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Slammed: Welcome to the Age of Incarceration
The number first appeared in headlines earlier this year: Nearly one in four of all prisoners worldwide is incarcerated in America. It was just the latest such statistic. Today, one in nine African American men between the ages of 20 and 34 is locked up. In 1970, our prisons held fewer than 200,000 people; now that number exceeds 1.5 million, and when you add in local jails, it's 2.3 million-1 in 100 American adults. Since the 1980s, we've sat by as the numbers inched higher and our prison system ballooned, swallowing up an ever-larger portion of the citizenry. But do statistics like these, no matter how disturbing, really mean anything anymore? What does it take to get us to sit up and notice?
Apparently, it takes a looming financial crisis. For there is another round of bad news, the logical extension of the first: The more money a state spends on building and running prisons, the less there is for everything else, from roads and bridges to health care and public schools. At the pace our inmate population has been expanding, America's prison system is becoming, quite simply, too expensive to sustain. That is why Kansas, Texas, and at least 11 other states have been trying out new strategies to curb the cost-reevaluating their parole policies, for instance, so that not every parolee who runs afoul of an administrative rule is shipped straight back to prison. And yet our infatuation with incarceration continues.
There have been numerous academic studies and policy reports and journalistic accounts analyzing our prison boom, but this phenomenon cannot be fully measured in numbers. That much became apparent to me when, beginning in 2000, I spent nearly four years shadowing a woman who'd just been released from prison. She'd been locked up for 16 years for a first-time drug crime, and her absence had all but destroyed her family. Her mother had taken in her four young children after her arrest, only to die prematurely of kidney failure. One daughter was deeply depressed, the other was seething with rage, and her youngest son had followed her lead, diving into the neighborhood drug culture and then winding up in prison himself.
The criminal justice system had punished not only her but her entire family. How do you measure the years of wasted hours-riding on a bus to a faraway prison, lining up to be scanned and searched and questioned, sitting in a bleak visiting room waiting for a loved one to walk in? How do you account for all the dollars spent on collect calls from prison-calls that can cost at least three times as much as on the outside because the prison system is taking a cut? How do you begin to calculate the lessons absorbed by children about deprivation and punishment and vengeance? How do you end the legacy of incarceration?
This is not to say that nobody deserves to go to prison or that we should release everyone who is now locked up. There are many people behind bars who you would not want as your neighbor, but in our hunger for justice we have lost perspective. We treat 10-year sentences like they're nothing, like that's a soft penalty, when in much of the rest of the world a decade behind bars would be considered extraordinarily severe. This is what separates us from other industrialized countries: It's not just that we send so many people to prison, but that we keep them there for so long and send them back so often. Eight years ago, we surpassed Russia to claim the dubious distinction of having the world's highest rate of incarceration; today we're still No. 1.
If awards were granted to the country with the most surreal punishments, we would certainly win more than our share. Thirty-six straight years in solitary confinement (the fate of two men convicted in connection with the murder of a guard in Louisiana's Angola prison). A 55-year sentence for a small-time pot dealer who carried a gun during his sales (handed down by a federal court in Utah in 2004). Life sentences for 13-year-olds. (In 2005, Human Rights Watch counted more than 2,000 American inmates serving life without parole for crimes committed as juveniles. The entire rest of the world has only locked up 12 kids without hope of release.) Female prisoners forced to wear shackles while giving birth. (Amnesty International found 48 states that permitted this practice as of 2006.) A ban on former prisoners working as barbers (on the books in New York state).
America is expert at turning citizens into convicts, but we've forgotten how to transform convicts back into citizens. In 1994, Congress eliminated Pell grants for prisoners, a move that effectively abolished virtually all of the 350 prison college programs across the country. That might not seem like a catastrophe, until you consider that education has been proven to help reduce recidivism. (This was the conclusion of a recent paper by the Urban Institute, which reviewed 49 separate studies.) As the New York Times' Adam Liptak has pointed out, our prisons used to be models of redemption; de Tocqueville praised them in Democracy in America. Many prisons still call themselves "correctional facilities," but the term has become a misnomer. Most abandoned any pretense of rehabilitation long ago. Former California governor Jerry Brown even went so far as to rewrite the state's penal code to stress that the primary mission of that state's prisons is punishment.
