CPAC: The Conservative Case for Criminal Justice Reform
"You wouldn't necessarily expect–and certainly the establishment press doesn't expect–to hear a discussion about criminal justice reforms and prison reform at the Conservative Political Action Conference," stated Americans for Tax Reform Founder Grover Norquist. "But in point of fact this is a big problem, it's an expensive problem, [and] it's a problem that creates more expensive problems."
During a Friday morning session at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), the biggest annual gathering of right-leaning activists, Norquist, Texas Governor Rick Perry, and former New York City Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik, laid out their vision for conservative criminal justice reform, highlighting a number of successful state-based initiatives implemented by Republican governors.
"We are not a soft on crime state, but I hope we get the reputation of being a smart on crime state," Gov. Perry explained. "We shut a prison down last year. That is the message all across this country. You want to talk about real conservative governance, shut a prison down."
Following the session, Reason Magazine's Matt Welch visited the exhibition booths for Right on Crime, Families Against Mandatory Minimums, and Conservatives Concerned About the Death Penalty, to get a sense of what was driving the undercurrent of interest in these issues, what sort of reception reform proponents are finding at CPAC, and the prospect of legislative cooperation with like-minded Democrats.
Produced by Meredith Bragg
Approximately 4 minutes.
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Why does none of this interest ever translate into action, one wonders.
Prisons employees are unionized. So, Dems won't alienate their core voting block, and Repubs want to appear hard on crime.
The funny thing is that Democrats also want to appear tough on crime, depending on which state they represent. And the Republicans probably don't want to take on the prison-industrial complex despite their claims of being tough on unions.
P.S.: I like your handle.
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I asked my congresscreature that question about "tax reform".
His response -- I'm not making this up -- was "Washington is a complicated place."
Meaning, "Vote for me, but don't expect anything you want in return."
I don't vote for incumbents.
My head is a complicated place, too.
Its easy to never vote for incumbents as a libertarian.... just sayin
translate into action
Shutting a prison down in Texas seems like action.
Probably because the establishment Republicans are a vastly different group of people than the people who attend CPAC.
The Boehners of the world don't give a fuck about prison reform.
The state of prisons in this country is intentional. What better way to keep the sheeple in line than to threaten them with rape and race-riots if they dare not pay their parking tickets?
Working in the hot sun under an irate overseer is "cruel and unusual" treatment for an inmate; for me, it's just how I pay the bills (along with a debt-vortex).
OT: Boston Police seek security balance for marathon
Balance = unless you're a runner, fuck off. And if you're a runner, pretend you're going to take a flight somewhere and you'll make it through security