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Never mind the Military Industrial Complex. The War on drugs created the Prison Industrial Complex.

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TheBigotBasher Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-09-09 07:57 PM
Original message
Never mind the Military Industrial Complex. The War on drugs created the Prison Industrial Complex.
If America wants to change, it needs to look at the War on Drugs. The sad irony is that The War Against Terror slowed down the growth of the Prison population.

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cbc5g Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-09-09 08:00 PM
Response to Original message
1. It's no coincidence that dramatic rise happened right when the drug war on Americans started
Edited on Fri Jan-09-09 08:01 PM by cbc5g
And Clinton should be ashamed of himself.
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TheBigotBasher Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-09-09 08:04 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. Prohibition
Edited on Fri Jan-09-09 08:05 PM by ukfordems
When the Federal US government prohibited alcohol, it required a change in the constitution, when they banned other drugs no change was made.

Helps when you want $1 a day prison pay.

If the ban was not a change to federal law, why does the Federal Government override state medical marijuana laws?
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ikojo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-09-09 08:10 PM
Response to Original message
3. In states such as California the correctional officer's
union has also encouraged the building of more prisons, of course it creates more jobs for them.

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TheBigotBasher Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-09-09 08:50 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. Inmates Forced to Drink Poison Water, No Place to go for Help
If you are poor and not a Senator, drugs laws do more harm than good.

From http://www.webcommentary.com/asp/ShowArticle.asp?id=birdbc&date=090109

I would like to share with you a letter sent to me by Daniel Zuma, a member of our UNION prison reform group with a graduate degree who gives us a first person, professionally qualified description of water at Duel Vocational Institute, a prison at Tracy, California and conditions he personally witnessed after he was terrorized by law enforcement. Here is Daniel's shocking account. He is now out of prison, but he told me that he will never get over how his own life was devastated by what he endured and witnessed there. It is a key to why nobody is getting out of prison as a better person, but are instead broken in mind, body and spirit. Here's the letter from a very courageous man whose government has destroyed him over a victimless "crime". After his letter, I discuss other instances of poison water in the state's prisons and call everyone to rally with us outside the San Francisco, California federal courthouse on February 4, 2009

He was harshly sentenced to three years on a first arrest for possesion of recreational drugs. A senior citizen who was harming no one, a well-educated, gentle person who worked for years helping people in state service, thrown into prison. Whom did this benefit? No wonder we have no state budget and so many people are walking around traumatized for life after a ridiculous prison sentence.

Begin Letter from Daniel Zuma

Dear Rev. Bird:

Nobody ever expects to go to prison, least of all someone who has never been in trouble before, and who has retired from a career in civil service. But, a friend of mine got caught for possession of drugs and they offered him his freedom in exchange for mine. The government broke down my front door, destroyed my faith in humanity, ruined me financially, and sentenced me to 3 years in prison for drug possession.

Prison did nothing about my drug use except to traumatize me to an extent that I would only be more likely to use them in the future (drug use is one of the defining criteria of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder). Prison also ruined my physical health, leaving me bitter and in chronic physical pain. To my surprise, the vast majority of the people I met in prison were there for non-violent offenses--mostly for drug possession, or for technical violations of their conditions of parole--things like "failure to follow directions," failing to keep an appointment, or turning in a dirty drug or alcohol test; i.e., things that are not even crimes. Many were over 50 years old, like myself.

I was at Deuel Vocational Institute in Tracy CA, where the water runs gray and sometimes brown from the tap. It tastes of industrial chemicals and fermented cow urine, since a dairy sits atop the shallow aquifer from which the prison draws 620,000 gallons per day. It´s disgusting even in the best of times; the staff won´t drink it; there are signs warning visitors not to drink it; and trying to wash anything white only makes them dirtier. In mid-May of 2006, Plant Ops did some routine maintenance changing over the pipes bringing water into the prison. They turned the water off to the entire prison for about 18 hours, and when they turned it back on, the water ran black and thick as paint for nearly a day, after which it gradually went back to its usual gray. The staff brought trash cans full of potable water into the large dorms, and gave the prisoners buckets to help flush the toilets.

The roughly 3,900 prisoners confined two to a cell were completely without water; 379 prisoners and eight staff members were seriously sickened by some sort of diarrheal disease, variously identified as the Norovirus, Campylobacter and, according to one Doctor I spoke to, "a mixture of fecal bacteria" that were never conclusively identified. DVI is a reception center--a feeder prison--which sends about 750 inmates per week to Mule Creek, Wasco, Folsom and elsewhere in the Central Valley. It is, therefore, the first stop for any epidemic entering the prison system. Between May 16 and May 23, 2006, 1,344 inmates and 14 correctional staffers at 10 prisons came down with the disease.