Our cell blocks are packed with men and women who cannot read or write, who never graduated from high school-75 percent of state inmates-who will be hard-pressed to find a job once they are released. Once freed, they become second-class citizens. Depending on the state, they may be denied public housing, student loans, a driver's license, welfare benefits, and a wide range of jobs. Perhaps there is no more damning statistic than the fact that within three years, half will be convicted of a new crime.
Recently, there have been some hopeful signs. In April, the Second Chance Act was finally signed into law; it will provide federal grants to programs that help prisoners reenter society. But our punishment industry-which each year spends millions lobbying federal and state lawmakers-has grown so massive and so entrenched that it will take far more than one piece of legislation to begin to undo its far-reaching effects.
Just look at our felony disenfranchisement laws, which prohibit 5.3 million people from voting-including 13 percent of African American men. These numbers actually underestimate the scope of the problem, as many ex-prisoners believe they cannot vote even if they can. And so the legacy of our prison boom continues: We've become a two-tier society in which millions of ostensibly free people are prohibited from enjoying the rights and privileges accorded to everyone else-and we continue to be defined by our desire for punishment and revenge, rather than by our belief in the power of redemption.
Jennifer Gonnerman is the author of Life on the Outside: The Prison Odyssey of Elaine Bartlett, which was a finalist for the 2004 National Book Award. Her work has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, New York, Mother Jones, The Nation, Newsday, and many other publications.
© 2008 Mother Jones
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37 Comments so far
Show AllIt just amazes me how Americans think it is their holy duty to spread their great values to the world. Just the lack of universal health care, attacks by government on unions and the prison population make me cringe that we in Australia would contemplate following.
Yes, we have one of the most punitive "justice" systems in the world. Writing a check with insufficient funds, possession of a miniscule amount of drugs, even use of a disabled placard by a driver when the disabled person is not in the vehicle--have made felons fo countless people, who frequently have no idea what the penalties are. The sentences are appalling, and they face exclusion from education, housing and employment because of more laws that continue to punish ex-offenders for the rest of their lives.
Why even bother to call them ex-offenders?
What depresses me most is the incredible apathy the populace has in this state of affairs. Worse than apathy, is a sick mindset that justifies destruction of millions of lives as if it were the fault of each single individual who made bad "choices." More psycho-babble about "consequences" is sure to follow. Of course, this view is historically, economically and ethically blind, and serves only to justify the crimes of the propertied class against the poor.
The prison system now is the repository for the poor, homeless, mentally ill, and marginalized people of every race. It has replaced and keeps out of public sight millions who would otherwise fill the hospitals, homeless shelters and vanishing SRO's and flophouses. It is a disgrace that we hide our failure and shame in prisions for profits of the worst kind.
We will reap what we have sown.
Some call the merging of government and corporate power in America fascism lite. The lite part is only temporary if privatization of the government continues apace. There is Blackwater and other private military and private prisons and plans to link prisons with military bases to use what is virtually slave labor. What is not metioned in this article is the fact that over 1.7 million of these US prisoners are being used as labor for corporations at a fraction of the cost it would be to hire new employees. This is big business turning citizens into slaves. They will not quit. It is far too profitable.
To understand the stunning number of incarcerated in the US (far larger in actual numbers than 400% more populous and undemocratic state of China), it is only necessary to understand the deep attachment the US has to the utterly triumphalist version of the brutal economic system call "capitalism".
Many countries that have managed, as a society, to reign in these most brutal aspects, I admire them. But looking at the trends, I fear the capitalists will triumph there in the end too.
Was it Tolstoy who said that a society can be judged by it's prisons?
Fyodor Dostoevsky 'The degree of civilization in a society can be judged by entering its prisons.'
