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BREAKING: Discover How A Slacker Makes $100,000 A Year! |
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Joe
Posted: Mar 4th, 2008 at 8:24 pm |
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Vermont
Posted: Mar 5th, 2008 at 3:16 pm |
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I would like to know what percentage of these is for posession, and to further break it out, how many for posession of weed. |
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Fred Adams
Posted: Mar 5th, 2008 at 3:53 pm |
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Say wouldn’t it be good to outsource prisons to China and India. |
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The Presidential Candidates
Posted: Mar 5th, 2008 at 5:01 pm |
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“Land of the Free” my ass! Save the jails for violent dangerous criminals. Free all nonviolent prisoners. Legalize all “vices.” Stop trying to your silly “morals” into the law book. Goddamn idiots. Save all of this money and put it into education. |
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August
Posted: Mar 5th, 2008 at 5:18 pm |
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I wish there was a country for me to sneek into; all other countries hate Americans though. The “prison” population is actually higher considering once someone gets out of prison or jail they can’t get a living wage job or get their own housing, thus creating more crime. |
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Jimmy L
Posted: Mar 5th, 2008 at 5:24 pm |
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Why not throw everyone in jail? Then we can control their every move and make this into a real autocratic state (rather than the hidden autocratic state that it currently is). Power to the people! If you’re a drudge fan: drudgetracker.com |
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ctiberius
Posted: Mar 5th, 2008 at 5:44 pm |
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So I guess we should just let everyone out onto the streets? What is the argument here? Forget incarcerating criminals and just lavish them with public school funding increases? I’m sure the dealers and the users and thieves and the rapists and the murderers were just misunderstood teens who grew up craving a good book and a guidance counselor to talk to. |
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Nikolai
Posted: Mar 5th, 2008 at 7:06 pm |
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This is actually a big problem and I think that the laws need to be adjusted to make sure that only those that really need to spend time behind bars do that. Alternative punishment system might work better than imprisonment. |
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Figuria
Posted: Mar 5th, 2008 at 9:24 pm |
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Growing numbers in prison… Well when we have an executive branch that thinks it is above the law, why are we surprised when their lead-by-example approach results in emulation across the board. FYI for link purposes, I first saw this article at: But I believe it’s origin may have been the Pew Center: |
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e. van
Posted: Mar 5th, 2008 at 10:53 pm |
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What specific areas (towns,little or big cities)are all these criminals coming from,and what is going on or not going on there?Seems to me all of this must be known, and I suspect that would be were living standards are low and a high degree of hopelessness exists. Now spending some of our tax dollars would be better spent in those places. Wada ya think? |
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mirror
Posted: Mar 6th, 2008 at 12:56 am |
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the laws all ready been adjusted to suit thous h did adjustment…. |
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mirror
Posted: Mar 6th, 2008 at 2:26 am |
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Prisons- big business |
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jack quwin
Posted: Mar 6th, 2008 at 3:19 am |
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you all are missing the bigger picture I looked up 3 states so you see the savings here ? maybe I should sue my state for the money they do not have to pay for me not being in prison. but Prison populations like this is what happens when you get rid of what they called ever notice they are not building MORE woman prisons ? SO I SAY pay then $1000 per month and save us all money Peace |
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Adam Seale
Posted: Mar 6th, 2008 at 5:15 am |
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Anyone else also see something of a connection between a horrid public school system and high crime rates? |
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Janie
Posted: Mar 6th, 2008 at 5:25 am |
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Jack quwin, you have hit it on the head, but you have the wrong answer. Paying them money is not going to fix any problems. Look at that amount of money spent, as Jack says, that is more than decent people are making WORKING for a living. Prisons are too nice, why should prisoners live a life so much better than honest working people? They should take away the TV’s, the cable, the cigarettes. Hard labor and simple, but nourishing, food (oatmeal anyone?) would do alot to reduce the expenses. Expand the death penalty, or even just execute those on death row. Inmates on death row cost over 5 times the average cost of regular prisoners. Bring back some physical punishment. Speeding - 5 lashes, drug use - 25 lashes, second offense 50 lashes, 3rd 75…you get the idea. Those kinds of punishments are effective. Cruel and Unusual? It is cruel and unusual for me to have to slave away at 2 jobs so I can eat, and then have my tax money going to pay for those thugs that live better than I do. I have people in my neighborhood that when things get tough for them, they go do something so they get put back in jail. At least there they get free TV, free food, and a place to sleep instead of having to work to get those things. You can bet that if they started getting whippings then wouldn’t be so eager to go back to commit crimes anymore. |
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michael mazur
Posted: Mar 6th, 2008 at 8:49 am |
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Were the State to spend on education what it spends on prisons it would need only to spend on prisons what it now spends on education . But that would create an educated thinking population who would begin to demand of the State that it justify abdicating the public good, as it has, by giving the licence to private banks to create money out of thin air and to charge interest on it. That is why the private banks demand that education for nearly all people be so designed that most people by far are rendered incapable of even posing the question of how money is really created, let alone coming to the independant conclusion that it is only thin air being loaned to us at interest. One further intended result of our `education` is that it leaves people ill equipped to properly handle life, but the State and the banks don’t really mind as they would rather have us all in jail anyway. |
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Give me a break
Posted: Mar 6th, 2008 at 11:21 am |
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This site is apparently afraid of the truth since my last comment was not accepted… “The RATE OF INCREASE for prison costs was six times greater than [THE RATE OF INCREASE] for higher education spending, the report said.” There is a very big difference. |
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Bart
Posted: Mar 6th, 2008 at 1:13 pm |
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many people say, omg how america has changed. |
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Rick
Posted: Mar 6th, 2008 at 3:21 pm |
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Read a few books on this topic and estimate around 28% incarcerated for drug offenses. I am moving out of this country as millions already have to get away from this police state. The joke is the U.S government is the biggest drug dealer in the world, when Cheney was approached with a question of why in Afghanistan is the U.S. not destroying the poppy fields he replied, not enough manpower and money. What he did not say is that troops are used as security guards for the poppy fields. |
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galilei
Posted: Mar 6th, 2008 at 3:54 pm |
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Janie, you’re a fascist. The US doesn’t have the highest per capita prison population in the world because we have the most crime. It is because we have a corrupt system. |
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Realist
Posted: Mar 6th, 2008 at 5:46 pm |
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Please add the link to the original article. Thank you.