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Good morning, John, it's Friday.
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A few weeks ago a company called Visually emailed me.
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Aand was like: "Hey Hank. If you could do a high-quality, animated video on any issue in the world, what would you choose?"
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Now that was a hard choice, but I went with incarceration in America, because it is messed up!
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Now, crime is also messed up.
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Bad things happen to good people, and that's terrible, and something should be done about it.
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Well, we send people to prison to be punished, and to prevent them from doing bad things again, and to deter others from breaking the law.
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Punishment, corrections, and deterrence.
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Now we have this habit of thinking of prisoners as something very external to society.
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After all, there are literal walls between them and society.
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Walls capped with razor wire and watched over by people with guns.
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But millions of prisoners are released each year.
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Today's prisoners are tomorrow's neighbors.
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So corrections should probably be the most important piece of the incarceration pie.
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Unfortunately, it is not.
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We are, however, really good at punishment.
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America has about 4% of the world's people and about 25% of the world's incarcerated people.
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We have the highest incarceration rate in the world.
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Over the last 30 years, that number has skyrocketed, increasing over 400%.
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41% of American juveniles and young adults have been arrested by the time they turn 23.
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Children as young as 13 years old have been sentenced to die in prison, and our prisons violate international standards.
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Solitary confinement increases instability and violence in inmates, and is considered by international law to be torture.
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But in America, it's not regulated by anyone except the prison officials; no judge, no jury.
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Arguably the most devastating form of punishment we enact in this country, and yet there is no appeals process.
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And you think it's hard to get a job in America?
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Well, we make it intentionally more difficult to get a job once you have a conviction on your record, not to mention just live your life.
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Convicts are ineligible for welfare, student loans, public housing, food stamps, and are often socially disconnected from community and family support structures.
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So in addition to have high recidivism rates, they have very high rates of homelessness and suicide.
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Somewhere along the way, we started to think that being tough on crime meant being tough on criminals.
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But that's not the same thing!
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Punishment is only one piece of a much larger crime reduction pie, and it's an expensive one; with some institutions paying more than $100,000 per year per prisoner.
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Long prison sentences have helped to decrease crime, but no more than 25% of the decrease that we've seen can be attributed to incarceration, and it costs far beyond just dollars.
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The cost is to people, to our country, to communities, to families, and to ourselves.
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The policy seems to be, if you've committed a felony, we just give up on you.
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These wars on crime, wars on drugs, they are wars on people.
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The smart political move is to appear tough on crime because crime is scary.
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So we increased minimum sentences, we arrested more people, we sent more of them to prison.
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That's how we looked tough on crime, but the results are in: it's bad policy!
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It's cruel, it's shortsighted, and to continue this policy of mass incarceration would be foolish.
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We're living inside of a massive $75 billion per year failed experiment.
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2010 was the first year in nearly 40 years that the number of incarcerated individuals in America did not increase.
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Policy makers are beginning to realize the magnitude of this failure, but there is a long way to go.
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John, I'll see you on Tuesday.