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ElsewheresDaughter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-03-05 04:49 PM
Original message
The Daily Outrage ....Prison Industrial Complex
Edited on Wed Aug-03-05 04:58 PM by ElsewheresDaughter
CCA and its main rival, GEO Group _ formerly Wackenhut




http://www.covertaction.org/content/view/59/75/

Beyond the Prison Industrial Complex:
Class Warfare from Above

What drives incarceration and the massive build-up in American criminal justice? Are specific corporate interests taking control of criminal justice policy, as is often the case with military policy? Has the Military-Industrial Complex, with the end of the Cold War, transmogrified into the Prison Industrial Complex (PIC)?
This "prison as pentagon" argument has assumed the mantle of common sense among many left pundits and activists. The PIC explanation generally cites three ways in which incarceration directly bolsters capitalism. They are: the privatization of prisons and prison-related services, the exploitation of prison labor by private firms, and the broad Keynesian stimulus (i.e., job creation) of criminal justice spending.
All of these features are important, but none of them—alone or together—explains why we are headed for what Jerome Miller calls a "gulag state."1 Perhaps a more useful analysis of the cops-courts-and-big house buildup requires a broader, more historically rooted class analysis that looks not just at bad corporations but at the structure of American capitalism more generally.

Prison Labor
Critics of the Prison Industrial Complex focus much of their attention on prison labor: We hear that incarceration is increasingly driven by profit hungry firms looking for cheap labor. In making this point speakers or writers will reel off a sinner's list of familiar implicated corporate names: Microsoft, Starbucks, Victoria's Secret and TWA. The phenomenon looks to be a mile wide, but in reality it's only an inch deep.
Most of the typically named culprits have engaged prison labor only via subcontractors who, in turn, often have only sporadic contracts with prisons. The moral stain remains: Leasing convicts is leasing convicts. But we need to re-calibrate our understanding of what's going on and look closely at the facts. Nationwide only 2,600 prisoners work for private firms.2 Why is this? Because capitalists don't like the invasive, slow, overbearing environment of prisons. Guards may approve of "making convicts pay" but in practice they regularly interrupt production to strip-search, count, and lock away the convict employees. Nor are many big firms willing to risk the bad press associated with exploiting prisoners. For example, Montgomery Ward's charter pledges that the company will not use child, slave, or convict labor. Finally, why hire convicts at minimum wage—corporations have to pay prisons minimum wage even if the inmate employees only receive pennies per hour—when there is an overabundance of desperate, often militarily disciplined, workers in the free world.
But that's just the private sector, what about the State? After all, most convict laborers are employed by state-owned "prison industries" such as the California Department of Corrections Prison Industries Authority (PIA) or the Federal Government's Unicor, which employs about 20,000 inmates. Impressive numbers, and one would be excused for thinking that someone must be making money hand over fist. However Unicor—like the many parallel ventures owned by the states—is an economic basket case that would shortly collapse if ever forced to compete with the private sector.3
Unicor products provided to the Department of Defense, on average, cost 13 percent more than the same goods supplied by private firms. U.S. Navy officials say that, compared to the open market, Unicor's "product is inferior, costs more and takes longer to procure." The federal prison monopoly delivers 42 percent of its orders late, compared to an industry-wide average delinquency rate of only 6 percent. A 1993 government report found that Unicor wire sold to the military failed at nearly twice the rate of the military's next worst supplier.
"The stuff was poor quality," said Derek Vander Schaaf, the Pentagon's Deputy Inspector General, adding: "If you can't compete at 50 cents an hour for labor, guys, come on."4
Most state owned prison industry authorities (PIAs) are just as bad: twenty-five percent of them reported net losses in 1994. But even this unflattering number is optimistically distorted, because many PIAs that boast profits in their annual reports fail to disclose the massive subsidies they receive. For example, California's PIA claims to be in the black, but state auditors tell a different story: In 1998 the PIA employed 7,000 of the state's 155,000 prisoners in everything from dairy farming to computer refurbishing, and operated with the usual pampering of guaranteed markets and obscenely low wages. But, like Unicor, the PIA was unable even to meet its costs. Despite posting a "profit" the PIA is on life support, receiving "operating subsidies" and capital outlay funding from the state worth more than $90 million.5
The same story can be found in state after state. Why the inefficiency? In part because convicts resent being used as virtual slaves and thus drag their feet, steal supplies, and commit sabotage nonstop. One former federal inmate told me that his "cellie" ended each workday at a Unicor shop with a celebratory calculation of how much equipment and material he had destroyed, thrown or stolen. As the former prisoner put it, "It was all waste, all the time."