To finish my thought above, in addition to the profit motive and control of disenfranchised minorities and poor people, what enables the incarceration state is a pernicious philosophy peddled by the neo-con and neo-liberals alike promoting "personal responsibility" as the only cause and only solution to social ills.
Who can argue that individuals should not take responsibility for their behavior? It is such self-evident proposition, none dare to oppose it, and it has been adopted by a long list of "leaders" including Barack Obama.
But the real message is that only the choices of individuals (especially poor and black) are fair game, and the choices of the wealthy, the corporations and the government that boldly defies the public will, are more acts of nature than man, and immune to criticism or correction.
Who will prosecute, punish and detain the irresponsible and psychopathic choices of the powerful?
We must return to a state of mind where the bad choices of government and corporations, which cause the greatest harm, are subject to correction by the people, not the other way around.
Most of our fellow "citizens", if you were to ask them, believe that if you are arrested, you must have done something wrong. "Innocent until proven guilty" means nothing to them. If the police arrested you, you're guilty of something, even if it isn't the crime you are charged with. If you are innocent of the crime, well you probably did something else that equally deserves punishment, but just haven't been caught before.
Also, check out your neighbors' attitudes about prison rape. Not only is it accepted, most people actually expect it and think it's a justifiable part of your punishment. Emphasis on punishment, as "rehabilitation" and "education" are just a wast of taxpayer money.
God, I hate living with a sick society of beasts unworthy of the sacrifices so many have made to give us liberty and freedom. I would not lift a finger to defend this place if the hordes of Genghis Khan returned to burn, pillage, loot, and rape from sea to shining sea.
Amen to that, and may the USA die before it realizes its dream of world domination. Who ever thought this country would be inferior in everything except torture, murder, and oppression.
You are right of course. This country is corrupt thru and thru in all levels of organized government and law enforcement.
We have the Novak hit and run currently to cite as an example. He should have been charged with hit and run, leaving the scene of an accident, and vehicular assault. He got a $50 ticket for failure to yield that the police didn't witness, how could they cite in that manner and not be breaking the law themselves?!
Rush Limbaugh and Nicole Bush are 2 more examples. Both should be in federal prisons like any other middle class person would be for perscription fraud.
This is a failed state.
This is a rogue nation.
This is an unlawful administration, congress and justice dept.
The right to bear arms.
The right to bear arms.
The right to bear arms.
Was meant for this case.
Students arrested for trying to make a citizens arrest on Rove.
The right to bear arms.
The right to bear arms.
Do it.
"Private Companies in the United States operate 264 correctional facilities, housing almost 99,000 adult offenders."
Let's call it 100K at an average of $30,000 per inmate per year: that's $30 million per year. It's no wonder why, in spite of a decade of dropping crime rates, the prison pop continues to grow, and sentences continue to lengthen. The profiteers need more "product" and longer "shelf-lifes."
"The Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) and The GEO Group are major contributors to the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), a Washington, D.C. based public policy organization that develops model legislation that advances tough-on-crime legislation and free-market principles such as privatization."
IOW, they bribe and lobby our so-called Gov reps for more "product" and longer "shelf-lifes."
Here's the sicker part: "Past co-chairs of the Criminal Justice Task Force have included Brad Wiggins, then Director of Business Development at CCA and now a Director of Customer Relations..."
Roll that around in your head... Director of Customer Relations for the private prison lobby... and who might said customers be again?
Baa... baa...
redrooster:
I regret that I agree this sick society is indefensible, and I only wish I knew how to stop providing tax revenue (without going to prison) to promote it's detestible policies.
Lulled by NBC / MTV / HBO and FOX, our ignorant populace has internalized the perspective of their oppressors to such an extent they wield the knife that presses to their own throats.
It is amusing the see the protests of people who support the carceral state, when they find themselves at the receiving end, visiting family members in prison, or looking out from behind the bars. Oh, their cries for justice then.
It's only natural this thread topic moves from incarceration to war crimes to empire, since this is all part of a fabric. And the whole cloth is the desperate thrashings of a declining empire to sustain its domination, but expending its energies instead by cannabilizing the wealth, resources and people to the benefit of a parasitic cabal of evil money-changers.
