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FOCUS: Colson Task Force Leads on Prison Reform, Will Congress Follow? Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=36478"><span class="small">John Kiriakou, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Thursday, 05 May 2016 11:53

Kiriakou writes: "The bottom line is that post-release help is nonexistent. And neither the Justice Department nor the Congress has the guts to do anything about it."

Prison guard. (photo: Getty Images)
Prison guard. (photo: Getty Images)


Colson Task Force Leads on Prison Reform, Will Congress Follow?

By John Kiriakou, Reader Supported News

05 May 16

 

he Charles Colson Task Force on Federal Corrections recently announced six recommendations for changes to federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) policies that would “correct the country’s overreliance on incarceration.” The Congressionally-mandated task force is made up of former congressmen, former federal judges, and prison reform activists, among others, and is named after Nixon-era Watergate conspirator Charles Colson, who served seven months in a federal prison in the 1970s and then dedicated his life to prison reform. Its proposed recommendations would save the BOP $5 billion and would cut the federal prison population of 196,000 prisoners by 60,000.

The recommendations are common sense solutions to prison overcrowding and to the draconian sentencing that has taken hold in federal courts across the country.

First, the task force said, “At sentencing, the federal system should reserve prison beds for those convicted of the most serious federal crimes.… This goal cannot be achieved without addressing mandatory minimum drug penalties – the primary driver of BOP overcrowding and unsustainable growth.”

The task force is right. The Pew Charitable Trusts found in a recent study that “nine in 10 federal offenders received prison sentences in 2014, up from less than half in 1980, as the use of probation steadily declined.” Despite the ballooning number of cases in that time, 2014 saw 2,300 fewer probation sentences than 1980.

Second, the task force recommended that “the federal Bureau of Prisons should promote a culture of safety and rehabilitation and ensure that programming is allocated in accordance with individual risk and needs.” Unfortunately, this is just a bad joke in the BOP. Nobody is “rehabilitated.” There is no training and no education beyond a GED degree. Prison “Education” departments are nothing more than prisoners teaching other prisoners to read. There is no budget for vocational training. So when a prisoner is finally released, he goes back to his old neighborhood broke, uneducated, and untrained. This is nothing more than a recipe for failure and recidivism.

Third, the task force noted that “Throughout the prison term, correctional policies should incentivize participation in risk-reduction programming.” In other words, prisoners should be encouraged to “participate in rehabilitative programs to achieve sentence credits, and a second chance provision should be used to ensure judicious use of incarceration and encourage rehabilitation.” That’s great. But there is no budget for such incentives in the BOP, and nobody is receiving rehabilitation or training in anything. Even worse, there’s no stomach in Congress for such a program.

Fourth, the Justice Department should “ensure successful reintegration by using evidence-based practices in supervision and support.… People leaving prison need to be given the tools, services, supervision, and support necessary for successful reintegration.”

When I was released after serving nearly two years in prison for blowing the whistle on the CIA’s torture program, I had to spend three months reporting to a halfway house in Washington DC. This halfway house, Hope Village, colloquially known as “Hopeless Village” or “Abandon all Hope Village,” was supposed to help me “reintegrate into society” and find a job, among other things. In fact, the only job posted on the “jobs board” was for a dishwasher position at Fuddruckers in Washington. And that was for something like 140 recently-released prisoners. The bottom line is that post-release help is nonexistent. And neither the Justice Department nor the Congress has the guts to do anything about it.

Fifth, the task force found that “The federal criminal justice system should enhance performance and accountability through better coordination across agencies and increased transparency.” Great idea. But it made me laugh out loud. The BOP famously is a dumping ground for people who simply can’t cut it in law enforcement, the military, or anywhere else in government. Indeed, Dr. Peter Moskos, a professor of criminal justice at John Jay College and a former Baltimore detective said in his book In Defense of Flogging that the BOP is little more than an employment agency for otherwise unemployable, semi-literate, rural white men. He’s right. The Colson task force notwithstanding, saying that the BOP needs enhanced performance and greater accountability is stating the obvious. And it’s like speaking to a wall.

Finally, the task force said, “Congress should reinvest savings to support the expansion of necessary programs, supervision, and treatment.” As Prison Legal News pointed out, “It is currently difficult for the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Bureau of Prisons to devote sufficient resources to programming when federal prisons are overcrowded and require funds to be diverted from other DOJ agencies to the BOP.”

