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THE US Prison Population Thread (merged)

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: Peak Oil and the US Prison Population

Unread postby rockdoc123 » Thu 29 May 2008, 17:55:17

Bring the boys home from Iraq, send the criminal prisoners over in their place. The former would love to come home, their hearts probably aren't in it anymore, the latter are nasty and immoral enough to get the job done. Tell the criminals that there is a full pardon and free dope for the one who finds Bin Ladin....problem solved. Money saved from not having to incarcerate the criminals is put to funding alternative energy programs run by the returning soldiers.

Dang....if I were an 'merican I'd run for senate! :-)
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Re: Peak Oil and the US Prison Population

Unread postby Memysabu » Thu 29 May 2008, 17:56:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jlw61', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnM', 'F')rom what I've read, seen and heard, in the past 10 or so years prisons have become their own thriving industry in the US. According to this Washington Post article, the prison population is about 2.2 million, and 7 million have been in and out of prison ... in 2005.
Apparently people are being incarcerated for the most trivial reasons like smoking pot or shoplifting.
To me this is surreal. But it seems to be quite real.
My personal philosophy on this, is that by putting this many people in jail, and allowing the incarceration of people to be an industry, you'll only be breeding more criminality.
I mean, employers will be wary when hiring someone with a criminal record, however trivial their crime has been. This could lead to the said person commiting more crimes, maybe even serious crimes, because her or she can't get any real work.
I reckon these huge prison populations will be quite hard to deal with when the initial PO crap starts hitting the fan. Many might even have gotten used to a life of crime and this might cause some undesireable situations to emerge when these jailbirds flee the coup and want to survive.
However, down the road it won't make a big difference, I think.
What are your views on this?

I think you have the situation well in hand. Take a look at "predator" laws. You can publicly say things to a twelve year old in front of a cop, priest and judge without concern of being arrested that will land your butt in jail if you say them over the Internet to a 40 year old guy with a badge posing as a 12 year old girl. You can end up in prison if they find a joint in the used car you just bought.
All they are doing is breeding criminals because if they don't, then people start feeling less afraid and start wondering why they are paying so much money in taxes. Did you notice that while violent crime in the US has gone down, over the last 8 or so years, they've passed new laws designed to put more and more people in jail?
Fear is the key to getting your way over the masses. Control the fear and you can do anything because the masses will demand you to do "something".

Thats so true, Im starting to wonder when they will prosecute over sodomy. Its still illegal in a lot of states. Just seems they are nit picking. The states get more federal money for more inmates.
After youve gotten one felony, your life is over.

You cannot even deliver pizza in oklahoma or texas now if youve had a felony. Its starting to become retarded. They have nothing to turn to but selling drugs or stealing. God forbid they get out of prison and have to support a family.

Oil feild doesnt hire you, tech support wont hire you, customer service wont hire you. Just where in the heck are they supposed to work? People refuse to hire them for jobs that arent sensetive.
And the entire law allowing employers to discriminate was only for sensetive positions not all positions.

Someone needs to start suing people, but I dont think they will get anywhere. If you are an ex felon you have less rights then a slave did.
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Re: Peak Oil and the US Prison Population

Unread postby patience » Thu 29 May 2008, 17:57:56

The same thinking of people demanding that doctors "do something" for their cold or flu, led to overuse of antibiotics, and now to "superbugs", resistant to any antibiotic.

Any time we ask for govt to solve our problems, they will do something, but we probably aren't going to like it in the long term. The nature of the problem doesn't seem to matter.
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Re: Peak Oil and the US Prison Population

Unread postby Memysabu » Thu 29 May 2008, 18:00:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rockdoc123', 'B')ring the boys home from Iraq, send the criminal prisoners over in their place. The former would love to come home, their hearts probably aren't in it anymore, the latter are nasty and immoral enough to get the job done. Tell the criminals that there is a full pardon and free dope for the one who finds Bin Ladin....problem solved. Money saved from not having to incarcerate the criminals is put to funding alternative energy programs run by the returning soldiers.
Dang....if I were an 'merican I'd run for senate! :-)

I believe they did that in WWII and I agree it would work.
BTW if you have a felony its almost impossible to get into the military. If you do get in you cannot advance anywhere.
I dont agree with that.
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Re: Peak Oil and the US Prison Population

Unread postby mmasters » Thu 29 May 2008, 18:02:57

It's about socialism. Soon the economy will have shrunk to the point that many of the middle and lower classes will have nowhere to go but to working camps and or the military. The working camp concept has been well tested and refined by way of our prison system.
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Re: Peak Oil and the US Prison Population

Unread postby Kingcoal » Thu 29 May 2008, 18:16:26

Prisons are expensive and energy intensive, no doubt American policies towards locking people up need to be reanalyzed. While I agree that violent and petty criminals need to be locked up, our drug laws need to be relaxed. Marijuana in particular seems to be over penalized and the laws enforced with a strangely high priority. America's "war on drugs" seems to me to be a huge waste of money, resources and produces misery for a lot of minor offenders. Drugs should be regulated, however the emphasis should be on their immediate health danger to the user and people around them, not some social agenda based on anecdotal theories concerning "gateway drugs", etc. In other words, marijuana should be legalized and regulated like tobacco and alcohol. Drug addicts should be treated as a person with a health (mental and physical) problem, not like criminals. Doing that alone would sharply reduce the prison population.

