Monday, July 25, 2011

The "Land of the Free" is No More

What a surprise -- the United States is #1 at something, yet again! But unfortunately, this time we shouldn't be proud of it. No, I'm not talking about our obesity rates (though I think we might be world champions at that, too), I am talking about the national incarceration rate.

Yes, it's official -- we lead the world in locking up our own fellow citizens. We are a nation trademarked by freedom and liberty, and yet we have the highest percentage of inmates per 100,000 citizens on earth. Why is this? Is it that our citizens have no regard for the law; no respect for the principles of freedom and democracy? Not quite.

In 2004, 55% of prisoners, according to the US Department of Justice, were "serving time for drug offenses". It's been 25 years since the passage of the Anti-Drug Abuse Act, and accordingly the United States prison population has grown from 300,000 to over 2 million in less than 20 years.

Taxpayers spend $60 billion a year on prisons. Each inmate costs tax-paying, law-abiding American citizens over $23,000 in federal tax revenue dollars per year. Talk about high-maintenence! And to top it all off, 67% of ex-prisons return to jail for re-offenses and 52% are re-incarcerated!

Now hang on a minute -- let us contemplate what purpose prisons serve. If someone is a danger to society, they must be quarantined and treated and fixed so they can become safe members of civilization once again. But that isn't how the system works. We punish people, costing tax-payers hard earned money, for drug crimes that do no harm to anyone but the arrestee! Laws are supposed to protect society, when in fact they often do not. And not because they are ineffective, but because the crime itself is not dangerous! Sounds a bit ridiculous, no?

Going off of what I said earlier, one of the purposes of jail is to reform criminals so they can once again participate legally and safely as members of society. But if over half of all inmates return to jail, doesn't that make the jail-reform process an enormous failure? Would you send a loved one to a rehab clinic with a 50% success rate?

And to top it all off, there exist such things as privatize prisons. Yep, people building prisons outside of the federal government but collecting government money to fund their services, and subsequently, turning a profit. Additionally, these private jail corporations have been known to lobby Congress for stricter laws and longer jail sentences to continue raking in cash. But that's a whole different issue. I'll have to contemplate the private prison-industrial-complex in another post sometime in the near future.



What do YOU think? Why are we the world leader in locking up our own people?

20 comments:

  1. WE'RE #1 !!! In your face, St. Kitts! It is good to know that the USA is leading the way in something other than morbid obesity.

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  2. well its not surprising we are #1 in that list...its sad actually

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  3. well, you shouldn't be so aware. there's places where they don't have jail for everyone, the police just don't do their work or their law isn't so hard about crimes. You should be happy, your country are effectively fighting against the criminals

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  4. a very informative blog. nice one

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  5. Long live America! wake up sheeple!!! You must fight for your freedom! great blog. following ;)

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  6. That's weird Britain isn't even on there!

    Nice post, very interesting =D

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  7. We are the world leader in locking up our own people due to privatized prisons. Since some prisons make a profit for each inmate they have, they lobby for ridiculous drug laws and contribute to mostly republican campaigns so the candidates will enforce those laws.

    Wonder if I will live long enough to see a civilized America when we aren't putting tons of people in jail for non violent crimes like having some pot in your pocket, or an America where we aren't incentivizing incarceration with profit.

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  8. "Nearly 2 million americans are incarcerated in the prison system of the US."
    THEY'RE TRYING TO BUILD A PRISON!

    followed, keep up the good work. :)

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  9. Wow, I thought Germany would be somewhere at the top... Feels good we arent ;)

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  10. It's an interesting point, if drugs were legalized, there'd probably be a lot less people in prison, there are a lot of people who don't belong there, and a lot of people out of there who probably do belong in there. But, what can you do?

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  11. American incarceration system is trash.

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  12. Well, if they deserve to be locked up...

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  13. You could call this a positive and say that our police are doing their jobs really well I guess...

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  14. If only the education system and health system improved, this will decrease, but people will always seem to commit felonies.

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  15. It's disturbing man. I there were less people-per-capita in the Gulags of Lenin than there are in America now.

    The only difference is that private corporate prisons can actually generate revenue for the State in the US, so imprisonment is straight profitable.

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  16. You have one of the most interesting blogs that I'm following. Keep up the good work! $howing some love

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