States Looking Beyond "Get Tough" Extremism to Criminal Justice Reform

by: David Sirota

Wed Apr 08, 2009 at 18:17


Last week, my newspaper column looked at the encouraging statements of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Sen. Jim Webb (D-VA) on the issue of drug policy and (in Webb's case) overall criminal justice reform. These are politically taboo topics, but they are hugely important. And, as with most issues, it looks like the states are already taking the lead on important reforms.

Here's a new AP report:

After cracking down and incarcerating hundreds of thousands, cash-strapped states including New York, Kentucky and Kansas are pulling back. They face an uncommon confluence of dire economics and prisons bursting at the seams and several have changed, in whole or in part, their stances on hard punishment.

Their reasons: the get-tough laws didn't always work, especially when it came to slowing recidivism, the revolving door of prisoners who get out, mess up again, and come back. There were legal challenges, and questions about whether the punishment always fit the crime.

And of course, there's the money. In tough economic times, the expensive laws are increasingly being deemed expendable.

As the Progressive States Network detailed in a recent report, the private prison industry has aggressively lobbied for the most draconian federal and state criminal justice laws - and for an obvious reason: The more idiotic our criminal justice laws, the more people will be incarcerated, and thus the more taxpayer cash goes to the prison-industrial complex.

Breaking that prison-industrial complex's hold on our criminal justice policy will be key to making the new talk about criminal justice reform into reality.

David Sirota :: States Looking Beyond "Get Tough" Extremism to Criminal Justice Reform

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This is great news! (4.00 / 1)
It is time to move the hell away from the unholy alliance of privatized jails and statutory sentencing. This is the creepiest appalling set of tricks to destroy peoples lives for profit ever in American History. Someone who can actually string words together at some point will make an important film about the people who profit on the millions of Americans in jail, to represent the entire era of Republican rule.

I can just hear them in their clubs laughing. "We will make them stay in jail for you for decades and you make about $60,000 each on every single one, every single year!! HAR DEE HAR!!! "

Thanks for the good news!

--

The government has a defect: it's potentially democratic. Corporations have no defect: they're pure tyrannies. -Chomsky


is Webb actually going to do anything? (4.00 / 1)
Or is this like the Iraq war, free trade, Katrina contractors, where he makes a bunch of public statements, but doesn't actually follow up with any action?

Yes (4.00 / 1)
Putting this bill forward is doing something. The problem here isn't that people don't know how to deal with these problems, it's that there is no political will.  Democrats fear that acting will be political suicide (as they often do on many issues, regardless of the evidence.) This bill is about creating that will. The fact that he has a few key Republicans and the entire Dem Senate leadership is telling.

A better analogy than the ones you offered is Webb's work on the GI Bill.  

Politics is the art of the possible, but that means you have to think about changing what is possible, not that you have to accept it in perpetuity.


[ Parent ]
We just need to keep it running as a story (4.00 / 2)
Everyday. God how quick everything major fades in a day or two but octomommie keeps on up there.

The CA Prison Guards Union Forced The Lege (0.00 / 0)
there to drop plans a couple of years ago to drop the 3-strikes laws.

private prisons are big bidness in my home state, NM.

It's a sign, and all, but that's about all

And I do hate to piss in the cheerios...


States Looking Beyond "Get Tough" Extremism to Criminal Justice Reform (0.00 / 0)
It's OK David,and agree with your article.Thanks.
Salehoo
dropship wholesaler

Is this robo spam? (0.00 / 0)
It looks like a autogenerated 'comment' to me.

--

The government has a defect: it's potentially democratic. Corporations have no defect: they're pure tyrannies. -Chomsky


[ Parent ]
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