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Sanders writes: "It's wrong to profit from the imprisonment of human beings and the suffering of their friends and families. It's time to end this morally repugnant practice, and along with it, the era of mass incarceration."

U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders speaks during a campaign rally in Madison, Wis. on July 1, 2015. (photo: Christopher Dilts/Bloomberg/Getty)
U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders speaks during a campaign rally in Madison, Wis. on July 1, 2015. (photo: Christopher Dilts/Bloomberg/Getty)


We Must End For-Profit Prisons

By Bernie Sanders, Reader Supported News

23 September 15

 

he United States is experiencing a major human tragedy. We have more people in jail than any other country on earth, including Communist China, an authoritarian country four times our size.  The U.S. has less than five percent of the world's population, yet we incarcerate about a quarter of its prisoners -- some 2.2 million people.

There are many ways that we must go forward to address this tragedy.  One of them is to end the existence of the private for-profit prison industry which now makes millions from the incarceration of Americans.  These private prisons interfere with the administration of justice. And they're driving inmate populations skyward by corrupting the political process.

No one, in my view, should be allowed to profit from putting more people behind bars -- whether they're inmates in jail or immigrants held in detention centers. In fact, I believe that private prisons shouldn't be allowed to exist at all, which is why I've introduced legislation to eliminate them.

Here's why:

For-profit prisons harm minorities.

The prison crisis has disproportionately harmed minorities. If current trends persist, one in four black males born today can expect to be imprisoned during their lifetime. Tragically, 69 percent of African-American men who drop out of high school will end up in jail, according to the most recent statistics.

The Department of Justice found that black motorists were three times more likely than their white counterparts to be searched during a traffic stop. African Americans are twice as likely to be arrested, and almost four times as likely to experience the use of force during encounters with police. Further, African Americans are imprisoned at six times the rate of whites.

For-profit prisons abuse prisoners.

The horror stories from for-profit prisons are plentiful. Here are a few examples:

  • Rat-infested food was served to inmates by a private vendor in Michigan, and other rotten or spoiled food items were served in that state and elsewhere. The same vendor reportedly underfed Michigan inmates.

  • Privately-run prisons in Mississippi reportedly have two to three times the rate of violent assault as publicly run facilities.

  • A private prison vendor has reportedly used juvenile offenders in Florida to subdue other young prisoners. "It's the Lord of the Flies," said Broward County's chief assistant public defender. "The children are used by staff members to inflict harm on other children."

  • Nurses at a private prison chain in California threatened to strike over the inadequate health care, which one described as "unsafe," and there have even been reported incidents of patient abuse.

For-profit prisons victimize immigrants.

Immigrants have also been victimized by corporate prison greed. As the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) notes in in an in-depth report, "The criminalization of immigration ... enriches the private prison industry" by segregating most of the resulting inmates into one of thirteen privately-run "Criminal Alien Requirement" (CAR) prisons. Another report, from Grassroots Leadership, found that 62 percent of all ICE beds are now privately owned.

For-profit prisons profit from abuse and mistreatment.

As the ACLU notes, the bidding process for private immigration centers provides "incentives that keep facilities overcrowded and place excessive numbers of prisoners in isolated confinement." It also reports inadequate medical care, abusive treatment, and "severely overcrowded and squalid living conditions." These are also true for prison populations.

Prison industry money is corrupting the political process.

The prison industry is highly profitable. The two biggest prison corporations in the country made $3.3 billion in 2012 -- profiting from government payments and prison laborers, who were forced to work for pennies on behalf of companies like Boeing and McDonald's.

With so much money at stake, it's not surprising that the for-profit prison industry is corrupting our political process. According to National Institute on Money in Politics just one such company, the GEO Group, has given more than $6 million to Republican, Democratic, and independent candidates over the past 13 years.

Moreover, as the Washington Post reports, the two largest for-profit prison corporations and their associates "have funneled more than $10 million to candidates since 1989 and have spent nearly $25 million on lobbying efforts."

