Crack: Kokain, Korruption und Konspiration
Originaltitel: Crack: Cocaine, Corruption & Conspiracy
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,7/10
4036
IHRE BEWERTUNG
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Crack: Cocaine, Corruption & Conspiracy: Incarceration Rates ansehen
Anfang der 1980er-Jahre wütete in den amerikanischen Innenstädten eine Crack-Epidemie wie ein Tsunami und richtete unglaubliche Zerstörung an.Anfang der 1980er-Jahre wütete in den amerikanischen Innenstädten eine Crack-Epidemie wie ein Tsunami und richtete unglaubliche Zerstörung an.Anfang der 1980er-Jahre wütete in den amerikanischen Innenstädten eine Crack-Epidemie wie ein Tsunami und richtete unglaubliche Zerstörung an.
Carl Hart
- Self - Neuroscientist
- (as Dr. Carl Hart)
Louise 'Weeze' Point
- Self - Former User
- (as Weezy)
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An unflinching study of the '80s inner-city crack epidemic; how a government could manufacture a drug crisis, ignore those suffering and then lock up the addicts when crime skyrocketed. Basically the same response to the AIDS epidemic with the added secret sauce of authoritarianism.
As infuriating as this story is, I loved hearing from these people, and it reframed the problem from a sociological perspective. These communities didn't ask for substance abuse, and they sure as hell didn't deserve punitive measures. Corruption blazed through police departments while medical personnel sold out their patients to law enforcement. Black women were uniquely targeted here, vilified in popular culture and subjected to harsher punishment. Households were destroyed and neighborhoods decimated. Reagan's indifference gave way to Biden's crime bill, and prisons were summarily filled so that white people could sleep easier. It was systemic failure all the way down.
Just like "LA92", I knew this was going to be good and that I'd probably be pissed, it's just the extent that surprised me. It's a sucker-punch but for all of the right reasons, and I'd recommend this in a heartbeat; it's comprehensive, insightful and brutally honest.
As infuriating as this story is, I loved hearing from these people, and it reframed the problem from a sociological perspective. These communities didn't ask for substance abuse, and they sure as hell didn't deserve punitive measures. Corruption blazed through police departments while medical personnel sold out their patients to law enforcement. Black women were uniquely targeted here, vilified in popular culture and subjected to harsher punishment. Households were destroyed and neighborhoods decimated. Reagan's indifference gave way to Biden's crime bill, and prisons were summarily filled so that white people could sleep easier. It was systemic failure all the way down.
Just like "LA92", I knew this was going to be good and that I'd probably be pissed, it's just the extent that surprised me. It's a sucker-punch but for all of the right reasons, and I'd recommend this in a heartbeat; it's comprehensive, insightful and brutally honest.
This documentary is a welcome telling of the history of the crack cocaine epidemic that tries to look behind the obvious violence and misery towards the bigger picture.
Other reviewers appear to have taken objection to more uncomfortable truths - police corruption, inner cities destroyed by Reaganomics, CIA complicity etc - and I can only assume this is because these facts are threatening to their world view.
Admittedly, the film at times seems confused about its thesis but, f you think Nancy Reagan's 'Just Say No' campaign was an adequate response to the horrors that crack visited on already impoverished African-American communities or that Ronald Reagan really made America 'great again', then this documentary is not for you.
If you think that government drug policy has for decades been a hypocritical disaster and that the war on drugs' has achieved nothing except to give self serving politicians a convenient slogan to parrot, then you will probably find it an interesting, if not revelatory, account of a shameful, and still unfinished, chapter in our history.
Other reviewers appear to have taken objection to more uncomfortable truths - police corruption, inner cities destroyed by Reaganomics, CIA complicity etc - and I can only assume this is because these facts are threatening to their world view.
Admittedly, the film at times seems confused about its thesis but, f you think Nancy Reagan's 'Just Say No' campaign was an adequate response to the horrors that crack visited on already impoverished African-American communities or that Ronald Reagan really made America 'great again', then this documentary is not for you.
If you think that government drug policy has for decades been a hypocritical disaster and that the war on drugs' has achieved nothing except to give self serving politicians a convenient slogan to parrot, then you will probably find it an interesting, if not revelatory, account of a shameful, and still unfinished, chapter in our history.
How much money did the Reagan-Bush-Clinton administrations spend on medical treatment for crack addicts, compared to the money spent on criminalizing them and expanding the prison system? It is one of the questions that this film tries to answer, which offers an extensive, but not particularly deep, chronicle of the "war on drugs." The result is interesting, more for the questions it raises than for the answers it offers.
Finally after years of silence an even handed account about this horrific period comes out. I lived this period and saw the devastation, was touched by it. An entire generation - especially of black and brown people - was crippled for life. The side by side comparison of the crack epidemic and the opioid epidemic tell you all you need to know about this nation's attitude toward crime.
A look back at the huge arrival of cocaine in The USA in the early 80's.
Some fascinating and insightful interviews, you'll hear some surprising stories, initially you may be lured into thinking the documentary is spinning you a somewhat rose tinted view of drugs, it quickly changes, giving you a realistic, harsh view.
From a historical point of view, I found this fascinating, stories I genuinely wasn't aware off, plus the routes and ways the drugs were imported into The US. Cover ups, stitch ups, plenty of eye raising moments.
So much hypocrisy, so much intentional and open racism, some of the content is genuinely jaw dropping, Prisons, rules, laws etc.
What's astonishing, is how consecutive administrations have failed to deal with the actual problem, I don't think that any Government have been able to deal with the problem at its core, each new term have just used different sticking plasters.
It was nice to see former users and addicts, that have been able to turn their lives around, and leave crack in the past.
7/10.
Some fascinating and insightful interviews, you'll hear some surprising stories, initially you may be lured into thinking the documentary is spinning you a somewhat rose tinted view of drugs, it quickly changes, giving you a realistic, harsh view.
From a historical point of view, I found this fascinating, stories I genuinely wasn't aware off, plus the routes and ways the drugs were imported into The US. Cover ups, stitch ups, plenty of eye raising moments.
So much hypocrisy, so much intentional and open racism, some of the content is genuinely jaw dropping, Prisons, rules, laws etc.
What's astonishing, is how consecutive administrations have failed to deal with the actual problem, I don't think that any Government have been able to deal with the problem at its core, each new term have just used different sticking plasters.
It was nice to see former users and addicts, that have been able to turn their lives around, and leave crack in the past.
7/10.
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- VerbindungenFeatures Richard Pryor: Live on the Sunset Strip (1982)
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- Crack: Cocaine, Corruption & Conspiracy
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- Chicago, Illinois, USA(location, archive footage)
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- 1 Std. 29 Min.(89 min)
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