The USA has by far the highest Incarceration Rate in the whole world with 2,121,000 prisoners. World Prison Brief.[1]
The Origins of Prison Slavery
How Southern whites found replacements for their emancipated slaves in the prison system.
The link between prison labor and slavery is not merely rhetorical. At the end of the Civil War, the 13th amendment abolished slavery “except as a punishment for a crime.”

The origins of prison slavery in the American South.
This opened the door for more than a century of forced labor that was in many ways identical to, and in some ways worse than, slavery. Follow this link to excerpt from , American Prison: A Reporter’s Undercover Journey Into the Business of Punishment.
Proof of US Racist Slave Regime..Wikipedia..
Ethnicity
See also: Race and crime in the United States and Racial inequality in the American criminal justice system
| 2010. Inmates in adult facilities, by race and ethnicity. Jails, and state and federal prisons.[72] | |||
| Race, ethnicity | % of US population | % of U.S. incarcerated population | National incarceration rate (per 100,000 of all ages) |
| White (non-Hispanic) | 64 | 39 | 450 per 100,000 |
| Hispanic | 16 | 19 | 831 per 100,000 |
| Black | 13 | 40 | 2,306 per 100,000 |
The 2015 US prison population by race, ethnicity, and gender. Does not include jails.[73]

The Civil War Didn’t End Slavery After All
According to the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) in 2018 Black males accounted for 34% of the total male prison population, white males 29%, and Hispanic males 24%.
White females comprised 47% of the prison population in comparison to Black females who accounted for 18% of the female population. The imprisonment rate for Black females (88 per 100,000 Black female residents) was 1.8 times as high as for white females (49 per 100,000 white female residents).
The imprisonment rate for Black males (2,272 per 100,000 Black male residents) was 5.8 times as high as for white males (392 per 100,000 white male residents).