Private Prisons
Another player in the matrix of interests referred to as the prison industrial complex is the fast-growing and powerful private prison industry which now controls around 10 percent of all U.S. prison beds. Though private jailers are generally profitable, they don't lower the costs of incarceration for state governments. What savings are achieved through corner cutting—that is: removing all amenities and services and hiring unqualified guards —is usually absorbed by the company as profit. Already this modus operandi of the bottom line is showing itself to be detrimental for the long-term profitability of some big private jailers, as we will see below.
Through assiduous cultivation of state officials, the private jailers are increasingly active in shaping criminal justice policy, but their partnerships with state governments also face problems. Recent events have unveiled private jailers as cheats, liars and major political liabilities.
The biggest of the most recent blemishes on the private gulag's image was the mass escape at Corrections Corporation of America's Youngstown, Ohio, prison. That joint—supposed to be a medium security lockup—was a hyper-violent overcrowded facility illegally packed with maximum security inmates from D.C.
CCA's invincibility crumbled with the news that six very angry young men from Washington, D.C., had cut open the prison's chain-link fence, crossed an electrified barrier, plowed through yards of razor wire and were now at large among the good people of Youngstown.6
For almost a week, regular police, tactical squads, canine teams, and helicopters combed an ever widening circle around the prison in search of the runaways. One by one the cops busted the desperate, exhausted escapees, some of whom had been badly wounded by the razor wire. The last runaway inmate, Vincent Smith, was finally taken down in the backyard of Susie Ford's house. A 54-year-old grandmother of three living on the outskirts of Youngstown, Ms. Ford got the news live—when her frenetic sister telephoned advising her to turn on the television. "That's our building! That's our building!" Indeed it was. And the Ford sisters watched their screens in amazement as police swarmed through the shrubs out back.7
This and a slew of other "problems" have finally undermined the once unstoppable CCA. A former Wall Street darling, and dubbed "a theme stock for the nineties," CCA's stock price has tumbled to half its peak value.8
Other private lockup firms are facing the same crisis. Recently the number two private jailer, Wackenhut Corporation, saw several of its facilities rocked by riots. In mid-November last year, at the Taft Federal Correctional Institution, hundreds of inmates, angry about lousy food, smashed windows, televisions, and tables in the federal system's only full-sized private prison. Thirty minutes of tear gas, rubber bullets and flash bang grenades ended the uprising.9 More serious was the August rioting in two of Wackenhut's New Mexico penitentiaries. In one of those clashes a guard was shanked to death by ten inmates.10 On top of all that 12 former Wackenhut employees are under indictment in Austin, Texas. And much like CCA, the company ended the year with its stock heading south—down 60 percent from the previous season.11
So private prison has grown fast but its boom days may be over as politicians—even Republicans—are turning against for-profit lockups.12 Thus it would seem that private prisons are not pushing criminal justice policy in the way that arms manufacturers do with defense policy.

more...
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Silverhair Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-03-05 05:00 PM
Response to Original message
1. The problem is that among the general public...
NOBODY GIVES A DAMN ABOUT JAILBIRDS. I use the term "jailbirds" to convey the idea about how the average person views them.

Further, if the left pushes this as an issue, I believe that we will push away even more voters. People are wanting sympathy for the victims of crime, NOT for the predators.

I am well aware that many of them are in for victimless crimes, such as using drugs. But the general public doesn't care about "druggies" either.
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ElsewheresDaughter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-03-05 05:04 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. innocent man spends 26 years behind bars released yesterday ..........
Edited on Wed Aug-03-05 05:10 PM by ElsewheresDaughter
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/national/AP-Rapes-DNA-E...


MIAMI (AP) -- A man who spent 26 years behind bars as Florida's ''Bird Road Rapist'' was released from prison Wednesday after DNA evidence cleared him in two of the attacks and cast doubt on whether he was responsible for any of the crimes.

''Victory,'' 67-year-old Luis Diaz said as he walked out of a courthouse a free man.

Circuit Judge Christina Pereya-Shuminer threw out his five rape convictions at the request of both Miami-Dade County's chief prosecutor and lawyers for the Innocence Project, a nonprofit organization that works to get inmates exonerated via DNA.


can i get at least a sigh?
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SouthernDem2004 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-03-05 05:40 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. Off topic. /nt
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Swamp Rat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-03-05 08:02 PM
Response to Reply #4
7. LOL! Off topic?!?
I have never seen this before. Within 4 posts someone tells the OP that they are "off topic." :rofl:

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Silverhair Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-03-05 09:57 PM
Response to Reply #2
10. Woulld you be happier if ALL prisioners were set free?
It is good that evidence that can clear a person is being looked at. But it says nothing about your original topic.
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ProudDad Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-04-05 02:11 AM
Response to Reply #10
15. Yes
I'd be happier if the nearly 50% of the people incarcerated due to the phoney drug war were set free and the phony drug war ended.