Post peak, we won't have the money or resources to play around with mandatory minimum sentences for minor infractions of the law. We will return to using prisons to house people who society needs protection from.
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Re: Peak Oil and the US Prison Population

Unread postby hopethreat » Thu 29 May 2008, 19:15:54

Once someone has a felony on their record, they no longer have the right to own a firearm. Just another way to disarm people.

"They're trying to build a prison...for you and me" - SOAD
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Re: Peak Oil and the US Prison Population

Unread postby Cog » Thu 29 May 2008, 19:22:49

Post-Peak oil we won't have prisons as we know them now. Only holding cells for people awaiting trial and execution.
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Re: Peak Oil and the US Prison Population

Unread postby PrairieMule » Thu 29 May 2008, 19:44:19

Well the Nazis used cheap labor to help help convert coal to deisel in WWII. Perhaps a new form of labor pool is being created for something similar? What's cheaper than chinese workers? Incarcerated americans. Maybe in a not so distant future Barbie's butt will say Made in Sing Sing or Folsom?
If you give a man a fish you will have kept him from hunger for a day. If you teach a man to fish he will sit in a boat and drink beer all day.
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Re: Peak Oil and the US Prison Population

Unread postby Byron100 » Thu 29 May 2008, 19:46:59

Yeah, this is the one of the things that make me ashamed to be an American. :cry:

We have more prisoners than ANY other country in the world, and there is just no logical reason for this whatsoever. And as the saying goes, once a criminal, always a criminal, as there is really no way of living a normal life once you've been in jail, even it was for something so petty as having a joint in the car.

At this rate, we'll eventually be a nation of nothing but criminals, as there won't be anything else going... 8O
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Re: Peak Oil and the US Prison Population

Unread postby Denny » Thu 29 May 2008, 19:52:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cog', 'P')ost-Peak oil we won't have prisons as we know them now. Only holding cells for people awaiting trial and execution.

You may not be too far off the mark. Capital crimes are whatever society defines them as. Back in wild west, being a horse thief would get you hung. In the poverty of eighteenth centruy Scotland, stealing sheep likewise. In the latter case, a thief may well have deprived somebody else of their only winter sustenance.

And, in a poor society, long terms jail sentences are a luxury. But, I think we are far, far from that way of life.

By the way, does possession of pot get somebody locked up in the States now? Or, just if one has a garbage bag full , which means they are selling it?

I guess I wrote about this before, but I was surprised to see about a year or two ago, that Erie County sheriff's department, in the Buffalo area, swooped in with a helicopter to nab somebody who had just a few plants in their yard, ten or so. I thought that was overkill, the fuel used by the helicopter was worth way more than the plants. Mabye the pollution from the helicopter made worse health risks than the plants too. I would just have thought the sheriff's department would be embarrassed to admit they made such an expensive bust for so little. But, they seemed proud of their bust. I sure hope that person did not spend time behind bars for that.
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Re: Peak Oil and the US Prison Population

Unread postby JohnM » Thu 29 May 2008, 19:58:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cog', 'P')ost-Peak oil we won't have prisons as we know them now. Only holding cells for people awaiting trial and execution.

For a while maybe. When gas and food starts to get really expensive some people are bound to riot, the prisons might start to fill up faster than they can be built, especially with the current legislation. However I read somewhere that a former subsidary to Halliburton has built detention centers around the US capable of holding up to 100k people each, ordered by the US govt. I dunno if it's true, though.

But ultimately I think criminality will be uncommon Post-Peak, I'm talking maybe a decade or two after, when the dust has settled.
Maybe it'll be a bit like here in the rural areas of my country, away from the capitol and other big cities. There's basicly almost no police and no real crime. Last I heard of somebody comitting a crime other than speeding or drunk driving, was back when I was a kid, somebody broke into the local golf club, but the alarm went off, apparently the crook ran away and nothing was stolen.

That's my view, perhaps a bit too optimistic.
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Re: Peak Oil and the US Prison Population

Unread postby mos6507 » Thu 29 May 2008, 20:47:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Byron100', '
')We have more prisoners than ANY other country in the world, and there is just no logical reason for this whatsoever.


