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Another bill to make conservatives go apeshit
Both the Senate and House, on bi-partisan votes, passed the Second Chance Act recently. Its uncertain if Bush will sign it.
The bill provides grants to local governments and non-profits to assist the 650,000 inmates released from prison each year readjust to society by helping them obtain housing, employment, job training and mental health and substance abuse treatment. At a cost of $2 per American over the next five years, it seems like a reasonable approach and a pretty cheap price to helping ex-cons get back on their feet, which IMO, is in the public's best interest. |
I think it makes sense. The idea is often expressed that prison provides a great way for criminals to refine their criminal-ing skills. It seems obvious to me that giving them alternatives to criminal behavior upon their release would help many of them not reoffend, and thus (here's the clincher), increasing the effectiveness of the criminal justice system in terms of lowering crime. This isn't to say that it would be 100% effective, but nothing ever is.
Cue fiscal ideology trumping common sense in 3, 2, ... |
This is a horrible, horrible waste of taxpayer money. My money. MY MONEY!!!! *spittle flyin' everywhere*
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I'm glad I'm not a conservative, because I'm not sure I could handle going apeshit this early in the morning. I like this idea.
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With a prison population as it is in the U.S., I'm surprised something like this isn't already in place.
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mmmmmmmm....melts in your mouth http://blog.wificat.com/wp-content/u...mnm%5B3%5D.jpg Now if it was conservative male spittle.....ewwwww |
A post on a bipartisan bill, who's effectiveness is unknown but is amazingly low cost at this point at least?
Sounds good on paper, you provided no information on how it plans to do this, so basically this is a troll post. BTW you like to claim that your bosses are more fiscally responsible, so I look forward to you posting about spending cuts in the near future. |
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It has been done successfully in the past but was sunsetted (a common legislative practice) so that it doesnt become a permanent program without the opportunity for periodic review its effectiveness. Republican leaders in the House (not Republican backbenchers) have blocked this version for the last seven years. Oh..and Democratic members of Congress are not my bosses. Under the best scenario, I (and the voters) am their boss. But with Republican filibuster threats of appropriation bills in the Senate, and Bush threats of vetoes, the 09 appropriation (spending) bills, based on Bush's record $3.1 trillion budget request, now being debated will not be Democratic bills. Actually, both the House and Senate passed $3 trillion budget frameworks (used as a guideline for the 13 appropriation bills that actually make up the budget), comparable to Bush's. The difference is that they want to pay for it by proposing an end to Bush's "temporary" 2001-2003 tax cuts for the top 2%....its called pay-as-you-go (paygo), a concept totally foreign to Republicans in the last seven years: Quote:
...and the Republicans want to just keep spending and pass the cost on to your kids. Which approach do you think is more fiscally responsible? |
I'd pay a lot more than $2 for that.
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And I like this idea, nice one America, now to see if Dubya signs it. |
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You know considering most of these inmates are directly related to the drug war, why don't we just end that and put a massive check back in everyones pocket. The judicial and prison system cost a ton of taxpayer money. For the remaining inmates, why dont you just start charity to give to them instead of making me pay too. |
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The government is stepping in here because the free market isn't. Job placement for ex cons is absolutely atrocious. Since the market can't fix this itself, the government has to step in. Like big tobacco.
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I suppose I'm, what, a liberal libertarian for liking this bill?
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Careful, you might fall on that slippery slope. |
Problem is I do not trust the government enough with all of our $2, the amount of jobs and administrative work, and bull shit waste of the money is what upsets me.
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Logical fallacies by their very nature are invalid.
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Seems sane and rational from reading the summary. What's this mean though:
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Your saying the free market failed, I'm saying did it even have a chance? Most people I know can't afford to give to charities because they just don't have extra money sitting around. Less taxes would allow people to be more charitable. |
It's an interesting idea and if the money goes truly where it is supposed to, that only leaves one factor to consider, the ex-con. It thus, depends on them.
If the money doesn't go where it should, then we get to see fingers pointed and it becomes a program that will grow demand more funding and fail. If the ex-cons go back to the life they left, people will eventually say, "we've tried everything... no more." and develp a harsher attitude towards rehabilitation. The Feds have a similar program for addicts/alcoholics that they are testing in Ohio and several other states. Where I work we are the center of it for our county. The program is 2 months old, called among other names "Action to recovery". The addict gets his assessment and a referral to intensive outpatient. The addict then goes over to the Action side, shows his/her referral and gets 2 months rent for a sober house and payment for the treatment with their signature on a contract that states they will stay clean and will by the third month have a job and be able to pay their own rent. However, should they break that contract they are no longer eligible for any government funding for treatment unless it is life threatening. A first they just gave clients $1000 check for rent and found too many relapsed on the money. So then they very fastly went and found halfway houses. The problem is, landlords weren't ready so some of those rooms or apartments were paid for but weren't ready to live in. I know personally of a client going in to the house, being given a room with a mattress (no box springs) on the floor and would flood when the person up stairs flushed the toilet. He left. He is staying clean on his own and has been keeping in touch with me. The landlord's in all this get to keep he money. Someone comes in drunk, gets booted, the landlord keeps the 2 months rent AND gets to re-rent that room. It's getting better, more organized. But what we are seeing is people are still relapsing because it is truly free money. So they are trying to find ways to better the recidivism rates. There s definitely abuse in this system. It's a great idea, but they need to put more controls on it, especially the landlord side. Right now as I showed, it pays more to have the client fail and be kicked out within the first week. Also screen the clients better, don't just take anyone, which is what they are doing. Take those serious abut recovery.... but therein lies the problem who is serious and who is looking for free rent for 2 months? How can you tell who is who? Have these landlords answerable, make them show some form of success rate. But so far they are just looking at the clients and what they can do to get more success out of them. I hope this program (OP) is better thought out. |
I've been thinking about this a bit. Shouldn't we try to fix the prison systems first, then use all the money we'd save to help the convicts?
