• TMP Mixtape
• Memphis Phonk
• B Side Sliced & Shredded by DJ Clak
• C-90
• clear shell, with black coils
• Realtime dubbing
• Hand labeled
• reversible cover
• Limited to 50 Cassettes
Manufactured by Tape Gang / WMF
han(d)ˌkraftəd mixtapes / berlin 2022
Includes unlimited streaming of FUCK THE JUDGE
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Streaming + Download
Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
Note: For newer data on imprisonment rates, please see this 2020 post.
Blacks have long outnumbered whites in U.S. prisons. But a significant decline in the number of black prisoners has steadily narrowed the gap over the past decade, according to new data from the Bureau of Justice Statistics.
Racial and ethnic gaps shrink in U.S. prison populationAt the end of 2017, federal and state prisons in the United States held about 475,900 inmates who were black and 436,500 who were white – a difference of 39,400, according to BJS. Ten years earlier, there were 592,900 black and 499,800 white prisoners – a difference of 93,100.
(This analysis counts only inmates sentenced to more than a year.) The decline in the black-white gap between 2007 and 2017 was driven by a 20% decrease in the number of black inmates, which outpaced a 13% decrease in the number of white inmates.
The gap between white and Hispanic imprisonment also narrowed between 2007 and 2017, but not because of a decrease in Hispanic prisoners. Instead, the number of white prisoners fell while the number of Hispanic inmates increased slightly. At the end of 2017, there were 100,000 more white inmates than Hispanic inmates (436,500 vs. 336,500), down from an inmate difference of 169,400 in 2007 (499,800 white inmates vs. 330,400 Hispanic inmates).
Overall, there were 1,439,808 sentenced prisoners in the U.S. at the end of 2017, or about 6% fewer than the 1,532,851 at the end of 2007. Apart from blacks, whites and Hispanics, these totals include inmates from other races and those from mixed racial and ethnic backgrounds. The figures only count people in federal and state correctional facilities, including those held in privately run prisons that contract with the government; they exclude most inmates held in locally run jails.
Deep shares a collection of beats and instrumentals that reflect his memories of the Lower East Side, pre-gentrification. Bandcamp New & Notable Dec 11, 2015