From the 1950s to the 1980s, DVI was used as a firefighter training facility. Chemicals would be ignited in an open pit and extinguished by firefighting personnel. Consequently, there are now high concentrations of Volatile Organic Compounds, such as PCE, TCE, and DCE in the groundwater. The prison dairy contributes significant amounts of nitrates and fecal bacteria, which leach into the water table only 12 feet below. Instead of filtration, the prison relies on high levels of chlorination to suppress fecal contamination, so there are high levels of chlorides (i.e., the "C" in PCE, TCE and DCE) in the water.

In addition to manganese and iron, the water at DVI has a very high salt content due to it´s proximity to San Francisco Bay. So, the water is very "filling," but it doesn't quench your thirst. During intestinal disease outbreaks and in hot weather, it is very difficult to stay hydrated or to flush the accumulated toxins from your body. (This is a particular danger for the elderly, or the many inmates who are on psychotropic medications due to mental health problems.)

After three months of drinking the DVI water I developed a rash over 80% of my body, which was so itchy I would scratch myself bloody in my sleep. It also affected my joints and my vision, and only cleared up when I was able to obtain bottled water.

I went to Mainline Medical to try to get a prescription or a medical "Chrono" for bottled water, or else a transfer to another institution with clean water. I was told by Dr. Fox, the Chief of the Medical Staff, that they didn't have the power to grant either request, and besides, I couldn't prove medically that it was the water (even though my rash would come back when I started drinking the water again). I was advised to file a Medical 602 , an Inmate Appeal which, in keeping with the normal standard of incompetence in these matters, was routed to the prison´s Chief Engineer as a "quality of life" issue, who denied it on the grounds that there was nothing he could do about the water.

Unlike many inmates I was fortunate enough to have family who could send me my own money from the outside, and I was able to purchase 2-liter bottles for 90 cents each once a month at the prison canteen. But then CDC suddenly canceled these from the canteen inventory in favor of 20 oz bottles at triple the price. I filed an Appeal on the price increase, citing my own health reasons and the fact that clean water is a necessity of life and health. After nearly a year of working my way through the various levels of appeal, it was finally turned down at the highest level by CDC in Sacramento.

They said that the decision to raise the price on water was made at the state level by a committee and, having been made, it cannot be unmade just for me. Apparently, allowing all prisoners access to clean water--even at their own expense--was not deemed sufficiently reasonable to revisit the committee´s decision. I know from my own years of experience in state government that there is no impediment to modifying a contract of this sort. They simply did not consider the health of inmates worth the effort.

In the meantime, I began documenting cases of others who had filed grievances at DVI and found a consistent pattern of obstruction and delay--and, when appeals were granted, the outcomes were deliberately calculated to make the situation worse, so as to convince the inmates of the futility of trying to change the system by working within it. All of the organizational self-correcting mechanisms have been disconnected in CDC--there is no meaningful press access; no outside audits; no inmate self-governance; no checks and balances; no whistle blower protection; chaplains can be fired for disclosing substandard conditions; and a recent federal case brought by an inmate at Pelican Bay regarding the serving of hot meals has shown that even the federal courts cannot force CDC to follow its own rules--should a prisoner survive the year-long gauntlet of delay and reprisals that pervades the Inmate Appeals Process.

What I didn´t know at the time is that polluted drinking water had been known about for decades at DVI and elsewhere, but it has been largely ignored as overcrowded prisons overtax the aquifers from which they draw their water. Nitrate contamination due to fertilizers is especially common in rural areas, such as the Salinas Valley State Prison near Monterey; the California Institution for Men (CIM) in Chino; at the California Men´s Colony (CMC) in San Luis Obispo; and the nearby California Institution for Women (CIW). Mule Creek State Prison´s water is contaminated with dry cleaning chemicals; Old Folsom´s water is contaminated by toxic waste from the old scrap metal, drum storage, industrial manufacturing areas, and a firing range. At Kern Valley State Prison, there are high levels of arsenic in the water. Alkalinity, asbestos and fecal contamination are issues at Avenal. Inmates have also been sickened by the water at the Sierra Conservation Center in Jamestown, and by outbreaks of Helicobacter pylori (a bacterium that causes peptic ulcers) at the California Rehabilitation Center in Norco.

If there is any pollution in the local water table, it tends to get sucked into the prison because of the rates of pumping have to keep up with overcrowding. To make matters worse, prisons only concentrate these pollutants further, and they discharge them back into the host communities, who are forced to subsidize the cost of treating the excess sewage. Between 2000 and 2006, eight of California's 33 state prisons have been cited for major water pollution problems. Folsom State Prison, for example, was fined $700,000 in 2000 for a massive 700,000 gallon sewage spill into the adjacent American River.