The parasites are stripping the carcass and will flee anywhere the money can take them. We will be left to survive in the ruins
. . . and throw away the key.
redrooster (12:41 pm), I had pretty much the same thoughts when I read the article.
Except for a distant cousin who made headlines for a non-violent crime, I must admit that I and my "respectable" middle-class relatives haven't been incarcerated or imprisoned. (Yet.)
But I regularly encounter people in my work who've run afoul of the law, and been "put into the System". Even minor crimes like retail theft or drug possession can impede employability; now that corporate employment mandates peeing into a cup and authorizing draconian background checks, it's virtually impossible for a person to truly put a criminal conviction behind them.
Even if an employer's policy permits hiring of persons with relatively minor criminal records, the applicant is all too tempted to falsify questions about criminal history on employment applications and during interviews. Once it catches up to them, they're fired because of their dishonesty.
Two more steps backwards, and that much rockier of a path to take a step forward.
But the self-righteous, small-minded, self-centered hostility you describe is an easy opinion to hold, especially if one has never suffered the consequences of joining the criminal and post-criminal underclass. The letters to the editor page of the Philadelphia Daily News is like a petri dish upon which such opinions are frequently and fervently voiced by pious, under-educated, ignorant, judgemental, ruthless lumpenprole bacteria.
No, on further thought, it's not only those who have NEVER suffered the consequences of being imprisoned; their ranks include a fortunate few who have been busted, but were able to become successfully rehabilitated for idiosyncratic reasons. Like children of immigrants who buy into repressive attitudes, there are those who preach that if THEY could work and sacrifice to successfully adapt, ANYONE can. And should. And if they don't, it must be either their own fault, or misguided leniency and enabling by authorities.
This "salt of the earth" crowd, as they doubtless consider themselves, is so corrosive that the prospects of reform and conviviality melt and wither under their toxic influence.
As Old Lodge Skins noted ruefully in "Little Big Man", when Jack Crabbe expressed his angst at the unstoppable invasion of US soldiers and settlers: "There is an endless supply of white men. There has always been a limited number of human beings."
People in jail for nothing?Let's see,in my area,2 had sex with a child below the age of 10,one beat a woman half to death.one killed a woman,one would have gone gone to jail but he committed suicide.He set a truck on fire and when they came to put the fire out.He shot a 22 year old fireman as he got out of the truck,the kid died instantly.The only 13 year old who went to jail around here kidnapped and raped a 6 year old.He almost killed her.Redrooster,what would you want to happen if someone raped your daughter?
Agreed. But let's save some prison room for Bush and his neocronies.
So far no one brought up the odd fact that Americans consider themselves to be religious. I don't have the statistics in front of me, but the US suffers from a high dose of religiosity, and while the vast majority identify with Jesus (I mean isn't that what CHRISTianity is purported to be for and about?) and his teachings were all about mercy and compassion, note the attraction to the punitive dictates of the Old Testament, instead.
As George Lakoff pointed out, those raised in strict father-centered (head of) families tend to gravitate towards a conservative philosophy, while those raised in nurturing family systems tend to be more liberal. It seems to me that just as lots of middle class and lower-middle class workers are venting their rage at the limitations of their lives (caused by the elites) at immigrants, so, too do those who lead lives of quiet desperation find a measure of satisfaction when they compare their lots with those serving time.
So long as the hierarchy rather than the democratic circle is chosen as a basis for governing rationales, there will always be someone to throw rocks at, so that those who have no other power, can miss the TRUE target. I believe this also explains the Roman arena like sewer that modern US entertainment simulates, and why people go to see torture films.
That is why Kansas, Texas, and at least 11 other states have been trying out new strategies to curb the cost-reevaluating their parole policies, for instance, so that not every parolee who runs afoul of an administrative rule is shipped straight back to prison.
What? An admission that Texas tries progressive paths? I'm delighted!
