A Prison State, If Not a Police State
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
The
US has a unique distinction: It is the world’s greatest prison state.
The
US, "the land of the free," has the biggest prison population
in the world and the highest rate of prisoners per capita of all
countries including countries that President Bush believes need
liberating by US armed forces.
Even
China, with one party rule and a population that is 4.5 times larger
than the US population, has 30% fewer total prisoners than the US.
China’s per capita rate is a small fraction of the US rate.
The
US prison population per capita is three times higher than "axis
of evil" country Iran, five times higher than Tanzania, and
seven times higher than a civilized European country like Germany.
One
out of every 142 Americans is in prison and this does not include
military prisons or INS jails.
The
conservatives’ war on drugs, launched during President Reagan’s
first term, bears much of the blame. Between 1980 and 2000, a period
during which the US population grew by 21%, the number of state
and federal inmates soared by 312%.
Almost
one-half million Americans are in prison for drugs-only offenses.
Many of them are innocent or were encouraged by federal agents or
informers posing as friends to transport small amounts of drugs
as a favor.
Consider
Elaine Bartlett, pardoned by New York Gov. George Pataki in 2000
after serving 16 years of a 20-year-sentence. Bartlett was tricked
by an acquaintance, who turned out to be a government informant,
into taking four ounces of cocaine to Albany. Bartlett was given
20 years even though she had no history of arrests or convictions
and left 4 children behind, the oldest being 10 years old.
Most
government informants are real criminals who escape charges or are
given lenient plea bargains in exchange for helping prosecutors
boost their conviction rates by entrapping innocent people. It is
a disgrace to the US legal system that judges permit such false
convictions.
Many
other innocents are in jail because police dropped small packets
of drugs or in the Texas cases bags of ground up wallboard into
their cars when stopped, allegedly for traffic offenses.
Society
gained nothing but more criminals by locking up Bartlett. Her six-year-old
son was traumatized by his mother’s absence. At the end of every
prison visit he had to be forcefully removed by prison guards from
clinging to his mother. By the time he was 10 years old, he was
a drug runner. He bought his first gun at age 12 and was in prison
by age 16. You can read the whole story in the book, Life
on the Outside, by Jennifer Gonnerman.
With
a legal system that mass-produces criminals, prisons are being constructed
at a breathtaking rate. An Urban Institute study, "The New
Landscape of Imprisonment," released on April 29, documents
the boom in prison construction during the last two decades.
Jeremy
Travis, one of the authors, says: "The prison network is now
deeply intertwined with American life, deeply integrated into the
physical and economic infrastructure of a large number of American
counties. It provides jobs for construction workers and guards,
and because the inmates are counted as residents of the counties
where they are incarcerated, it means more federal and state funding
and greater political representation for these counties."
A
number of states now have prisons in almost one-third of their counties.
Florida has at least one prison in 78% of its counties! In 1923
there were only 61 prisons in the entire US.
Another
conservative idea prison privatization has created
a contractual monster that must be fed with a constant stream of
inmates. A variety of new police Gestapos have been created that
help to keep the massive prison complex our own Gulag
Archipelago filled.
The
most dangerous is Child Protective Services, created by Walter Mondale
in response to his constituency of anti-family feminists and "child
therapists" in need of employment. CPS was set up on the insane
assumption that a large percentage of families committed "child
abuse." CPS offices are everywhere, and employees outnumber
child abusers.
The
child sex abuse witch hunt in Wenatchee, Washington, was set off
when the local CPS office was told to find some cases to justify
its budget. It took years to expose and overturn one of the greatest
cases of prosecutorial misconduct in human history. Dozens of families
were destroyed and 50 children were put into foster care.
The
latest report from Child Protective Services Watch documents that
children placed in our "child protection system" are 5
times more likely to die from physical abuse and 11 times more likely
to be sexually abused than they would be from remaining in the homes
from which they are removed!
Mondale
and his "child advocates" got their Gestapo legislation
passed in 1974. A quarter century later there are 500,000 US kids
in the "child protection system." Soon there will be one
million because of the perverse incentive that funds the system.
The federal government pays state and country child welfare services
a bounty for each child seized from a family. Linda Wallace Pate,
a California attorney specialized in foster cases, calls it a "kids
for cash" system.
The
evidence is overwhelming that children are extremely traumatized
by being ripped from families and placed in foster care.
It
turns out that the overwhelming majority of abused children suffer
the abuse from their single mother’s live-in boyfriends or overnight
lovers.
Child
abuse is rare in two-parent families, so CPS has expanded abuse
to cover spanking even playground bruises are grounds for seizing
children and shouting ("verbal abuse").
The
war on crime has turned even parenting into a dangerous occupation.
One
can’t help but wonder whether the US itself is in need of liberation.
May
4, 2004
Dr. Roberts [send him mail]
is John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy and
Research Fellow at the Independent Institute. He is a former associate
editor of the Wall
Street Journal and a former assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury.
He is the co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2004 Creators Syndicate
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