Tuesday, May 31, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 15 TEDDY PAPES|VEWPN Prison pandemic There is an epidemic of incar- ceration in the United States. Roughly one in 100 adults is hehind bars. That is five times more people than the United Kingdom, nine times more than Germany and 12 times more than Japan, per capita. I hear about the military-industri- al complex from time to time and have dismissed it mostly as liberal hysteria, but one theory that I have heard more recently- and one that seems to hold more water - is the prison-industrial complex. In the past, the correctional sys- tem in the United States remained largely stagnant, maintaining a relatively low incarceration rate. About 250,000 people were in prison in 1940 and the population stayed around 300,000 from 1960 to 1970. But under the watch of everyone's favorite president, Ron- ald Reagan, the prisoner popula- tion doubled from under 500,000 to about 1,000,000 inmates. Now we have close to 2,300,000 pris- oners in the United States and the numbers keep rising. Prior to 1980, California had two maximum security prisons, and between 1984 and 1994 they constructed eight more to house their massive influx of convicts. Last week the Supreme Court ordered the release of 30,000 prisoners because of over- crowding. Clearly, the situation is reaching disastrous proportions. As prisons overflow, the private sector is stepping in to fill the gap. Every year there are more and more private facilities housing inmates. We have somehow allowed pri- vate companies to participate in an industry where the less money they spend on inmates, the more profit they will get to keep - not to mention that repeat offenders will only bolster this expanding industry. Why would these orga- nizations make any effort to reha- bilitate their clientele? That's like a store owner selling a pop to a cus- tomer and then asking that patron to never show his face in the store again. Without some kind of elabo- rate oversight, the use of private industries for prisons is one that favors high inmate populations. Prison reform is looming some- where in many people's minds, but what is everyone waiting for? Pris- oners are not a very relevant inter- est group, nor are many of them allowed to vote, but for both con- victs and those individuals lucky enough to be spared the gavel, the prison system in this country must change. Violent offenders probably should be in prison away from the rest of us, but in 2009 only half of state prisoners were violent crimi- nals, and only 7.9 percent of federal inmates were violent offenders. According to December 1998 arti- cle in The Atlantic Monthly, 70% of women in prison were non-violent offenders. So who are the rest of the peo- ple in lockup? Politicians use the War on Drugs to make themselves look strong and tough, but these shameful political ruses are afflict- ing the poor and minorities. This is no way to solve the problems of drugs and crime. These inmates filling the expanding prison sys- tem are largely undereducated and often mentally ill or have a history of substance abuse. Drug crimes account for two-thirds of prisoners in federal prisons. Is it in the best interest of the country to put these people in jail? Should their crimes even be illegal in the first place? The racial demograph- ics further reveal the travesty of the corrections system as blacks represent nearly 40 percent of the prison population while they only represent about 13 percent of the national population. Conversely, whites represent one-third of the prison population and are 72% of the population in the United States. Michigan is facing its own ver- sion of this national problem. Its prison population is the sixth largest in the nation despite being eighth in overall population. It spends nearly $2 billion on correc- tions, exceeding the amount spent on education. Gov. Rick Snyder trashed the Michigan Business Tax and levied taxes on pensions and retirement funds, without making significant changes to the billions being funneled to correc- tions. Cutting a significant amount of that could alleviate the states budgetary problems, and more programs to cut recidivism will help further on down the road, much more so than his supply-side economic policy. The problem is that a politician will seem weak if they are soft on criminals, so as much as the state needs to change, the public understanding of this broken, self-perpetuating system needs to change as well. Teddy Papes is the editorial page editor. "I had sold my things but it was just for the money. -.We had four Big Ten rings. There was enough to go around." - Former Ohio State wide receiver Ray Small, on breaking NCAA regulations Embracing autonomy In Puno, Peru, a small town on Lake Titicaca, global power struc- tures are being challenged. And its pretty impor- tant, but you can be sure that you won't hear much about it. For all of the apparent ide- ological differ- ences between -- Democrats and JONATHAN Republicans, AYLWARD there's no sub- stantial debate that challenges the global para- digm. If there was, the world might actually start changing. This invisible subject is eco- nomic imperialism. Legitimized by all the powerful nations of the world and the global finan- cial institutions that they run, the process occurs without resis- tance - almost. That's where Puno comes in. Puno has been designated a Special Economic Zone by presi- dent Alan Garcia. This is a strat- egy to attract foreign investments in which nationwide labor and tax laws are suspended within the area. These regions exist glob- ally, and are hotbeds of incredibly cheap labor. While this maybenefit those who work for these compa- nies in the short-term, it ultimately serves to maintain the global hier- archy of nations that provide and nations that consume. The Canadian company Bear Creek Mining Corporation was given a contract by the Peruvian government to harvest silver. Lake Titicaca, an indispensable cultural and livelihood resource for the people of the region, will likely be damaged by such opera- tions. In an incredibly powerful display of indigenous resistance, the citizens of Puno have block- aded the streets into the city and have united to protest a process that they had no say in and con- sider detrimental to their lives. Let's take a few steps back. The earth has been divided into official nations that encompass the people within their borders. These lands each have a set of unique resources that are the most essential wealth that a nation pos- sesses. They can be used by the people of the region or exported for financial gain. Since Europeans have come to the Americas, with vast wealth and the ever-increasing need for resources, indigenous popula- tions have been trampled and their resources have been exploited. The native populations of North Amer- ica have been basically obliterated; in Peru, only 14 million Native Americans remain and they still are strugglingwith Western states. But does it need to be a strug- gle? Perhaps a simple global law would free developing nations from the developed worlds' grip and strengthen their autonomy by forbidding foreign entities from owning or controlling the resources of another country. To present such an idea is seen as radical, but why? The status quo is radically imperialistic, and actively preserves the role of nations as either exploited or exploiting. A simple exercise in empathy can help us see this: as a native of a country, would you want full autonomy to choose what to do with your land, or would you want someone in Van- couver (as is the case with the Bear Creek Corporation) deciding what to do with it? The West blindly clings to its supposed cultural superiority, as if it somehow excuses the erasure of other cultures and depletion of our planet by companies like Bear. Creek. We have developed stable lives with longer lifespans (unless you live in a neglected urban or rural area) and who wouldn't want to have that? We are doing the world a favor by spreading our economic system and culture, regardless of what a few misguid- ed Indians think. Just give them some time - they'll come to real- ize a Filet-O-Fish is tastier than anything that comes out of Lake Titicaca. Right? Maybe this is the case - maybe everyone wants to live like an American. But who are we to assume that they do? By being allowed to dangle our incredible wealth around the world, some- one will surely bite. Regardless of who it is, the decision is unlikely to be accepted by those who it negatively affects. The compa- nies and governments that sign the contracts will benefit, while the locals have to deal with the consequences. Maybe a few jobs will be gained for a while, but the long-term consequence is the con- tinued subservience of an entire nation towards another. Not everyone wants to be an American. In a world driven by compas- sion rather than greed, the U.S. would be the first ones to step up and support the people of the developing world in their struggle for true independence. Unfortunately this is not the world in which we live. Instead, the burden falls on the people of the developing world to organize and assert their autonomy. This is what the people of Puno are doing, and they deserve our full support and attention. Jonathan Aylward can be reached at jaylward@umich.edu.