No limit on stupid
Interesting assertions, but I respectfully ask that you justify them with some factual basis. Such generalized statements, standing alone, mean little unless you explain them and back them up.stevelee wrote:The criminal justice system is big business. In some areas it is the largest employer. Like most businesses, growth depends in part upon repeat business.
They don't have time to mess with trivial things like defrauding people out of billions of dollars.
“Yeah, well, you know, that’s just, like, your opinion, man.”
"I can't be worrying about that sh*t. Life goes on, man."
- Jeff Bridges as The Dude in "The Big Lebowski"
"I can't be worrying about that sh*t. Life goes on, man."
- Jeff Bridges as The Dude in "The Big Lebowski"
I have observed the private prison folks in our state up close and you can be sure that their interest is in pushing legislation to strengthen sentencing laws. And it has nothing to do with smaller government at less cost and everything to do with getting to the trough of public dollars.catnhat wrote:Anecdotally I've heard that the for profit prison companies have lobbyists pushing some harsh bills. To date NC has no private prisons, but they fit the small gov't/privatize model that is becoming more popular here.
Chalk it up to a rant by an old white guy about systemic problems in our society. I don't think I'd have a whole lot of problem Googling names of counties in the US where for-profit prisons are the largest employers, or the times when a "war on drugs" was accompanied by cuts in budgets for treatment, rehabilitation, etc. I could probably find the name of the guy who received a life sentence for stealing a slice of pizza, and rather than researching the names of bankers and Wall St. folk who are walking around as free men after the October, 2008, events, I could just cite quotations from the AG and others in the DOJ about how it would be more trouble than it is worth to indict them.raptorcat wrote:Interesting assertions, but I respectfully ask that you justify them with some factual basis. Such generalized statements, standing alone, mean little unless you explain them and back them up.stevelee wrote:The criminal justice system is big business. In some areas it is the largest employer. Like most businesses, growth depends in part upon repeat business.
They don't have time to mess with trivial things like defrauding people out of billions of dollars.
But more to my point, stay off my lawn!
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Looks like we have a political discussion evolving in the appropriate thread. Speaking of greedy folks in the criminal justice system lobbying for laws to garner more profits ... is anyone going to complain about the powerful trial lawyers lobby? Or are they the good guys on the "right team" working for truth and justice?
Sometimes, regrettably, that seems to be what mechanism we have for truth and justice in cases whether otherwise the balance of power and money is lopsided. Perhaps more often it is like the cases my buddy in CA defends for insurance companies. And then there are the numerous class actions where the lawyers get millions and the injured parties get $10 discount coupons for more stuff from the defendants.MakeIt-TakeIt Cat wrote:Looks like we have a political discussion evolving in the appropriate thread. Speaking of greedy folks in the criminal justice system lobbying for laws to garner more profits ... is anyone going to complain about the powerful trial lawyers lobby? Or are they the good guys on the "right team" working for truth and justice?
Perhaps you have suggestions for alternatives to our tort systems that don't involve even more draconian government regulation.
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Funny how people get their panties in a bunch over abuses in private prisons and never seem to recognize the extraordinary waste, corruption and abuse in public prisons. Consistency, folks. Better to get pissed at all the BS, regardless of political affiliation, and retain credibility.
"Then they started making 3s. A lot of 3s. We're talking more 3s than a bad dating site."
Now I understand the context, Steve. I guess that since we have no for-profit prisons in North Carolina, the issues and problems associated with them are largely off my radar. As I'm sure you're aware, there is a bipartisan movement at the Federal level to lessen the penalties for low-level drug offenses. If the private prisons are pushing for stiffer penalties, it would be antithetical to the underlying philosophies of this pending sea change. Also, our legislature has enacted sweeping new laws dealing with probation that are actually forward-thinking and progressive, IMO. I know of no active lobbying efforts by private prison interests to persuade the General Assembly to take a more hard-line stance regarding sentencing. Of course, I am far from claiming to be a Raleigh "insider."
“Yeah, well, you know, that’s just, like, your opinion, man.”
"I can't be worrying about that sh*t. Life goes on, man."
- Jeff Bridges as The Dude in "The Big Lebowski"
"I can't be worrying about that sh*t. Life goes on, man."
- Jeff Bridges as The Dude in "The Big Lebowski"
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- Joined: Thu Mar 08, 2012 1:31 pm
There are many good plans for tort reform out there but you will have to go beyond progressive sources to find them ... way beyond the scope of this forum and tangled up in partisan politics.stevelee wrote: Perhaps you have suggestions for alternatives to our tort systems that don't involve even more draconian government regulation.