The BOP accounts for fully a quarter of the Justice Department’s budget. And without immediate reforms, it will require even more money. That’s money down the drain, not money for education, rehabilitation, or preventing recidivism. Until reforms are implemented, beginning with the Colson task force reforms, the government will remain mired in a culture of overincarceration and a failure to rehabilitate anybody. But that’s not up to the Justice Department. It’s up to Congress. And until there is real leadership on criminal justice reform, nothing will change.



John Kiriakou is an Associate Fellow with the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington DC. He is a former CIA counterterrorism operations officer and former senior investigator for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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David Brooks Discovers Income Inequality Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=36361"><span class="small">Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Facebook Page</span></a>   
Thursday, 05 May 2016 08:24

Reich writes: "Will wonders never cease? David Brooks, the noted conservative New York Times columnist, has finally realized something many of the rest of us have been saying for some time."

Robert Reich. (photo: Getty)
Robert Reich. (photo: Getty)


David Brooks Discovers Income Inequality

By Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Facebook Page

05 May 16

 

ill wonders never cease? David Brooks, the noted conservative New York Times columnist, has finally realized something many of the rest of us have been saying for some time.

From Brooks’ latest column:

“This election — not only the Trump phenomenon but the rise of Bernie Sanders, also — has reminded us how much pain there is in this country. According to a Pew Research poll, 75 percent of Trump voters say that life has gotten worse for people like them over the last half century. This declinism intertwines with other horrible social statistics. The suicide rate has surged to a 30-year high — a sure sign of rampant social isolation. A record number of Americans believe the American dream is out of reach. And for millennials, social trust is at historic lows. Trump’s success grew out of that pain, but he is not the right response to it. The job for the rest of us is to figure out the right response. That means first it’s necessary to go out into the pain. I was surprised by Trump’s success because I’ve slipped into a bad pattern, spending large chunks of my life in the bourgeois strata — in professional circles with people with similar status and demographics to my own. It takes an act of will to rip yourself out of that and go where you feel least comfortable. But this column is going to try to do that over the next months and years. We all have some responsibility to do one activity that leaps across the chasms of segmentation that afflict this country.”

It's about time, David.

Does this mean the American establishment is finally starting to learn something? Is the anti-establishment fury – the authoritarian bigoted populism of Trump, and the progressive reformist populism of Bernie – beginning to pierce the armor of America's elite? And, if so, will the establishment (especially, but not exclusively, the Republican establishment) now be more open to progressive change?

What do you think?

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House Republicans New Budget Is a Major Assault on America's Environment Print
Thursday, 05 May 2016 08:09

Rodewald writes: "Why is it that some politicians now seem to believe that a strong America is not compatible with a clean, safe and sustainable America?"

Acadia National Park. (photo: National Park Service)
Acadia National Park. (photo: National Park Service)


House Republicans New Budget Is a Major Assault on America's Environment

By Amanda D. Rodewald, The Hill

05 May 16

 

t's budget time again, and the House Republicans have released a new plan: "A Balanced Budget for a Stronger America." There is little to disagree with in the opening line of the budget: "A strong America is built on opportunity and the passion and talents of a free people who are empowered to pursue that opportunity, determine their own future, and achieve success." Yet a closer look reveals that the budget would significantly erode many regulations, rules and mandates designed to protect our environment, while at the same time expanding energy development likely to a carry hefty environmental toll.

Why is it that some politicians now seem to believe that a strong America is not compatible with a clean, safe and sustainable America?

We hear disturbing anti-environment sentiments from the current Republican presidential candidates. Donald Trump has repeatedly vowed to dismantle the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in an effort to cut spending and curb regulations. While more tempered in their comments, the other Republican candidates have called for massive cuts to reduce the reach of the EPA. The expressed rationale for these views is that current efforts to protect our environment bear too great a cost and prevent us from prospering as a nation.

Interestingly, that position contrasts sharply with that of former President Richard Nixon, who created the EPA. A Republican, Nixon recognized that "clean air is not free, and neither is clean water" in his Jan. 22, 1970 State of the Union and asserted later that year that the national government should lead a "coordinated attack on the pollutants which debase the air we breathe, the water we drink, and the land that grows our food."

Nixon understood what today's Republican candidates seem to miss: that our ability to pursue opportunity, chart our individual and collective destinies, and achieve success is stronger in a country that protects the health of its people by reducing their exposure to dangerous toxins. Certainly, the GOP indicates through rhetoric that it is tuned in strongly to issues of public safety. Well, if we measure risk by numbers of premature deaths, the risk from terrorism is dwarfed by that posed by contaminants in our environment.

