Pubdate: Wed, 18 Aug 1999 Source: Meriden Record-Journal, The (CT) Copyright: 1999, The Record-Journal Publishing Co. Contact: 11 CrownStreet, P.O. Box 915, Meriden, CT 06450 Fax: (203) 639-0210 Feedback: http://www.record-journal.com/rj/contacts/letters.html Website: http://www.record-journal.com/ EDITORIAL: CRIME: PUNISHMENT A recent poll says that 74 percent of state residents support reinstituting chain gangs. Some inmates may prefer the fresh air to a cell, but it is likely that the most abiding effect of being chained in a row with other prisoners and forced to perform menial labor is not rehabilitative but embittering. It is clear that many will mouth support for rehabilitation - 55 percent in this poll did - but this support will quickly crumble once any strictly punitive measure surfaces, no matter how regressive or demeaning. And it is this attitude that we must rise above. For many years now our debate about the penal system has drifted from one Draconian nostrum to the next, until finally what has emerged is a metastasizing and merciless system that draws its main inspiration from cages and shackles and executions. The United States has the highest rate of incarceration in the world, with the exception of Russia. In 1998, 1 our of every 149 people in this country was in prison. The prison population has not declined since 1972. These numbers bespeak a grievous problem with our society. It is a gross counterpoint to the theater of violence that now characterizes our national life. And yet our best response continues to pivot around fostering a penal system increasingly enamoured with endless punishment and drained of hope. Mandatory minimum sentences and longer sentences in general, sometimes with no possibility of parole, have caused the growth in the prison population. But these tough measures, while exacting some revenge, exacerbate a criminal's maladjustment and crush any hope of reform. This harshness also allows us to escape confrontation with the complex social problems that spawn our dilemma. For example, we continue to lock young black men up at an unconscionable rate. Unconscionable because we are seemingly unwilling to extend our thinking to examine the implication of the numbers. In 1997, the rate of incarceration for black males in their 20s was 8,630 per 100,000. For Hispanics males it was 2,703, for whites 868. Numbers like these, not poll results, are what we need to consider. If we wish, we can take the 1.9 million men and women behind bars in the United States and have our way with them. We can reinstitute chain gangs, or stocks, or dunking stools. Perhaps we can chain some prisoners to the wall. But the line of prisoners waiting for their punishment at our hands will stretch far and forever unless we begin to reorder our thinking and make rehabilitation, not punishment, our final destination. And rehabilitation is not just a prison program but a social movement. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck