Welcome to the Mass Incarceration State!
by Freedom Freddy
The United States of America has more than 2.4 million of
its citizens in state and federal prisons, which is far and away the largest national prison population and
highest incarceration rate in the history of the world. Just look at the current situation!
One in every four
prisoners in the world rot in American prisons. Americans spend, in many states, over $60,000 a year per
prisoner to maintain this distinction, and we can’t afford it. Prison
overcrowding and an inability to properly house and care for inmates has gotten
so bad in the state of California (home of the “three strikes” law which doles
out life sentences to repeat felony offenders regardless of whether violence
was involved) that the US Supreme Court in 2011 forced the state to either let
prisoners out or build more prisons. They said it was “cruel and unusual” to treat
people this way. The Federal penal system is doing no better. Driven by “get
tough” sentencing legislation for non-violent drug offenses that overwhelmed both
Congress and state government in the 1980s and 1990s – like the three strikes
laws – the prison population of America has spiked. This was also the beginning
of America’s doubling down on its “drug war” – which had been failing badly
since President Nixon declared it in the 1970s and is still failing, miserably. But we sure have thrown a lot of people in prison! Look at this graph showing the
spike beginning in the 1980s! Holy cow!
Now let’s look at a graph showing the who is the target of
this imprisonment. Answer: African-Americans compose a vastly higher proportion
of prisoners than they represent in the general population.
Maybe this isn't so helpful for race relations?
Ok, enough graphs. This is a problem so obvious and so bad that during one of the most polarized political climates in
Washington in a century, the issue has spurred Republicans and Democrats to craft
and promote a bipartisan plan to do something about America’s incarceration
problem. If passed, the Sentencing Reform and Corrections Act (House) and
Sentencing Reform Act (Senate) would be the first major and substantive pieces
of non-budgetary legislation since the gridlock that ensued after Republicans
took over the House in 2010 and stonewalled the Democratic President, Barack
Obama. The laws would reduce federal mandatory minimums for nonviolent drug
offenses, reduce life sentences for three strikes felony offenses to 25 years,
and would apply retroactively, which would do a great deal to immediately reduce
the prison population. As wild as this seems, it should not be that surprising.
After all, both political parties are equally to blame for the mandatory minimum
sentences and both have zero interest in raising the taxes necessary to continue
to pay for a mass incarceration state. The bill is more popular with Democrats
than Republicans, whose political image has always rested more squarely on “law
and order” when it comes to corrections over the more liberal approaches of prevention and rehabilitation. But key Republican support from figures like Iowa Senator Charles
Grassley has helped get the legislation out of the judiciary committees in both
houses, a feat in and of itself.
Whether the legislation will ever get to the President’s
desk to sign is questionable in an election year, but there is real hope on both
sides of the aisle. This blog is devoted to stirring up discussion on this
important issue, discussing some aspects in more depth, and keeping you abreast
of development as this legislation works its way through Congress over the next
several weeks. We welcome your comments. Freedom is the only way!