The Pros And Cons Of Prison Industrial Complex

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What does it mean when someone says Prison Industrial Complex or PIC? Have you ever heard this phrase before? If you have never heard this before then it is likely you have no reason to be concerned with it or that you are unaffected by it. The Prison Industrial Complex is a term used to describe the overlapping interests of government and industry that use surveillance, policing, and imprisonment as solutions to economic, social and political problems. (1) Prisons have become a new form of enslavement for minorities. The PIC helps people who have racial, economic, and social advantages keep those advantages and maintain their authority. But how do they use the PIC to do this you ask? Well, they create mass media outlets that keep these stereotypes …show more content…

They portray them as criminal delinquent or deviant. It is a pinwheel of cash being spread around, and at the center of it is the criminal, who has traditionally been African-American. Prisons have private ownership usually and that person wants the prison to be as full as possible so they can make the most out of their investment. Sometimes, private companies will invest in prisons and make huge profits off the prison and in return extra money is also made by the police forces that arrest the “criminals”. Prisons were created as a place to send criminals for rehabilitation with the hopes of returning them to society better so they wouldn’t commit that crime again; depending on the severity of the crime they committed. Now, prisons are just a form of exploitation of the poor people and minorities. Do you know how many people profit from one person’s incarceration? The Police Officer who arrest you gets paid. He has a quota to meet and if he does he’ll get a bonus. The Judge who hears your case, he gets paid for each trial he proceeds over. The parole officer gets paid. As long as there are people who go on parole he will always have a …show more content…

And as someone on the outside looking in it seems like the problem has been solved. This practice of disappearing people has become big business. When prisons disappear human beings in order to convey the illusion of solving social problems, penal infrastructures must be created to accommodate a rapidly swelling population of caged people. (2) The day to day operations of prisons used to be done by the government; now they are performed by private corporations. Their actions are starting to reflect that of the military industrial complex. The dividends that accrue from investment in the punishment industry, like those that accrue from investment in weapons production, only amount to social destruction.

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