When living without air conditioning, water becomes a life or death matter. The summer I was at DVI, several people collapsed from the heat; three others died at Vacaville, a prison not far away. There is absolutely no excuse for not having reverse osmosis units attached to the drinking fountains in the dorms and cell blocks. It isn´t done because no one in authority thinks that the prisoners need or deserve unpolluted water. There is no public outcry, therefore no reason to care.

In one 214-person minimum security ranch dorm where I was housed, two people died in the space of 6 months because the guards simply would not call the paramedics even though it was obvious that one man was having a stroke, and the other had fallen out of his bunk and was unconscious. Instead, the guards called for a pickup truck to take them to Mainline Medical, which took 45 minutes to arrive. They had to drag the poor men out on a blanket because they had no stretcher or any emergency equipment that paramedics would have normally brought. The prisoners died in Mainline Medical, and their families were told it was due to "natural causes." It was, however, simply cold, callous neglect.

Daniel Zuma

DVI Y Dorm

This is Y-Dorm at DVI. I lived in Z-Dorm which is on the other side of the back wall partition. It is twice the size but there are only 14 working toilets for 300 people. Prisoners are issued one eating utensil and one cup, but there are only two sinks (adjacent to the toilets), and no hot water or dish soap. Notice the lack of places to sit and write letters. Prisoners have to sit crouched or lay or their bunks upwards of 20 hours per day, causing all sorts of back and neck problems. There is no air-conditioning or ice here, and temperatures regularly climb into the 100s in the summer.

click here for rest of this article, for source links, photographs. Article picks up beneath the picture of the DVI dorm

http://preview.tinyurl.com/prison-poisoned-water

Dr. B. Cayenne Bird
Founder and Director, http://www.1union1.com/advice.htm
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avaistheone1 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-09-09 09:08 PM
Response to Original message
5. Educational graph. Thanks for posting.
We are totally being duped and robbed by the military industrial and prison industrial complex. It truly takes away from the quality of all our daily lives in this country.

Money that could be spent for the common good is spent going down those two rat holes.
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camera obscura Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-09-09 09:14 PM
Response to Original message
6. Jim Webb is trying to put prison reform back on the table - if you support him contact your Senators
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Hippo_Tron Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-10-09 03:37 AM
Response to Reply #6
14. I was about to mention this, Jim Webb is awesome
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mopinko Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-09-09 09:41 PM
Response to Original message
7. a disgrace. and absolute disgrace in the land of the free.
and a waste of epic proportions.
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Phoebe Loosinhouse Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-09-09 09:42 PM
Response to Original message
8. This is finally starting to filter through to our collective conscience (or unconscience)
(this is a duplicate of something I posted in another thread)



For instance, it is dawning on me that things are really much much worse than I ever realized. I am recognizing that a concept that has always been relatively metaphorical for me like "evil" is actually possible and could even intrude on your life one day, even if you're just a little person who trys to mind your own business and put food on your family.

A few recent threads about prison labor and the for-profit prison industry have made me feel like I am looking into some God forsaken (literally) abyss. I never really have taken stock of the fact that I am living in a country where the prison population is HUGE and growing daily. And who makes up that population? It took a thread about some quiet 50 year old retired civil servant who made the error of growing his own pot and who now finds himself in a prison workhouse making pennies a day to wake me up. The reason is, because while I have always been sympathetic to the plight of the poor and underprivileged who have traditionally made up the criminal class, it never truly struck a personal chord. A retired 50ish civil service guy does. Sad, but true. It wakes me up to the fact that the answer to "who is a criminal?" is "anyone they say so." Non-violent drug users. Protesters. Don Seligman. Tomorrow it could be bloggers who say unkind things about the state. Combine that with the fact that we live in a country with "Constitution Free" zones that cover the majority of the population.

Why are we so invested in prisons? Why are they being turned into privatized profit centers? Why don't we try to rehabilitate? Why do we look for ways to make sentences longer? Why are there things like 3 strikes laws? How can a sheriff make money by denying inmates food? Why don't we make even some kind of pathetic effort to address the underlying causes of why people are jailed in the first place?(Mental illness, homelessness, poverty, disintegrated families, lack of employment opportunities that pay a living wage,etc.) Because it is to someone's benefit. Because someone is making money.


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awoke_in_2003 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-10-09 07:11 PM
Response to Reply #8
22. Prisons
are becoming modern day slavery. Big money to be made in the business.
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Royal Sloan 09 Donating Member (286 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-09-09 10:12 PM
Response to Original message
9. K & R eom
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Phoebe Loosinhouse Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-09-09 10:25 PM
Response to Original message
10. Will you please look at that graph, everyone?!
Look at the increase! Do you really want to live in the United States of Prison America?
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RepublicanElephant Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-09-09 11:15 PM
Response to Original message
11. legalized slavery. nt
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High Plains Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-10-09 03:01 AM
Response to Original message
12. The land of the free is the world's leading imprisoner.
#1 in actual people behind bars. Take that, China!

#1 in people behind bars per capita. Take that Russia, China, South Africa!
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High Plains Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-10-09 03:02 AM
Response to Original message
13. More than 500,000 imprisoned on drug charges.
That's more than the total number of people imprisoned for all offenses in the European Union, and they have about 100 million more people than we do. What the fuck is wrong with America?
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Uncle Joe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-10-09 02:02 PM
Response to Reply #13
19. I believe the answer to your question is "the corrupting influence of power."
"What the fuck is wrong with America?"

We as a nation have a supreme amount of power, combine that with our relatively young national history and you can get a potentially dangerous mix.

Today and for he last few decades if not the past century we've been experiencing the creeping stranglehold of corporate supremacy. I believe the eternal "War Against Inanimate Objects" and the eternal "War Against An Emotion" are both a direct result of the corporate super citizen's wishes.

"We the people of the United States" has morphed in to "We the corporations of the United States."

Corporations rule our lives, and you are guilty until proven innocent because corporations dictate that you should be.

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eridani Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-10-09 09:28 AM
Response to Original message
15. We can't do anything about it because all those jailers need jobs
:sarcasm:

All those folks working in private insurance to deny people health care need jobs, too. and those people working at our 700+ military bases around the world.
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populistdriven Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-10-09 10:59 AM
Response to Original message
16. Thanks Bill Clinton for Growing our Prison Population by over 700,000
Prison Expansion:

When Bill Clinton took office in January 1993, the violent crack epidemic of the late 1980s was already subsiding. Nonetheless, the galloping expansion of police powers and the prison system didn't skip a beat, and law enforcement shifted to a new emphasis on marijuana. When Clinton entered office, the prison population-local, state and federal-was about 1.3 million. As he leaves, that number has ballooned to over 2 million, the highest rate of incarceration-as well as the highest total number behind bars-in a democratic state in the history of the world.

Nearly 60% of federal and 25% of state prisoners are incarcerated for nonviolent drug offenses. Hundreds of new prisons have been built to accommodate them, giving rise to a prison-industrial complex that defies imagination. New drug courts and judges have been added to state and federal rosters; 100,000 new police, with their attendant paraphernalia-guns, cruisers, station houses and adjunct non- uniformed personnel-have been hired to search out small-time drug users; tens of thousands of jail and prison guards have been added to state and federal payrolls. There has not been such a boon to public construction since the Works Progress Administration of the 1930s. Our military and Drug Enforcement Administration forces overseas have exponentially expanded as well, particularly in Latin America. All of this has been an enormous help to booming Clinton's economy. The strategy was brilliantly devised: Increase incarceration by three- quarters of a million, add a couple of million workers to create and maintain the prison infrastructure, and voila! Lower unemployment and a healthier economy. And to help pay for it all, the Feds and states used a tool that became available only a few years before Clinton's inauguration: forfeiture.


http://www.mapinc.org/newscfdp/v01/n087/a05.html?6793
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ensho Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-10-09 11:35 AM
Response to Original message
17. private owned prisons should be outlawed


people in jail/prison for pot need to be let go.
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uppityperson Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-10-09 01:35 PM
Response to Original message
18. Indeed and it is one of the reasons they keep mj illegal, to keep the #s up
If they took marijuana off, legalized it, those #s would drop so fast. Follow the money.
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treestar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-10-09 02:04 PM
Response to Original message
20. Exactly, and that's why they are all for criminalizing everything
There are companies that sell things to the prisoners. They may earn money or get it from relatives.

Money is always at the root of it.

There are those who make money off the population at military bases, too. In their case, it's no wonder they see the need for wars and more wars.
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file83 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-10-09 03:53 PM
Response to Original message
21. Timothy Leary discovered the Prison Industrial Complex's roots in the 1950's.
Edited on Sat Jan-10-09 03:54 PM by file83
Read his autobiography "Flashbacks".

He was conducting state sanctioned experiments on prison inmates through Harvard. The psychological experiments used psilocybin (from "magic" mushrooms) on the inmates AND Timothy himself at the same time to see what effects those "therapy" sessions would have on recidivism rates (the % of inmates who get released and then commit a crime again).

Basically, his scientific results showed that his therapy sessions were DRASTICALLY dropping the recidivism rate. The prisoners reported that after their psychedelic experience they had a totally different world view. It changed them FOR THE BETTER.

So, shortly after he published those results the U.S. Government tried to criminalize his research, he lost his job, and he was on the run.

It seems his success at reforming inmates was bad for the business model of the Prison Industrial Complex. And the rest, as they say, is history.
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