Over the past few decades, America has locked up more and more people. Our
prison population has tripled. Now we jail a higher percentage of people than
even the most repressive countries: China locks up 121 out of every 100,000
people; Russia 511. In America? 730.
"Never in the civilized world have so many been locked up for so
little," The Economist says.
Yet we keep adding more laws and longer jail terms.
Lavrentiy Beria, head of Joseph Stalin's secret police in the old Soviet
Union, supposedly said, "Show me the man, and I'll show you the
crime." Stalin executed anyone he considered a threat, and it didn't take
much to be considered a threat. Beria could always find some law the targeted
person had broken. That's easy to do when there are tons of vague laws on the
books. Stalin "legally" executed nearly a million people that way.
I'm not saying that America is like Stalin's Russia, but consider the
federal laws we have. The rules that bind us now total more than 160,000 pages.
The Congressional Research Service said it was unable to count the number of
crimes on the books. Yet last week the feds added or proposed another thousand
pages. States and cities have thousands more. Have you read them all? Have our
"representatives" read them all? You know the answer.
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