This article starts off rather quickly. The first line reading, "America's criminal justice system has deteriorated to the point that it is a national disgrace." Senator Jim Webb argues that we are wasting billions of dollars and diminishing million of lives. In comparison to other Nations such as Japan, our prison population is soaring. In 1985, The United States was incarcerating 580,000 sentenced offenders, as oppose to Japan's 40,000. Almost two and a half decades later however, Japan's number have increased to 71,00, while the U.S. prison population has quadrupled to 2.3 million. This all comes at a very high price to taxpayers: Local, state, and federal spending on corrections adds up to about $68 billion a year. And with these numbers, Webb's article reads, "With so many of our citizens in prison compared with the rest of the world, there are only two possibilities: Either we are home to the most evil people on earth or we are doing something different--and vastly counterproductive. Obviously, the answer is the latter." It goes on to explain that most of the arrests and imprisonments made are due to drug offenders, most of which have no illegal history, and are arrested for possession, not selling.
He finishes the article with a huge problem in the United States today: Mexican drug cartels, whose combined profits are estimated at $25 billion a year. Mexican cartels are now reported to be running operations in some 230 American cities. "In short, we are not protecting our citizens from the increasing danger of criminals who perpetrate violence and intimidation as a way of life, and we are locking up too many people who do not belong in jail."
I'm very happy to be reading an aticle like this finally. I read all about the Mexican drug trafficking and I'm wondering why it's lasted so long. I knew that our prison population was a problem but 2.3 million? That is an outrageous figure. With all the capital the Mexican are pulling in, and all the weapon they can so very easily aquire, and on top of that now I know they don't only exist in Mexico but in 230 American cities; I fear for the safety of a lot of innocent Americans. I'm very afriad this who operation will go haywire and turn into an ugly mess, I just wish we had a little more room in our prisons for those that deserve to be there. I read an article the other day about two juvenile judges who were arrested because they were throwing kids in jail without listening to their stories or really doing their job. They realized they can make some more money by doing this and our economy is bad-so, what the heck, right?
Wrong. I'm so sick of society. Imbiciles. We have all this potential and I feel the more we are selfish the more it hurts us in the end and from my point of view or justice system has been very selfish. Fizing this problem is very very easy to say and talk about but doing it and going through with whatever it takes will be a huge challenge. For everyone.
Thursday, April 2, 2009
Friday, March 20, 2009
Recycling the Suburbs
The American suburb as we know it is dying. Shopping mals and big-box retail stores are going dark. An estimated 148,000 stores closed last year, the most since 2001. Kaid Benfield a director of the smart-growth program at the Natural Resources Defense Council says, "as much as possible, we need to redirect development to existing communities and infrastructure, otherwise we're just eating up more land and natural resources." People want to balance the privacy of the suburbs with more public and social areas, but the result will be a U.S. that is more sustainable-environmentally and economically.
Jobs Are the New Assests
Remember when job weren't worth your small talk? This article explains that no one ever use to be excited about their steady paycheck because no one ever worried. Most people were obsessed with their homes or their portfolios in the stock market to even notice that they can create wealth by there income. People are starting to relearn all of this because of this recession and thanks to credit cards and other source of debt, our saving accounts went negative in the year 2005. People were actually saving negative. Which is why we are in such a pickle today because savings accounts are good for the holder of that account- not the economy as a whole because no money is being shot into the system. And now that Jobs are scarce and people don't have the money to spend, how do we fix this?
Human capital is how we can solve this. Our education and all of our traning-it's worth something. People want to figure out who they are as a person and what they want out of life. I think this will all take a huge amount of time but with people being obsessed with their income rather than what they have right now, and when people start to think about the future as oppose to right now, we will have a steady economy. But never anything perfect.
Human capital is how we can solve this. Our education and all of our traning-it's worth something. People want to figure out who they are as a person and what they want out of life. I think this will all take a huge amount of time but with people being obsessed with their income rather than what they have right now, and when people start to think about the future as oppose to right now, we will have a steady economy. But never anything perfect.
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
TIME 'Are The Wrong Kids Taking Multivitamins?'
This article was about most of the poor children in the United States who actually need vitamins, don't get them because of the cost. However the children whose families usually have a higher income are the ones taking the vitamins. These children have enough money to to have a regular diet and enough exercise. "Children who face poverty, food insecurity and lack regular balanced meals have a high likelihood of benefiting from supplements," says Shaikh, but they typically don't have access to them because of cost. Families whose children get well-balanced meals should know that vitamin supplements won't make their kids any healthier. But parents who struggle to feed their children may need better access to vitamins and minerals to supplement daily meals.
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