Mass Incarceration Is Destroying America
By John Legend, TIME
22 July 15
President Obama's decision to commute the sentences of 46 low-level drug offenders is a positive step
America,
as more and more people are starting to realize, is indecently
over-incarcerated. We lock up far more people per capita than any nation
even close to our size: roughly 2.4 million men, women, and children. The financial toll of mass incarceration is irresponsible; the human toll is unconscionable.
We
haven’t always been this way: Just 40 years ago, our incarceration
rates were much lower, and on par with our peer nations. Since then,
however, our prison population has ballooned by about 700%. What happened four decades ago that led to such a steep climb? We launched the so-called War on Drugs.
The
full scope of how badly we lost that “war”—and how ill-advised it was
to launch it in the first place—began to dawn on me in 2012, when I
served as executive producer for Eugene Jarecki’s documentary The House I Live In. At the time, the War on Drugs had cost $1 trillion and led to 45 million arrests. Since then, those numbers have only risen.
It’s
become even clearer, as I’ve visited correctional facilities and
listened to inmates’ stories, that we’ve done great harm in
criminalizing drug abuse. In California I met a 17-year-old
methamphetamine addict who’d fallen into drug abuse after experiencing
repeated sexual and physical abuse by his uncle. While incarcerated,
however, instead of getting the treatment he needed, he was abused,
again, and subjected to solitary confinement. Sadly, this is not a story
on the margin.
There is a better way. This past Thursday,
while the president was in Oklahoma, I visited a different kind of
correctional facility in Portugal. It was like stepping through a
looking glass—but into a more just system.
In 2001, Portugal took the bold step of decriminalizing
all drug use. The Portuguese decided, instead, to treat addiction as a
medical issue, with medical professionals at the center of their
response system. Their correctional conditions are the exact opposite of
ours; they are humane and tranquil. The facility I visited had cows and
lambs out front, as part of the farm the inmates help run. They rarely
use solitary confinement.
Some might be surprised to learn that Portugal has not fallen apart after 14 years of this humane, public-health-oriented approach. Quite the opposite, in fact: Portugal has seen drug-use rates, as well as drug-induced deaths, markedly decline.
Here
in America, by contrast, we pay lip-service to the idea that addiction
is a disease; we certainly don’t treat it like one in our jails and
prisons. That’s a terrible mistake. No one grows up wanting to be a drug
addict any more than anyone grows up wanting to be a diabetic or an
alcoholic. Sure, people’s choices play a role in falling prey to those
sicknesses; but those choices are often constrained by the mentally and
emotionally debilitating effects of poverty. And further fracturing sick
people’s lives through harsh punishment is no way to help them get
better.
Those of us who have seen these diseases up-close
understand that what a sick person needs is treatment, not punishment.
As a teenager growing up in Ohio, I watched my mother disappear into
more than a decade of drugs and despair after my maternal grandmother—a
person who filled our whole family with love—passed away. My mother’s
addiction didn’t just tear her life apart; it tore me and the rest of
our family apart, too. Drug addiction, for anyone who doubts it, is a
serious problem, and our society is right to want to tackle it.
But we’ve been going about it wrong. My mother didn’t need punishment; she needed help. Criminalizing drug abuse only further shatters people and families that are already in pieces.
And
what’s true of drug criminalization is, unfortunately, true of our
criminal-justice system in general: It takes people whom we have failed
since birth—subjecting them to substandard food, poor living conditions,
failing schools, unsafe communities—and then tries to “correct” them
through inhumane, over-punitive treatment. That strategy would be a joke
if it weren’t so sad.
Fortunately, some change is beginning
to take root. The president is showing important leadership, and some
state and local governments—which are where the vast majority of
criminal-justice policy is made—are undertaking reform. Last November, I
phone-banked and released a PSA on behalf of California’s Proposition 47,
a historic ballot initiative that reclassified felonies that should
never have been felonies, to misdemeanors. Thanks to Prop 47’s passage,
tens of thousands of California inmates are now eligible for release,
and nearly a million Californians are eligible to be freed from the label “felon.”
Similar
change is needed across the country. For four decades, we have embraced
the lie that incarceration makes us safer—that it protects us from
“dangerous” people. Mass incarceration, does not make us safer; it makes
us more vulnerable. It destroys communities, wastes resources,
separates families, ruins lives. It is the result of policies that
criminalize poverty and make prisons and jails become warehouses for
deeply damaged people with little or no access to mental health or
substance abuse treatment. Instead, let’s invest those resources in our
neighbors and family members so they don’t end up in the system to begin
with, and if they do, so they can get back on their feet.
The
46 people whose sentences the president commuted last Monday are just a
drop in an ocean of lives that have been torn apart by the War on Drugs
and the era of mass incarceration. It’s time to stop warring and start
healing.

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