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Locked into a prison mentality
A Times Editorial
Published March 1, 2008
The Land of Liberty now imprisons one of every 99 adults, a criminal milestone that deserves more than a punch line about law and order.
Forget, for a moment, the causes or the results of putting 2.3-million adults behind bars in the United States. Just consider the sobering context: The United States leads the planet in incarceration, in raw numbers and per capita rate. No other country is even close.
China, with more than four times the population, imprisons a third fewer. Russia, at one of every 159 adults, has the second highest rate behind the United States. Cuba locks up one in 204, South Africa one in 293, Iran one in 450. The U.S. incarceration rate is now seven times higher than Canada, 10 times more than Italy and 12 times greater than Japan.
These numbers are supplied by the Pew Center on the States, and one striking feature of its report is the extent to which conservative state lawmakers are now looking for alternatives. No one is trying to push dangerous inmates back on the streets, but some states are looking anew at how they deal with drug offenders and probation violators and older inmates under mandatory sentences.
Dave Heineman, Republican governor of Nebraska, introduced a work program for nonviolent offenders last year, saying: "The concept we've embraced through community corrections is that there are better solutions to this challenge than to simply build another maximum-security prison."
Florida might want to listen. While other big states find ways to reduce prison population and crime at the same time, Florida continues to stuff its prisons. Just last year, Gov. Charlie Crist pushed through a law that can lock up even those who have minor probation violations.
According to Pew, Florida is second in the nation in the share of general government revenue it spends on corrections. That financial measurement is salient, since that same pot of money is used to pay for public schools and universities. Across the United States, prison spending over the past two decades has grown at five times the rate of education spending.
The questions posed by these prison numbers are profound, which is why the usual political bromides are inadequate.
[Last modified February 29, 2008, 21:46:26]
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by Jack Tanner
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03/03/08 01:07 AM
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The solution includes LEGISLATORS removing BAD laws that continue to create unintended consequences.
http://www.drugpolicy.org/news/incarcerex.cfm
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by jimmy
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03/02/08 04:19 AM
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Recidivism is a primary factor in violent crime today, but liberal commentators who haven't been the victim of such criminals write editorials like this one.
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by Lumina
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03/02/08 02:20 AM
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Uncompensated cost of jailing illegals in FL prisons is about $60 mill/yr,not incl prosecution costs.Recent aquittal of Cesar Meija in red-light running death of Middle School Principal Margaret Campbell one example.To reduce jail pop,secure border.
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by Andy
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03/01/08 01:57 PM
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With the privatization of the corrections system it's a growing industry. Someone's making big bucks from this. Just follow the money trail and see where it goes.
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by Angela
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03/01/08 12:39 PM
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Our great country clearly have no idea what it takes to keep people out of the prison system. I say change the laws make punishments harsher. for instance, If you commmit murder terminate citizenship, and ship over to a third world country.
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by Sam
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03/01/08 12:05 PM
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As I have said before, the main money (federal) maker of Florida is it's prisons not tourism as most people think. Good for the governor of Nebraska. He sounds like he has some common sense!!
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by Shan
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03/01/08 10:17 AM
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Yes. One place we can start locally is by asking WHY someone who stole a sandwich from Publix ended up in jail at all -- let alone fatally neglected.
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by scooter
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03/01/08 08:09 AM
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people who commit Non-violent crimes, especially drug offenses, should not be in jail or their sentences should be reduced. the sentences given for most non-violent crimes are more than most violent crimes.
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by brian
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03/01/08 06:30 AM
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Just another sign of the times.Law and order(republican)candidates want to appear tough on crime at what cost?Big business collects and we pay!
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