N
nomadologist
Guest
Nonono, nomadologist is a cold, rational debating machine who doesn't feel emotions like us puny humans.![]()
I just don't waste mine on "debating" (is that what we're doing?) on message boards
Nonono, nomadologist is a cold, rational debating machine who doesn't feel emotions like us puny humans.![]()
I just don't waste mine on "debating" (is that what we're doing?) on message boards![]()
You would think less violent crime would lead to fewer people in prison, but this doesn't seem to be the case.
Oh come on, you clearly get massively worked up sometimes. As do I, it's all part of the fun.
What's interesting (at least moreso than nomad's level of emotional investment in her posts) is that violent crime in the U.S. has actually declined in the past 10-15 years, which almost directly corresponds to a) hysteria over gangsta rap and b) the acceleration of the prison-industrial complex through increasingly harsher sentencing (and perhaps c) the worst race riots the U.S. had seen in a generation?). You would think less violent crime would lead to fewer people in prison, but this doesn't seem to be the case.
It's probably rap's fault somehow though.
Couldn't it be the case that the extra people in prison are the ones who would otherwise, being free, be violent?
Couldn't it be the case that the extra people in prison are the ones who would otherwise, being free, be violent?
Maybe we could just lock everyone up and violence would totally go away.
"In 2005, about 1 out of every 136 U.S. residents was incarcerated either in prison or jail."
This just in: US and UK "not same country", say experts.