For-profit prisons are influencing prison policy ...

It's been money well spent for the prison corporations. Between 1990 and 2010, the number of for-profit prisons in this country has increased by 1,600 percent. There are now 130 private prisons in this country, with a total of 157,000 beds.

Through organizations like ALEC (the American Legislative Exchange Council), the prison industry has promoted state laws that increase incarceration rates for nonviolent offenses.

... and immigration policy.

A report from the Council on Hemispheric Affairs outlines some of the ways in which private prison corporations have tried to influence immigration policy and increase incarceration rates, apparently with great success.

Grassroots Leadership found that, "contrary to private prison corporation claims that they do not lobby on issues related to immigration policy, between 2008 and 2014, CCA spent $10,560,000 in quarters where they lobbied on issues related to immigrant detention and immigration reform."

For-profit companies exploit prison families.

Private prison corporations and their affiliates do everything they can to make a buck off people in prison -- and their families. According to The Nation's Liliana Segura, for example, a tech company called Global Tel*Link charges more than $1 per minute for families and friends to speak with their loved ones in prison. There is no free market, no competition to drive the price down.

If family or friends are unable to afford Global Tel*Link's prices, prisoners may run a higher risk of social isolation. It's a vicious circle, as studies show that social connections are key to a prisoner's rehabilitation process once he or she is released. FCC Commissioner Mignon Clyburn, a leader on this issue, has also pointed out that 2.7 million children in the United States have an incarcerated parent. Many of them suffer immeasurably when such unaffordable rates rob them of parental contact.

Global Tel* Link makes more than $500 million per year from exploiting these vulnerable people.

Young people are being mistreated and exploited. 

Worst of all, the for-profit system is having a terrible impact on our young people. A Huffington Post report entitled "Prisoners of Profit," paints a vivid picture of the widespread abuse and brutality -- including fatal medical neglect and sexual abuse. In the "kids for cash" scandal, business people actually paid judges to send young people to their often-brutal facilities, often for very minor infractions.

We must put an end to this shameful industry.

I have introduced legislation that will put an end to for-profit prisons. My legislation will bar federal, state, and local governments from contracting with private companies to manage prisons, jails, or detention facilities. Regulators will be directed to prevent companies from charging unreasonable fees for services like banking and telecommunications.

My legislation also takes steps to reduce our bloated inmate population. It reinstates the federal parole system, which was abolished in the 1980s, so that officials can individually assess each prisoner's risk and chance for rehabilitation. It ends the immigrant detention quota, which requires officials to hold a minimum of 34,000 people captive at any given time. And it would end the detention of immigrant families, many of whom are currently held in privately-owned facilities in Texas and Pennsylvania.

It's wrong to profit from the imprisonment of human beings and the suffering of their friends and families. It's time to end this morally repugnant practice, and along with it, the era of mass incarceration.

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+20 # bugbuster 2012-05-01 11:40
"in 1000 years, humanity will still be playing this game..."

I think that as long as most of the people in the world are people we don't know personally, we will be playing the game.

I discussed this on the OWS chat last year with two anarchists. After drilling down into their core, we found that what they really want is person-to-perso n management of our daily affairs, not impersonal authority doing that for us.

I wish I could envision a just society composed of anything other than small self-governing villages and nomadic bands of hunter-gatherer s, but I can't. Not as long as we are who and what we are.

What I can hope for is a stable system of checks and balances of power. We have never had a perfectly functioning system, but we have had one that worked better than this one does. I believe that TV-driven politics and the environment of ignorance that nurtures it are the core of the problem.
 
 
+4 # noitall 2012-05-01 12:46
These greedy bastards have been around for a 1000 years and more. As long as having more than anyone else and using it to greedy ends is acceptable, this will continue and they will call the shots. "Calling the shots" is what Churches, customs, traditions, etc. are for but churches have broken their own tenets in the name of the sin 'greed' and they have collaborated in destroying the fiber of community that maintained the traditions, customs and social mores that kept the group morally stable and healthy. These rats are just that and we reap what they sow.
 
