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Biden Says 1994 Crime Bill Was a ‘Mistake’ During Town Hall

Critical Race Theory Divides Americans, Leads to Tyranny and Violence: Jarrett Stepman

The prevalence of critical race theory (CRT) in mainstream institutions is creating a “permanent intractable division” between Americans that can only lead to either tyranny or violence, author and columnist Jarrett Stepman warned. In an interview with The Epoch Times’ “Crossroads,” Stepman described the CRT as a concept that boils down every aspect of society and individual life to race. “This is where we get the idea that America is inherently a white supremacist society,” Stepman told host Joshua Philipp. He explained that under the CRT framework, everything in the society is dictated by skin color or identity, leaving individual preference and individual choice as simply “non-determinative factors.” It is not surprising, according to Stepman, that many proponents of the CRT “sound very much segregationist,” considering how this idea divides…

Biden Says 1994 Crime Bill Was a ‘Mistake’ During Town Hall

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden said during Thursday’s televised town hall that his support for the 1994 crime bill was a mistake, although he insisted the main problem was with “what states did locally” under the framework and defended some parts of the initiative as actually leading to lower incarceration rates for African Americans.

An audience member asked Biden during the ABC Town Hall event at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, “What’s your view on the crime bill that you wrote in 1994, which showed prejudice against minorities?” referring to the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, which has often been blamed for expanding tough-on-crime policies that disproportionately criminalized black Americans.

Biden began by saying that “things have changed drastically” since the bill was passed, adding, “the crime bill itself did not have mandatory sentences except for two things. It had three strikes and you’re out which I voted against in the crime bill. But it had a lot of other things in it that turned out to be both bad and good.”

He praised the Assault Weapons Ban that was part of the bill, but said one of the bill’s bad aspects was giving more money to states to build prisons.

“And you have 93 out of every 100 people is in a state prison not in a federal prison because they built more prisons,” Biden said.

The former Vice President then said he doesn’t believe anyone should be going to jail for drug use, and called for the decriminalization of marijuana and wiping of records for cannabis use-related offenses.

Townhall host George Stephanopoulos then said: “But in the meantime, an awful lot of people were jailed for minor drug crimes after the…”

“Exactly right,” Biden interjected.

“Was it a mistake to support it?” Stephanopoulos asked.

“Yes it was. But here’s where the mistake came. The mistake came in terms of what the states did locally,” Biden said, adding that “same time for the same crime” concept that was part of the bill actually reduced incarceration rates among African Americans for some types of crimes.

“What happened was it became the same time for the same crime. So it said you had to serve between one and three years. It ended up becoming much lower. Black folks went to jail a lot less than they would have before. But it was a mistake,” Biden said.

The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act reinforced the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986, which substantially increased the number of drug offenses with mandatory minimum sentences, including for marijuana. It also mandated a minimum sentence of 5 years without parole for possession of 5 grams of crack cocaine, while mandating the same minimum sentence for 500 grams of powder cocaine, a disparity that the Brookings Institution linked to higher incarceration rates among blacks as crack is more prevalent in black neighborhoods.

“While the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010, enacted under the Obama-Biden administration, reduced the crack/powder cocaine disparity from 100:1 to 18:1, the damage had been done, and its effects continue to this day,” wrote Rashawn Ray and William A. Galston, in a paper examining the impacts on mass incarceration of the 1994 crime bill.

Biden previously expressed regret for the bill, calling it “a big mistake.”

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Focus News: Biden Says 1994 Crime Bill Was a ‘Mistake’ During Town Hall

Man Who Fired Shots Before Kyle Rittenhouse in Kenosha Is Charged: Officials

The man who admitted firing shots before Kyle Rittenhouse fatally shot two people during unrest in Kenosha, Wisconsin, was charged, officials said. Joshua Ziminski, 35, faces charges of disorderly conduct and use of a dangerous weapon following the Aug. 25 shooting that occurred in the midst of riots and protests in Kenosha after police shot Jacob Blake in the back. According to a police complaint, officials said Ziminski was seen holding a black handgun. They said he was seen walking with his wife near a gas station before firing one shot into the air. “Detective Howard observed a muzzle flash emit from the handgun, and heard a gunshot at the same time,” the complaint said, according to Fox News. “In another video, the defendant is clearly seen at that same location. The…