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War Hero Tackles US Over Degrading Prison Conditions
Dumping grounds for drug addicts, the mentally ill and petty thieves exposed by Democrat senator
Few United States senators have a more unusual CV than Virginia's Jim Webb. He's a Democrat who was once a Republican and served as Navy Secretary under Ronald Reagan. He's a decorated Vietnam veteran and the highly successful author of Fields of Fire, which is said by many to be the best novel ever written about that war. When he made his senate bid in 2006, his Republican opponent ran adverts criticising some explicit sexy passages in other Webb works. Now he is embarked on perhaps his most improbable mission: the senior senator, from one of the toughest law-and-order states, wants to restore humanity, and proportionality, to the punishment of criminals.
All the focus, right now, is on reforming the US healthcare system. Think prisons, and you think Guantanamo Bay, and the bizarre debate over whether the transfer of its inmates to the mainland would see alleged Islamist terrorists burst out of fearsome maximum-security jails such as Florence, Colorado, and run amok across the Rockies.
When it comes to sending people to jail, America is the undisputed world champion. In 1970, a mere 200,000 people were behind bars. Last year, 2.3 million were held in federal, state and county prisons, more than 1 per cent of all adults in the US and five times the international average. Blacks, predictably, bear the brunt of this compulsion to incarcerate, accounting for 40 per cent of the prison population. This punishment industry gives work to more than two million, more even than the 1.7 million employed in higher education.
The establishments themselves hide behind bureaucratic euphemisms such as the phrase "Department of Corrections". In reality, US prisons are hideously overcrowded breeding grounds for crime, and dumping grounds for drug addicts and the mentally ill: "America's default mental health institutions", as one expert described them. Precious little "correcting" goes on. Of the 700,000 men and women who are released each year, two-thirds are back in jail within three years. As Webb puts it: "Either we are the most evil people on earth, or we're doing something wrong." You don't have to subscribe to the country's spiritually exalted view of itself to know which.
The vast majority of those behind bars pose no threat to society; most inmates in state prisons have been convicted of non-violent offences, mainly related to drugs or property. The colossal growth in prisoner numbers can be traced to the collapse of inner cities and the urban rioting of the late 1960s, the futile "war on drugs", an over-rigid parole system - and, of course, politicians' awareness that nothing wins elections like being tough on law and order.
Back in 1988, the elder George Bush used the infamous Willie Horton case to brand Michael Dukakis, his Democratic presidential opponent, soft on crime. In 1994, California became the first state to pass a "Three Strikes and You're Out" bill; within a year, 24 states had followed in an effort to target violent repeat offenders. Instead they led to nonsenses (upheld by the Supreme Court, no less) such as the sentencing of one recidivist to 25 years to life for stealing a bag of golf clubs. No less pernicious are the minimum-sentencing requirements imposed by many states, which force judges to send people to prison unnecessarily, or for too long.
And so a vicious cycle has set in, whereby the country locks up ever more people for ever less serious offences, at ever greater expense, with ever less resources for rehabilitation.
Common sense - with the help of a firm shove from economic reality - may finally be making a comeback and, as ever, California is setting the example. It's not that the place has gone soft on crime: the Golden State is still planning a new death row facility, even though no one has been executed there since 2006. It's simply that conditions in California's prisons have become untenable, with some operating at 300 per cent of capacity, where violence is endemic, and lockdowns are often the only practical means of keeping order.
Now a panel of federal judges has stepped in, ordering Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to come up with a plan by mid-September to cut the prison population by a quarter, or 40,000, over the next two years.
If Webb has his way, as California goes, so goes the nation. This spring, the Virginia senator introduced the National Criminal Justice Commission Act of 2009. Assuming Congress passes the measure, a top-level body will be established to conduct a review of the US sentencing and prison system, in which nothing would be off-limits, even drug decriminalisation. Only when the commission has submitted its recommendations would lawmakers be in a position to act. And even then, they may not. America's prisons may be falling apart but many Congressmen will not dare suggest less means more in the fight against crime. Unless of course, you've got the bipartisan war-hero credentials of Jim Webb.
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14 Comments so far
Show AllLong over due for this stupid hard ass country.
The...prison industrial complex...is the employer of choice in rural Amerika
Does anything make sense in the US????
I'll give Webb credit where it's due on both prison reform and a subtle way to end the phony war on drugs. I wished he'd carry through elsewhere but what to ask these politicians any more?
Could we just quietly slink away from the war on drugs as we did in Vietnam.
We don't have to admit we lost. Crimminality breeds poverty and arbitrary drug laws make otherwise law abiding citizens wards of the state at great expense.
Current drug enforcement reminds me of the 25mph speed limit in front of the mayors house being dropped to 5 mph.
Twenty five was ineffective so they ingeniusly thought hey 5mph will make more citizens compliant plus anyone caught going 25 will get that extra charge of exceeding the limit by 20 mph and increasing revenue.
