The Original Gay Porn Community - Free Gay Movies and Photos, Gay Porn Site Reviews and Adult Gay Forums

  • Welcome To Just Us Boys - The World's Largest Gay Message Board Community

    In order to comply with recent US Supreme Court rulings regarding adult content, we will be making changes in the future to require that you log into your account to view adult content on the site.
    If you do not have an account, please register.
    REGISTER HERE - 100% FREE / We Will Never Sell Your Info

    To register, turn off your VPN; you can re-enable the VPN after registration. You must maintain an active email address on your account: disposable email addresses cannot be used to register.

  • Hi Guest - Did you know?
    Hot Topics is a Safe for Work (SFW) forum.

1 In Every 100 Americans Now Behind Bars

I agree with you Críostóir, this is a major driving force behind this statistic. Once prisons were called and industry, they became part of local economies, and harder to do without in local budgets the incarceration rates began to climb.

Additionally, as our public education systems fail, it leaves more and more poorly educated people struggling to survive in a society that only values money. When an individual can't get a job that will support him and his family, because the education system failed him, then he is more likely to turn to crime for survival.

This may sound like conspiracy theory, but there is too much evidence that this has been planned for a long time. It does two things.

1. It allows less money to be spent on educating the poor, and pretty much guarantees: A. a low paid worker force, and B. creates a criminal cast to fill the cells of the prison industry.

2. It feeds the local economy with a stimulus package of Federal and local funds to incarcerate people for less violent crimes, (a three strikes loser may only have been caught stealing food a third time to be sentenced to life).

The road out of this Law and Order mess, is via better education. Hopefully the next president will do something about getting rid of the "No Child Left Behind" Stupidity and get educators and education back on track. When I was teaching at the college level before retiring 4 years ago, I was astonished by how many of my students could not read or comprehend beyond the 2nd or 3rd grade. I count that as a failure of education. I saw these students given student loans to learn a skill that supposedly would land them well paying jobs, but then the school gave them less than was necessary to earn that job, but left them with massive loans to pay off after graduating. I deem this a failure of education, and a failure of government, but to hear the people running the school and the programs, it was not their fault the students were too ignorant to get work with their degrees.

We've allowed our higher educational systems to be taken over by frauds that promise good paying jobs, while assisting the government in signing them to student loans that cripple them for life. The students find themselves on a slippery slope at the beginning of their adult life, with no real skills that would allow them to get ahead. Some of those students will eventually turn to crime. Selling drugs is the usual easy way out for many of these people caught in this trap, and eventually they run afoul of law enforcement.

But if the Government was doing it's primary function of protecting our borders we would not have drug sellers and users to throw into prisons. If this is a conspiracy, it is a well planned one. It takes eager young Americans and puts them on a slide to ruin so they never really have a chance to be anything other than what the government has planned for them. What better way to remove unwanted people from the job market, and tax rolls for long periods of time, teach them better criminal skills, than survival skills and pretty much guarantee they will become recidivists and keep working like the cog in the wheel the government wants them to be.

After being out of the US for 4 years, I'm back right now, and I'm appalled with the amount of crime even in the local rural area in which I am staying currently. Bank robberies weekly, sometimes twice or three times a week. Murders in robberies of businesses, Murders from home invasions with guns, stolen cars, stolen identities, and on and on. In Colombia where I retired to, education is paramount, and within walking distance of my home there, you will find at least 12 universities, and more throughout the city, and almost every child aspires to a higher education. Crime is not rampant in Colombia as our government would have us believe. Not that it doesn't exist, but it is nowhere near the levels it is here in America. In four years, I have not heard of a single bank robbery, and only one business robbery, which took place in a rural village of a bar being run by two young women alone who were not very aware of security.

Until the people realize our problem stems from lack of serious education, and stop demanding more and tougher laws against crime, and begins to support more legitimate education reforms, this will only get worse. In reality, the way it is now, the real criminals are running the systems for higher education and our prisons. It is rampant criminal capitalism creating this mess.

So if this is a conspiracy, it has been well planned, and not a single politician including the Democrats have spoken out against it. Apparently, Americans like it the way it is, law and order and public safety. Unfortunately they have neither because of this situation, and a government too stupid to recognize the real problem causing it.

If even a quarter of the funds spent on prisons and the "Justice" industry, were earmarked for education reforms, we'd see a drop in crime very quickly. If half of what is spent on prisons and the "Justice" industry, was redirected to education, we would see America return to the foreground of leadership in the world. We'd become the country we think we are again.


You never have a pleasant thing to say about America, never. Bullshit crime is running rampant in rural areas. That is just not correct Bogota Bully..... gezzzzzzzzzzzz!
Comparing how safe and great things are in Columbia. .......pffft only a complete idiot would believe that............. land of the drug cartel where a war is going on as we speak and the drug lords are as well armed if not armed better then the special forces/CIA that are there from the USA and whatever 3rd world rat hole military Columbia might have.

