Letters to the Portland editor: December 29, 2006

Prison is not the answer
By DAN CHARD  |  December 27, 2006

Cheers to Lance Tapley for his quality reporting on the Maine State Prison and the apparent political persecution of Deane Brown (see “Lockdown,” December 15). Unfortunately, punishment for political organizing is common practice not just in Warren, but in prisons across the country. If you don’t believe me, then just ask anyone who has ever been inside.

Readers should also be aware that incarceration rates nationally and in Maine have increased dramatically over the past fifteen years despite declining crime rates. The vast majority of those incarcerated come from poor and working-class backgrounds, and even in the predominantly white state of Maine, a disproportionately high number are black, Latino, or Indian.

Meanwhile, President George W. Bush breaks federal and international law by lying to Congress (about weapons of mass destruction and false connections between Saddam and al-Qaeda) and by initiating an unwarranted attack on a sovereign nation, resulting in the unnecessary deaths of hundreds of thousands of people. Bush, along with his cabinet and complicit senators and representatives (from both major parties) act with impunity from justice.

The hypocrisy is staggering.

The fact is that the laws and courts are set up to protect the rich and punish the powerless. The mostly nonviolent offenders who fill state and federal prisons and county jails need opportunities for rehabilitation, self-improvement, and economic livelihood. No one is made safer by locking 2.1 million Americans in cages.

Related: The 10th Annual Muzzle Awards, Letters to the Portland editor: May 4, 2007, 10 years later, we told you so, More more >
  Topics: Letters , George W. Bush, Criminal Sentencing and Punishment, Prisons,  More more >
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