 
+22 # Andrew Hansen 2012-05-01 11:40
A beautiful essay.
 
 
+21 # tedrey 2012-05-01 11:40
Absolutely beautiful, Mike. And not inadequate at all. Bless you!
 
 
+8 # Andrew Hansen 2012-05-01 12:02
Same reaction, same time, striking... (sorry, had to express the pun :^)
 
 
+9 # NanFan 2012-05-01 15:01
Quoting Andrew Hansen:
Same reaction, same time, striking... (sorry, had to express the pun :^)


Same here, but I'm watching now as violent anarchists (not part of the Occupy Movement) are smashing windows and causing chaos in Seattle amid what should be a non-violent strike.

These people are all dressed in black and hooded and masked, as usual, and once they finished bashing in things, they disperse and remove their coverings and meld into the crowd of peaceful Occupy protestors.

Unfortunately, their violent actions deflect from the valid purposes for the strike and the overarching reasons for the Occupy Movement.

Will the violence EVER end in the US? Or will it escalate, and use a righteous movement to perpetuate it?

This saddens me deeply.

N.
 
 
+16 # firefly 2012-05-01 12:17
I think that was very well stated. Until each one of us realizes that we are interconnected on an individual level, we are doomed to have the psychotics running the circus (since they are the only ones who truly believe that they are the only 'real' people).
 
 
+4 # Martintfre 2012-05-01 13:24
Quoting firefly:
I think that was very well stated. Until each one of us realizes that we are interconnected on an individual level, we are doomed to have the psychotics running the circus (since they are the only ones who truly believe that they are the only 'real' people).


excellent point FireFly
- using the power of government to get things by force that one normally can't voluntarily get from others is a huge magnet for those who are dishonest and uncaring of others and have no problem lying and pretending like they care to get the power that they want.
 
 
-31 # Martintfre 2012-05-01 12:18
//Our growing sense of isolation and disconnection, whether from ourselves, from those next door to us, or from those producing our food and products halfway across the globe, is why we're striking. //

Complete disconnect from reality - people across the globe can read and comment on this foolishness within moments and that hard fact totally escapes you casting a huge shadow of doubt when you do stumble across some actual truth.
 
 
+17 # Vardoz 2012-05-01 12:44
Even David Frum, on Tom Ashbrook, on NPR today, a staunch Republican from the Bush administration, said that the GOP, right and Blue Dog Dems are completely sold out. We are in a serious crisis and if we the people don't take a stand one way or the other, whether it is a phone call or protest march we will continue to be sucked into the suicide mission that Wall St. the polluters, the govt and the military are taking us on. All of our lives and futures are at stake. They are waging war on us and our very ability for us, our children and all living things on Earth to survive. This ravenous mentality defies all reason or logic and is devoid of all morality, principles or ethics. We will vote for Obama - the best of the worst and hope that we can change the congress that now has the worst environmental and human rights record in our history.

But in no way should people let up. We need to be heard and as Patrick Leahy just said. "KEEP THE PRESSURE UP." NOT VOTING IS NOT A SOLUTION. And having a Rove puppet as president is not the answer either.
 
 
-36 # Martintfre 2012-05-01 12:45
When the non producers go on strike, leave their parents basements and go whining in the street -- who cares.

When the producers - those who have "exploited" you with their goods and services like iPhones, and polar fleeces, and their gasoline, and their computers, their medicines, their cars and their best services for the lowest cost and you have "exploited" them with your money -- when they are over taxed and over regulated to the point of economic failure and THEY go on strike -- you better be ready to take care of your greedy selfish selves for once.
 
 
+6 # seeuingoa 2012-05-01 13:10
Good luck to Mike and all other occupiers!

OCCUPY OCCUPY OCCUPY !

Gandhi style:

Step 1: Sit down and get arrested
PEACEFULLY

Step 2: When released a few hours later,
repeat Step 1.

