One Political Plaza - Home of politics
Home Active Topics Newest Pictures Search Login Register
Main
A Tale Of Two Americas: Where The Rich Get Richer And The Poor Go To Jail
Page <prev 2 of 2
Jan 9, 2018 11:34:03   #
Morgan
 
buffalo wrote:
John Whitehead
The Rutherford Institute
January 5, 2018

This is the tale of two Americas, where the rich get richer and the poor go to jail.

Aided and abetted by the likes of Attorney General Jeff Sessions—a man who wouldn’t recognize the Constitution if it smacked him in the face—the American dream has become the American scheme: the rich are getting richer and more powerful, while anyone who doesn’t belong to the power elite gets poorer and more powerless to do anything about the nation’s steady slide towards fascism, authoritarianism and a profit-driven police state.

Not content to merely pander to law enforcement and add to its military largesse with weaponry and equipment designed for war, Sessions has made a concerted effort to expand the police state’s power to search, strip, seize, raid, steal from, arrest and jail Americans for any infraction, no matter how insignificant.

Now Sessions has given state courts the green light to resume their practice of jailing individuals who are unable to pay the hefty finesimposed by the American police state. In doing so, Sessions has once again shown himself to be not only a shill for the Deep State but an enemy of the people.

First, some background on debtors’ prisons, which jail people who cannot afford to pay the exorbitant fines imposed on them by courts and other government agencies.

Congress banned debtors’ prisons in 1833.

In 1983, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the practice to be unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection clause.
Where things began to change, according to The Marshall Project, was with the rise of “mass incarceration” when we started to imprison more people for lesser crimes.

By the late 1980s and early 90s, “there was a dramatic increase in the number of statutes listing a prison term as a possible sentence for failure to repay criminal-justice debt.” During the 2000s, the courts started cashing in big-time “by using the threat of jail time – established in those statutes – to squeeze cash out of small-time debtors.”

Fast-forward to the present day which finds us saddled with not only profit-driven private prisons and a prison-industrial complex but also, as investigative reporter Eli Hager notes, “the birth of a new brand of ‘offender-funded’ justice.”

Follow the money trail. It always points the way.

Whether you’re talking about the government’s war on terrorism, the war on drugs, or some other phantom danger dreamed up by enterprising bureaucrats, there is always a profit-incentive involved.

The same goes for the war on crime.

At one time, the American penal system operated under the idea that dangerous criminals needed to be put under lock and key in order to protect society. Today, the flawed yet retributive American “system of justice” is being replaced by an even more flawed and insidious form of mass punishment based upon profit and expediency.

Sessions’ latest gambit plays right into the hands of those who make a profit by jailing Americans.

Under such a system, the plight of the average American is measured in dollars and cents.

This is not justice.

This is yet another example of how greed and profit-incentives have not only perverted policing in America but have corrupted the entire criminal justice system.

Unfortunately, the criminal justice system has been operating as a for-profit enterprise for years now, covertly padding its pockets through penalty-riddled programs aimed at maximizing revenue rather than ensuring public safety.

All of those seemingly hard-working police officers and code-enforcement officers and truancy officers and traffic cops handing out ticket after ticket after ticket: they’re not working to make your communities safer—they’ve got quotas to fill.

Same goes for the courts, which have come to rely on fines, fees and exorbitant late penalties as a means of increased revenue. The power of these courts, magnified in recent years through the introduction of specialty courts beyond your run-of-the-mill traffic court (drug court, homeless court, veterans court, mental health court, criminal court, teen court, gambling court, prostitution court, community court, domestic violence court, truancy court), is “reshaping the American legal system—with little oversight,” concludes the Boston Globe.

And for those who can’t afford to pay the court fines heaped on top of the penalties ($302 for jaywalking, $531 for an overgrown yard, or $120 for arriving a few minutes late to court), there’s probation (managed by profit-run companies that tack on their own fees, which are often more than double the original fine) or jail time (run by profit-run companies that charge inmates for everything from food and housing to phone calls at outrageous markups), which only adds to the financial burdens of those already unable to navigate a costly carceral state.

Ask yourself this: at a time when crime rates across the country remain at historic lows (despite Sessions’ inaccurate claims to the contrary), why does the prison population continue to grow?

The prison population continues to grow because of a glut of laws that criminalize activities that should certainly not be outlawed, let alone result in jail time. Overcriminalization continues to plague the country because of legislators who work hand-in-hand with corporations to adopt laws that favor the corporate balance sheet. And when it comes to incarceration, the corporate balance sheet weighs heavily in favor of locking up more individuals in government-run and private prisons.

