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Jay Z to Bail Out Dads on Father's Day and Take On the Bail-Bond Industry

Jay Z (photo via eurweb.com)

by eurweb.com
Jay Z, who just became a father all over again earlier this week, is also making news for a different reason. It seems he’s stepping up his involvement in social issues. One way he’s getting involved is what he’s doing this Father’s Day. He was inspired by what he saw last month by what various organizations did on Mother’s Day.
“Last month for Mother’s Day, organizations like Southerners on New Ground and Color of Change did a major fundraising drive to bail out 100 mothers for Mother’s Day. Color of Change’s exposè on the for-profit bail industry provides deeper strategy behind this smart and inspiring action,” he wrote in an essay for Time, in the closing of what was an ultimate indictment of the bail-bond industry, as a racist institution that exploits people who are poor and Black.
His mentioning of Color of Change was essential seeing how Black women are the fastest growing prison demographic. This Father’s Day weekend, however, he put forth a plea in hopes of generating help for incarcerated dads who remain sidelined by one of the numerous broken parts of the criminal justice system.
“This Father’s Day, I’m supporting those same organizations to bail out fathers who can’t afford the due process our democracy promises. As a father with a growing family, it’s the least I can do, but philanthropy is not a long fix, we have to get rid of these inhumane practices altogether. We can’t fix our broken criminal justice system until we take on the exploitative bail industry.”
To read more, go to: Jay Z to Bail Out Dads on Father’s Day & Take on the Bail-Bond Industry


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  1. J. kearney J. kearney June 18, 2017

    Thank God for Jay Z and B for their example to us and the world.
    Sent from my iPhone

  2. P. Jefferson P. Jefferson June 18, 2017

    The practice of cash bail within the judicial system, by nature, punishes the poor for being.. poor. It is not just the bail bonding industry but the laws themselves. They are set up to oppress and impose suffering upon those who cannot afford bail. Those that can afford to make bail(and as such could probably afford to miss a few days on the streets) get out. Those who cannot afford bail and may end up losing job/housing, etc are pushed down even further.
    In essence this is a form of punishment before trial, while still only charged, not guilty under the law

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