Of the US Prison System and Slavery



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A recent post by @lukestokes has given me much pause and cause to think.

I would strongly suggest that you read his post first as Luke has quite a way of expressing his thoughts - and I shall be focusing upon my reaction and related perspective.


When I first began reading his post I thought it was going to be a simple stance against violence in competition.

It did start out that way.

And then it evolved.

As did my 'comment' to his post... which turned into this post (and this I foresee a couple more).

My nose did wrinkle at the outline of what humanity considered entertainment in the (somewhat) past, but then he made a point that sent my brow arching upwards.

Connecting the Prison System with Slavery

He suggested that a close enough look at the prison industrial complex (presumably within the US) would reveal that slavery is alive and well.

This is something that 3rd party information that I looked into for an old article about how the war on drugs is a scam would support. I'd also recommend that you give it a look as it goes into more than I get into here - with a different focus.



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Over 2.15 million people are presently within the U.S. prison system.

With that population you could replace the population of the Republic of Macedonia... or alternatively the populations of the 42 least populated countries in the World.

Does this sound absurd to you? It should - because it is true.

The so-called "war on drugs" is primarily responsible for multiplying inmate populations 8-fold since the early 70s. Either people got a whole lot evil or the laws by which they got measured and shafted did. Conservatively a million forsaken lives (and several million fragmented or shattered families) versus one self-important system of law. Which might be at fault?



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But I have spoken of prison systems and slavery is all about exploiting humans with no rights for one's own personal gain.

Oh - wait. This actually does happen within the prison system also. Corporations smack their lips in delight as they take advantage of state-permitted privatizede-prison mechanisms by which they employ inmates at cheaper-than-otherwise-legal rates.

One might think that this is no big deal. "They are criminals, after all, and should be made to work for their living", you might cry.

And yet - besides again harking back to pointing out that a big portion of the inmate population is made up of people who have lost their freedoms and their rights for simple non-violent drug-crimes (and other relatively frivolous crimes like vandalism/street art), even if you didn't particularly care about all this (or consistent ethics for that matter), your ears 'would' likely twitch at the news that while they are doing jobs assigned to them, other persons on welfare are denied the option of signing up fo that same job... because...

...big corporations exploiting inmates is so much cheaper than employing the unemployed... and they don't pay for the "accomodation"... Taxpayers do.



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In short, this is my nod to @lukestokes on that point.

I plan on revisiting his interesting post to provide my angle on the rest of it.


If you found this post interesting and would like to share this with your friends then a resteem couldn't hurt.

Yes I do hold a rather pessimistic outlook and interpretation of what I perceive as going on - not exclusively within the US - but with all the accurate information within this post alone (not including source-diving), can one truly shrug it off as 'fine'? :c/

It is my hope to raise a little awareness - and while I likely would have addressed it some day, @lukestokes' post definitely triggered me to move that date forward. :cP

If you 'didn't' like this then feel free to share your views in comments. A civil conversation can go a long way.

Sincerely,

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