It’s a vicious cycle that grows more vicious by the day.

Now you can shrug all of this away as a consequence of committing a crime, but that just doesn’t cut it. Especially not when average Americans are being jailed for such so-called crimes as eating SpaghettiOs (police mistook them for methamphetamine), not wearing a seatbelt, littering, jaywalking, having homemade soap (police mistook the soap for cocaine), profanity, spitting on the ground, farting, loitering and twerking.

There is no room in the American police state for self-righteousness. Not when we are all guilty until proven innocent.

As I make clear in my book Battlefield America: The War on the American People, this is no longer a government “of the people, by the people, for the people.”

It is fast becoming a government “of the rich, by the elite, for the corporations,” and its rise to power is predicated on shackling the American taxpayer to a debtors’ prison guarded by a phalanx of politicians, bureaucrats and militarized police with no hope of parole and no chance for escape.
John Whitehead br The Rutherford Institute br Janu... (show quote)



Yes Obama did try and remedy this but another undo by Trump...

Trump reversed the Obama era Department of Justice’s order to stop contracting with private prison facilities. Private prisons create a perverse incentive to incarcerate more people since these companies are motivated to increase profit, which is generated only if there are more inmates filling their facilities. Private prisons that contracted with the Department of Justice were found by the department itself to be less efficient and have more issues with security and management.

Reply
Jan 9, 2018 11:55:09   #
emarine
 
cold iron wrote:
Real people can change their name. ???
Yes, a real "person" can declare bankruptcy. ???
Can a real "person" have limited liability like a corporation, YES they can!! You need to go back to school.
People like Hillary who has lots of money can make lots of her own FREE speech, may not be true, but.
Yes, most of Congress is beholding to the lobbyist, we can not legislate honesty. We can only punish lawbreakers.




I found the point of the article was the increase in the "police state" where police prayed on people for profits ... I find it very true that those who can't properly defend themselves in court are basically prey in a for profit system...

Reply
Jan 9, 2018 12:17:45   #
buffalo Loc: Texas
 
emarine wrote:
I found the point of the article was the increase in the "police state" where police prayed on people for profits ... I find it very true that those who can't properly defend themselves in court are basically prey in a for profit system...


It is the whole corporatization of the US that has created the largest wealth inequality since the 20s right before the great depression and will again be the downfall of the US for 10s of millions in the bottom 90%. You watch--when the stock market crashes again (and it will) millions of small investors savings and retirement will be wiped out and the wealthy 1% on the inside will get even wealthier because they can manipulate the rigged game of the stock market. Then it will be the opportune time for the elite and their monkey politicians to really clamp down using the police state apparatchiks.

Reply
 
 
Jan 9, 2018 18:24:14   #
Morgan
 
buffalo wrote:
It is the whole corporatization of the US that has created the largest wealth inequality since the 20s right before the great depression and will again be the downfall of the US for 10s of millions in the bottom 90%. You watch--when the stock market crashes again (and it will) millions of small investors savings and retirement will be wiped out and the wealthy 1% on the inside will get even wealthier because they can manipulate the rigged game of the stock market. Then it will be the opportune time for the elite and their monkey politicians to really clamp down using the police state apparatchiks.
It is the whole corporatization of the US that has... (show quote)


I agree, they'll lure people in and then crash it.Will we see properties sold again in packs, stealing properties, will they then stroke back to having property owners to be the elite and privileged who will be able to vote, have only private schools to who can afford them, they do have a long-term plan? To what extent only the insiders really know, but it does seem quite diabolical.

Reply
Jan 10, 2018 07:41:33   #
cold iron Loc: White House
 
emarine wrote:
I found the point of the article was the increase in the "police state" where police prayed on people for profits ... I find it very true that those who can't properly defend themselves in court are basically prey in a for profit system...



America has the best legal system that money can buy. That is a very sad fact. I told that to a politician once and he got very mad.
SO, now we can see why Hillary and Obama are still walking the streets.

Reply
Jan 10, 2018 12:22:47   #
emarine
 
cold iron wrote:
America has the best legal system that money can buy. That is a very sad fact. I told that to a politician once and he got very mad.
SO, now we can see why Hillary and Obama are still walking the streets.




Very True... maybe we shouldn't elect billionaire's for this exact reason...

Reply
Jan 10, 2018 13:30:33   #
cold iron Loc: White House
 
emarine wrote:
Very True... maybe we shouldn't elect billionaire's for this exact reason...


