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  • In October 2015, the US Justice Department announced that they were releasing 6,000 inmates

  • from federal prisons around the country; the largest release in history. Officials have

  • said that this is an attempt at dealing with overcrowded prisons. The released inmates

  • are mostly non-violent drug offenders and undocumented immigrants awaiting deportation.

  • With millions of inmates still in prison, we wanted to know, why does the US have more

  • prisoners than any other country in the world?

  • Well, today the US incarcerates roughly one in 100 of its citizens. That amounts to about

  • 2.2 million adults behind bars. But by comparison, in 1979, there were only about 300,000 total

  • prisoners. Over that same time period, the number of people incarcerated for drug offenses

  • increased by over 1,000%. So what happened in 1980?

  • Two things. The 80s saw a period of politicians running on the promise ofcracking down

  • on crime”. What this led to were much stricter and narrower mandatory sentencing guidelines.

  • Small crimes would send a person to jail whether it was justifiable or not. People who had

  • already been to jail were considerably more likely to return as a result of thethree-strikes

  • laws. Sentences were also made much longer, and parole was reduced in an effort to keep

  • criminals off the streets. Unsurprisingly, the previous decade saw the start of the War

  • on Drugs, and a huge increase in nonviolent drug offenders facing years in prison.

  • And while laws were enacted that made it more likely that you’d go to jail, mental health

  • services around the country were cut to the bone. This meant that mentally ill individuals

  • who had been housed and helped in psychiatric hospitals, were suddenly released onto the

  • streets, where the police were forced to deal with them. Today, a huge number of prisoners

  • suffer from mental illness as mental health budgets are continually reduced. Some have

  • reported that there are ten times as many mentally ill people in prisons as there are

  • in mental health facilities.

  • Additionally, immigrants and non-citizens have been increasingly sent to prison while

  • awaiting deportation, or in lieu of deportation altogether. More specifically, many sentencing

  • guidelines and correctional policies end up targeting minorities and the poor. It took

  • until 2010 for President Obama to pass the Fair Sentencing Act. This eliminated a discrepancy

  • where drugs which were primarily used by poor minorities carried heavier sentences than

  • those used by the affluent.

  • The US’s problems with overcrowding are further impacted by the influence of private

  • prisons, which see more money for more convictions. Decades of broad efforts to eliminate crime

  • have lowered the standard to spend time in prison, and skyrocketed the number of prisoners.

  • Unlike in other countries, long-term incarceration is an accepted part of US culture. Until the

  • focus is shifted in line with other developed countries, the US will continue cramming millions

  • of inmates into 5,000 total prisons.

  • Another factor that adds to overcrowding? The U.S. bail system, which keeps lower-income

  • non-violent criminals behind bars. To find out how the process works, watch this video.

  • Thanks for watching TestTube News! Make sure to like and subscribe to our channel so you

  • don’t miss out. Well see you later!

In October 2015, the US Justice Department announced that they were releasing 6,000 inmates

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米国はなぜ他のどの国よりも多くの囚人を抱えているのか (Why The U.S. Has More Prisoners Than Any Other Country)

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    羅紹桀 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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