Contrary to Common Sense
The foremost world power holds a record that it's not close to giving up yet: It holds 25 percent of all prisoners on the planet behind bars. With its overpopulated prisons, whose cost exceeds $80 billion per year, the United States is paying the price for a repressive crime policy that has gone astray.
Hundreds of thousands of Americans serve very harsh sentences that flout the basic principle of proportionality. Since criminologists of the Robert Martinson era for whom rehabilitating criminals is just a waste of time became prevalent in the 1970s, the number of prisoners in the country's prisons quadrupled. The most affected populations are African-American and Hispanic minorities, who represent more than half of all incarcerations. They are also the ones who are poorest and suffer the most from an incomplete education.
This kind of policy toward crime goes against what it's supposed to uphold: putting criminals back on the right track and if possible, rehabilitating them within society. However, a criminal system that loses sight of such an objective is not thinking straight. The concept of redemption, an integral part of the "American dream," seems to be limited to those who have failed on the economic playing field. Two reports that the National Research Council and Brookings Institution published this week paint a graver picture of the situation. The two institutions note that while crime has decreased by half since the 1990s, its not because of a careless policy toward crime. On the contrary, they deem that the social cost of very harsh prison sentences by far exceeds its benefits in terms of social cohesion and fighting crime.
Nonetheless, hope for change seems to be rising. A national consensus is forming to change counterproductive laws, adapt sentences to the gravity of the crime, and find rehabilitation solutions worthy of their name.
http://watchingamerica.com/News/239149/contrary-to-common-sense/
Jefferson23
(30,099 posts)and have barbaric measures used against them. If there is a sense among Americans to change
this and the corruption which was bad enough before..with privatization the situation became
even worse, great.
Yesterday I read of a mentally ill man tortured to death, and no accountability since then is in the works.
Would be a relief to know this was rare, but it's not:

The purported details of Darren Raineys last hour are difficult to read.
I cant take it no more, Im sorry. I wont do it again, he screamed over and over, according to a grievance complaint from a fellow inmate, as Rainey was allegedly locked in a shower with the scalding water turned on full blast.
A 50-year-old mentally ill inmate at the Dade Correctional Institution, Rainey was pulled into the locked shower by prison guards as punishment after defecating in his cell and refusing to clean it up, said the fellow inmate, who worked as an orderly. He was left there unattended for more than an hour as the narrow chamber filled with steam and water.
When guards finally checked on prisoner 060954, he was on his back and dead. His skin was so burned that it had shriveled from his body, a condition referred to as slippage, according to a medical document involving the death.
But nearly two years after Raineys death on June 23, 2012, the Miami-Dade medical examiner has yet to complete an autopsy and Miami-Dade police have not charged anyone. The Florida Department of Corrections halted its probe into the matter, saying it could be restarted if the autopsy and police investigation unearth new information.
Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/05/17/4123183_behind-bars-a-brutal-and-unexplained.html
bemildred
(90,061 posts)And yeah, it is very wasteful too. Wasteful of money, wasteful of people, wasteful of talent. And they wonder why nobody listens to us.