Yeah, right, don't fix the problem!!

Reply
 
 
Jan 10, 2018 16:33:51   #
Radiance3
 
buffalo wrote:
John Whitehead
The Rutherford Institute
January 5, 2018

This is the tale of two Americas, where the rich get richer and the poor go to jail.

Aided and abetted by the likes of Attorney General Jeff Sessions—a man who wouldn’t recognize the Constitution if it smacked him in the face—the American dream has become the American scheme: the rich are getting richer and more powerful, while anyone who doesn’t belong to the power elite gets poorer and more powerless to do anything about the nation’s steady slide towards fascism, authoritarianism and a profit-driven police state.

Not content to merely pander to law enforcement and add to its military largesse with weaponry and equipment designed for war, Sessions has made a concerted effort to expand the police state’s power to search, strip, seize, raid, steal from, arrest and jail Americans for any infraction, no matter how insignificant.

Now Sessions has given state courts the green light to resume their practice of jailing individuals who are unable to pay the hefty finesimposed by the American police state. In doing so, Sessions has once again shown himself to be not only a shill for the Deep State but an enemy of the people.

First, some background on debtors’ prisons, which jail people who cannot afford to pay the exorbitant fines imposed on them by courts and other government agencies.

Congress banned debtors’ prisons in 1833.

In 1983, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the practice to be unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection clause.
Where things began to change, according to The Marshall Project, was with the rise of “mass incarceration” when we started to imprison more people for lesser crimes.

By the late 1980s and early 90s, “there was a dramatic increase in the number of statutes listing a prison term as a possible sentence for failure to repay criminal-justice debt.” During the 2000s, the courts started cashing in big-time “by using the threat of jail time – established in those statutes – to squeeze cash out of small-time debtors.”

Fast-forward to the present day which finds us saddled with not only profit-driven private prisons and a prison-industrial complex but also, as investigative reporter Eli Hager notes, “the birth of a new brand of ‘offender-funded’ justice.”

Follow the money trail. It always points the way.

Whether you’re talking about the government’s war on terrorism, the war on drugs, or some other phantom danger dreamed up by enterprising bureaucrats, there is always a profit-incentive involved.

The same goes for the war on crime.

At one time, the American penal system operated under the idea that dangerous criminals needed to be put under lock and key in order to protect society. Today, the flawed yet retributive American “system of justice” is being replaced by an even more flawed and insidious form of mass punishment based upon profit and expediency.

Sessions’ latest gambit plays right into the hands of those who make a profit by jailing Americans.

Under such a system, the plight of the average American is measured in dollars and cents.

This is not justice.

This is yet another example of how greed and profit-incentives have not only perverted policing in America but have corrupted the entire criminal justice system.

Unfortunately, the criminal justice system has been operating as a for-profit enterprise for years now, covertly padding its pockets through penalty-riddled programs aimed at maximizing revenue rather than ensuring public safety.

All of those seemingly hard-working police officers and code-enforcement officers and truancy officers and traffic cops handing out ticket after ticket after ticket: they’re not working to make your communities safer—they’ve got quotas to fill.

Same goes for the courts, which have come to rely on fines, fees and exorbitant late penalties as a means of increased revenue. The power of these courts, magnified in recent years through the introduction of specialty courts beyond your run-of-the-mill traffic court (drug court, homeless court, veterans court, mental health court, criminal court, teen court, gambling court, prostitution court, community court, domestic violence court, truancy court), is “reshaping the American legal system—with little oversight,” concludes the Boston Globe.

And for those who can’t afford to pay the court fines heaped on top of the penalties ($302 for jaywalking, $531 for an overgrown yard, or $120 for arriving a few minutes late to court), there’s probation (managed by profit-run companies that tack on their own fees, which are often more than double the original fine) or jail time (run by profit-run companies that charge inmates for everything from food and housing to phone calls at outrageous markups), which only adds to the financial burdens of those already unable to navigate a costly carceral state.

Ask yourself this: at a time when crime rates across the country remain at historic lows (despite Sessions’ inaccurate claims to the contrary), why does the prison population continue to grow?

The prison population continues to grow because of a glut of laws that criminalize activities that should certainly not be outlawed, let alone result in jail time. Overcriminalization continues to plague the country because of legislators who work hand-in-hand with corporations to adopt laws that favor the corporate balance sheet. And when it comes to incarceration, the corporate balance sheet weighs heavily in favor of locking up more individuals in government-run and private prisons.

