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Bianca Tylek

👤 Person
42 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

In the United States, we have the highest incarceration rate in the world. We have 4% of the world's population and 20% of the world's prison population.

In the United States, we have the highest incarceration rate in the world. We have 4% of the world's population and 20% of the world's prison population.

And so in our country, we really like to criminalize people, arrest people, and put them in jail, and then often sentence them, sometimes for really minor crimes, sometimes for obviously more aggressive crimes, but either way for excessively long times.

And so in our country, we really like to criminalize people, arrest people, and put them in jail, and then often sentence them, sometimes for really minor crimes, sometimes for obviously more aggressive crimes, but either way for excessively long times.

We're not the safest country in the world. We're not even near the top. And so we incarcerate a tremendous number of people because we really don't believe in liberty and freedom in the way that we claim to. And we have nothing to show for it. There are many, many countries across the country, I mean across the world, excuse me, that are safer than we are.

We're not the safest country in the world. We're not even near the top. And so we incarcerate a tremendous number of people because we really don't believe in liberty and freedom in the way that we claim to. And we have nothing to show for it. There are many, many countries across the country, I mean across the world, excuse me, that are safer than we are.

And so there's nothing about our carceral system that is producing the results that we would intend it to if we say we want a justice system.

And so there's nothing about our carceral system that is producing the results that we would intend it to if we say we want a justice system.

The carceral boom started really in the 1970s. That was when we went from a much more modest number of people who were incarcerated to this exponential growth over the last, let's say, 50 years or so, where we have seen the prison population increase by hundreds of percent. Right? We saw the peak actually happen in 2009. So thankfully, we know we are seeing a little bit of a decline.

The carceral boom started really in the 1970s. That was when we went from a much more modest number of people who were incarcerated to this exponential growth over the last, let's say, 50 years or so, where we have seen the prison population increase by hundreds of percent. Right? We saw the peak actually happen in 2009. So thankfully, we know we are seeing a little bit of a decline.

But we're still at really, really aggressive and extensive levels. And so, you know, where did this come from? It came from a number of things. I mean, many would say that, like, in the 1970s is when we started the war on drugs.

But we're still at really, really aggressive and extensive levels. And so, you know, where did this come from? It came from a number of things. I mean, many would say that, like, in the 1970s is when we started the war on drugs.

Then, you know, we, in the 1990s, we had sort of the tough-on-crime era. When we passed the 1993-94 crime bill, that included mandatory minimums and three-strike laws and truth in sentencing, all of which dramatically increased the number of people who are incarcerated, so much so that the federal government, to incentivize other states to...

Then, you know, we, in the 1990s, we had sort of the tough-on-crime era. When we passed the 1993-94 crime bill, that included mandatory minimums and three-strike laws and truth in sentencing, all of which dramatically increased the number of people who are incarcerated, so much so that the federal government, to incentivize other states to...

take on some of these same laws the federal system was passing, offered funding to states to build more prisons and jails because they knew that that would be the outcome. And so since then, you know, we continue to maintain the largest prison population in the world. And as I said, with little to show for it.

take on some of these same laws the federal system was passing, offered funding to states to build more prisons and jails because they knew that that would be the outcome. And so since then, you know, we continue to maintain the largest prison population in the world. And as I said, with little to show for it.

And obviously this is a system that is deeply embedded or dependent on issues of class, issues of race, issues of gender, right? All of sort of our social failures around racism, classism, poverty, loss of education, loss of job opportunities manifest themselves in a prison population.

And obviously this is a system that is deeply embedded or dependent on issues of class, issues of race, issues of gender, right? All of sort of our social failures around racism, classism, poverty, loss of education, loss of job opportunities manifest themselves in a prison population.

Absolutely. I mean, you know, we're a country that deeply believes in state rights. And what that means is that every state, plus the federal system, right, gets to have its own laws, which makes everything about enforcement very hard. Because, you know, what's a crime 10 feet away may not be a crime, you know, 100 feet down the other street, right?

Absolutely. I mean, you know, we're a country that deeply believes in state rights. And what that means is that every state, plus the federal system, right, gets to have its own laws, which makes everything about enforcement very hard. Because, you know, what's a crime 10 feet away may not be a crime, you know, 100 feet down the other street, right?

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