Slammed: Welcome to the Age of Incarceration
NEWS: What happens when you lock up 1 in every 100 American adults?
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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?

The US holds 1 in 4
of the world's prisoners.
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).
POPULATION GROWTH
Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics; US Census
ARRESTS AND INCARCERATION
(rate per 100,000 people)
Sources: Bureau of Justice Statistics; Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics Online. (No 2006 drug data.)
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.
Contributing writer Jennifer Gonnerman's book, Life on the Outside, was a 2004 National Book Award finalist.
Photo: Melissa Springer

The last time I was locked up in Jefferson County for a ticket I couldnt pay for a light violation (taillight)
ticket and they locked me up and didnt give me my meds....I almost died, my blood pressure went up so high so fast I literally keeled over from withdrawls of my meds. Then they fined me $800 dollars on top of it....Of course I cant pay it and I will end up being hauled away again sometime for the same damn ticket. 2 other countys want me for the same piddly crap.....They have taken my license which took any chance of making a good living with it....
Now I have sold my truck and am sliding face first into economic disaster of
end of days proportions. I am 45 and my wife is 47 and a cancer patient as well as a diabetic. We take 23 prescriptions combined per month. How long do you think we will last?? Not long...as we get evicted in 9 days and I dont even have the means to move my stuff.
All for a traffic ticket, thanks so much.
We have a high percentage of minorities and a lack of common social norms and mores.
Countries with common social norms have less of a need to enforce standards for behavior with imprisonment.
We have a great deal of diversity of views and norms. We have several large groups of races and ethnicities with significantly higher rates of criminality. Again, persons with those same ethnicities in their home countries (e.g., Ghanans) aren't in jail, because there are common standards for behavior there. Here, their 85 IQ, lack of education, inability to delay gratification, and so forth causes them to break laws and go to prison.
Increasing secularism causes the lack of common social norms to become more pervasive.
Not saying any of this is good or bad (my parents were immigrants, albeit from a country with low criminality), and I'm not religious. Just pointing out the obvious. If you have seen the U.S. compared with other countries lacking the huge blocks of Hispanics and blacks, the answer to this becomes painfully -- both in terms of implications and extent -- obvious.
Why we can't talk about this in this country is amazing to me -- we have the constant focus on stopping racism and discrimination while promoting multiculturalism and secularism, but we're not allowed to discuss some of the downsides of that focus. Ridiculous, really, in terms of getting actual improvement.
JT
www.FireMe.To/udi
When the government took it upon itself to influence the culture, few cared and many supported it. When the government took it upon itself to start arresting people for exercising their rights, no one came to their defense. When congressmen decided to dictate terms to the courts through mandatory minimum laws, few cared enough even to understand the implications. Now, with over 2 million Americans behind bars, it is still just a few fringe groups making an issue out of it.
America has become the land of the nominally free. If we don't demand radical changes, the model for our future society is Federal Prison Industries. The only issue remaining will be size and sustainability.
just look at the following MONTHLY salaries
http://www.doc.wa.gov/jobs/
i mean yes you have a high rick of being shanked
we have been lied to all along we dont live in a free country ! you have the right to do what you want as long as you do what your told !!! and thats it so tell the truth !!!!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:US_incarceration_timeline.gif
The real damage of illegal drugs is the tax payers and the people spending years in jail for petty non-violent crimes.
Guess who benefits the most from our current drug policies? The alcohol and nicotine industries. They have strong lobbies that continue the war to maintain their monopoly on addictive substances. Pharmaceutical companies are also deeply involved trying to keep marijuana illegal so that people won't be able to grow their own medicine without their intervention. Don't forget the multi billion private prison industry whom makes more money the more prisoners they hold.
Prohibition never works and only results in a dangerous unregulated black market and persecution of those that get involved.
It's the so-called "War on Drugs" that has caused the prison over-population. Here in California, we voted to have drug users assigned to court-ordered recovery houses (both state run and private industry). But somehow that doesn't always happen.
My wife spent 15 years as a Program Director at a private drug rehab house. Their success rate was very good for those who had not learned to become career criminals though repeated incarcerations. Many clients came out of prison to rehab because their sentences included prison and rehab.
It's the war on drugs.