Though vilified by some politicians, the EPA has made our country a cleaner, safer and healthier place. One striking example is that emissions of common air pollutants have dropped almost 70 percent since the EPA was created in 1970. Did this achievement come at great economic cost? Quite the opposite: The U.S. gross domestic product grew over 200 percent and jobs in the private sector increased by 88 percent during the same period.

Environmental protection is also a job-creating industry. One study found that over 4 million environmental jobs were created in the U.S. from 1970 to 2003; importantly, these jobs were concentrated in manufacturing and professional, scientific, and technical services that all states are trying to attract. Air pollution control equipment generated revenues of $18 billion in 2008, including roughly $3 billion in exports. According to a U.S. Department of Commerce report, our efforts to protect the environment have positioned the U.S. as the world's largest producer and consumer of environmental protection technologies worldwide.

Surprised? The reality is that environmental protection can drive innovation, and many policies implemented in the past have made us a cleaner and more prosperous country. The Clean Air Act, in particular, is estimated to have benefits that exceed costs by a factor of more than 30 to one. Most of the economic benefits are attributed to reductions in premature deaths — up to 230,000 lives saved and over 17 million lost work days avoided annually by 2020). Even relatively small changes can result in huge benefits, like the 2011 revisions to the Clean Air Act standards that prevented an additional 11,000 premature deaths, 2,800 cases of chronic bronchitis, 4,700 heart attacks, 130,000 asthma attacks, 5,700 hospital and emergency room visits, and over 3 million restricted activity days, according to one study. The value of these benefits amounts to $37 billion to $90 billion each year, and even more if one considers that over a half-million sick days would be avoided each year and  more than 50,000 new jobs created.

Those are impressive benefits from the Clean Air Act alone, but even a cursory glance at other EPA accomplishments turns up other examples. For instance, the EPA has cleaned up millions of acres of contaminated land that can again provide ecological, economic and recreational opportunities. The agency has also developed an advanced network of sewage treatment facilities to make our rivers and lakes safe for swimming, tourism and fishing, and has cleaned the Great Lakes, which supply drinking water for millions of Americans.

Aside from potentially forgoing benefits, are we ready to bear the real human and economic costs of gutting environmental regulations? The massive public health crisis stemming from contaminated water in Flint, Mich. shows both how much Americans value a clean environment and the degree of our reliance upon regulations and enforcement at the federal level. For a decade now, the EPA's Office of Water has faced 15 percent annual budget reductions and lost more than 10 percent of its employees. As reported by The New York Times, the Association of State Drinking Water Administrators "said federal officials had slashed drinking-water grants, 17 states had cut drinking-water budgets by more than a fifth, and 27 had cut spending on full-time employees," with "serious implications for states' ability to protect public health." Our nation is outraged over what is happening to Flint residents, so why would we create, or be complicit in, efforts that will lead to similar crises elsewhere?

We all aspire to the strong America described in the opening line of the Republicans' budget, but that strong America is built not only upon opportunity, passion and talents, but also upon a clean, safe and healthy environment. Gutting environmental protections is risky for our economic and physical well-being. Republicans and Democrats should work toward a budget that allows our economy and our environment to prosper.

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Senate Officially Mourns Return of Ted Cruz Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=9160"><span class="small">Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Wednesday, 04 May 2016 14:36

Borowitz writes: "The United States Senate declared an official day of mourning on Wednesday to mark the impending return of Senator Ted Cruz to the legislative body."

Republican Senators. (photo: AP)
Republican Senators. (photo: AP)


Senate Officially Mourns Return of Ted Cruz

By Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker

04 May 16

 

The article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column, "The Borowitz Report."

he United States Senate declared an official day of mourning on Wednesday to mark the impending return of Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) to the legislative body.

Ordering all flags at the U.S. Capitol to half-staff, the Senate Majority Leader, Mitch McConnell, announced the day of mourning in a somber proclamation. “We mark this day with a deep personal sense of loss that will never completely heal,” he said.

To recognize Cruz’s return, which is expected to be imminent, McConnell said that the Senate would suspend all work for the day. “Ordinarily our members would welcome a day off,” he said. “But not for this.”

In a rare moment of consensus for this bitterly divided chamber, both Republicans and Democrats expressed their sorrow, but the news of Cruz’s return seemed to cut the deepest among Republicans, many of whom now regret their decision not to endorse the Texas senator for President.