Siouxrose July 26th, 2008 4:03 pm
"It seems to me that just as lots of middle class and lower-middle class workers are venting their rage at the limitations of their lives (caused by the elites) at immigrants,"
I don't see any rage at immigrants anywhere I've been. Haven't heard of any. Frankly I don't know why you think the "elites" would try to encourage rage at immigrants. Makes no sense to me.
It's absolutely terrible, this ugly, vindictive mindset that our politicians get elected on (the "I'm tough on crime--LOCK THEM UP!!" mantra all politicians parrot), and the prison-industrial complex that thrives by bankrolling "tough on crime" politicians to pass more "3 strikes yer out" laws that turn more citizens into prisoners to then create the need to build yet more prisons to be manned by prison guards employed by large corporate security conglomerates, etc, etc. Yep, folks, we're in deep doo-doo with a system that is now consuming our own...for profit's sake! :D
You can thank the National Rifle Association for the prison population. In the eighties, the NRA sought (and has succeeded) in convincing legislators that criminals are the problem and not guns.
But, that is too simplistic. But, it makes for perfect politics. Lock em up has replaced sound reform.
The left wing got snukered into going after guns to the exclusion of a well rounded public policy. But, the gun was an easy target.
Hey, redrooster,
Have you noticed that the evil done to prisoners is justified by the Christian church, too?
You would think that those bastards running the Christian church would have more compassion for those in prison.
In fact, they love Christ on the Cross, too. He must have done something wrong. :-)
The only 3 strikes I support is molesting children,The 3rd time you do it you get life.
Cripes, you have made some excellent posts here.
Here, where I live, you can be jailed for having overdue library books. You can be jailed for being behind in child support. You can be jailed for having unpaid traffic violations (old, unpaid DUI's). When did our prison system become a debtors prison?
Do the math. How much does a past due library book, DUI fine, etc. really cost as compaired to the cost of incarceration.
hoytdouglas July 26th, 2008 6:05 pm wrote:
"You can thank the National Rifle Association for the prison population. In the eighties, the NRA sought (and has succeeded) in convincing legislators that criminals are the problem and not guns."
As much as I detest the NRA, it's clear that the federal war on (some) drugs is primarily responsible for the massive increase in incarceration in the US.
lauraj400 July 26th, 2008 3:06 pm wrote:
"The only 13 year old who went to jail around here kidnapped and raped a 6 year old."
and
"The only 3 strikes I support is molesting children,The 3rd time you do it you get life."
I disagree. In the first place, a 13-year-old who rapes a 6-year-old is obviously in need of treatment. And yes, in some cases, he (it's usually a boy) should be committed to custody for a long stretch, perhaps indefinitely, until we better understand how to deal with predators whose primary goal is inflicting suffering on the weak or powerless, rather than merely modelling behaviour they see on TV or at home (or in the juvenile lockup - you would not believe the abuse in such places).
Many of these young males have histories of head injury or other disorders, like fetal alcohol syndrome. We don't understand or know how to deal with those very effectively in the community yet, or rather, we choose not to spend the money even on what does work, but I would agree that leaving 6-year-olds at risk is unacceptable.
However, as you yourself say, these heinous examples are pretty exceptional. But what about the 13-year-old boy whose "victim" is his willing 11-year-old female classmate? There are literally thousands of adolescent boys in long-term lockup in the States for nothing more.
Betcha a tenner there are dozens from your own community, if it numbers in the hundreds, hundreds if it numbers in the thousands, and thousands if it numbers in the millions. Betcha. You probably just don't know about it, BECAUSE it happens all the time.
The US federal government's goals with respect to minimum/mandatory sentencing and raising kids to adult court have little to do with public safety or the welfare of children and everything to do with emasculating the judiciary.
I'm maybe not as articulate or expansive as I could be because I'm in a hurry to go out, and unfortunately CD's format discourages extended dialog, but do a little research, and if decide you owe me that tenner, please donate it to a well-regarded youth diversion or rehab program in your community.