The latest problem in California is the "Sieze & Sell" policy. The authorities sieze your property and sell it. They then spend the money on themselves - leather jackets, sports activity tickets, and even party houses. A recent case in California found two officers guilty of targeting Medical Marijuanna users (permitted to grow a maximum 20 plants) of growing illegal drugs. After going through the courts and found not guilty, they couldn't get theuir assetts back because it would cost more in legal fees than the assets themselves!
But then this is only one failure of the so-called war on drugs.
By the way, I also agree that the "war on drugs" contributes to the U.S.'s disproportionately high incarceration rate.
Have you ever thought that it IS racism that leads to the high incarceration rate of blacks and Hispanics in this country rather then their inability to assimilate - especially since many of these people are actually American citizens, not immigrants.
It certainly opened my eyes.
Peace.
lets face it. we are living in a natzi police state .
And many in prison have the worst attitude when they get back to the world, they are preditor and should NEVER be let out.
I like that one comment about everyone being able to carry a gun...:-) Then we could start removeing many criminals and not have to pay for them.. When they try and rob a GOOD citizen, they would be shot in self defense, and no more trouble..!!
Bill
Don't get me wrong, I love black people and it horrified me to think that racists who constantly spew out psuedo-scienctific evidence of black people being more likely to commit crime might even be 1% right, but my experiences certainly changed my perception.
The prison population would reduce if more people decided to just obey the law. Its not that hard, whether you agree with it or not, just go with it and don't waste your life in jail. While we might not all agree with the legal system in the US I'm comforted to know that the police get results - we all know that the vast vast vast majority of convicted criminals are guilty as charged.
Elected officials (Police chiefs, District Attorneys and judges) are major contributors towards this 1 in 4 statistic. Its all about their numbers. All concerned with re-election need to pad their statistics as much as possible.
Victim-less crimes should not result in serving time.
Article VIII in the Bill or Rights states: "Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted." How did our country stray so far off course, where it no longer resembles the the vision of it's founders? And how is it that the courts and prison system are not held accountable?
I too am a teacher--a black teacher. I find disrespectful behavior among teens because of their age, not their race. Your comment "I love black people" reeks of racism. It's the kind of thing racists always say when they don't want to take ownership of their racism. There are cultural differences between different racial groups in terms of how they express themselves, etc. I would wager that the supposed hostility that you perceived from these black teens was in large part you projecting on to them your own feelings of hostility. In terms of criminality among minorities, did you know that according to the Center for Disease Control, white teens were more likely to use and sell drugs, have sex at an early age, carry a gun to school than an other ethnic group? I think that throws your morality claim right out the window and exposes you for the aversive racist you truly are. Perhaps it is stereotypes about black youths that leads to a higher incarceration rate rather than a lack of morality. Perhaps it is also their inability to receive a decent education, especially when the teacher before then has nothing but hatred for them that also contributes to a disproportionate number of them dropping out of school and eventually being locked up. I've had many a white teacher like you--a hypocrite who won't admit just how much they hate black people all the while ignoring the needs of these students in class, sterotyping them, and refusing to understand them. If I were your student (and believe me, your black students know just how you feel about them) I wouldn't respect you either.
That being said, despite what many of the people on this thread seem to think, it is really, really easy to avoid going to jail no matter how poor you are or what ethnicity you are.
Pretending otherwise is just engaging in condescending pity for people that are too selfish to do the right thing for themselves and their communities. "Oh, they can't help it because they're poor, uneducated, and non-white and the police will arrest them for nothing and ruin their lives because the cops are racist."
The victims are all the other people that have to live in communities plagued by drug use, guns, gangs, and crime.
As for RTMAN and his traffic jail time...what are the police supposeed to do? "Oh, you can't pay the fine, okay. Oh, you can't pay for insurance? Well, I guess it's not really an important law. Have a nice day." Seriously, I understand that you're having a tough time, but that doesn't really change anything. And
That being said, some of the views expressed here are so ridiculous I feel the need to point something out. It is really easy to avoid getting sent to jail no matter how poor, uneducated, or non-white you happen to be. The majority of people in all socio-economic groups follow the law and it's ridiculous and condescending to suggest that criminals are not responsible for their actions, but are just the victims of poor education or a racist system. People that go to jail are too selfish to follow the law and are destructive to their communities.
