< Back to News

Test Page for Quiz Creation - Question Goes Here

April 03, 2026

Answer: No — some communities were targeted more.

The tough-on-crime era did not fall equally on all Americans. While the War on Drugs was framed as a national effort to reduce crime, its enforcement was heavily concentrated in Black and Brown communities — communities that were publicly labeled as dangerous and drug-addicted by politicians and media alike. That narrative provided cover for dramatically higher rates of policing, arrest, and incarceration in those neighborhoods, even though drug use rates were similar across racial groups.

The result was devastating and unequal. Black Americans were incarcerated at roughly five times the rate of white Americans. Families were separated. Generational wealth and stability were disrupted. And the communities most harmed had the least power to shape the policies being used against them.

Understanding this history isn't about assigning blame — it's about making sure we don't repeat it.

The future starts with a dream.
The future starts with us.
A woman laughing
Dream.org Logo
Dream.Org - 1630 San Pablo Avenue, 4th Floor, Oakland, CA 94612, USA
Show your support and help fuel our work.
DONATE NOW
crosschevron-down