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.N O T E S156 “You don’t use episodic rallies”: Edwards, interview156 “I wish that we would stop”: Edwards, interview156 “I have no [political o‰ce] aspirations”: Miles Marshall Lewis, “Russell Simmons’s Rap,” The Nation, 276(2), January 13, 2003.157 “business is politics and politics is business, so”: Ta-Nehisi Coates,“Compa$$ionate Capitali$m,” The Village Voice, January 7–13, 2004.157 “The hip-hop community takes pride in”: Susan Berfield, “The CEO of Hip Hop,”Business Week, October 27, 2003.157 “The most important thing we gotta do”: Ta-Nehisi Coates, “Compa$$ionateCapitali$m,” Village Voice, January 7–13, 2004.157 “Dear Russell: YOU ARE NOT”: Rosa Clemente, “You Are Not Hip Hop,” Village Voice, May 2, 2001.157 “Many of us have this conversation”: Ibid.158 “How many fundraisers have you”: Ibid.160 “is now emerging as potentially the most credible”: Johnnie L.Roberts, “Beyond Definition,” Newsweek, p.40, July 28, 2003.161 “civil rights progress has desimplified”: Mark Bowden, “Pompadour with aMonkey Wrench,” The Atlantic Monthly, pp.88–106, July/August 2004.162 “You don’t get people back by just”: Pam Lambert, “An Uncivil War,” People Weekly, pp.44–45, September 5, 1994.Chapter Six: Young Voices in the Hood163 “Ain’t no power like the power”: David Hill, “Hip-Hop vs.Lock-Up,” The Annie E.Casey Foundation, http://www.cya.ca.gov/research/charfa_59-01.pdf.164 “ ‘In the Bay Area’ ”: Interview with Andreana Clay.167 “seems a solution in search of a problem”: Joan Ryan, “Proposition 21 Locks Out Common Sense,” San Francisco Chronicl e, March 7, 2000, p.A23.167 “In 1959, the state made 4,059”: The 1959 and 2001 figures come from, “Charac-teristics of First Admissions to the California Youth Authority, 1959–2001,”http://www.cya.ca.gov/research/charfa_59-01.pdf.167 “Today’s juvenile justice system was designed in the”: Pete Wilson, “California Needs Juvenile Justice Reform,” San Diego Union-Tribune, February 23, 2000.168 “It has the potential to be overwhelming”: Rene Sanchez, “California Toughens Juvenile Crime Laws; Rules to Treat Young Offenders More Like Adults,” Wash-ington Post, May 13, 2000, A Section; p.A03.169 “like the military-industrial complex that”: Donziger, p.85.169 “The Report of the National Criminal Justice”: Ibid, p.36.170 “the legacy of an infrastructure of punishment”: Rupert Cornwell, “American Jail Population Hits Two Million,” The Independent (UK), April 8, 2003, p.13.170 “Blacks and Latinos combined made up”: According to The Sentencing Project,45 percent of U.S.prison inmates in 2002 were black and 18 percent were Hispanic.272 [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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.N O T E S156 “You don’t use episodic rallies”: Edwards, interview156 “I wish that we would stop”: Edwards, interview156 “I have no [political o‰ce] aspirations”: Miles Marshall Lewis, “Russell Simmons’s Rap,” The Nation, 276(2), January 13, 2003.157 “business is politics and politics is business, so”: Ta-Nehisi Coates,“Compa$$ionate Capitali$m,” The Village Voice, January 7–13, 2004.157 “The hip-hop community takes pride in”: Susan Berfield, “The CEO of Hip Hop,”Business Week, October 27, 2003.157 “The most important thing we gotta do”: Ta-Nehisi Coates, “Compa$$ionateCapitali$m,” Village Voice, January 7–13, 2004.157 “Dear Russell: YOU ARE NOT”: Rosa Clemente, “You Are Not Hip Hop,” Village Voice, May 2, 2001.157 “Many of us have this conversation”: Ibid.158 “How many fundraisers have you”: Ibid.160 “is now emerging as potentially the most credible”: Johnnie L.Roberts, “Beyond Definition,” Newsweek, p.40, July 28, 2003.161 “civil rights progress has desimplified”: Mark Bowden, “Pompadour with aMonkey Wrench,” The Atlantic Monthly, pp.88–106, July/August 2004.162 “You don’t get people back by just”: Pam Lambert, “An Uncivil War,” People Weekly, pp.44–45, September 5, 1994.Chapter Six: Young Voices in the Hood163 “Ain’t no power like the power”: David Hill, “Hip-Hop vs.Lock-Up,” The Annie E.Casey Foundation, http://www.cya.ca.gov/research/charfa_59-01.pdf.164 “ ‘In the Bay Area’ ”: Interview with Andreana Clay.167 “seems a solution in search of a problem”: Joan Ryan, “Proposition 21 Locks Out Common Sense,” San Francisco Chronicl e, March 7, 2000, p.A23.167 “In 1959, the state made 4,059”: The 1959 and 2001 figures come from, “Charac-teristics of First Admissions to the California Youth Authority, 1959–2001,”http://www.cya.ca.gov/research/charfa_59-01.pdf.167 “Today’s juvenile justice system was designed in the”: Pete Wilson, “California Needs Juvenile Justice Reform,” San Diego Union-Tribune, February 23, 2000.168 “It has the potential to be overwhelming”: Rene Sanchez, “California Toughens Juvenile Crime Laws; Rules to Treat Young Offenders More Like Adults,” Wash-ington Post, May 13, 2000, A Section; p.A03.169 “like the military-industrial complex that”: Donziger, p.85.169 “The Report of the National Criminal Justice”: Ibid, p.36.170 “the legacy of an infrastructure of punishment”: Rupert Cornwell, “American Jail Population Hits Two Million,” The Independent (UK), April 8, 2003, p.13.170 “Blacks and Latinos combined made up”: According to The Sentencing Project,45 percent of U.S.prison inmates in 2002 were black and 18 percent were Hispanic.272 [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]