I'd be happier if nearly all of the people who are incarcerated were set free and provided with the help they need to break out of the cycle of self-loathing violence they've been dealt.

This shouldn't be a democrat or republican issue. This should be an issue of humanity and reason.

An eye for an eye renders the whole world blind...
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ArkDem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-03-05 05:11 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. Bingo and bingo.
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ProudDad Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-04-05 02:07 AM
Response to Reply #1
14. The word you need is MOST
Most of the people in prison are there for the crime of being born poor and of darker skin color. There are almost no affluent people in prison.

Most of the people in prison are there in great part due to substance abuse as the crime or a major cause of their crime.

Most of the people in prison could be saved but instead are put into an environment that will make them worse.

Juvenile halls are the elementary schools for crime. Jails are the high-schools for crime. Prisons are the crime colleges. Maximum security prisons are the post-graduate schools for crime.

These "jailbirds" you speak of are mostly human beings who have lived through circumstances you can't even dream of... but again, most could be saved if this was a civilized country.

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ArkDem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-04-05 09:20 AM
Response to Reply #14
18. Are they responsible, in any way, for their actions? I grew up poor,
no running water/outhouse, I've never felt the need to commit armed robbery, burglary or assault. Maybe it's just me?
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Silverhair Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-04-05 12:30 PM
Response to Reply #18
23. Same here. No running water/outhouse.
I guess maybe we are weird. Maybe we should be violent sociopaths and blame society for all our woes.
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ArkDem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-04-05 12:55 PM
Response to Reply #23
25. I know this, we will be much better off if we release all convicts
now! They were either wrongfully convicted or they did, in fact, commit the crimes but it's our fault. Sounds pretty unfair to me.
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durutti Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-04-05 11:06 AM
Response to Reply #1
21. The middle class isn't the "general public".
To be sure, there's plenty of resentment toward convicts among that sector. But the middle class isn't the majority. The poor and working class are -- and there's sympathy for this issue among them, especially in the black and Hispanic communities. The key is getting the poor and working class to vote in large numbers (which they don't).
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Silverhair Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-04-05 12:40 PM
Response to Reply #21
24. The poor and the working class are the ones most victimized...
by criminals. The middle class and up can afford better neighborhoods, better policing, better locks, security systems, and even better guns. The poor can't and are usually the ones closest to the criminals, so they are the easiest prey.

Many of the crimes aren't property crimes either. Being raped is much more frequent among lower class females. The poor have very little sympathy for violent criminals.

I grew up so poor that when I joined the Army I thought it was wonderful, and that is NOT an exageration. I know poverty from experience, not from reading about it and watching TV programs.

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Wizard777 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-03-05 06:07 PM
Response to Original message
5. On the other end feeding that is Police Inc. AKA the FOP.
The FOP is just one of many police "unions." Well ay least until it's time to start putting people in jail for being an illegal union. Then suddenly it's just a fraternal organization like the Moose or Elks. This in turn leabing our politicians to wonder why the morals and ethivs of our paramilitary is eroding into out right corruption. Something tells me the FOP Political Committee isn't exactly being honest with our politician about the union that isn't a union. But why should our politicians pressure them for honest answers when they will be introducing a bill drafted by the FOP legislative committee. So where is We The Peoples voice in our police departments? We don't have one. We're the enemy. We're the subject. We are the product in the fascist police state.
The FOP has a say in who gets elecetd and what laws get the put on the fast track. Yet we have no vote in their elections. If they are going to change our world we can have no voice in theirs. We might dissent against summary execution and other forms of street justice enacted by police. This will tell you how powerful the FOP is. This is a quote from a public announcement made by the Virginia SAG in a case involving a shooting in Virginia by an off duty Maryland police officer. "A valid case of murder exists. I will not pursue these charges because I am an elected official. You cannot get elected without police support." It looks like getting away with murder is an FOP perk to the Centurian Class that they are trying to create here in America. "He who weilds the sword need never fear it's sharpened point." Right now the FOP and their attacks upon our Constitutional rights in the name of making the police's job easier or safer. Is more of threat to America than Al Qaida.
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wli Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-03-05 07:26 PM
Response to Original message
6. Bushler's solution to the housing bubble and unemployment
I've no doubt whatsoever this is the Republicans' dream for everyone making under 1M USD/yr.
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Kathy in Cambridge Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-03-05 08:09 PM
Response to Original message
8. KAZAAM!
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Bouncy Ball Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-04-05 12:16 AM
Response to Reply #8
12. KAZAAM!
(Shouldn't there really be three of these?)

