
the world that the Sixties created was not necessarily a better one for
all Black children. There followed the great white backlash, with its
public policy of mass Black incarceration, and accelerated white flight
to the suburbs, which some white people blame on the civil disturbances
of the Sixties. And, closely related to both mass Black incarceration
and increasing segregation and isolation of Blacks in urban centers, is
the massive Black school dropout phenomenon. A new Northeastern University study attempts to put a dollar amount on what dropouts cost society, and themselves. Every
high school dropout costs the nation $292,000 in lost tax revenues,
social services, and the cost of imprisoning those who get sucked into
the system, according to the report. One out of every four Black
dropouts is incarcerated or otherwise supervised by the state on any
given day. Black female dropouts are nine times
more likely to get pregnant than Black women that go to college. Black
female-headed households proliferate because so many young Black men
have dropped out and can't take care of families. The cost is high, but
who is costing whom? Since the tail end of the Sixties, Blacks have
been over-policed, over-arrested, over-charged and over-sentenced. We
have been more pushed-out than dropped-out. So, rather than talk about
what Black dropouts cost society, why not tally what white society is still costing us. For Black Agenda Radio, I'm Glen Ford Comments[0] |