Overload the whole system.
Where will they put all these people?

Guantanamo?
Concentration Camps?

and show their true face.

(google Gandhi and see how he managed)
 
 
+7 # Martintfre 2012-05-01 14:23
I like Ghandi, He and MLK had it right.
 
 
+4 # cordleycoit 2012-05-01 13:18
What about striking ouf longing and desire. I long to see peace. every cell wants to to see justice. I seire my partner for her warmth and humor when the stress is gone and there is desire in its many forms can be attained.
 
 
+8 # caniscandida 2012-05-01 13:30
This is a beautiful essay, which expresses true and strong observations that most of us all too often miss, in our thoughtlessness.

It reminded me of a magnificent point made by Trevor J. Saunders, in the essay with which he introduces his translation of Plato's "Laws," in the Penguin Classics series. Writing on the institution of slavery, which, we are disappointed to obsserve, many great-souled people in antiquity could never quite get beyond (cf. the recent movie "Agora," which turns on the troubled relationship between the brilliant mathematician Hypatia and her slave), Saunders writes, "We [moderns]reject [slavery] utterly; yet it was as completely taken for granted in the ancient world as the employer-employ ee relationship today (which may itself in time come to be regarded with as much distaste [!] as slavery is regarded now."

And yet, it will never be easy to overcome the systemic evil of competitiveness , since we are sexually reproducing animals and social primates. Competitiveness , and zero care for the suffering of outsiders, is our original sin. The strikers today maintain a hope that we may yet overcome that sin. And for that, I love them, admire them, and stand with them.
 
 
-5 # Andrew Hansen 2012-05-01 14:02
-----
Correction: Was intended to be a reply to the comment posted 2012-05-01 10:45 by Martintfre, not directed at the article's author Mr. David.
-----

I am reminded of the 'ask a bitter man' skit of years past.

I submit that there is a different 'Complete disconnect from reality', maybe from being stuck behind a computer only connecting (or being paid to connect) on comment boards.

When speaking of greedy selfish selves, do you mean all of those people who became rich by striking?

Randian-speak at its finest.
 
 
0 # barbaratodish 2012-05-01 15:17
We accept injustice, because it's easier than accepting anyones solution to injustice because real solutions involve the truth that all most of us are is ego!
I used to be unable to deal with any criticism, now I look at criticism as an opportunity to turn anyones criticism of me right back at them! So instead of anonymous thumbs down, what is your solution to injustice?
 
 
+5 # Buddha 2012-05-01 16:26
Touches on the core problem, that of the consistantly uninformed American voter. While we still have some semblance of a democracy, we should be able to elect leaders who have our best interest at heart...but too many voters allow their own ignorance and prejudices to be manipulated by those of high wealth and power to voting against their own economic self-interest. So, we see middle-class and poor voters electing leaders who are championing policies that are eviscerating the middle-class and the poor, who are pushing a cruel Social Darwinist vision of America that will most hurt these very voters. We get the government we deserve.
 
 
0 # robbeygay 2012-05-01 18:41
That's it:- "Just as a virus's only reason for existence is to expand [..]our economic system pursues its infinite expansion without regard or awareness of its effect on humans" Right to question...
Why did Monarvchy change or fall? Why did Communism change or fall? Why will NWO USA change or fall?
Same answer.... it's the reverse of your thinking..not exist to expand....expan d to exist is the Robyn Hoood idea when it crosses the National borders in war to sell more everything at homw and rid populations to destroy things to make more labor jobs and force the richest to pay more to the machine than the machine pays to them.
Unindustrial revolution your need, out with GMO weedicides etc, back with weeders labor, out with Combine harvesters for rice, back with paddyworkers. Out with I-pad, Iphone, back with I can walk postie labor etc. Out with digital billing back with book keepers.
 
 
+2 # Eliza D 2012-05-04 16:37
Mr. David-Thank you for making one almost-giving-u p-hope fighter for justice happy and inspired. Transcendent writing!
 

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