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9/27/2004; 1:51:15 PM


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Thursday, November 14, 2002

Working in the Big House

 

Being a prison guard in an overcrowded penitentiary has got to be one of the world’s worst jobs. It’s dangerous, it’s demoralizing, it’s essentially menial, and it’s low-skilled enough that there will always be a willing pool of replacement workers around to ensure the jobs are insecure and low-paid. Of all the jobs that need the protections afforded by a union, prison guard is definitely among the top.

 

However, prison guard unions pose one of the most vexing problems for progressives. They do a great job for the members by ensuring them all the benefits due to “working families,” such as health benefits, decent pay and fair work rules. But they do immeasurable harm to society by creating not only a constituency for, but a vested interest in the perpetuation of our egregiously unjust criminal justice system.

 

With an increasing percentage of our adult male population under lock and key, the issue of reform is growing more and more urgent. Draconian mandatory sentences, “three-strikes” laws and the mean-spirited, futile “war on drugs” are all putting huge economic and logistical strains on the prison system in the United States. Even conservative states and politicians are starting to question the cost of their zealous urge to prosecute and punish – if not in lives, then certainly in dollars. Prison guard unions and the political and civic organizations of towns where prisons provide a large percentage of the jobs fundamentally change the character of the debate over criminal justice issues by introducing an economic-interest counterweight to the compelling forces favoring reform. And furthermore, because organized labor is involved, the voices against reform are as likely to be Democratic as Republican.

 

The classic case is in California, where there is a hardly-coincidental correlation between Governor Gray Davis’s opposition to fundamental criminal justice reform and the critical support of the prison guard’s union. This problem is likely to be repeated in many states where big labor supports Democrats, because labor has a compelling interest in supporting the building of prisons (which provide more jobs, and thus more members and dues) and no real need to take a position on a matter like the drug war, even if its members had a strong opinion on it. This forces pro-reform progressives to form unlikely alliances with maverick Republicans and Libertarians on these kind of issues – a trend which can only be bad for the future of Democratic politics on a national level.


1:14:40 PM    Emphasize This! []

Cut Me Some Googleslack

A few bloggers like Rayne and (notably) Driver 8 have been weaving some wonderful content out of odds bits from their referer logs, wondering how certain weird Google searches (e.g. "men forced to wear pantyhose") have turned up visitors to their sites. I've been monitoring my referers for the last week trying to find something interesting, but unfortunately, the vast majority of people making Google-eyes at me are finding exactly what they're looking for.

My big winners in the Google cateogry seem to be my review of the Fantagraphics Jack Kirby book, particularly my comments on the observations of Ron Wells; my thoughts on Amiri Baraka's anti-Semetic remarks in his poem; and the steady stream of Slovenians here to read about Miha Mazinni (where I'm a page-one result, at least in English). Even my blatant Googleslut attempt to appeal to lazy high-school students looking for a plot summary of Hamlet for their school book reports is only drawing people who are interested in the Hamlet song by John Wesley Harding, which was the putative subject of the article.

What does a poor blogger need to get cut some Googleslack? Do I have to be totally blatant and include randomly-provocative phrases like "free videos of the Bush daughters in perverted sex acts with Britney Spears" or "best places to find Cuban cigars in the US" to entice the gaggle of Google gawkers? Geez... The only thing worse than a Googleslut is a Googleslut who isn't getting any.


9:37:40 AM    Emphasize This! []



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Last update: 9/27/2004; 1:51:15 PM.
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