February 2010
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ENOUGH ALREADY!

In the last 25 years we have allowed, encouraged and given our approval to our policy makers in regards to criminal justice.  We nodded our heads in approval when they announced that we needed to declare war on drugs.  We nodded our heads in approval when they announced that we had a generation of super predators coming and we needed to prepare for that.  We nodded our heads in approval when we declared war on crime in our nation.  Even if we did not believe or agree with their political platforms and policy decisions, our SILENCE gave them tacit approval.

We now have 25 years of history to review.  We can look at the policy decisions, the mandatory sentencing policies, the results of our war on drugs and crime, and ask ourselves if we made the right decisions.  We can look at the war that has been declared on the youth of this nation with zero tolerance policies, direct file statutes and the elimination of juvenile reform policies and see that our PRISONS are full of kids.  Kids, who are left to survive or be destroyed by an abusive and destructive system of incarceration.

At the receiving end for our war on drugs are addicts and kids who are experimenting with drugs.  Did we stop the drug traffic into America?  No we did not.  Have we impacted the availability of drugs to our kids?  No we have not.  Have we changed the landscape in our communities so that we have fewer people with addiction problems?  No we have not.  We have simply moved them out of intervention, treatment and rehabilitation and put them in prison.  We have sold our effective, and less costly, practices of dealing with drug problems for huge prison budgets.  We have turned the ill and afflicted members of our communities over to prison guards and dehumanizing practices, somehow believing that this will solve the problem. 

We know the impact of zero tolerance policies.  Kids can be sent to juvenile detention for smoking at school.  A first grader, who just received his first boy scout knife,  can be expelled for bringing it to school.  A kid who is caught fighting can be charged with assault.  A kid who get’s mouthy with his teacher can be suspended.  A kid who drinks, drives and gets in an accident, is sentenced to 15 years in prison.  An adult who commits the same crime against the community will be released in 5 years.  A kid who robs a store where someone gets hurt, will get life without parole, while his adult counter part may get 10 years.  We are making it very easy for our kids to fail and NEVER live down their mistakes. 

We have the results.  We have the history.  We know the cost and we know the impact.  Our communities are not safer, our communities are not healthier and every morning we have to look ourselves in the mirror and know that the same torturous practices that appall us concerning Guantanamo, happen in our prisons everyday……to kids…….the ones we are supposed to protect. 

We have created a prison nation.  7.3 million people are under the jurisdiction of the department of corrections in the United States.  Prisons have the jurisdiction over the lives of these people and are not accountable to anyone except the criminal justice branch of government.  That means that whatever happens inside of prison….stays in prison.  They are not places of reform….they are warehouses of darkness. 

Please read these articles which are from the Solitary Watch web site.  If you have not signed up to receive their blog posts, I recommend that you do.  They are a force and a voice for those who cannot speak out for themselves. 

http://solitarywatch.wordpress.com/2010/02/16/what-the-war-on-terror-owes-to-the-war-on-crime/

http://solitarywatch.wordpress.com/2010/01/30/children-sentenced-to-die-in-prison/

http://solitarywatch.wordpress.com/2010/02/13/kids-languish-in-solitary-while-awaiting-trial-in-colorado/

One Response to “ENOUGH ALREADY!”

  1. Seth says:

    The problem is a lack of community. It used to be that we knew the kids that we read about being locked up. It used to be that as a society we could balance in our minds the wrong done to victims with the injustice done to children. We’ve lost all capacity for empathy in our society. In Colorado, we’re fighting back; trying to draw people closer to the children that politicians want to demonize. We hope you can join us as we debate the issue of direct file with Adams County DA, Don Quick on March 18. Just click on the link to RSVP http://tinyurl.com/ybpxasa

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