I realize Bogota is a lot safer now than it was a decade ago but it is only a matter of time before whatever type of puppet government is setup by larger powers that it crumbles into another 3rd world dictator and revolution. Only a matter of time.
Drugs are king and regardless of where you stand on the drug issue in the USA they are a source of a shit load of crime here.
No movie speaks volumes to all the wanna be thugs in America who idolize Al Pacino's Scarface with the opening scene where Pacino and friends are handcuffed in the bathroom in Miami and the Colombians selling the dope start up the chain saws and start cutting up the Cuban's. That is just a movie but not far from reality.
There are a shit load of nasty thug not needing to be in the Country Colombians dealing drugs and fucking people up here in South Florida.

Comparing the education system in Columbia and how great it is to America is like comparing a steak to a piece of SPAM. I'll let you in on this Columbia isn't the steak!!!
Why don't you get your tired ass back down to Columbia and shut the fuck up? I know it's Gods gift to the Globe and you hate America. Glad you retired there and like it, and it is pretty landscape. The people are beautiful in general but you are so full of shit with your "I used to live in America before I moved over the rainbow to Shangri-la".
Wake up Alice this ain't wonderland....
Thankyou for your time. #-o
 
during the same news segment in which they offered the statistic that says

1 in 99 americans are now behind bars,

i was more shocked to hear that

1 in 14
"african-americans" are behind bars.

that's so much more disproportionate than i suspected even in my wildest nightmares.
 
Comparing how safe and great things are in Columbia. .......pffft only a complete idiot would believe that............. land of the drug cartel where a war is going on as we speak and the drug lords are as well armed if not armed better then the special forces/CIA that are there from the USA and whatever 3rd world rat hole military Columbia might have.

No movie speaks volumes to all the wanna be thugs in America who idolize Al Pacino's Scarface with the opening scene where Pacino and friends are handcuffed in the bathroom in Miami and the Colombians selling the dope start up the chain saws and start cutting up the Cuban's. That is just a movie but not far from reality.

But you're not the one who's in Bogota, and living it EVERY DAY, and having to put up with whatever ills exist there. Do you really think that he would choose to stay in Bogota if it was the horrible stinking rathole that you think it is? Surprise...I have a friend who went there last summer (and thence to Lima - flying out of Peru less than one day before their big earthquake); my friend fell in love with Bogota! He's even started to look at the costs of real estate there.

Though not at all germane to your discussion, V_N, it doesn't hurt anything at all that, just perhaps, Bogota may have the most perfect climate in the world. San Diego, EAT YOUR HEART OUT!

And my friend isn't an America-hater; nor is LaloGS. We know what America is capable of, and how the entire world benefits when the U.S. conducts itself in an exemplary way, as we usually did before 1950 or so. The U.S. could be the engine leading the entire world toward sensible and sustainable energy decisions, and recognize that fossil fuels are NOT forever. When a nation goes in the wrong direction - and dare I say that some things under active consideration would be suicide for this country (bombing Iran, for example) - it is a patriotic duty to speak up. It can no longer be left to Fox News and CNN to speak up. The U.S. is in the unique situation of setting policies which can affect people in nearly every country on earth, and the U.S. is NOT being a very good steward of this planet at all.

And THE GODFATHER was a **MOVIE** and it was unabashedly fictional. Drug cartels, Mafia higher-ups, etc. will always be shown in the most ruthless portrayal possible, because that's what draws in the crowds. From all that I can understand, crime in Colombia is FAR less than what we have in the U.S. here. I understand that even Medellin has become safe. Of course the druglords and Mafia bosses were ruthless, but you're not going to get shot in Bogota just because you opened the door to let the dog out.

As I've said before, any acting and movie roles notwithstanding, the current administration in Washington has managed to achieve something even more powerful than the Mafia ever wished for in their wet dreams. The Mafia was an association of local and regional organizations (Al Capone didn't rule over the Los Angeles, Miami, etc. "offices"), but what's in place now is a nearly global cabal.
I shouldn't refer to the Mafia in the past tense, as they still exist; only that their power and influence is greatly diminished in recent decades.

I meant to quote your text on education as well, but haven't you noticed that American schools are now considered probably the very worst, or close to it, in the industrialized world? It's very possible that your "average" high school graduate in France, Brazil or Japan knows more U.S. history than most U.S. people do. (And before I reserve any judgment on Colombia's schools, I would want to see a factual comparison - I would be VERY surprised if they were inferior to ours.) I am seeing comments from college instructors, etc. that they're forced to try to teach students who are coming in with 4th Grade comprehension and reading skills.
 
during the same news segment in which they offered the statistic that says

1 in 99 americans are now behind bars,

i was more shocked to hear that

1 in 14
"african-americans" are behind bars.

that's so much more disproportionate than i suspected even in my wildest nightmares.

And another, related, statistic blew my mind even farther past the moon. One in SEVEN African-Americans from **some age group** (it was a big spread like 19 to 34 or something) are currently in the System.
 
Back
Top