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I have a family member who has a criminal felony conviction on his record. He is currently unemployed, but he had a job at a warehouse few weeks ago. He got fired after his first day. The story is incomplete, but he says one of his co-workers started telling him what to do, and he told that co-worker to go to hell because he wasn't his supervisor. He said the next day that person had him fired because that guy did not like him. The other version we have is that he was on his cell phone most of the night, his girlfriend visited him while he was on the clock, and he left early.
I don't know what happened that resulted in his termination, but I do know this person has had the support and love of his entire family including me. He has had countless opportunities to do "the right thing" and has made choices not to. I don't support the bill referenced in this thread because I think it will generally be a waste of money. I don't really understand the psychology of the mind of people who choose to engage in criminal activity but it seems to me that the lack of housing, employment, job training and mental health and substance abuse treatment is not the problem. Here is information that has been in the news lately regarding HS graduation rates. This is not a Washington problem, not a school problem, a teacher problem, but a problem of choice on the part of the student. Quote:
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Bush is expected to sign the bll tomorrow...probably because it includes key elements of his Prisoner Reentry Initiative:
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Legalize weed, free anyone in jail on drug charges, tax pot, spend pot tax on prison rehab. Yaaay. War on drugs = war on empty prisons.
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One thing that some of you are failing to realize is programs like this may have a net gain in money. If we can prevent a significant percent of criminals from becoming repeat offenders we no longer have to pay for them to be in prison in the future.
Oh yeah and I agree end the drug war, tax the drugs, make lots of money for the government. It's a win win, we make more money and we spend less money. |
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Why don't we come up with a way to keep people from having to become criminals in the first place. The people who run the prisons would lose money, we can't let that happen... And if they did want to pay for this program, it should be done with fines. If you commit a crime, the government should be able to seize some property to auction until they can raise (or you can pay) a set amount. This money could be used to rehabilitate ex-prisoners. |
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Gad yes. Massive waste of public money chasing down weed, and massive waste of the lives of people who get prosecuted for it.
Chasing down weed is almost as stupid as the states that outlaw "marital aid devices." |
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Will, you have no idea. The things some state legislators think are worth passing laws about are just plain mind-boggling.
here is the operative language of the Alabama statute, in case you are interested: Alabama Code § 13A-12-200.2 (a)(1) (1975) (Supp.2001) makes it "unlawful for any person to knowingly distribute, possess with intent to distribute, or offer or agree to distribute ... any device designed or marketed as useful primarily for the stimulation of human genital organs for any thing of pecuniary value." So legally this all might turn on how it's marketed. <rolling eyes> |
So no "fleshlights" and vibrators? And yet Alabama is known for incest.
Go figure. |
Maybe the incest is due to the fact that fleshlights and vibrators are illegal so the residents have to resort to other stuff that's close at hand?
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What is closer at hand than your hand?
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I see it as something that may help those who are already trying to make their lives better again, I doubt it will have any effect on recidivism. |
Depending on how the inmates are qualified for the program and how their performance and spending is managed, I believe a measure like this could mean the difference between success and failure for many borderline potential recidivism cases.
I'm not clear on the criteria regarding who will get this assistance, but I'm all for a very strictly managed program with significant consequences for abuses or violations. I mentioned in another thread that I am a frequent substitute teacher in our local public school system. My specialty is in mental and behavioral education services, and work extensively with the juvenile justice system. I am transitioning as full time later this year. I assume the bill is aimed at adult criminals, but the successes I witness are those who can turn themselves around within the system and are able to shun their external destructive influences. Without assistance, the borderline folks that struggle to make it often fail because they have no support at home and revert to criminal activity for financial and social (gangs, peer pressure) reasons. The hardcore habitual offenders should not be considered, but that's just my jaded point of view. I hope the measure isn't a broad-stroke approach, but a very serious attempt at rehabilitation and accountability, and not another huge waste of money. |
Why aren't we spending this money teaching children empathy, emotion management, cooperation, and conflict resolution? Why not strike at the roots of criminality instead of, again, just responding to people that have already been failed and have failed?
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