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radio4progressives Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-03-05 09:34 PM
Response to Original message
9. Thanks for raising this issue - It rarely makes it on the radar..
i'm disappointed there hasn't been more discussion than it's seems to have received at this juncture - this is really important.
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Alcibiades Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-03-05 10:32 PM
Response to Original message
11. The prison industrial complex
is also a pretty lousy employer. The private prisons are really bad, the states are not much better and the federal system....

Actually, the federal system is pretty good to work for. More than that, it's a pretty good place to do time, if you must. I used to teach on an adjunct basis at the university level, and I always told my kids (most of whom presumably were not prison-bound, but you never know) that if you have to do time, go the extra mile and try to federalize your crime so that you do your time in the Bureau of Prisons. Compared to the BoP, most state systems are hellholes.

Anyway this thread reminds me of a book I had in the only criminology class I took in grad school, The Rich get Richer and the Poor get Prison, by Jeffrey Reiman. It also strikes me that Foucault's Discipline & Punish is increasingly relevant.

I agree with what's been said on the decriminalization of drugs, for the most part, except I think that if pot were legal, very little would get accomplished--I'm not just talking about in the work setting, I'm talking about in people's private lives. We'd become a nation of stoners, or at least most folks would. Perhaps there should be a law legalizing pot only for 21-30 year olds. No, that wouldn't work either, as the folks who always have the best access to pot are high school kids. Plus, if drugs were legal, people who aren't cool would start doing drugs, and then where would the counterculture be?

In closing, I would like to add that we really, really need prisons. Perhaps not for nonviolent drug offenders, and certainly not for Martha Stewart (they convict her and she's completed her sentence and Ken Lay is still a free man? WTF?), but there are folks in prison who really are guilty of some really horrendous shit, and who would do it again in a heartbeat if the could.
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ProudDad Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-04-05 02:14 AM
Response to Reply #11
16. The problem with the feds
is that there's no "good time". Also the penalties are much more draconian than most of the states for the same crime.

Also, there's a federal death penalty. You don't want to face that in a state like Mass where there's no death penalty. That's what that slime-puke-ball asscroft was doing, pre-empting capital cases in non-death penalty states so he could murder people.

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OKthatsIT Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-04-05 01:44 AM
Response to Original message
13. Bush&daBoyz make money in prison construction iindustry and security.
they also own crematoriums.
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Silverhair Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-04-05 06:20 AM
Response to Original message
17. This issue is a "third rail" for a progressive candidate. Touch it & DIE!
ANY candidate that tries to use this issue WILL LOSE THE ELECTION unless his/her district is so blue that it's indigo. That is a fact of political life.

Does anybody here remember the Willie Horton ads? THEY WORKED!! They were brutally effective. Dukakis was effectively painted as soft on crime because he did not quickly end the furloughs for lifers that was STARTED by his Republican predecessor. He did end them once he had been struck with Presidential ambitions, but it was too late.

The Republicans would LOVE for our candidates to include this in their campaign.
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durutti Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-04-05 10:53 AM
Response to Reply #17
19. I think you'd be surprised...
Poorer communities, I think, are fairly sympathetic toward the idea of ending the prison-industrial complex.
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durutti Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-04-05 11:03 AM
Response to Reply #19
20. Self-delete.
Edited on Thu Aug-04-05 11:06 AM by durutti
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durutti Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-04-05 11:07 AM
Response to Original message
22. Any DUers have personal experience with prison?
That is, have any DUers had close friends or family in prison (or been there themselves, if they're comfortable talking about it)? What is it like being a prisoner today? I'm very curious.

The reason I ask is that I just stared working for a company that sells prisoners things like food, bathroom supplies, and so on. I deliver it to them. The guards generally aren't nice people, and I'm sure they're even less nice when I'm not around. The things they buy are overpriced and poor quality. But otherwise, their treatment seems humane.

So, what's life really like on the other side?
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ElsewheresDaughter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-04-05 12:57 PM
Response to Reply #22
26. www.theotherside.org does a lot on inside prisons articles....
Edited on Thu Aug-04-05 01:05 PM by ElsewheresDaughter
and i was a minister in NY's youth prison system for 3 years...i saw plenty of injustice in these youth prisons

http://www.theotherside.org/archive/jul-aug04/


http://www.theotherside.org/
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durutti Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-04-05 08:38 PM
Response to Reply #26
27. Thanks.
Interesting links.
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