Don’t let the anthem fool you. The land of the free
says “Go to Jail” to more than one in every 100
adult Americans, actually 99.1. What’s scarier is that
one out of every 34 of the 230 million adult Americans are
under the correctional system’s “guidance,”
in jail or out on probation. This makes the US el numero uno
jailer in the world, ahead of China, Russia, Brazil, India,
Mexico, South Africa, England and Japan.
Yes, prison is a growth industry in the US, what with residents
rising by 25,000 last year, bringing it to almost 1.6 million.
Local jails suck up another 723,000 people. Naturally, jail
rates are higher for minorities. One in 36 Hispanics is behind
bars according to 2006 Justice Department figures. One in
15 black adults is in the slammer, one in nine black men between
ages 20 and 34. Also, one in 355 white women between ages
35 and 39 are behind bars, but one in 100 black women are,
you naughty girls.
These statistics came from the Pew Center on the States.
And so, in the big Monopoly game of life, it’s pretty
clear where the dice are landing as to “Go to Jail.”
If you’re wondering about the tab, the National Association
of State budgeting Officers tell us states spent $44 billion
in Corrections (not the novel by Jonathan Franzen).
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That costs are up from $10.6 billion in 1987, a 127 percent
increase adjusted once for inflation. Funding from bonds and
the federal government plus state spending on Corrections
rolled in last year at $49 billion. By 2011, we’re looking
at another $25 billion on top of the $49 billion. But hey,
they say it creates jobs. One in every nine state government
employees works in Corrections, and all the jobs aren’t
filled. California spent $500 million plus in overtime in
2006.
But California’s prisoner number dropped by 4,000 last
year and that makes the Texas prison system numero uno at
172,000. It also had the highest execution rate under George
W Bush. Recently, drug treatment programs, drug courts and
revised parole practices have been approved, probably before
Texas goes broke and has to jail the judges for imprisoning
so many poor people.
In fact, the average cost per stay per year runs about $23,875.
That’s derived from a high of $45,000 a year in Rhode
Island and a low of $13,000 in Louisiana, where New Orleans
is still swimming in the Katrina apocalypse. The bottom line,
according to the FBI, is that violent crime rates (whatever
that specifically applies to) have fallen by 25 percent in
the past 20 years.
Some other reasons for all these jails
Obviously, the US produces an unhealthy share of rapists,
murderers, child molesters, thieves and what all, serious
criminals who should be locked up for a long time. Unfortunately,
as John Whitmore, a Democratic state senator from Houston
and the chairman of the state Senate’s Criminal Justice
Committee pointed out, “The problem was that we weren’t
smart about nonviolent offenders . . . We have 5,500 DWI (driving
while intoxicated) offenders in prison,” which includes
people driving under the influence who had not been in an
accident.
But that’s the teensy tip of the iceberg that floated
in with our fabled War on Drugs under Nixon, and the Controlled
Substances Act in 1971, and the Drug Enforcement Administration
in 1973, which caused the incarceration of millions of people
for victimless crimes. The billions allocated for Corrections
accelerated in 1988, towards the close of the Reagan administration,
which also brought us the Office of National Drug Control
Policy, and the idiotic “Just Say No” campaign,
in New York called “Just Say, Yo!”
Notably, in a Wikipedia article, the “Effects”
section on how marijuana and cocaine had increased fivefold
between 1972 and 1988 (as methamphetamine and ecstasy have
today) the truth is that the volume of imported drugs began
ballooning in 1968 with the Vietnam War and the CIA flying
in major tonnages of grass, heroine and opium to supplement
their income for black ops and personal profit. Drug smuggling
by people in high (no pun intended) places became a way of
life.
George H.W. Bush’s 1989 burning of marijuana fields
in the US gave US growers the urge to go underground, literally
indoors, cloning, hybridizing more potent forms of marijuana
for stronger effect with less volume. Arrests and long jail
sentences increased exponentially, even for users caught selling
or using small amounts of marijuana.
