prison

Discrimination ‘08: Ex-Offender Disenfranchisement

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

America has a long history of depriving entire groups of people the right to vote. Before the Civil Rights Act, black citizens were ridiculed, threatened with lynching, and even given a disposable paper ballot when they expressed interest in making their voices heard.

With a candidate such as Barack Obama running for president in this election, one would think we’ve come a long way. But some argue that the new target of government-sanctioned discrimination is the growing class of convicted felons who have served their time and paid their fees, but still can’t vote.

The Sentencing Project reports that an estimated 5.3 million Americans—1.4 million of whom are black men—are denied the right to vote because of felony convictions. Of these, 2.1 million are ex-offenders who have fully completed their sentences and probations.

Nowhere is this problem more evident than in the state of Florida, which was the center of controversy during the 2000 election.

(more…)

Prison-sex politics

Wednesday, October 17th, 2007

prisoner3.jpgcondom2.jpgprisoner3.jpg

Gov. Schwarzenegger vetoed a bill last week that would have allowed non-profits to distribute condoms to inmates in California’s prison system. What part of free-condoms-to-inmates didn’t Schwarzenegger understand? How can this possibly be a bad thing?

Maybe it’s like the abstinence people who fight against condoms in high school—despite evidence to the contrary, they think giving kids condoms will encourage them to have sex.

The prison argument makes even less sense. These are not the innocent little things parents are hoping to protect against the corruptions of sex. These are adults. In prison. Having regular sex and trying to not get HIV. Opponents of the bill say inmates aren’t allowed to be having sex. So there it is.

Under the vetoed plan, public health organizations would have distributed condoms, dental dams and other STD-preventing devices among California’s almost 170,000 inmates. Instead, the governor has backed a pilot program at one prison to test the effectiveness of an STD prevention program.

Good one, Arnold.

Photo credit: www.vpul.upenn.edu/
Contact: hingber@gmail.com