preview

The House I Live In - Film Analysis

Decent Essays

The film, The House I live In, opened my eyes to the severity of unfair law enforcement and the depths of the battle with war on drugs. Theoretically, the more people are being arrested for drugs, the cheaper, purer, and more available the drugs become. Making these arrests are not helping get the drugs off the streets, it is only opening up more opportunities for other people to pick up the business. For almost 40 years now the longest and most unsuccessful war in the United States has been the war on drugs. Resulting in 45million arrests and $1 trillion dollars in government spending, the war on drugs has been nothing more than a way of income for public officers and other law enforcement officials. The effort behind the war on drugs is solemnly to reduce illegal drug use and trade. This plan includes a set of drug policies that are intended to discourage the production, distribution, and consumption of these popular and wide spread narcotics. The story of Maurice Haltiwanger stuck out to me because of the truth behind why he was in prison serving time for committing crimes that hypothetically he couldn’t help but to commit. Growing up, most kid’s role models are their parents or a close family member. Kids see what that person does and regardless of if that person is ‘good’ or ‘bad’, they want to be just like them. Maurice grew up around gang members and drug dealers, to him that seemed like a normal adult life. How was he supposed to know that what these people were

Get Access