Unless you've studied the statistics that show what people are in prison for, you can't really make any judgments. If more americans commit crimes than in other countries, it's not the government's fault. It's our society. Also this is the system that let OJ get off.
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Re: Peak Oil and the US Prison Population

Unread postby Ferretlover » Thu 29 May 2008, 21:08:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnM', 'H')owever I read somewhere that a former subsidary to Halliburton has built detention centers around the US capable of holding up to 100k people each, ordered by the US govt. I dunno if it's true, though.

The camps do exist-in some form; do a search here (on on the 'Net) for Halliburton camps.
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prison population

Unread postby anador » Mon 16 Mar 2009, 02:39:22

What is the most likely scenario in prisons once the shtf?

They are certainly an institution the gov. will try to hold on to for a long time for propaganda reasons, but once the county police forces fall apart, how will that situation unfold?

Also, abandoned prisons are practically fortresses, they would make wonderfully defensible compounds for the ambitious peak defensivist.
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Re: prison population

Unread postby Laromi » Mon 16 Mar 2009, 03:16:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')lso, abandoned prisons are practically fortresses, they would make wonderfully defensible compounds for the ambitious peak defensivist.


Complete with a garrison of untrained bruisers :lol:
Last edited by Ferretlover on Wed 18 Mar 2009, 09:20:52, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: Fixed broken quote.
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Re: prison population

Unread postby ReverseEngineer » Mon 16 Mar 2009, 03:29:40

Prisons in their current form are way too expensive, and in the short term the solution is to try to reduce the prison populations. Read that CA with a mandatory release of like half its prison population over the next couple of years.

However, with the economic spin down, crime will obviously increase, not decrease. So eventually here you get the cheaper form of Prison, the Concentration Camp. You can detain way more people in Camp then you can in a modern prison. No worries about 2 to a cell or anything like that. Your main objective these days is staying OUT of prison. At some point, somebody might decide to just "eliminate" all the criminals in your prison, even if your crime was stealing a loaf of bread for your starving child. As homelessness increases, just Vagrancy can of course land you in prison, so you are in danger the moment you get foreclosed on and start living in your car. So far, they aren't imprisoning the Carsteaders, but that probably won't be the case forever.

Insofar as the use of current prisons as Fortresses, its possible but most of them are in the wrong locations. More likely I think will be the use of abandoned Malls and Shopping Centers. There are many more of them of course. The sanitation in these places witll be the main problem, with no electricity and the water cut off probably. That will be the big problem for any use of a building from the modern era during the spin down. You can Squat there, but if its not being supplied with power or water, its not a real good location for very long.

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Re: prison population

Unread postby anador » Mon 16 Mar 2009, 03:56:46

Regarding power and water, don't prisons have extensive backup systems? Not saying its a perfect solution, but many diesel systems can be disassembled and made to run gassified wood, albeit at a much lower power output.
and many prisons are sited in places where they have to use well water, which only requires modest power to run the pump.

True many malls have similar construction habits, and they are more plentiful, but they are located in areas close to population centers unlike most prisons. Many will be susceptible to raids and break ins unless they are modified pretty significantly.

Malls also have large windows and doorways framed in glass. Prisons are designed to keep people in... which also serves to keep people out.

Malls are designed to get people in. Malls also use cheap styrofoam and lightweight steel frame for everything except the outer walls, which makes them only defensible at the entrances where prisons can fail in their external wall but still be defensible in the warren of cast concrete rooms inside.

Not that malls arent good solutions for post-peak communities, they basically are town-style grids with a roof over the streets and no second floor, but i think they pose alot of defensive risks.

heres a link where they are actually modding a dead mall to become a town.

http://www.doverkohl.com/project.aspx?id=20&type=5
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Re: prison population

Unread postby Pops » Tue 17 Mar 2009, 17:41:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('anador', 'W')hat is the most likely scenario in prisons once the shtf?

They are certainly an institution the gov. will try to hold on to for a long time for propaganda reasons, but once the county police forces fall apart, how will that situation unfold?

Also, abandoned prisons are practically fortresses, they would make wonderfully defensible compounds for the ambitious peak defensivist.

The War on Drugs, decades of influence by the unions set on gain and the fear in our aging population are a remnant of cheap energy and easy money.

Prisons will be closed, populations will be reduced as tax revenues dwindle and the mandatory sentencing of petty crimes is abandoned.

Aside from that, what makes you think county police forces will fall apart once they are again empowered to prosecute serious crimes against people and property instead of someone's idea of right and wrong.


And tell us in exactly what scenario you feel you will be capable of becoming such a "Peak defensivist"?


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Re: prison population

Unread postby Cloud9 » Tue 17 Mar 2009, 19:49:22

The chain gang will come back and the prison work farm will come back. When times were hard, prisons made money for their states. They are a primary source of slave labor. I suspect they will grow in size rather than decline.
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