The prison-industrial complex
A question we Canadians should be asking ourselves about the current prison expansion agenda of the Harper conservatives is this: Why if imprisoning people does nothing to deter social harm ("crime"), why if it is so incredibly expensive, and destroys generations of families, if there are far more effective means of addressing root causes of "crime", why are the conservatives being so damned pig headed in insisting we must jail vulnerable Canadians? [sheryl jarvis, Oct, 2011]Read on for one likely explanation ....
The Conservative omnibus Safe Streets and  Communities Act makes no sense if the aim is to reduce burgeoning crime,  since the same strategies were tried and seen to fail in the US, and  the Canadian crime rate is going down anyway. Furthermore, it is proven  that increased funding of education reduces street crime — how many  street gang members have university degrees? Harsh sentences actually  serve to harden inmates into career criminals and break  up families so children don’t get proper attention, thus increasing the  crime rate over time. 
I would suggest that the Conservative  enthusiasm for longer sentences, mandatory prison terms, and prison  sentences for more crimes has nothing to do with reducing crime.
The US has an economically important  incarceration industry that corporate interests want duplicated in  Canada. Patiently, step by step, the Conservatives have been creating  the conditions for this — billions of dollars to build more prisons, and  “tough on crime” legislation to ensure a huge increase in the Canadian  prison population. In the US, private prison corporations have their own  trade fairs to attract businesses that use sweat shops abroad. Gone are  the days of sewing mail bags, now inmates have been hired at very low  cost to do dangerous jobs, like cleaning up the toxic BP oil spill,  highly technical tasks like assembling missiles, and all points in  between.
Private prisons are interested in making a  profit. That means they cut corners on everything else, including  rehabilitation (bad for business: they want returning convicts) medical  care, and the pay of their staff. In other words, this is  state-corporate business at its ugliest — trafficking in human misery.  Of course the taxpayer will be paying the private prisons, the transfer  of money from the taxpayer to corporations being the goal of all serious  Liberal and Conservative machinations.
Also, the Conservatives are an authoritarian  sect which wants Canadians running on fear, anger and patriotism. They  spend our money on propaganda to make us self-righteously angry at  criminals, see them as less than human and therefore deserving of any  violations of their dignity or well-being the prisons care to carry out.  The term “criminal” is increasingly broadened to include legitimate  dissent to frighten people away from exercising their constitutional  rights. Witness the police state tactics at the G20 meeting in Toronto  which were used on innocent protesters and even passersby.
As the government increasingly uses the  international bankster-created deficit to justify “austerity” measures  imposed upon the rest of us, they expect popular resistance at some  stage. That’s another contingency the prisons are waiting for.
So, despite the hype and lip service, the  Conservative omnibus crime bill won’t, and isn’t meant to, reduce crime.  That is either irrelevant or counterproductive to the real goals. It’s  about upping intimidation against poor people generally, and setting up a  lucrative prison-industrial complex at taxpayer expense. In meeting  these hidden agendas it unfortunately makes a lot of sense.
 Keith Newberry
The prison-industrial complex
The Conservative omnibus Safe Streets and  Communities Act makes no sense if the aim is to reduce burgeoning crime,  since the same strategies were tried and seen to fail in the US, and  the Canadian crime rate is going down anyway. Furthermore, it is proven  that increased funding of education reduces street crime — how many  street gang members have university degrees? Harsh sentences actually  serve to harden inmates into career criminals and break  up families so children don’t get proper attention, thus increasing the  crime rate over time. 
I would suggest that the Conservative  enthusiasm for longer sentences, mandatory prison terms, and prison  sentences for more crimes has nothing to do with reducing crime.
The US has an economically important  incarceration industry that corporate interests want duplicated in  Canada. Patiently, step by step, the Conservatives have been creating  the conditions for this — billions of dollars to build more prisons, and  “tough on crime” legislation to ensure a huge increase in the Canadian  prison population. In the US, private prison corporations have their own  trade fairs to attract businesses that use sweat shops abroad. Gone are  the days of sewing mail bags, now inmates have been hired at very low  cost to do dangerous jobs, like cleaning up the toxic BP oil spill,  highly technical tasks like assembling missiles, and all points in  between.
Private prisons are interested in making a  profit. That means they cut corners on everything else, including  rehabilitation (bad for business: they want returning convicts) medical  care, and the pay of their staff. In other words, this is  state-corporate business at its ugliest — trafficking in human misery.  Of course the taxpayer will be paying the private prisons, the transfer  of money from the taxpayer to corporations being the goal of all serious  Liberal and Conservative machinations.
Also, the Conservatives are an authoritarian  sect which wants Canadians running on fear, anger and patriotism. They  spend our money on propaganda to make us self-righteously angry at  criminals, see them as less than human and therefore deserving of any  violations of their dignity or well-being the prisons care to carry out.  The term “criminal” is increasingly broadened to include legitimate  dissent to frighten people away from exercising their constitutional  rights. Witness the police state tactics at the G20 meeting in Toronto  which were used on innocent protesters and even passersby.
As the government increasingly uses the  international bankster-created deficit to justify “austerity” measures  imposed upon the rest of us, they expect popular resistance at some  stage. That’s another contingency the prisons are waiting for.
So, despite the hype and lip service, the  Conservative omnibus crime bill won’t, and isn’t meant to, reduce crime.  That is either irrelevant or counterproductive to the real goals. It’s  about upping intimidation against poor people generally, and setting up a  lucrative prison-industrial complex at taxpayer expense. In meeting  these hidden agendas it unfortunately makes a lot of sense.
 Keith Newberry
 
 
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