Wikipedia also points out, “A number of economically-depressed
Colombian farmers in several remote areas of their country
began to turn to what became a new, illicit cash crop for
its high resale value and cheap manufacturing process. Local
coca cultivation, however, remained comparatively rare in
Colombia until the mid-1990s. Drug traffickers originally
imported most coca base from traditional producers in Peru
and Bolivia for processing in Colombia, continuing to do so
until eradication efforts in those countries resulted in a
"balloon effect". The coca base was used to derive
the alkaloid cocaine. And Air America had a major hand as
ever in delivering it to the USA.
Says Wikipedia, “Despite the Reagan administration's
high-profile public pronouncements, secretly, many senior
officials of the Reagan administration illegally trained and
armed the Nicaraguan Contras, which they funded by the shipment
of large quantities of cocaine into the United States using
U.S. government aircraft and U.S. military facilities.[7][8]
Funding for the Contras was also obtained through the illegal
sale of weaponry to Iran.[9][10] When this practice was discovered
and condemned in the media, it was referred to as the Iran-Contra
affair.”
So, drugs in the Reagan/Bush era became plentiful on American
streets, thanks to their use as barter for weapons and funding
to overthrow an unwanted Nicaraguan government; also to negotiate
for hostages with Iran behind standing President Jimmy Carter’s
back. That’s treason. And no administration member went
to jail for any of it. Huh!
Wikipedia reports, “Another milestone occurred in 1996,
when 56 percent of California voters voted for Proposition
215, legalizing the growing and use of marijuana for medical
purposes. This created significant legal and policy tensions
between the federal and state governments. Courts have since
decided that neither this nor any similar acts will protect
users from federal prosecution (e.g., see Gonzales v. Raich).”
So, you cancer victims seeking pain relief from marijuana,
you may be felons yet. But why can’t you just suffer?
What wusses.
The article goes on say, “Regardless of public opinion,
marijuana could be the single most targeted drug in the drug
war. It constitutes almost half of all drug arrests, and between
1990-2002, out of the overall drug arrests, 82 percent of
the increase was for marijuana. In this same time period,
New York experienced an increase of 2,640 percent for marijuana
possession arrests. As of 2006, marijuana has become the United
States of America’s biggest cash crop.[11]” So
it looks like we’re back in the growing business. What
goes around comes around.
Thus, the greatest part of the surge in arrests, creation
of prisoners and prisons needed to hold them, came as effects
of massive government criminality, oversight, and misconstruing
“victimless,” even minor, drug abuse as crime.
One could safely say that the government’s criminality
and interference in the personal habits of Americans is largely
responsible for our overcrowded, ever-growing prison system
today. And no one went to jail for that, huh?
Beyond that
The United States Department of Defense spent $30 million
in June 2005 with a unit of defense contractor Halliburton
to build a detention facility at the Guantanamo Bay Naval
Base for “enemy combatants” in the “War
on Terror.” Since the start of the war in Afghanistan,
775 detainees have been brought to Guantanamo. Roughly 420
have been released. As of August 9, 2007, 335 detainees remain
for whatever is being done to them.
On Feb 9, the media notified us that six of the detainees
from Gitmo would be prosecuted for the conspiracy in the 9/11
terrorist attacks. You don’t think any of those six
were possibly tortured, like our friend Zacarias Moussaoui,
who took credit for planning that event even though he was
in jail at the time of 9/11? This while wearing an electronic
stun belt under his shirt in the courtroom. He subsequently
recanted his confession.
I can’t find a dollar figure on the cost to maintain
and staff Gitmo, nor the many torture and rendition facilities
operated, leased, time-shared around the world in willing
countries. Who knows. We may be number one in international
prison systems as well, with a tab that adds more billions
to our domestic $49 billion prison rap sheet.
Ah well, what price freedom, or should I say incarceration,
or the more delicate word, Corrections (not the novel by Jonathan
Franzen). I guess I’m waiting for that special prison
for war criminals, like those that started and carried out
the illegal war in Iraq, including Blackwater and all the
privately contracted criminals who aided and abetted them.
I’m also waiting especially for those members of the
US government, Dick Cheney, George Bush, Donald Rumsfeld,
Richard Myers, Condi Rice, Colin Powell, et al, who had a
hand in the planning and execution of 9/11, the Inside Job
and false flag operation that killed nearly 3,000 Americans,
to go away for a long, long time, too, maybe even get crisped
in the chair or sent to meet their maker by lethal injection.
That would be a priceless gift to justice and democracy.