“If that bastard had somehow been elected President, we would have only had to see him one day a year, at the State of the Union,” Senator Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) said. “I should have done everything in my power to make that happen. And now it’s too damn late.”

“We have to respect the will of the voters, but they didn’t think about the devastating effect this would have on us,” the usually stoic McConnell said, his voice quavering. “There’s a real human cost to this.”

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FOCUS: Who Is More Electable? Print
Wednesday, 04 May 2016 11:28

Galindez writes: "As we are seeing in the open primaries, Bernie Sanders beats Hillary Clinton with independents in state after state. The strongest candidate for President in November is Bernie Sanders."

Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump, and Bernie Sanders. (photo: Reuters)
Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump, and Bernie Sanders. (photo: Reuters)


Who Is More Electable?

By Scott Galindez, Reader Supported News

04 May 16

 

on’t look now, but in the latest hypothetical general election poll conducted by Rasmussen Reports, Donald Trump leads Hillary Clinton.

According to the survey, which was conducted from April 27 to 28 among 1,000 likely voters:

Trump now has the support of 73% of Republicans, while 77% of Democrats back Clinton. But Trump picks up 15% of Democrats, while just eight percent (8%) of GOP voters prefer Clinton, given this matchup.

Among voters not affiliated with either major party, Trump leads 37% to 31%, but 23% like another candidate. Nine percent (9%) are undecided.

Hmmm, I do not think 32% are lining up to vote for Jill Stein or Gary Johnson. So these are voters who at this point are not supporting anyone likely to be on the ballot in November.

Give the voters the option of staying home and the same poll has the race tied.

Rasmussen Reports did not poll a hypothetical Sanders versus Trump matchup. Other polls all show Sanders beating Trump by more than 10 points. Those same polls have the race closer between Clinton and Trump.

Talk about a race to the bottom, the two most unpopular candidates in either party will likely be the nominees of the two major political parties.

Now let’s look at some other indicators of electability.

Favorability: (Huffington Post average)

Sanders: 52%
Clinton: 47%
Trump: 35%

Unfavorability: (Huffington Post average)

Trump: 61%
Clinton: 55%
Sanders: 40%

Honesty: (yougov.com poll)

Sanders: 47%
Trump: 29%
Clinton: 27%

Dishonesty: (yougov.com poll)

Clinton: 56%
Trump: 52%
Sanders: 24%

When asked by Peter Hart and Associates in an April poll, all voters chose Sanders as the candidate they could support at higher levels than any other candidate.

Here is the exact question, Q13: “I’m going to mention a number of people running for president in 2016. For each one, please tell me, yes or no, whether you could see yourself supporting that person for president in 2016. If you don’t know the name, please just say so.”

Sanders: 49% yes 48% no
Clinton: 41% yes 58% no
Trump: 31% yes 68% no

If these numbers are true, why isn’t Sanders winning? The answer is simple: These numbers are among all voters, many of whom are shut out of the nominating process. Hillary Clinton’s numbers are better if you only ask Democrats. Donald Trump does better among Republicans.

I hear you: these are the party primaries not the general election. I would say you were right if there were a level playing field for all political parties. We have a two party system, and it is becoming clear that the two parties do not represent the views of the whole country.

According to the Pew Research Center, based on 2014 data 39% of Americans identify as Independents, 32% as Democrats, and 23% as Republicans. This is the highest percentage of Independents in more than 75 years of public opinion polling.

As we are seeing in the open primaries, Bernie Sanders beats Hillary Clinton with Independents in state after state. The strongest candidate for President in November is Bernie Sanders. If all voters had a chance to weigh in during the nominating process we would likely see a race between Trump and Sanders. If we had a multi-party system Sanders, would have a chance to win as an Independent or as a candidate of another party.

The reality is that the system is rigged in favor of the two major political parties, and we will probably be stuck choosing between the two most unpopular candidates for President. It is time for a democracy movement in America. We don’t have a real democracy now.



Scott Galindez attended Syracuse University, where he first became politically active. The writings of El Salvador's slain archbishop Oscar Romero and the on-campus South Africa divestment movement converted him from a Reagan supporter to an activist for Peace and Justice. Over the years he has been influenced by the likes of Philip Berrigan, William Thomas, Mitch Snyder, Don White, Lisa Fithian, and Paul Wellstone. Scott met Marc Ash while organizing counterinaugural events after George W. Bush's first stolen election. Scott will be spending a year covering the presidential election from Iowa.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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