The numbers don’t lie, but they do cry. As I pored over the “Uneven Scales” report late last night, highlighter in hand, coffee growing cold, I found myself returning to one haunting question: How have we failed so completely, so consistently, for so long?
The report reads like a thriller you can’t put down, except this isn’t fiction, it’s the lived reality of Indigenous and African Caribbean Canadians. What we’re witnessing is a carefully constructed system of inequity that operates with terrifying efficiency.
Let’s be clear about what we’re facing: African/Caribbean Canadians are significantly overrepresented at every stage of the criminal justice process. From street checks to sentencing, the system is calibrated differently when African bodies are involved. The data shows what our communities have felt for generations; racial profiling is standard operating procedure.
What keeps me up at night is the fact African/Caribbean individuals face harsher sentences for the same crimes, when bail is denied more frequently, when alternatives to incarceration are rarely offered, we’re dismantling families.
I sat with Angela, a mother whose son has been in pretrial detention for 14 months awaiting trial. “He’s missed birthdays, holidays, graduations,” she told me, her voice steady but her hands trembling. “Whatever happened to innocent until proven guilty?”
The report connects these dots we have long suspected. Higher rates of poverty, unemployment, and housing instability create pathways to prison. When quality education and employment opportunities remain out of reach, the justice system becomes less a safety net and more a spider’s web.
Our youth are particularly vulnerable. They enter the school-to-prison pipeline earlier, face disciplinary actions more frequently, and encounter law enforcement at rates that would shock any reasonable person. By the time they reach adulthood, many have already internalized what the system apparently believes: they are suspects first, citizens second.
What the “Uneven Scales” report makes painfully clear is that this isn’t an African/Caribbean problem, it’s a Canadian problem. When justice isn’t blind, but instead peeks through one eye, checking skin color before administering consequences, we all live in a diminished society.
The solutions proposed are neither simple, nor quick, but they are possible. The report calls for systemic reforms that would: eliminate racial profiling, ensure judicial accountability, and provide proper anti-racism training. It advocates for community-based solutions that empower rather than punish.
What gives me hope is seeing the resilience of Black-led organizations already doing this work: creating restorative justice programs, supporting youth, building pathways to success despite systemic barriers. They are not waiting for permission to save their communities.
The “Uneven Scales” report is a mirror held up to Canada’s justice system, reflecting back uncomfortable truths we can no longer ignore. The question now isn’t whether we’ll act, but how quickly, and whether we’ll finally learn what previous generations tried to teach us: justice delayed is justice denied, and justice denied to some is ultimately justice denied to all.