Appealing to your fear of domestic crime, they get you to pay for prisons. Appealing to your fear of foreign terrorists they get you to pay for invasions/occupations. Appealing to your fear of foreign empires they get you to fund world's most monstrous military. Appealing to your fear of immigrants, they get you to fund a 1000 mile wall. Appealing to your fear of road rage, they get you to buy a gas-guzzling SUV. Appealing to your fear of disease/death, they get you to buy $6000/year health insurance. Appealing to your fear of destitution, they get you to spend $40,000 on college.
"Apparently, it takes a looming financial crisis. For there is another round of bad news, the logical extension of the first: The more money a state spends on building and running prisons, the less there is for everything else, from roads and bridges to health care and public schools. At the pace our inmate population has been expanding, America's prison system is becoming, quite simply, too expensive to sustain."
That goes much more for military spending. Spending priorities are screwed up in just about every area now.
The latest frenzy seems to be catching 'sexual predators' of all types, especially with 'decoys' enticing people (primarily male) over the internet.
Yep, better keep building them jails. If the economy continues to tank, while the social safety net shrinks, we can expect crime to skyrocket.
Prisons are the corporate answer to modern American society's call for a 'social safety net'. Housing, full-time employment, universal healthcare, meals and meds are paid for by middle class tax dollars while a handful of Wall Street investors reap huge profits.
I'm surprised that nobody has mentioned how the penal system is America's primary method of dealing with the mentally ill, those without health insurance because in a for-profit health care system their mental illness makes them uninsurable, or in our peculiarly Calvinistic society mental illness isn't seen as a public health issue, but as an individual moral failing of some sort (therefore your fault, and worthy of punishment); take a look at your policy (if you're fortunate enough to be able to afford one) and note the wide disparity of coverage between medical and psychological treatment coverage.
Under Reagan, state mental health facilities were closed, purportedly to be supplanted by community mental health centers. Of course, Congress never allocated sufficient funding for that to happen (sadly the mentally ill are too impoverished to form a PAC and buy a few Congressmen), so hundreds of thousands were turned out on the streets to fend for themselves. Those who didn't fall victim to sociopathic predators (who get early parole to make room in prisons for mandatory-sentenced nonviolent drug offenders) or die of exposure or disease eventually end up in our penal system, to be warehoused and preyed upon by those who REALLY belong there; out of sight, out of mind.
Bedlam was progressive, compassionate, and humane compared to modern America.
This is from a previous comment of mine here about a different article, same subject:
As a teacher for almost 17 years, in what used to be called "The Youth Authority" in a U.S. state, housing convicted male felons 18 to 25 years of age, I can emphatically agree with this writer.
For every inch education moved most of these young men towards a useful productive possibility, the combined efforts of the educational leadership and the corrosive effects of sub-standard correctional officers of a brutal mindset and the laughable, living unit counselors (an alias for correctional officer) eradicated daily that inch and six more just like it.
The best a teacher could hope for is a connection not being an authoritarian, but as a parent might hope to do. Sliding the education in through a studied moment of their willing reception to it.
I am a firm believer in small group incarceration/rehabilitation without the Gestapo mentality of most guards, correctional officers, for the 80% or more who are not violent offenders.
Sex offenders are in a whole league where even the rest of the prison population finds beyond taboo. Very damn few are able to surmount their deficiencies to not recommit. Some experts say none are able. Nothing, short of "male reduction" will prevent recidivism.
The year before I retired was the worst of my career. I had to report allegations of sexual contact with "wards" against a correctional officer I liked as a human being because he wasn't a Gestapo guard.
As a teacher, I have a legal and moral obligation to report any abuse on a child, minor student, or ward of the state that I witness or hear viable allegations. There was no way I could not report what I was told. There were too many coinciding events that were arranged while the ward(s) were my students. Too many linking phone calls requesting the same ward(s) to go to a particular location for a work detail, usually an empty classroom.
I was required to tell the sordid story up through the bureaucracy. After I retired I was subpoenaed to testify with him sitting across the table from me. I had no problem looking directly at him without averting my eyes.