Holy crap if people want to take drugs they should be able to do so on their own private property... and be ready to cite me for a moving violation as I "jog" in excess of 5mph.
Hey Mr Webb, it's not and either/or proposition as you stated, rather it is both: you are the most evil people on earth and you are doing something wrong! Terribly wrong! Terribly evil! May God: Brahma, Vishnu, Jehova, Buddha, Allah, Wotan, Apollo, Don, Zeus, Thor etc.etc. save america from the dark pit of evil that it has descended into.
The REALLY annoying thing about this is that the article is from a UK paper, not from anywhere in the US itself. We won't see anything related to this topic in our own papers or on the MSM. It's a loss to the for profit boys if we actually stop screwing up people for nothing. They only get paid when they get to ruin people's lives for money.
In addition to the war on drugs, the riots, and the need for politicians to play on fear, he could have mentioned the stagnant wages and non-existent jobs as adding further to the ridiculously high imprisonment numbers.
WASTED PRISON TIME
Sending a non dangerous person to prison not only unnecessarily burdens the taxpauers, it generates more dangerous people.
One recent exalmple is the ten month prison sentence handed to the Pilot of the Cosco Busan for the Nov 2007 San Francisco Bay oil spill. This will not make society safer. Nor will it deter this type of incident, after all he has experienced.
Instead it will burden the taxpayers for his subsistance, while adding to the hardships already experienced by his family. If more punishment were warranted, a rational fine, which does not pose these adverse consequences, would be the only logical punitive action.
I am not sure that a "Vietnam War Hero"--who was a 'Republican' but now a 'Democrat', under Reagan no less, served in the Navy at THE 'secretary' 'level'. Now--- he is a Senator from Virginia and 'has the answers'---to the problems, that if nothing else, he was 'present' when they were 'thunked up' by those 'Reaganites' (almost sounds biblical don't it?)
I managed a Prison Ministry for Native Americans for a brief time, in the years when the Reagan era program to 'fill em up' started.
The reason that the prison system has grown to the level it has is that there 'used to be big money in it' for the 'keepers' of the Prisons. Even to the point that there are at lest one company on the Stock Exchange, and publicly held, that IS a 'private prison provider'.
The 'system' has been the 'hatchery/nursery' for many "Gang Organizations". They have become a powerful force in the criminal 'world' and have even infiltrated the Federal System. These are 'gangs' but they mostly consider themselves 'family' and their criminal activities know no limits. They would be 'released' into an already depressed economy that has seen a rise in criminal activity. The Drug Cartel of the Southern Border gets most of its arms and ammunition from the USA--so these 'professional and violent criminals' would simply get out, arm up , and 'go outside to play'. They could make the Drug Cartel members look like 'amateur's'.
To 'close down' the prisons--and/or release these professional criminals, on an already taxed economic system such as America has become would be a major mistake without some very INTELLIGENT and diligent planning and implementation. Please name two times those requirements have come together in American history---or even one.
But then, there is this to consider.
Without that it could mean that the 'low class, 'uneducated' and violent professional criminals' might have a better chance to take control of much of America.
This of course would take the same 'control of America' OUT of the 'control' of the 'high class college educated non-violent professional criminals' who have been running things since the Reagan era.
So which do you want America?
High class or low class professional criminals, roaming around, 'armed' or otherwise 'abetted' taking control of so much of your money and 'other stuff'.
At least the 'educated high class professional criminals' don't drive around with their 'brother CEOs' 'doin drive bys'---'an shootin stuff up'' ya know?"
"America, you have directly and indirectly caused the streets of others to run red with blood mostly of the innocents, and you did it for profit. You may now cause your own to do the same---for the 'lack' of the same".
Good Luck America, you really really need it
It would be a big step in the right direction if this country would finally end the futilely barbaric “War on Drugs” that has been going on so long and at such a high price in both money and human suffering. The most practical way to reduce the prison population would be to first end the prohibition on marijuana and then set free any person serving time for simple possession or possession with intent to sell. If doing this doesn’t empty the prisons enough, start letting loose any and all people serving time for these two charges with regards to any and all recreational drugs.
Drugs are not always a problem to individuals or the general public. They’re at least no worse than the socially acceptable drugs such as tobacco or alcohol. When they do become a problem, this should be treated as a mental health issue rather than a criminal issue.
This is a no brainer in my opinion especially in light of the fact that marijuana has so many positive attributes that could be utilized by our society. It is one of the most useful plants in the world and legalizing it could create many employment opportunities in an economy starving for opportunities. Marijuana has many uses and potential uses that are just waiting to be discovered.
