The House I Live In

558 Words2 Pages

“The House I Live In” has a collection of strongly informed and articulate interview subjects who have decades of research and practice in the subject. The war on drugs is costly and it has not worked. It has actually torn apart families and communities. It mainly targets the poor and minorities and has filled the prisons with many nonviolent offenders, most of them serving insanely long sentences. The director makes a well-reasoned case that society would be better assisted if most drug offenders were reformed instead of imprisoned. While the drug war is for many synonymous with the Reagan administration, it was actually officially launched under Richard Nixon. Of the 2.3 million persons imprisoned in the United States, more than 500,000 are for nonviolent drug crimes. In the meantime, the amount of drug use has continued relatively constant, and in some areas actually gone up. The industry supporting the penal system has grown enormously and has become the primary employer in numbers of communities. The legal system that supports the industry has cooperatively gone along with irrat...

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