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magical thyme

(14,881 posts)
Fri Oct 2, 2015, 03:01 PM Oct 2015

Private prisons: Bernie Sanders is right

As a libertarian, the author won't vote for candidate Bernie. But he supports him on this -- and likely other -- issues.http://qctimes.com/news/opinion/private-prisons-bernie-sanders-is-right/article_81e3a99d-dd24-548f-8fd7-de312d619afd.html

U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (allegedly a Vermont Independent, but running for president as a Democrat) and U.S. Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Arizona; Keith Ellison D-Minnesota; and Bobby Rush, D-Illinois; introduced bills in Congress last week aiming to "ban private prisons, reinstate the federal parole system and eliminate quotas for the number of immigrants held in detention." The bills won't pass, and who knows what devils lurk in their details, but the general direction is right.

Americans should be embarrassed by the propensity of government at all levels to put cage other Americans. We've often heard over the last few years that the U.S. government imprisons a higher proportion of its own subject population than any other government on Earth. I doubt that's true — the remaining Communist regimes and other dictatorships likely don't honestly account for how many people they incarcerate — but the U.S. certainly leads the "western democracies" in the matter. Nearly one in every 30 Americans is "under correctional supervision," i.e. in jail, in prison, or on parole or probation....

....But "private prisons" aren't "private" in any meaningful sense of the word. They're still operated under government supervision and according to government rules; they are still paid for with taxpayer dollars. Fake "privatization" of prisons creates two bad situations.

First, it creates a special interest lobby centered around how much money can be made by sticking people in cages. "Private prison" companies lobby for things like mandatory minimum sentences and a litany of new or revised "tough on crime" laws that put more and more non-violent criminals in their facilities to generate more and more profits. That lobby finances the campaigns of politicians who pass such laws. It's good for business.

Second, it results in situations where no one is held accountable or responsible for abuses. When, for example a prisoner dies for lack of proper medical care, the politicians blame the "private prison" operators and the operators blame the politicians, round and round in a circle until someone's wrist gets slapped and everyone forgets about it (until the next such incident).
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Private prisons: Bernie Sanders is right (Original Post) magical thyme Oct 2015 OP
K & R! beam me up scottie Oct 2015 #1
Kickety rec! hifiguy Oct 2015 #2
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