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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (April 29, 2016)
News Page 12 Street Roots • April 29-May o, ¿ u io Our dubious grip on freedom Jam es K ilgore’s book tells how the U.S. became a country where freedom fa ils to rin g rhetorical tone. He points out the problems and prison was seen as a means of rehabili with private prisons, including the effects of tation. Media images of black criminality CONTRIBUTING COLUMNIST_______________ cost-cutting on staff and inmates, the and “welfare queens” shifted popular beliefs exploitation of prisoners for low-paid work to the idea that crime was a function of he irony of our criminal justice and by high prices for phone calls and individual character and that the main system is that our “land of the free commissary items, and the inherent political purpose of prison was deterrence and locks up more of its people than any problems of creating a private industry with retribution. other country. a financial stake in increasing the prison There was a strong element of racism and As such, it’s an outlier in industrialized population. social control, including media attention to democracies. The U.K., for example, locks While his sympathies clearly lean left, high-profile crimes such as the rape and up one fifth the number, per capita, that the Kilgore differentiates without judgment mugging of a Central Park jogger, which led U.S. does. And, as most readers already among the conservatives, who see prison to a frame-up of several black youths. know, the African-American incarceration reform mainly as a way of saving money, and George H.W. Bush won the 1988 election rate is much higher than that of whites - in liberals, who want to reduce populations in largely by raising fears about an African- 2012, almost 3 percent of black people in prison and provide rehabilitation as a way of American who had been released from the U.S. saw the inside of a prison cell. restoring people to society, and the prison prison under his opponent’s administration. There is still a sizable percentage of abolitionists, who argue the justice system Penalties got harsher for small-scale people in our country who think we should is broken and needs to be completely crimes associated with homelessness and just “lock 'em up, and throw away the key.” rebuilt. poverty. Being “soft on crime” became a However, many people think something has Kilgore points out that the emerging kind of third rail in politics. In an era when gone wrong. People want the U.S. to be No. consensus for ending mass incarceration is budgets were being cut across the board, 1, but not in this way. driven as much by financial concerns as by “coddling” criminals by providing them Author James Kilgore points out in his „ moral or racial justice arguments. But education and rehabilitation was not in the book, “Understanding Mass Incarceration,” effective “décarcération” needs to address that it didn’t used to be like this. Kilgore s mix. the practices that fueled mass incarceration Kilgore describes the effects on people well-written primer to the history, issues in the first place, including disparate and communities of this retributive and proposed alternative to mass treatment of people of color and philosophy, tying in the effects of the incarceration starts by explaining some of immigrants, the tunneling of youth into the so-called war on drugs and of increasing the reasons behind the U.S. having the adult prison system, the harsh rules applied crackdowns on undocumented immigrants. largest prison population in the world. to parolees, and the jailing of poor people K ilgore tra c e s th e ideological justification H e shows how the extension of a unable to pay fines. ’ for m ass incarceration to politicians and no-tolerance philosophy to schools initiated We have a long way to go. At the rate of mass media worried about controlling poor what became known as the school-to-prison decrease in the prison population between people and radicals, especially blacks, pipeline. He describes the effects on family 2009 and 2012, Kilgore notes, it would take backed up by academics who proposed that members of prisoners — especially women 88 years to reduce prison populations to the there were young “super-predators” in and children — as the system treated them level they were at in 1980. Kilgore asks: society and the best ways to bring down the as criminals and made them suffer When could we consider mass incarceration high crime rates would be to lock them up financially for being related to the wrong dead? Is it “a spiritual or philosophical for long periods of time. people. Poor communities affected by high tipping point, beyond which criminal justice At the same time, an economic downturn levels of arrests have seen erosion of social focuses on developing human beings and increased both poverty and the crimes ties and a general distrust of the police. creating opportunities for communities?” associated with poverty. Before the 1980s, a Kilgore walks the reader through the Kilgorê clearly wants the answer to be majority of Americans recognized that a complexities of the prison system — county, major factor in crime was systemic poverty “yes.” state and federal — in a gentle, non BY MIKE WOLD a Understanding Mass Incarceration by James Kilgore PHC 5312 NE 148th A ve. 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