If it makes all of you feel better, a friend of mine got jumped a few months ago because he was white and walking down the wrong street. I got to spend all night at the emergency room with my friend and the 3 non-white guys responsible got to do anger management counseling and some community service. That doesn't really seem like the cruel racist legal system that I keep hearing about.
prisoner's blog:
http://www.antaeusmusic.com.html
I thought you all might be interested in this short documentary I watched the other day dealing with mental illness in prisons.
It just blew me away. It's an incredible moving piece of journalism:
http://www.indepth.jennackerman.com/
So maybe he'll also let most of those prisoners out of prisons and jails all across the country. I firmly believe that if non-citizens can break the law with no consequences, that same rule should apply to citizens. If they are incarcerated for non-violent crimes, including identity theft, drug use, and/or possession, driving offenses, or whatever, they should be given a "get out of jail free" card too. We cannot have separate laws for different groups.
narrow by way of the IRS. IMF
controlls most others through the
courts that it ownes.
And if we browse up "diesel prices
in Mexico", THEY CONTROLL EVERYONE!
police officers/lawyers/judges/crime investigators/drug,alcohol/tobacco officers/bail bondmen/news media jobs. Thousands of parents are sending or plan to send their children to colleges and universities to fill these type of jobs. To ensure the jobs don't ever downsize, you must recycle the people.
Take an honest look at all the many sub jobs associated with forcing crime. Polices need uniforms/jails/cars/repairmen/office supplies and equipment to include PC and laptops. The sub staff are also needed.
The lawyers need TV advertise money and staff expenses. Your judges need staff and uniforms too. New court houses.
The PBS TV channel had a special on prisoners with lead on the brain. We sold the paint to China years ago, China sold it back to us on toys.
There is no such thing is private companies if the tax payers for local or federal government is providing the money. When have you printed a story that the major and sub jobs are downsizing as long as the taxpayer can be ripped off. I just wished you had cover these points, instead of that job training and education for prisoners. The country clubs members would have to find other types of training and works.
Striped naked maced and beaten for a stop sign infraction. (CHECK IT OUT ON UTUBE)
Happen on Sept. 1 2007 info in the video. If you can help please email me at damien_guarniere@hotmail.com. or call (910) 897-4529. Sheriff has been removed from office for embezzlement. The gov of our state Mike Easley was the District Attorney in Brunswick Co NC where he lock up the poor and brought business to the lawyers, judges, police, ect. And the drugs are still sold out in the open back by law enforcement. Dead beat dad's who don't pay child support sit in jail with no court date. That money could be going to the children if we really cared about the children. 16 17 yr old housed and showering with the adult prisoners in this jail. Where is Chris Hanson (Dateline) to catch a preator when your locking up the children with the preators. War on the poor. Ain't America great. How about someone asking about the other war we've lost on drugs. You don't arest a overweight person for eating unhealthy. So why in the name of public safty are we so into jailing drug users. I don't need my goverment to protect me from me. I need my goverment to protect my freedom not take it away. When Martha Stewart is going to jail watch out your next. Oh yeah Michale Vick he ain't gonna be no dog lover after doing his time. If you really wanted to help dogs you have let him play football and gave the money he made to the human socitiy. If our goverment ran as good as the parking tickect enforcement division runs in Hollywood CA we be well off. Unfortunally we have a goverment who get paid for not doing anything except shipping our jobs overseas and waisting taxpayers money on public safty. Yeah I haven't been proud of America for a long time either and I served our country. I'm proud of alot of the people just not our laws or politions. I praying for change. Want to fix the economey. Pay everyone a living wage everwhere in the world. If you work all day and can't pay the bills your captolisom is not working.
There is a book called "How to Arrest Proof yourself".
Anyone in this country (USA) that believes only 'criminals' go to jail, this book is for you.
Law enforcement is better trained, better equipped and out to get you. They can run you license plate sitting at a stop light, they call it BINGO!
It is a joke to them. Everything is set up to 'catch' you doing something wrong.
Ever late with your auto license or registration?
What about all you mothers out there, do you know it is a Felony to not have a child seat in your car????
(Yes, yes, yes, a child should be in a proper child seat, but a felony?)