Jan 19th, 2014
"The House I Live In"
The Asheville Buncombe Community Relations Council is pleased to kick off its movie series with this film discussing the disproportionate effect of the War on Drugs on African Americans and the impact it has had on maintaining poverty among African Americans.
About the Film
Why We Fight director Eugene Jarecki shifts his focus from the military industrial complex to the War on Drugs in this documentary exploring the risks that prohibition poses to freedom, and the tragedy of addicts being treated as criminals. In the four decades since the War on Drugs commenced, over 45 millions of addicts have been arrested - and for each one jailed, another family is destroyed. Meanwhile, the prisons in America are growing overcrowded with non-violent criminals, and illegal drugs are still being sold in schoolyards. By examining just where it all went wrong, Jarecki reveals that a solution is possible if we can just find it in ourselves to be compassionate, and see past the decades of paranoia and propaganda.
Summary by Rovi Jason Buchanan