http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=122725771 We must privatize everything including our justice system! But no, normally I'm pretty pro privatization, but after reading this are you beginning to see a problem with America's for profit justice system.
I think everyone who thinks the bail system is unfair should volunteer to house and feed and ensure the appearance in court of these destitute criminals.
Buddy, it's called reading the fucking article. Guess what, as it it says, most people who are ROR'ed show up to court. Guess what, 20 years ago most people were released ROR'ed, and guess what, they still showed up to court. Bail is supposed to stop flight risks, not as a way for the legal system to make money off every single person that gets arrested
How does bail ensure that someone will show up to court anyway? If it's just because they won't be able to pay it, why not just hold them without bail? If they can pay it, what's to keep them from still running?
As I’ve said elsewhere people have to realise that wealth’s power cannot be harnessed for the public good because most of its instincts run contrary to the public good. I might have added - only if it’s aggressively regulated and monitored (which it would always try and water down or destroy). There is a lot wrong with the US justice and penal system a lot of which goes back to a lot of wrong headed thinking. People have long predicted that if companies are paid to lock people up they will do all they can to see people are locked up. But that’s just half of it, many Americans have a very strong believe in intimidation, it’s what underpins many political views from gun ownership to foreign policy. And it’s what colours many peoples views on locking criminals up. For example the US has the largest prison populations in the world (686 per 100,000) and has one of the highest execution rates in the world (in the company of such countries as China, Iran, Pakistan and now Iraq). It is also about zero tolerance and the three strike rules. (Switzerland prison population is 83 per 100,000, England and Wales 148 per 100,000. Both countries do not have the death penalty) To me this seems more about ruling through intimidation and the fear of violence (especially since US prisons are often described as extremely brutal especially compared with those in the UK and Switzerland, - Amnesty International). But who is this intimidation been directed at? It might be interesting to note that Black households have traditionally had some of the lowest median incomes according to the US census and at the same time although black people only make up around 13 per cent of the US’s population they made up half the prison population in 1999 and in 2000 one in three young black men were either in prison or on probation or parole. Today in the US they make up 41.8% of those on death row. It seems to me that many people look to prisons as a way of dealing with or ignoring socio-political problems. Basically rather than dealing with the social or economic roots of crime they prefer to lock the problem out of sight. Here was a man that was too poor to buy blankets so save him from being cold, in the heart of a supposedly advance and civilised nation, and the only ‘help’ he received was to be locked up and criminalised, and the real tragedy is he was better off in prison.
Yes, this is high on the list of things wrong with this country. The prison industrial complex is scary indeed, profiting on the imprisonment of people is fundamentally wrong on every level. More people are probably working in the prison system than in the education system, although thats just a guess and I dont know that for fact. But it is a real problem that somehow must, but will never be, addressed by our political leaders. Lobbies should be banned, they are the real problem with our country, but with the supreme courts recent ruleing I'd say we are in real trouble now