Wednesday, March 26, 2025

The American Incarceration System Is a Total Disaster — And No One Wants to Talk About It

 

Let’s stop pretending. The American system of incarceration is not just broken — it’s a catastrophic failure that destroys lives, breeds violence, and offers no path to redemption or justice. It’s time we admit the ugly truth.


The Heart of the Problem: Violence and Forced Integration


We’ve packed our jails and prisons with people who are often natural enemies — violent individuals from vastly different, often clashing, cultural backgrounds. Instead of separating these groups for the sake of safety, we force them into overcrowded dormitories and locked units like animals in a cage match. The result? Constant fear, bloodshed, sexual assault and chaos.


Prisoners live every hour on edge, watching their backs, never knowing if they’ll survive the night. This isn’t justice — it’s torture. And in this environment, how can anyone focus on rehabilitation, education, or vocational training? They can’t. Fear rules everything.


Segregation in prisons is labeled evil, but integration in this setting is lethal. The idealism of equality has become a death sentence behind bars.


Total Communication Shutdown: A Modern Form of Isolation Torture


Prisoners are practically cut off from the outside world. Internet access and email — basic tools of modern society — are denied across the board, when they could instead be used as incentives for good behavior or tools for reentry preparation.


Phone calls are extortionate, controlled by shady corporations charging families outrageous fees for monitored conversations. Families go into debt just to maintain contact with their incarcerated loved ones. This isn’t security — it’s profiteering. And it’s cruel.


Guards or Babysitters? The Myth of Correctional Officers


Let’s not sugarcoat it. The guards are usually the lowest-paid, least-trained members of the entire criminal justice system. They’re often underqualified, poorly educated, and emotionally unfit for such high-stress environments.


In some jurisdictions, they aren’t even allowed to carry a firearm once they clock out — meaning violent inmates actually have more protection than the people assigned to guard them. Many of these officers end up as damaged as the inmates they supervise.


Call them guards — because there’s no “correction” going on. They’re prison babysitters at best, and that’s being generous.


Predator Politics: When the Inmates Run the Asylum


In many institutions, prison administrators knowingly allow violent inmates to dominate others — a throwback to the notorious “barn boss” system. These predators are unofficial enforcers, keeping other inmates in line through terror and brutality. Rather than isolating the dangerous few, prison systems often isolate their victims. It’s cowardly, corrupt, and systemic.


Wrongful Convictions: The Final Injustice


Now imagine enduring this hell while being completely innocent. You survive years — even decades — inside this nightmare. Then, finally, you’re released. But you don’t walk out whole — you walk out broken. Bitter. Vengeful. A system that was supposed to protect the innocent has now created a psychological time bomb.


Brutality Doesn’t Deter Criminals — It Creates Them


Let’s end the lie that brutal prisons scare people straight. Truly dangerous individuals aren’t frightened by violence — they thrive in it. And those who are law-abiding never needed prison threats to begin with. What we’ve built is a factory for trauma and rage, not rehabilitation.


This Must End


If you believe in justice — real justice — then speak up. Share this. Demand change. Because right now, our prison system isn’t just failing the inmates. It’s failing all of us.

1 comment:

Bruce Boyer Ventura County CA said...

Thank you Paul for putting this ugly reality out. Needs to be fixed.