I don’t smoke or drink or indulge in any mind altering substance. I’m just tired of watching this country that supposedly prides itself on freedom being so blatantly imprisoned by corporate entities of all sorts, not the least of which includes Big Pharma, and the Corporate Prison Complex, their lobbyists and corrupt beyond ignorance politicians who, if they had any sense, would ascribe to a saner and more pragmatic approach to the problems they create by the laws they make.
The really good thing about this article is the probable relative accuracy of the statistics it contains, one of which I had not read about before:
"Of the 700,000 men and women who are released each year, two-thirds are back in jail within three years."
So much for "rehabilitation." Instead, to me it looks as though the prison system is an addiction, but for whom? Perhaps a more perverted form of Stockholm Syndrome, where The Prisoner feels more secure on the Inside than the outside.
After all, American soldiers are re-enlisting because the REAL unemployment rate in the U.S. is closer to 20 per cent than to 10 per cent, at least there is a LITTLE health care on the Inside, and the lousy food is free. (I know, I've been there...)
On the other side of the equation are the for-profit prisons. For decades the unions fought this concept for all the reasons Rupert Cornwall cites above or else makes implicit. We need to CRIMINALIZE for-profit prisons. It is that simple.
Cure for the Great Recession: Draft all the Prisoners. In California alone that would save several hundred millions.
Oops. That would put all the guards and paperpushers out of work. Well then, draft them. Oops, they are 60 per cent overweight or obese and suffer from a host of health-care issues not the least being diabetes. And their "health insurance" is probably better than what the military offers (har har).
Ooops. Let's not change anything. We have the best of all possible worlds, right Mr. President?
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The whole prison system is big business and rotten to the core. It's good to finally read that at least one politician is taking it on, and is willing to risk being labeled "soft on crime."
If this "top-level body" ever does get established, the "to-do" list will be a long one. One reform that should be at the top of the list is to ban the use of solitary confinement. The brains of people kept in isolation actually begin to break down, and it constitutes one of the worst forms of torture. Indeterminate sentences likewise should be banned. Prisoners should have a basic right to know the length of their sentences, and denying them that is another form of psychological torture.
The jail food is lousy- I'll give you that! I wouldn't feed it to a dog if I had any other choice.
The US has indeed sunk to a miserable low. Prison Nation. 1% if all citizens! The obesity epidemic and the prison epidemic both seem to date from about the same time- Raygun's "Mourning in America". The economy may never regain what it has lost after giving away its entire manufacturing base and wallowing in decades of credit card inspired, mortgage foreclosing debt.
The drug war is certainly a complete failure. Emptying the prisons and laying off the hordes of prison employees will prove as difficult as getting rid of all those private insurance pirates currently bleeding Americans of their savings, putting millions into bankruptcy in their "Golden Years". "I've got mine- Screw You"- The new American Paradigm.
the only thing that can be said about the US jailing and punishment system is :
HIDEOUS.
it is HIDEOUSNESS hiding behind "law and order". all the while that the big time criminals of finance and capitalism run rampant causing social upheavals through their policies.....
that of course have mostly common people become the pawns for the results of the money masters of the universe policies.
just HIDEOUS.
Domisol wrote a bit earlier:
"The whole prison system is big business and rotten to the core. It's good to finally read that at least one politician is taking it on, and is willing to risk being labeled 'soft on crime.'
"If this 'top-level body' ever does get established, the 'to-do' list will be a long one. One reform that should be at the top of the list is to ban the use of solitary confinement. The brains of people kept in isolation actually begin to break down, and it constitutes one of the worst forms of torture. Indeterminate sentences likewise should be banned. Prisoners should have a basic right to know the length of their sentences, and denying them that is another form of psychological torture."
I think that "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," tells us most of what we need to know about the U.S. prison system, although barred cells should be substituted for open psychiatric rooms, much to the consternation of Nurse Ratchet. If she had her druthers, we'd all be sedated.
Come to think of it... Is the water in the pot getting warmer?
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Fuddgate:
Agreed, but add that the food on the military front is also lousy... And speaking of paradigms, what is the primary differemce between being a grunt in the military and being in prison? Level of Permitted Aggression?
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teddy:
Yes, it is all HIDEOUS, but to say so is merely adjectival, and ultimately neither Descriptive nor Prescriptive.
Today, Oppenheimer might utter, instead of his Vishnu quote upon witnessing the Trinity nuclear explosion,
(fill in the blank and send it to NPR's "Wait Wait Don't Tell Me" program and if you win you get my voice on your Answering Machine, not that most people have one...)
BLANK: _____________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________.
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By torturing "prisoners" we are torturing ourselves. What sort of person seeks a position of Power to Torture. How is it that they seem to remain in power? This is the paradigm that must be broken. We must return to the Founding Fathers and their Enlightenment attempt to vest power in the Individual while certainly NOT the goddam Corporations, which they specifically eschewed. Ditto the goddam banks.
BEST TO ALL
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