He had made insinuations of what I could expect from the guard culture prior to his being quietly put on administrative leave. It was just one more uncomfortable fact in an already intolerable, professional environment governed by a collective stupidity by intent. A female living unit counselor had been murdered a few years before by a ward who had been a student of mine and whom I wrote documents on and were ignored.
The karma was building up around too much bad water. The day I left, retired, two of my friends, also teachers, just walked out with me and never went back. They both managed to coerce a medical, or disability, retirement out of the state.
I add a further twist to the story which has come to my attention. Because of the way that student loans are currently set up, it is very possible for mixed up young people to acquire funds which then cause them to be targets of the drug world - something like the way that credit cards have been so easy to get. It is an entrapment which I believe is sucking in more and more vulnerable segments of society, who are given huge checks, and then are preyed upon and become victims of their own fragile hopes to gain thereby a better education. And into the prison system they go, having further lost the chance to get an education, being further in debt, and in the throes of addiction.
This way of using education as a lure is at the very least stupid, and at the height it is criminally evil. It is exactly like the big tobacco companies targeting their products towards children.
After reading all these posts, I am "speechless." How can we even begin to correct any of this?
Hoyt,With the 3 strikes,I WAS talking about I want it applied to men in their 20s,30s and 40s.Never kids.In the case of the 13 and the 11 year old,no cops.But the parents should sit the kids down and tell them that that is something kids their age don't do.
Good posts: DOLL, RT DRURY & PEDRAIG.
DOLL: The fellow I date went to jail for back child support. My heart goes out to him because as a union carpenter living in a "right to work" state, the union protections do NOT apply and he goes weeks without union jobs. Therefore his income is variable and he lives in constant anxiety over the fact he could be put in jail if he gets behind. It's just awful. The amount he was court-ordered to pay was based on his NY wages which were almost tripple what he makes here in Florida. I plan to write a humorous script to bring attention to this conundrum of modern US economics. Sometimes I feel like "Jessica Fletcher" in that what I write comes to be... and sure enough, I had the title selected for this work and it just happened! Scary.
DogLeg July 27th, 2008 9:07 am
Good post. I have been struck that being a guard or a correctional officer requires no training here. At least in Texas.
I remember an article about Japan and being struck with how much training they had to have just to get the job.
I also believe the three strikes law has been proved to be the idiot law it is. Why even have judges.
Hey everybody:
I was born in the very early 1950s and my Dad was a military professional: a lifer.
As a result, I grew up on or near military bases until 18.
I do remember all of the anti-Soviet, or anti-Chicom propaganda that was drummed into me.
Almost all of the political unfreedoms and abuses that this anticommunist propaganda dramatized as to why these soviet socities were evil have slowly become predominate within US society.
A funny aside, when growing up on (or near) military bases, I was repeatedly told that whatever social benefits soviet-style societies gave to their citizens/comrades, the horrible lack of political freedoms did not make up for the guaranteed low-quality social security system: food, shelter, employment and medical care.
Of course, the US elite are establishing a similar soviet-style police state while cutting back on social guarantees that are even rise up to the "low quality" social benefits that a soviet citizen was entitled to.
In fact, in many ex-soviet societies, the above social quarantees now are viewed with nostalgia and desire.
T. More,
It is the same in California...H.S. diploma and a BAD attitude, as in the stereotype, "I'm a bad dude. See this badge." Much like most fucking cops.
You see. At one time in my life I actually took cops one at a time, like any other human. I have have actually stopped my car in heavy traffic to aid an officer cleaning up some junk that had fallen all over the highway. No one else stopped, it was a very hot day, and it only took two minutes. He was very appreciative and acted like a civilized human being. That was the only time a cop was civil to me. No more. Any contact I have had has always been negative, not because I was breaking a law, but because their attitudes have changed. I think they have a "seige mentality." I think they know everybody hates their guts because of the last eight years.
I've had the thought for some time that if Michael Moore is looking for a new project, or wanted to fund one, then American prisons would sure be a good topic to select.
Moore has already done war and health care quite well. I can't think of anything more important to focus on now than the American prison system.
- JV