Pubdate: Wed, 06 Aug 2008
Source: Collegiate Times (VA Tech,  Edu)
Copyright: 2008 Collegiate Times
Contact:  http://www.collegiatetimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/699
Author: Logan Milford

PRIORITY OF LAWS NEEDS TO BE QUESTIONED

Laws are a necessary part of any functioning society.  They represent 
a moral and practical standard by which  all people are judged and 
held accountable. Laws are  the basis for all industry and provide a 
benchmark by  which any dispute can be settled. The problem with laws 
is that sometimes the government goes overboard and  begins exacting 
them which, make little to no sense or  laws that are put in place by 
corrupt powers to help  special interests.

In a democratic system, the government is  representative of the 
people it serves and the law is  supposed to be exercised by the 
people. Therefore, in  my opinion, the law should be something that 
the  majority of people agree on and follow. Breaking the  law should 
not be something that a majority of people  do on a daily basis; 
however, in this country everyone  at one time or another has broken 
the law even if they  didn't realize it. That is why I am perplexed 
at how  the democratic nation of the world, the country that  sets 
the benchmark for a functional democracy, has the  largest 
populations of imprisoned individuals around  the world.

Since we do have freedom of information from the  government, the 
statistics for our legal system are  readily available from the 
justice department. Here are  some of the highlights from the most 
recent statistics  available: the United States currently has over 4 
million people on probation, close to 2 million in  prison, close to 
1 million in jail and another million  on parole. Overall, 7 million 
people are under some  form of correctional supervision. That makes 
up just  over 3 percent of the total population, or one person 
incarcerated for every 31 in this country. While I  don't doubt that 
some of these people are serious  criminals, this is still a large 
amount of the  population to be imprisoned. Furthermore, high prison 
counts places a heavy burden on taxpayers to support  these 
criminals- about $60 billion dollars per year.

A large portion the inmates in prison are committed  because of drug 
offenses. I find this to be the first  major problem with our prison 
system. To put desperate  drug addicts into jail with violent 
criminals turns  drug addicts -- sick people in need of serious help 
- --  into life-long criminals. Not only do prisons expose  criminals 
to a network of new connections with other  criminals, but they also 
can expose people with new  drugs which contribute to their downward spiral.

If the goal of the police and justice system is to  protect and 
serve, why do they take people who get into  a bad situation and turn 
them into lifelong criminals  with no way out? I feel strongly about 
the drug issue  in particular because it is quickly becoming 
an  epidemic in adults. It is the only major offense  (felony) that 
is not seeing a downward trend in recent  years. In fact, adult drug 
arrests since 1970 have  increased at a nearly exponential trend with 
juvenile  drug arrests staying relatively constant. In 1970,  there 
were approximately 300,000 drug arrests while in  2005 there where 
over 1.5 million. That is an absurdly  high number of drug arrests 
especially considering my  doubts that there is a greater percentage 
of the population using illicit drugs today than there was in  the 
1970s. I am certainly not condoning the use of  illicit drugs, but 
when it seems like so many people  are using and arresting people is 
not making an impact,  maybe finding more a! ppropriate and effective 
ways to  help people would be productive.

Following my guidelines for the justification of a law  in a 
democratic government, several laws should be  repealed or at least 
reevaluated. Traffic laws and  speed limits are nearly impossible to 
follow and in  many cases impractical. Any police officer will tell 
you that if he or she wants to pull you over and is  willing to 
follow you a couple blocks, they can find  legal justification to 
pull you over. Alcohol laws are  ridiculous and have led to 
intensified desire for  underage drinking as well as producing a 
binge drinking  mania. Drug laws imprison sick people with an 
addiction  disease and in the end exact more damage than 
good.  Public order laws are also too strict and further take  away 
from people's freedom. For example, noise levels  are a matter of 
respect and common courtesy between neighbors and not an issue for 
police involvement. In  the end, laws like these detract from the 
police's  ability to catch true criminals with malicious intent  and 
in general ! create a fear by the general public  toward the justice 
system. The justice department  doesn't seem to understand that 
negative reinforcement  is a minimally effective teaching tool, 
especially  since they have to expose every person to the 
negative  outcomes before behavior begins to change.

For some reason unknown to me, the government has made  it its 
priority to define the moral standards for its  people through laws. 
Isn't that religion's purpose and  doesn't that defy the principles 
of freedom? Perhaps  the answer to criminal problems is not more 
jails, but  fewer laws. Also, instead of passing a law and 
stealing  people's money until they become obedient, why doesn't  the 
entire tone of the justice department change. A  suggestion that may 
make a difference: change "speed  limit 65" signs to "please drive 
65". When laws are set up for our own well-being and safety, asking 
the people  to help themselves will get a larger response 
than  demanding and punishment. And after all, the people  pulling 
you over are the people who are supposed to  live by your side, 
protecting and serving a democratic nation.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom