Townhall...
The
Real Prison Industry
by Jonah Goldberg
November 26, 2011
I’ve
long thought the notion of a
prison-industrial complex to be laughable left-wing nonsense peddled by
Marxist
goofballs and other passengers in the clown car of academic identity
politics.
For
those who don’t know, the phrase
“prison-industrial complex,” or PIC, is a play on the
military-industrial
complex. The theory behind PIC is that there are powerful forces --
capitalist,
racist, etc. -- pushing to lock up as many black and brown men as they
can to
maintain white supremacy and line the pockets of big-prison CEOs and
shareholders with profits earned not just from the taxpayer but from
the toil
of prison-slave labor.
Self-described
“abolitionists” in the
anti-PIC cause seek to get rid of prisons altogether. Indeed, they want
to
abolish punishment itself.
That
goes for murderers, rapists and
pedophiles.
“People
who have seriously harmed
another need appropriate forms of support, supervision and social and
economic
resources,” explains the website for Critical Resistance, the leading
outfit in
the “abolitionist” cause. In other words, if Penn State’s Jerry
Sandusky is
found guilty on all counts, he doesn’t deserve prison; he deserves
“support,
supervision and social and economic resources.”
Personally,
I think that is just
bat-guano crazy.
Still,
the state of our prisons has
become something of a scandal. We have more prisoners today than we
have
soldiers, and more prison guards than Marines.
Our
prisons have become boot camps for
criminals. That’s one reason why I’m sympathetic to Peter Moskos’ idea
to bring
back flogging. A professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice,
Moskos
argues in his book, “In Defense of Flogging,” that flogging -- aka the
lash -- is
more humane than prison and much, much cheaper. He suggests that
perpetrators
of certain crimes -- petty theft, burglary, drug dealing -- be given
the option
of receiving one lash instead of six months in prison.
Before
you shrink from the cruelty of
the proposal, ask yourself which you would prefer: six lashes or three
years in
jail?
Moskos’
motive is to reduce the size,
scope and influence of prisons while keeping them around for the people
who
truly must be locked up: murderers, rapists, terrorists, pedophiles,
etc. I
might disagree with where he would set the ideal size of our prison
population
(I think incarceration rates have reduced crime more than he does), or
how many
lashes criminals should get, but he makes a compelling case, and his
objective
is reasonable.
But
it’s not an objective shared by
the California Correctional Peace Officers Association (CCPOA). This
was the
outfit that essentially destroyed then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s
attempt to
fix the state budget.
In
a state where more than two-thirds
of crime is attributable to recidivism, CCPOA has spent millions of
dollars
lobbying against rehabilitation programs, favoring instead policies
that will
grow the inmate population and the ranks of prison guard unions. In
1999, it
successfully killed a pilot program for alternative sentencing for
nonviolent
offenders. In 2005, it helped kill Schwarzenegger’s plan to reduce
overcrowding
by putting up to 20,000 inmates in a rehabilitation program. It opposes
any
tinkering with the “three strikes law” that might thin the prison rolls.
According
to UCLA economist Lee E.
Ohanian in a illuminating paper for The American, “America’s Public
Sector
Union Dilemma,” California’s corrections officers have exploited their
monopoly
labor power to push policies that will expand the prison population
and, as a
result, the demand for more guards who just happen to be the best-paid
corrections officers in the country. That’s why, contrary to what the
Marxist
sages would expect, they’ve successfully kept privately run prisons out
of the
state.
Meanwhile,
incarceration costs in the
essentially bankrupt state are exploding. California spends $44,000 per
inmate,
compared with the national average of $28,000. A state prison nurse
exploited
overtime rules to earn $269,810 in one year.
Also
contrary to left-wing
expectations, these policies have been implemented not so much by the
hard-hearted captains of industry and their Republican lackeys, but by
a
Democrat-controlled state legislature lubricated with donations from a
powerful
public-sector union.
The
system is now up for much-needed
reform thanks to a court order mandating that California fix the prison
mess.
Gov. Jerry Brown, whose 2010 gubernatorial campaign received more than
$2
million from CCPOA, has been forced to figure something out.
Still,
I suppose I owe the folks in
the clown car at least a small apology. They’re still nuts, but they’re
right
about the existence of a prison-industrial complex. They were just
looking in
the wrong direction.
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