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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsPunishment for profit: The economics of mass incarceration
The excessive arrests and unjustified long-term imprisonments of mostly people of color, and the devastating effects these measures have on whole communities, have been exposed and denounced by community, religious, human rights, legal and advocacy organizations, and individual researchers.
Then why is it so hard to stop?
Because for a very powerful few, mass incarceration is not a bad thing at all. It is the source of fabulous profits. For them, prison equals profits.
The total cost to government of incarceration is $70 billion a year. The privately run prison industry, which feeds on mass incarceration, is one of the fastest growing and widest reaching of U.S. industries. In 2009 alone, when most industries were in a slump, the prison industry brought in $34.4 billion in revenues. "
*Thats why the judiciary, the courts, the police, the legislatures and even whole federal agencies have become apologists for, encouragers of and accomplices in punishment for profit, having had their palms amply greased by its main corporate players.
Legislation that enables financial gain from prisons, such as mandated harsh sentences for nonviolent crime, were actually written by the prison profiteers, then passed by legislatures in their pay."
http://www.workers.org/articles/2015/05/04/punishment-for-profit-the-economics-of-mass-incarceration/
daleanime
(17,796 posts)AgingAmerican
(12,958 posts)...and a continuance of the so called, 'war on drugs'. Human misery = profits.