Crime & Punishment
The United States has the highest documented incarceration rate in the world. As of December 31, 2010, the International Centre for Prison Studies (ICPS) at King's College London estimated 2,266,832 prisoners from a total population of 310.64 million as of this date (730 per 100,000 in 2010). In comparison, Russia had the second highest, at 577 per 100,000, Canada was 123rd in the world as 117 per 100,000, and China had 120 per 100,000. A recent article by Fareed Zakaria also shows that Japan has 63 per 100,000, Germany has 90, France has 96, South Korea has 97, and ­Britain has 153. In the same article it states that in 1980, the US had 150 per 100,000, so why the increase - the war on drugs. Drug convictions represent half the inmate population. Some have said that the US had more people in prison than Stalin had in his gulags. Watch out for extremist rhetoric like this. Stalin reported killed 20m people, so you wont find them in his prison population numbers. There is also much written today justifiably about wrongful convictions overturned by DNA evidence years later. According to the Innocence Project 292 convictions have been overturned by DNA evidence. While each one of these wrongful convictions is a travesty and the causes must be corrected immediately, it represents only .0001269% of the total prisoner population. Some wild extrapolations estimate up to 20,000 wrongful convictions, or about 1%. So the much maligned American justice system gets 99.% right in the worst case extrapolation. Though I could find no statistics, this is probably the #1 effectiveness rate in the world, too. Anyone would like a 99% winning percentage, but we can and should still do better. Also, within three years of their release, 67% of former prisoners are rearrested and 52% are re-incarcerated, a recidivism rate that is alarming. Plus, African Americans are imprisoned at a rate roughly seven times higher than whites, and Hispanics at a rate three times higher than whites, giving rise to racial profiling accusations and poverty as justification, but interestingly no other reasoning for this high percentage is publicly debated. More than 60% of the people in prison are now racial and ethnic minorities. For Black males in their thirties, 1 in every 10 is in prison or jail on any given day, and some say it is a higher rate than were slaves in 1850. These trends have been intensified by the disproportionate impact of the "war on drugs," in which two-thirds of all persons in prison for drug offenses are people of color. There is clearly much to do in this country to improve our criminal justice system. Below and in the sub-category of cyberattacks, you will see both sides debate the issue. The Gray Area believes the "Right on Crime" Statement of Principles is the best blueprint we have seen to reform the American Criminal Justice system. Also, the Overcriminalization guide prepared by The Heritage Foundation is an eye opener.

Alinsky 'Rules' in play here

1/30/24
from The Gray Area:
1/30/24:
Going after the Republicans 'strong on crime' and 'rule of law' positions smacks of Saul Alinsky's Rule #5, 'make the enemy live up to its own book of rules'. Saying that this is hypocritical for the Republican Governor of Texas and others in Congress to take a stand against lawlessness at the border is ridiculous and shows that this statement is just a political narrative.  What Texas is doing has everything to do with law & order, the 'rule of law' and 'tough on crime'. The Supreme Court did not say don't protect your border. It said do not inhibit federal border patrol agents from cutting the fence to get through to do their job. Texas did not inhibit border patrol agents from doing their jobs.  What they have done is continued to build more border barriers and the result, these barriers are working. They are continuing to inhibit illegal immigrants. Border Patrol agents are given access to migrants, but they are not allowed to inhibit Texas activities to protect the border. There is clearly an continuing legal and Constitutional dispute on protecting the Texas border.  Federal law is being ignored by Joe Biden. Biden is doing nothing.  As a matter of fact, Biden is breaking the law by not stopping migrants and detaining them.  Remember when Trump tried to change the way families were detained at the border, the courts said no, Flores consent decree, if you detain a migrant family you must separate children.  The Democrats used that to further their political narrative that Trump was 'keeping children in cages'. Not true. It was never his policy, it was the law. Cages were built by Obama/Biden for that purpose.  Even showing pictures of a crying child by a police car, a false political narrative. Trump adhered to the court order and moved to improve conditions for this at the border.  Today, the Biden administration is completely ignoring that part of the law and getting away with it in their "catch & release" scheme, started during the Obama Administration. If you let everyone in, their is no detention, theoretically. This policy has been a failure and is now a national security crisis. Texas has to do something.  When the issue is finally resolved in the Courts, Texas will, I'm sure, follow the law. This narrative is also being used to cover up the Defund the police and soft-on-crime policies do not work">weak on crime policies of the Democrat left and Soros' radical prosecutors. More From The Washington Post:


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