It’s a vicious cycle that grows more vicious by the day.

Now you can shrug all of this away as a consequence of committing a crime, but that just doesn’t cut it. Especially not when average Americans are being jailed for such so-called crimes as eating SpaghettiOs (police mistook them for methamphetamine), not wearing a seatbelt, littering, jaywalking, having homemade soap (police mistook the soap for cocaine), profanity, spitting on the ground, farting, loitering and twerking.

There is no room in the American police state for self-righteousness. Not when we are all guilty until proven innocent.

As I make clear in my book Battlefield America: The War on the American People, this is no longer a government “of the people, by the people, for the people.”

It is fast becoming a government “of the rich, by the elite, for the corporations,” and its rise to power is predicated on shackling the American taxpayer to a debtors’ prison guarded by a phalanx of politicians, bureaucrats and militarized police with no hope of parole and no chance for escape.
John Whitehead br The Rutherford Institute br Janu... (show quote)

==================
My Lord Jesus Christ said, those strong bodied people who don't work must not eat! During the 8 years of Obama, he created 51 million of these handouts.

Reply
Jan 10, 2018 16:43:52   #
buffalo Loc: Texas
 
Radiance3 wrote:
==================
My Lord Jesus Christ said, those strong bodied people who don't work must not eat! During h 8 years of Obama, he created 51 million of these.


Do you really think all 51 MILLION were "strong bodied" and "must not eat"? Even the children? But Jesus said, Suffer little children, and forbid them not, to come unto me: for of such is the kingdom of heaven.

Do ALL rich people deserve to be rich? Even those that did not "work" for it, or got their riches by hook and crook?

Reply
Jan 10, 2018 20:19:10   #
Radiance3
 
buffalo wrote:
Do you really think all 51 MILLION were "strong bodied" and "must not eat"? Even the children? But Jesus said, Suffer little children, and forbid them not, to come unto me: for of such is the kingdom of heaven.

Do ALL rich people deserve to be rich? Even those that did not "work" for it, or got their riches by hook and crook?


=================
Do you know how to read? There was no statement I said that the 51 million are all able and strong bodied.
Many of them are. Without working, they have food stamps, free phone, and welfare money, free Obamacare, free kids schools. They use their welfare money for manicure, pedicure, hair straightening and coloring. And they get fat buying those food loaded with fat and sugar. Then they frequently go to the medical doctor to fix their fat body due to eating so much.

Reply
Jan 10, 2018 20:45:33   #
emarine
 
cold iron wrote:
Yeah, right, don't fix the problem!!




You seem confused... you stated "America has the best legal system that money can buy. That is a very sad fact."... I agreed & stated we shouldn't elect billionaire's... have you now changed your mind?... I never said anything about Trump, he has nothing to do with the legal system... he would never pass the bar exam...

Reply
 
 
Jan 11, 2018 01:18:17   #
BigMike Loc: yerington nv
 
Radiance3 wrote:
==================
My Lord Jesus Christ said, those strong bodied people who don't work must not eat! During the 8 years of Obama, he created 51 million of these handouts.


Obama did like for folks to be dependent, no doubt.

Reply
Jan 11, 2018 01:20:10   #
BigMike Loc: yerington nv
 
emarine wrote:
You seem confused... you stated "America has the best legal system that money can buy. That is a very sad fact."... I agreed & stated we shouldn't elect billionaire's... have you now changed your mind?... I never said anything about Trump, he has nothing to do with the legal system... he would never pass the bar exam...


Lawyers are the problem bro. It existed long before Trump...trying to link him to it is pretty self-defeating, I think.

Reply
Jan 15, 2018 21:35:25   #
vernon
 
coffee wrote:
So right!! They make the law and rules for their selfs!! It's a mess! Anyone else would be in jail!! What a joke!!
We need good leaders but where and when??!!


WE have a great leader now if the press and the haters would give him a chance.

Reply
Jan 15, 2018 21:38:00   #
vernon
 
emarine wrote:
You seem confused... you stated "America has the best legal system that money can buy. That is a very sad fact."... I agreed & stated we shouldn't elect billionaire's... have you now changed your mind?... I never said anything about Trump, he has nothing to do with the legal system... he would never pass the bar exam...


You don't know that but that's the way you hater's talk.you are really disgusting.

Reply
Page <prev 2 of 2
If you want to reply, then register here. Registration is free and your account is created instantly, so you can post right away.
Main
OnePoliticalPlaza.com - Forum
Copyright 2012-2024 IDF International Technologies, Inc.